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A35827 The journals of all the Parliaments during the reign of Queen Elizabeth both of the House of Lords and House of Commons / collected by Sir Simonds D'Ewes ... Knight and Baronet ; revised and published by Paul Bowes ..., Esq. D'Ewes, Simonds, Sir, 1602-1650.; Bowes, Paul, d. 1702. 1682 (1682) Wing D1250; ESTC R303 1,345,519 734

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Wells a new Writ was required for Wotten-Basset M r Elrington appeared this day with Mr. Serjeant Harper and Mr. Plowden being of his Learned Council who shewing great reasons that the Bill might be rejected certain Articles were delivered in by the Mayor of Guildford for maintenance of the Bill which being read the Copy thereof was awarded to Mr. Elrington Vide de ista materia on the Morrow following Giles Clinket Servant to Sir John Parrot K t of Pembroke Attached in London in a Plea of Debt at the Suit of Francis Parke had the Priviledge of the House granted On Saturday the 30 th day of January Thomas Heneage was returned Knight for the County of Lincoln and also Burgess for Boston in that County and doth appear for Lincoln whereupon a new Writ is required for Boston Three Bills had each of them one reading of which the last being the Bill to revive the Act touching Usury an 37 Hen. 8. was read the first time and as it should seem committed to Mr. Vice-Chamberlain to consider of it Mr. Elrington came in with the Serjeant requiring the Order of this House in what sort he should Answer the Articles whereupon the whole matter was committed to twelve of the House to hear the Parties and Proofs on both sides and thereupon to certifie this House of which number it should seem Mr. Sidney was one Vide touching this business on Thursday the 21 th day on Friday the 22 th day and on Friday the 29 th day of this instant January foregoing It was Ordered that every one of this House that cometh after the Prayer which shall begin at eight of the Clock shall pay four pence to the poor Mans Box. On Monday the first day of February Five Bills of no great moment had each of them one reading of which the second being the Bill touching the Bowyers of London was read the second time and as it should seem committed to Sir William Chester and others not named And the third being the Bill against carrying over the Sea of Pelts and Sheep-Skins not Staple Ware was read the second time and Ordered to be ingrossed The Committees in the Bill touching Barwick have had Conference with the Lords and have further day to meet again viz. on Saturday next The Bill to have de circumstantilus to the Juries in Wales and in the County Palatine of Lancaster was read the first time Mr. Comptroller with others was appointed to confer of the Priviledge of this House upon motions made for the Imprisonment of Sir Edward Warner On Wednesday the 3 d day of February the Bill to revive the Statute made for putting down of Grigg Mills was read the second time and as it should seem committed to Mr. Chichester and others not named Vide a like President on Thursday the 21 th day of January foregoing Thomas Dring Burgess of Petersfield in the County of Southampton was Licensed upon the Death of his Uncle to be absent for ten dayes Five other Bills of no great moment had each of them one reading of which one being the Bill against carrying over Sea of Pelts and Sheep Skins not Staple Ware was read the third time and passed And another being for Robbing of Ponds and Stealing of Fish and Conies to be Felony was read the third time and as it should seem committed to Mr. Comptroller and others not named Vide consimile on Tuesday the 21 th day of January foregoing On Thursday the 4 th of February Three Bills of no great moment had each of them one reading of which the third being the Bill touching Badgers and Carryers of Corn was read the second time and as it should seem committed to Mr. Recorder and others not named Christopher Hillyer Burgess for Heydon in Yorkshire upon the sickness of his Wife was Licensed to be absent On Friday the 5 th day of February Two Bills of no great moment had each of them one reading of which the second being the Bill for repairing of Waltersey Bank in the Isle of Ely was read the second time and as it should seem committed to Mr. North and others not named Vide consimile on Thursday the 21 th day of January foregoing Sir Henry Jones complained that all his Servants were Imprisoned and prayed Priviledge and after long Arguments for the Priviledge Commission was given to Mr. Sackvill and others to examine and certifie of the matter On Saturday the 6 th day of February the new Bill for setting up of Grigg Mills betwixt Plime and Dart was read the first time A motion was made by M r Winter that the House would have regard by some Bill to the Navy And thereupon the matter as it should seem was referr'd to the said M r Winter and others whose names through the negligence of ..... Seymour Esq at this time Clerk of the House of Commons are here as in all other places of this Journal omitted The Bill for a Subsidy of Lands and Goods and two Fifteens was read the first time On Monday the 8 th day of February the new Bill against Servants robbing their Masters and Buggery to be Felony was read the first time M r Sidney and M r Mason declared that upon Examination the Fray seemed to be begun by Sir Henry Jones his Servants Vide touching this business on Friday the 12 th day of this Instant February following On Tuesday the 9 th day of February the Bill for the Subsidy of Lands and Goods and two Fifteens and Tenths was read the second time but there is no mention made of any thing spoken to it or the referring of it to Committees or Ordering of it to be ingrossed because as may be conjectured the Subsidy Bill being commonly of a great length the Forenoon was far spent by that time it was read through and therefore the Arguments upon it were deferred till to Morrow in which much dispute growing touching the Oath of the Assessors it was again agitated in the House on Friday the 12 th day and on Saturday the 13 th of this instant February ensuing when it was Ordered to be ingrossed and was lastly on Friday the 19 th day of the same Month read the third time and passed the House On Wednesday the 10 th day of February Two Bills had each of them one reading of which the first being the Bill for Servants robbing of their Masters and touching Buggery was read the second time and Ordered to be engrossed Thomas Walwin Gent. John Rice Yeoman Owen Rice Rice ap Richard and Griffith Lewes and John ap John Servants to Sir Henry Jones Knight for Carmarthen being Attached in London in three Actions of Trespass at the several Suits of George Catchmeyde William Prime and Henry Elmely Gent. move to have a Writ of Priviledge Vide plus concerning this matter on Friday the 12 th day of this Instant February ensuing Divers Arguments were this day in the House upon the Bill of Subsidy and the Oath
which is usual in other continuations of it But the reason why they met not till the Afternoon seemeth to be because then the Queens Majesty her self came thither to whom Richard Onslow Esq her Majesties Sollicitor having been Chosen Speaker for the House of Commons the day past was presented and admitted by her in manner and form as followeth About three of the Clock in the Afternoon this present Wednesday the second day of October the Queens Majesty took her Barge and Landed on the back-side of the Parliament-Chamber and so the Earl of Northumberland bearing the Sword the Lady Strainge her Trayn with the Lords in their daily Apparel and the Heralds attending on her she proceeded up into the Privy-Chamber to prepare her self during which time the Lords and Justices put on their Parliament Robes and took their places in manner and form following In which it is to be noted that no part of this days passages already set down is found in the Original Journal-Book of the Upper House but is either transcribed out of a certain Anonymous memorial I had by me in which the presentment of the Speaker this day is somewhat exactly set down or was supplied by my self upon the comparing of several things together Now follow the Names of the Lords and others as aforesaid First on the Form on the North-side together with the Upper Form at the nether end sate the Bishops as followeth Younge Archbishop of York Grindall Bishop of London Pilkington Bishop of Durham Sands Bishop of Winchester Birkley Bishop of Bath and Wells Bett. Bishop of Carlisle Barlow Bishop of Chichester Alleo Bishop of Exeter Gest. Bishop of Rochester Skamler Bishop of Peterburgh Horne Bishop of Worcester Bullingham Bishop of Lincoln Bentam Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield Denham Bishop of Chester Scorie Bishop of Hereford Davies Bishop of S t Davids Parkhurst Bishop of Norwich Cheyney Bishop of Gloucester Nota That these names with those that follow being transcribed in a different manner from all others in the residue of the Journals of the Queens time were so found with the Names of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal added to them in that before-mentioned Anonymous memorial of this present Wednesdays passages being the second day of October and were therefore transcribed out of it as is aforesaid rather than out of the Original Journal-Book of the Upper House although the Series of them that were present set down there did serve well to rectifie those foregoing and these also that next ensue At the foremost Form on the South-side sate these Peers viz. William Paulet Marquess of Winchester Lord Treasurer Thomas Howard Duke of Norfolk Earl Marshall of England William Parre Marquess of Northampton Thomas Peircie Earl of Northumberland Charles Nevill Earl of Westmorland George Talbot Earl of Shrewsbury William Sommerset alias Plantagenet Earl of Worcester Thomas Ratcliff Earl of Sussex Henry Haistings Earl of Huntingdon Edward Seymor Earl of Hartford Robert Sutton alias Dudley Earl of Leicester and Master of the Horse Anthony Brown Viscount Mountague Nota That Edward de Vere Earl of Oxford Lord Great Chamberlain of England Edward Mannors Earl of Rutland William Bowrchier Earl of Bath and Henry Wriotheisly Earl of South-hampton were at this time under Age and in Ward to the Queen and therefore they were not admitted to take their places in the Uppermost House but if they were present did either stand besides the upper part of the Rail at the higher end of the said House or were admitted to kneel at the upper end of the same House near the Chair of State at this time and upon like solemn days for no Peer is admitted to have his free Voice or sit as a Member of that Great Council untill he have accomplished his full Age unless by the special Grace of the Prince At the Form at their back and the nether Form at the nether end sate these Peers Fynes Lord Clinton as Lord Admiral sate first amongst the Barons Howard Lord Effingham as Lord Chamberlain of her Majesties Houshold sate second Nevill Lord of Burgaveny sate in his due place of preheminence and so the rest that follow unless such as were misplaced by the Clerks error which is too frequent Zouch Lord Zouch Standley Lord Strange Birkley Lord Birkley Parker Lord Morley Brooke Lord Cobham Stafford Lord Stafford Gray Lord Gray of Wilton Sutton Lord Dudley Lumley Lord Lumley Blunt Lord Mountjoy Darcy Lord Darcy of Mevill Standley Lord Mounteagle Sands Lord Sands Vaux Lord Vaux Windsor Lord Windsor Wentworth Lord Wentworth Burrough Lord Borough Mordant Lord Mordant Cromwell Lord Cromwell Evers Lord Evers Willoughby Lord Willoughby Sheffeild Lord Sheffeild Paget Lord Paget Darcy de Chiche Dominus Darcy North Lord North of Carthelige Bridges Lord Shandois Haistings Lord Haistings of Loughborough Carey Lord Carey of Hunsdon S t John Lord S t John of Bletsoe Nota That Dutchet Lord Audley and the Lord Dacres of the North were under Age. All which Peers abovesaid had their Mantles Hood and Circots furred with Miniver their Arms put on the right side and the Duke of Norfolk had Bars of Miniver the Marquess of Winchester and Northampton had three Bars of Miniver the Earls likewise the Viscounts two and the Barons two Item On the upper Sack of Wooll sate the Lord Keeper till the Queen came and then went to his place at the Rail On the Woolsack on the Northside sate Sir Robert Catlin and Sir James Dyer the Queens two Chief Justices M r Corbet Weston and Southcote Justices of both Benches on the Woolsack on the Southside sate Sir William Cecill the Queens Principal Secretary Sir William Cordall Master of the Rolls Sir Thomas Sanders Chief Baron Baron Whiddon ..... Carus the Queens Serjeant ..... Gerrard the Queens Attorney and on the nether Sack sate M r Vaughan and Yale Masters of the Chancery M r Spilman Clerk of the Parliament M r Martin Clerk of the Crown and M r Peile his Joint Patentee And behind them kneeled Smith Clerk of the Council and Jones Clerk of the Signet Permiter and Dister Then the Queens Majesty being Apparelled in her Parliament Robes with a Caul on her Head came forth and took her Seat the Marquess of Northampton carrying the Cap of Maintenance and after stood on her right hand the Duke of Norfolk carrying his Marshals Rod and on her left hand the Earl of Northumberland with the Sword the Heralds also and Serjeants at Arms being before her her Majesties Mantle was born up on either side from her Shoulders by the Lord Chamberlain and the Lord of Hunsdon who also stood still by her for the assisting thereof when she stood up her Train was born by the Lady Strange assisted by Sir Francis Knolles Vice-Chamberlain at the left hand of the Queen and on the South-side kneeled the Ladies and at the Rail at the Queens back on the right hand stood the Lord Keeper and on the left hand the Lord Treasurer Then the Queen
the Privy-Council being Members of this House and divers others to repair unto the Lords this Forenoon which they performed immediately But their names being very negligently omitted by Mr. Seymour at this time Clerk of the House of Commons in this Original Journal-Book of the said House are therefore supplied out of that of the Upper House being as followeth Sir Edward Rogers Knight Comptroller of her Highness Houshold Sir Francis Knolles her Highness Vice-Chamberlain Sir William Cecill her Majesties Chief Secretary Sir Ambrose Cave Knight Chancellor of her Highness Dutchy of Lancaster Sir William Peeter Sir Ralph Sadler Sir Walter Mildmay Knights all of her Highness Privy-Council Sir Thomas Wroth the Master of the Rolls Sir Nicholas Throckmorton Sir Morrice Berkely Sir Peter Carew Sir John Chichester Sir Thomas Gargrave Sir Henry Nevill Sir Nicholas Arnold Sir Henry Ashelie Sir John Pollard Sir John Perrott Sir Gabriel Carew Sir Thomas Gerrard Sir William Chester Sir John White Sir John Sellinger Sir John Constable Sir ..... Haistings Sir John Moor Sir John Southwrote Sir John Thinn Sir G. Turpin Sir Henry Gates Sir Robert Wingfeild Sir Henry Cheyney and Sir Arthur Champernown Knights Mr. Seckford Mr. Bell Mr. Mounson Mr. Dalton Mr. Colbie Mr. Kingsmill Mr. Mollineux Mr. Mersh Mr. Prat Mr. Norton Mr. Robert Newdigate Mr. Strickland Mr. Wray Mr. Sands Mr. Recorder Mr. William Fleetwood Mr. Mountgomery Mr. Thomas Fleetwood Mr. Heneage Mr. Bartue Mr. Alford Mr. Henry Knolles Sen. Mr. Hasset Mr. Hawtry Mr. John Haistings Mr. Ashbie of the Jewel-House Mr. Colly Mr. William Moor Mr. Hilliar Mr. Knight Marshall Mr. Robert Manners Mr. Barkham Mr. Francis Newdigate Mr. Warncomb Mr. Francis Brown Mr. Dunch Mr. Withers Mr. Robert Bowes Mr. Awberry Mr. Haddon Mr. Edward Leighton Mr. Young Mr. Charles Howard and Mr. Wilson Esquires The Names of these Committees being thus transcribed out of the Original Journal-Book of the Upper House now follows the Issue of their said meeting and Conference with the Lords out of the Original Journal-Book of the House of Commons which was that after they had returned thanks unto their Lordships for their readiness to join with them in their Suit unto her Majesty touching those two great businesses of her Marriage and the Declaration of a Successor their said Lordships Answer was that on Saturday next in the Afternoon they would confer with them the said Committees of the House of Commons in the Utter or Outward Parliament Chamber The House Adjourned it self until Monday next ensuing being the 4 th day of November and the Committees before-named were appointed to meet in the mean time on Saturday Morning to agree upon such reasons as they might offer to the Lords in the Afternoon of that day to be presented unto her Majesty to perswade and induce her to Marriage or at least to the Declaration of a Successor But what the Issue of the Conference was between the Committees of the Lords and Commons doth no where appear in the Original Journal-Books of the Upper and Commons House but it may bevery probably conjectured that upon their meeting it was agreed that the Commons should not at all at this time prefer any Petition unto her Majesty touching the said great businesses because they had already perform'd it in the first Session of this Parliament in An. 5 Regin Eliz. on Thursday the 28 th day of January in anno praedicto and that thereupon now the Lords only should sue unto her Majesty in the foresaid great matters if the said Upper House should allow thereof Which resolution as it should seem was accordingly approved and put in Execution as is very probable upon Tuesday the 5 th day of November following Ut vide ibidem On Monday the 4 th day of November to which day the House of Commons had Adjourned it self on Thursday the 31 th day of October foregoing Three Bills had each of them one reading of which the first being the new Bill for the Alneagers Fees of Lancashire and for the length breadth and weight of Cottons Frizes and Rugs was read the first time On Tuesday the 5 th day of November Five Bills of no great moment had each of them one reading of which the second being the Bill for the having of one Sheriff of one County in divers Counties was read the second time and thereupon Ordered to be ingrossed The Lords sent down M r Serjeant Carus and M r Attorney to signisie unto the House that the Committees touching those two great matters of her Majesties Marriage and Declaration of a Successor whose names see on Thursday the 31 th day of October foregoing should come up unto their Lordships who immediately thereupon did so And shortly after returning from the Lords they made Declaration that their Lordships required that thirty of this House should be before the Queen in the Afternoon at the Palace with thirty of the Lords which were thereupon appointed and chosen accordingly by M r Speaker out of the foresaid Committees nominated on the 31 th day of October foregoing to attend her Majesty and to understand what her pleasure was Post Meridiem The Committees of the Lords and House of Commons attended her Majesty this Afternoon touching those two great businesses of her Marriage and Declaration of a Successor which I have supplied as a thing necessary for the understanding both of the former and future agitation of which see more largely on Monday the 25 th day of this instant November following and what her Majesties Answer was shall be needless to insert here in respect that it was openly published by M r Comptroller and M r Secretary Cecill on this ensuing Morning On Wednesday the 6 th day of November Two Bills had each of them one reading of which the second being the Bill for the Cloth-Workers of London to have search was read the second time and as it should seem committed to M r Chancellor and others The Bill touching Informers for better Execution of penal Laws was read the third time and passed upon the Question M r D r Vaughan and M r Yale brought from the Lords the Bill for Hexamshire and a Proviso in the Bill for Bishops Sir Edward Rogers Knight Comptroller of her Highness Houshold and Sir William Cecill Knight her Majesties Principal Secretary read in writing notes of the Queens Majesties saying before the Lords and Committees of this House tending that her Grace had signified to both Houses by words of a Prince that she by Gods Grace would Marry and would have it therefore believed and touching limitation for Succession the perils be so great to her Person and whereof she hath felt part in her Sisters time that time will not yet suffer to treat of it Whereupon all the House was silent Vide plus concerning this matter on Monday the 25 th day of this instant November following The Proviso added to the Bill for Archbishops and Bishops was read the first time On Thursday the 7 th
it being a Reformation not contrariant but directly pursuant to our Profession that is to have all things brought to the purity of the Primitive Church and institution of Christ. He spake at large of the abuses of the Church of England and of the Church-men as first that known Papists are admitted to have Ecclesiastical Government and great Livings that Godly honest and Learned Protestants have little or nothing That Boyes are dispensed with to have spiritual Promotions That by Friendship with the Master of the Faculties either unable men are qualified or some one man allowed to have too many several Livings Finally he concluded with Petition that by Authority of the House some convenient number of them might be assigned to have Conference with the Lords of the Spiritualty for consideration and reformation of the matters by him remembred Vide Apr. 26. Tuesday postea M r Norton a man wise bold and Eloquent stood up next and said he was not ignorant but had long since learned what it was to speak on a sudden or first before other men in Parliament Yet being occasioned by M r Strickland he said that truth it was he had a Book tending to the same effect but quoth he the Book was not drawn by those whom he named but by vertue of the Act of 32. at the assignation or by the Advice of eight Bishops eight Divines eight Civilians and eight temporal Lawyers who having in Charge to make Ecclesiastical Constitutions took in hand the same which was drawn by that Learned man M r Doctor Haddon and penned by that Learned Man M r Cheeke whereupon he said that consideration had been and some travel bestowed by M r Fox of late and that there was a Book newly Printed to be offered to that House which he did then and there presently shew forth And for the rest of M r Stricklands Motions he said he was of his mind chiefly for the avoiding and suppressing of Simoniacal Ingrossments Whereupon were appointed for that purpose for redress of sundry defections in those matters these following viz. All the Privy-Council being Members of this House Sir Henry Nevill Sir Thomas Thinne Sir Thomas Lucy Sir Henry Gate the Master of the Requests M r Heneage M r Recorder M r Bell M r Henry Knolles Sen. M r Mounson M r Norton M r Strickland M r Godier M r William More and M r Doctor Berkley These names being thus transcribed out of the Original Journal-Book of the House of Commons as were those two foregoing Speeches of M r Strickland and M r Norton out of that before-cited Anonymous Journal of the same House more particularly mentioned at the beginning of this present Journal now follow other passages of this day out of the same The Bill concerning coming to the Church and receiving the Communion was read the second time and thereupon Sir Thomas Smith speaking for the maintenance thereof argued and in part wished the Bishops to have consideration thereof After whom M r Fleetwood moved that the penalty of that Statute should not go to Promoters and said it was a device but of late brought in in the time of King Henry the Eighth the first year of his Reign and shewed the Evils and inconveniences that did grow by these mens doings wherein no reformation was sought but private gain to the most of men He said also that matter of going to the Church or for the service of God did directly appertain to that Court and that we all have as well learned this Lesson that there is a God who is to be served as have the Bishops And thereupon he undertook to prove by the old Laws vouched from King Edgar that the Princes in their Parliaments have made Ecclesiastical Constitutions as these That if any Servant shall work upon the Sabbath day by the Commandment of his Master he should be free if of himself he should be whipped if a Freeman should work he should be bound or grievously amerced Then he concluded upon request that it might be committed to some of the House without the Bishops who perhaps would be slow Sir Owen Hopton moved very orderly that the Presentation of such defaults should not only depend upon the relation of the Church Wardens who being for the most part simple and mean men and fearing to offend would rather incur danger of Perjury than displease some of their Neighbours he shewed for proof Experience It may be gathered by these foregoing Speeches transcribed out of that Anonymous Journal more particularly mentioned at the beginning of this present Journal that M r Fleetwood moved to have this Bill referred to Committees but their names being there omitted are therefore wholly transcribed out of the Original Journal-Book of the House of Commons in manner and form following viz. Sir Thomas Smith Sir Owen Hopton Sir Thomas Scot the Masters of the Requests M r Serjeant Manwood M r Serjeant Geoffry M r Fleetwood and M r Sands who were appointed to meet in the Star-Chamber at two of the Clock in the Afternoon The Bill for preservation of Woods was read the first time On Saturday the 7 th day of April the Bill concerning Religion was read and the first of the said Bills was delivered to the Commissioners and the residue read and appointed to remain in the House and this not to stand for any reading Vide what Bills these were on Tuesday May the 17 th ensuing It should seem that the first of these Bills here mentioned is that which is stiled the Bill A and the other Bills those which were then also offered to the House and thereupon referred to certain select Committees to be considered of before they were suffered to be read in the House which being admitted of this day was not allowed by the House for any reading but only as may very well be gathered for the said House it self to consider of them before they were further entertained But there can be no absolute certainty set down hereof in respect that through the negligence of Fulk Onslow Esq at this time Clerk of the House of Commons it is so confusedly or briefly set down although in the general it is very probable that this proceeding in Ecclesiastical matters with so much caution and deliberation was because they desired to give no occasion of distaste to her Majesty who ever for the most part shewed her self very averse to their intermedling with any thing concerning Church matters Now follow other of this days passages out of the before-cited Anonymous Journal more particularly mentioned at the beginning of this present Journal but it is fully discovered what these Bills were on May the 17 th Thursday ensuing M r Strickland first moved that M r Norton might be required to deliver such Books as he had M r Newdigate moved that where one of the causes for the Calling of the Parliament and perhaps the chiefest was for a Subsidy he thought it not amiss to make offer of a Subsidy
that he should be presently Committed to the Serjeants-Ward as Prisoner and so remaining should be Examined upon his said Speech for the extenuating of his fault therein by all the Privy Council being of this House the Master of the Requests the Captain of the Guard M r Treasurer of the Chamber the Master of the Jewel-House the Master of the Wardrobe M r Lieutenant of the Tower Sir Thomas Scott Sir Rowland Hayward M r Attorney of the Dutchy M r Henry Knolles the Elder M r Sampoole M r Randall M r Birched M r Marsh who were appointed to meet this Afternoon between two and three of the Clock at the Star-Chamber and to make report at this House to Morrow next And then the said Peter Wentworth was brought to the Bar and Committed thereupon to the said Serjeants-Ward according to the said Order This Afternoon-Passages being thus transcribed for the most part out of the Original Journal-Book of the House of Commons now follows the Examination of the said M r Wentworth before the Committees before appointed which is transcribed out of a Memorial or Copy thereof set down by the said M r Wentworth himself being as followeth Post Meridiem A true Report of that which was laid to my Charge in the Star-Chamber by the Committees of the Parliament House viz. the House of Commons that same Afternoon viz. Wednesday February the 8 th after that I had delivered the Speech in the House that Forenoon and my Answer to the same Committees FIrst Where is your late Speech you promised to deliver in writing Wentworth Here it is and I deliver it upon two Conditions The first is that you shall peruse it all and if you can find any want of good will to my Prince and State in any part thereof let me Answer all as if I had uttered all The second is that you shall deliver it unto the Queens Majesty if her Majesty or you of her Privy-Council can find any want of Love to her Majesty or the State therein also let me Answer it Commit We will deal with no more than you uttered in the House Went. Your Honours cannot refuse to deliver it to her Majesty for I do send it to her Majesty as my Heart and Mind knowing it will do her Majesty good it will hurt no man but my self Commit Seeing your desire is to have us deliver it to her Majesty we will deliver it Went. I humbly require your Honours so to do Commit Then the Speech being read they said Here you have uttered certain rumors of the Queens Majesty where and of whom heard you them Went. If your Honours ask me as Councellors to her Majesty you shall pardon me I will make you no Answer I will do no such injury to the place from whence I came for I am now no private Person I am a publick and a Councellor to the whole State in that place where it is lawful for me to speak my mind freely and not for you as Councellors to call me to account for any thing that I do speak in the House and therefore if you ask me as Councellors to her Majesty you shall pardon me I will make no Answer but if you ask me as Committees from the House I will make you the best Answer I can Commit We ask you as Committees from the House Went. I will then Answer you and the willinger for that mine Answer will be in some part so imperfect as of necessity it must be Your Question consisteth of these two points where and of whom I heard these Rumors The place where I heard them was the Parliament House but of whom I assure you I cannot tell Commit This is no Answer to say you cannot tell of whom neither will we take it for any Went. Truly your Honours must needs take it for an Answer when I can make you no better Commit Belike you have heard some Speeches in the Town of her Majesties misliking of Religion and Succession you are loth to utter of whom and did use Speeches thereupon Went. I assure your Honours I can shew you that Speech at my own House written with my hand two or three years ago So that you may thereby judge that I did not speak it of any thing that I heard since I came to Town Commit You have Answered that but where heard you it then Went. If your Honours do think I speak for excuses sake let this satisfie you I protest before the living God I cannot tell of whom I heard these Rumors yet I do verily think that I heard them of a hundred or two in the House Commit Then of so many you can name some Went. No surely because it was so general a Speech I marked none neither do men mark speakers commonly when they be general and I assure you if I could tell I would not For I will never utter any thing told me to the hurt of any man when I am not enforced thereunto as in this Case I may chuse Yet I would deal plainly with you for I would tell your Honours so and if your Honours do not Credit me I will voluntarily take an Oath if you offer me a Book that I cannot tell of whom I heard those Rumors But if you offer me an Oath of your Authorities I will refuse it because I will do nothing to infringe the Liberties of the House But what need I to use these Speeches I will give you an instance whereupon I heard these Rumors to your satisfying even such a one as if you will speak the truth you shall confess that you heard the same as well as I. Commit In so doing we will be satisfied what is that Went. The last Parliament by which it may be conceived he meant and intended that Parliament in an 13 Reginae Eliz. he that is now Speaker viz. Robert Bell Esquire who was also Speaker in the first Session of this present Parliament in an 14 Reginae ejusdem uttered a very good Speech for the calling in of certain Licences granted to four Courtiers to the utter undoing of six or eight thousand of the Queens Majesties Subjects This Speech was so disliked of some of the Councel that he was sent for and so hardly dealt with that he came into the House with such an amazed Countenance that it daunted all the House in such sort that for ten twelve or sixteen days there was not one in the House that durst deal in any matter of importance And in those simple matters that they dealt in they spent more words and time in their preamble requiring that they might not be mistaken than they did in the matter they spake unto This inconvenience grew unto the House by the Councellors hard handling of the said good member whereupon this rumor grew in the House Sirs you may not speak against Licences the Queens Majesty will be angry the Councel will be too too angry and this rumor I suppose there is not one of
so in this our blessed time of Peace that we enjoy by the blessing of God through the Ministry of her Majesty we ought in time to make provision to prevent any storm that may arise either here or abroad and neither to be too careless or negligent but think that the tayl of these storms which are so bitter and so boisterous in other Countries may reach us also before they be ended especially if we do not forget the hatred that is born us by the Adversary of our Religion both for our profession and for that this Realm is also a merciful Sanctuary for such poor Christians as sly hither for succour so as now one of the most principal cares that we ought to care in this great Councel of the Realm is both to consider aforehand the dangers that may come by the malice of Enemies and to provide in time how to resist them and seeing that by those great occasions which I have remembred you can easily understand how low her Majesties Coffers are brought it is our parts frankly and willingly to offer unto her Majesty such a Contribution as shall be able to restore the same again in such sort as she may be sufficiently furnished of Treasure to put in order and maintain her Forces by Land and by Sea to answer any thing that shall be attempted against her and us and unless it might seem strange to some that her Majesty should want this some considering that not long sithence Aid was granted by the Realm To that I Answer That albeit her Majesty is not to yield an account how she spendeth her Treasure yet for your satisfactions I will let you understand such things as are very true and which I dare affirm having more knowledge thereof than some other in respect of the place I hold in her Majesties Service First how favourable the Taxations of Subsidies be through the whole Realm cannot be unknown to any whereby far less cometh to her Majesties Coffers than by the Law is granted a matter now drawn to be so usual as it is hard to be reformed Next the clearing of all Debts that run upon Interest to the insupportable charge of the Realm Thirdly the charge is suppressing the Rebellion in the North. Fourthly the free and honourable repayment of the last Loans the like whereof was not seen before Fifthly the Journey to Edenburgh-Castle for the quieting of that Country and this And lastly the great and continual Charges in Ireland by the evil disposition of the people there all which could not have been performed by the last Aid except it had pleased her Majesty to spare out of her own Revenues great Sums of money for the supplying of that which lacked wherein she more respected the Realm than her own particular Estate living as you see in most temperate manner without either Building or other superfluous things of pleasure and like as these be causes sufficient to move you to devise how these wants may be repaired so you ought the rather to do it for that her Majesty lacketh and cannot have without great inconvenience those helps which in the times of her Father her Brother and Sister were used as the abasing of Coin which brought infinite sums to them but wrought great damage to the Realm which we yet feel and should do more had not her Majesty to her perpetual Fame restored the same again so much as the time could suffer The sale of Lands whereof came also very great sums of money but that is not hereafter to be used saving that by the same the Revenues of the Crown are greatly diminished which it cannot more bear the borrowing of money upon Interest the burthen whereof the Realm hath felt so heavy as that is never more to be done if by any means it may be avoided And yet notwithstanding all those helps it is apparent that Subsidies were continually granted in those times if so then much more now then besides War and other extraordinary Charges may happen her Majesties very ordinary Charges which she cannot but sustain are far greater by dearth of prices and other occasions than in any other Princes days as you may see by the ordinary and annual Charges of the Houshold the Navy the Ordnance the Armory the Garrison of Berwick the standing Garrison and Officers within the Realm of Ireland And whether these are like to be more costly to her Majesty than in former times in respect of the prices of all things let every man judge by the experience he hath of his private expences And so to draw to an end for avoiding of your trouble I trust these few things may suffice to remember us how her Majesty found the Realm how she hath restored and preserved it and how the present State is now and therewith all may serve as reasons sufficient to perswade us to deal in this necessary cause as her Majesty being the Head of the Common-Wealth be not unfurnished of that which will be sufficient to maintain both her self and us against the private or open malice of Enemies wherein let us so proceed as her Majesty may find how much we think our selves bound to God that hath given us so Gracious a Queen over us and shew thereby also such gratuity towards her as she may perform the course of her Government cum alacritate This foregoing Speech of Sir Walter Mildmay Knight Chancellor of the Exchequer being thus transcribed out of the Copy thereof I had by me now follow the Proceedings thereupon out of the Original Journal Book of the House of Commons by which it appeareth that divers Members of the said House were appointed immediately after it to have Conference for drawing of a Bill for a Subsidy which Committees were as followeth viz. All the Privy-Council being of this House M r Captain of the Guard the Master of the Requests Sir Thomas Scott Sir Rowland Hayward Sir Nicholas Arnold Sir Thomas Shirley Sir George Speake Sir Henry Lea Sir Robert Wingfeild Sir John Thynne Sir George Turpin Sir William Winter Sir William Morgan Sir Edward Stanhope M r Edward Horsey Master Recorder of London M r Serjeant Lovelace M r Sampoole M r Grimston M r More M r Popham M r Telverton and M r Hilliard to meet this Afternoon at the Star-Chamber or some other place near unto it at three of the Clock M r Wilson Master of the Requests M r Norton M r Marsh M r Edward Stanhope M r Sandes M r Atkins and M r George Ireland were appointed to draw a Bill for the safe keeping of the Church Books or Registers of the Christnings Marriages and Burials and to meet upon Sunday next in the Afternoon at M r Wilsons Chamber in the Arches at three of the Clock M r Comptroller M r Chancellor of the Exchequer M r Recorder of London M r Attorney of the Dutchy M r Popham M r Marsh M r Sampoole M r Cromwell M r Thomas Browne and M r Robert Snagg
Hoddy Mr. French Mr. Alford and Mr. Norton to meet to Morrow in the Afternoon at three of the Clock in the Exchequer Chamber Certain Amendments in the Bill of Rogues c. reported by Mr. Treasurer upon the last Committee of the Bill which amendments were read and thereupon the Bill Ordered to be ingrossed Two Bills lastly had each of them their first reading of which the latter was the Bill for Trials by Juries Edward Smalley Servant unto Arthur Hall Esq being this day brought to the Bar in the House by the Serjeant of this House and accompanied with two Serjeants of London was presently delivered from his Imprisonment and Execution according to the former Judgment of this House and the said Serjeants of London discharged of their said Prisoner and immediately after that the said Serjeants of London were sequestred out of this House and the said Edward Smalley was committed to the charge of the Serjeant of this House And thereupon the said Edward Smalley was sequestred till this House should be resolved upon some former Motions whether the said Edward Smalley did procure himself to be Arrested upon the said Execution in the abusing and contempt of this House or not Vide Mar. 10. Saturday postea All the Privy-Council being of this House the Lord Russell Mr. Captain of the Guard Mr. Wilson Mr. Lieutenant of the Tower Sir William Winter Mr. Serjeant Lovelace Sir Henry Knivett Mr. Crooke Mr. Coleby Mr. Popham and Mr. Norton were appointed to meet upon Friday next in the Afternoon at three of the Clock in the Exchequer Chamber but through the great negligence of Fulk Onslow Esquire at this time Clerk of the House of Commons the business about which the foresaid Members of the House were appointed to meet doth not at all appear On Wednesday the 29 th day of February Seven Bills of no great moment had each of them one reading of which one being the Bill for Chepstow-Bridge another for Rochester-Bridge and the third for the Town of Reading were each of them read the third time and upon the Question passed the House Upon a Motion made by Robert Bainbrigge Gent. one of the Burgesses for the Borough of ..... in the County of ..... against one Williams as well for sundry unsitting Speeches pronounced by the said Williams in misliking of the present State and Government of the Realm and also for threatning and assaulting of the said Robert Bainbrigge the Serjeant of this House was thereupon by Order of this House presently sent for the said Williams to be brought unto this House to Answer such matters as shall be objected against him Two Bills of no great moment had each of them one reading of which the second being the Bill against excess in Apparel was read the first time The Petition and Motions made touching the reformation of Discipline in the Church was committed only to all the Privy-Council of this House Vide concerning this matter on Friday the 10 th day of March ensuing Mr. Sollicitor and Mr. Doctor Berkley brought from the Lords four Bills of which the first was the Bill for the assurance of the Mannor of New Hall to Thomas Earl of Sussex the second for the appointing of Justices in the Shires of Wales the third concerning Offices found in the Counties Palatines and the last for the assurance of certain Lands unto Sir John Ryvers Knight All the Privy-Council being of this House the Lord Russell the Masters of the Requests Sir Thomas Scott Sir Henry Gates Sir Henry Wallope and divers others were appointed to meet this Afternoon in the Exchequer Chamber between two and three of the Clock and agree touching the nature of the Petition to be made to the Queens Majesty upon the Motions for reformation of Discipline in the Church and that the matter of the Petition so agreed upon then those of the Privy-Council only to move the same to the Lords of the Privy-Council after report first made thereof to this House Vide concerning this matter on Friday the 10 th day of March following Walter Williams being brought to the Bar confessed that he did strike Mr. Bainbrigge and that he offered to strike at him with his Dagger Whereupon it was Ordered that he remain in the Serjeants Ward till the Order of this House be further known to Morrow Vide. On Thursday the first day of March Seven Bills of no great moment had each of them one reading of which one being the Bill for the true making of Woollen-Cloths another for Kentish and Suffolk Cloths and another for toleration of certain Clothiers in the Counties of Somerset Wilts and Gloucester were each of them read the first time and thereupon committed to the former Committees who were nominated on Thursday the 16 th day of February foregoing and unto Sir Thomas Scott Mr. Serjeant Lovelace Mr. Savile Mr. Peacock Mr. Gargrave Mr. Mickleborn Mr. Langley and Mr. S t John to meet this Afternoon in the Star-Chamber at two of the Clock as also to conser touching the unlawful ingrossing of Woolls Two Bills also had each of them their first reading of which the second was the Bill against common Promoters Sir Richard Read and Mr. Doctor Vaughan brought from the Lords the Bill for the payment of Tythes within the Parish of Hallifax and the other to take away the benefit of Clergy from Offenders in Rape and Burglary Martin Cole one of the Burgesses for Sudbury in the County of Suffolk was this day Licensed by Mr. Speaker for his great business to be absent for four days The Bill lastly for setting the poor on work and for avoiding of idleness was read the third time and passed the House On Friday the second day of March Six Bills of no great moment had each of them one reading of which the second being the Bill for assurance of certain Lands to Sir John Rivers K t was read the second time but no mention is made that it was either Ordered to be ingrossed or referred to Committees because it had been formerly sent from the Lords The Bill against wearing of unlawful Weapons was twice read and committed thereupon unto Mr. Comptroller Sir Henry Radcliffe Sir Thomas Scott Sir Henry Knivett Sir Henry Gates and others to be considered of presently Two Bills also had each of them one reading of which the second being the Bill against the buying and selling of rooms and places in Colledges Schools c. was read the first time Mr. Treasurer one of the Committees for the Petition touching reformation of the Discipline of the Church reported that he and the residue of the Committees have met and agreed upon a Bill to be made for that purpose which Bill was then offered and received in the said House and then read accordingly Vide concerning this matter on Friday the 9 th day of this instant March ensuing The two Bills viz. for maintenance of Colledges and against buying and selling of rooms and places in Schools
first time M r Doctor Vaughan and M r Doctor Yale brought from the Lords the Bill for setting the Poor on work and for avoiding of Idleness with certain amendments and a Proviso M r Treasurer one of the Committees in the Lady Wainman's Cause reported that both the Parties have submitted themselves to the Arbitrement of the Lord Treasurer the Lord Chamberlain the Earl of Leicester M r Treasurer M r Comptroller M r Chancellor of the Dutchy and M r Captain of the Guard or the most part of them to be made within one Year next after the Session of this present Session of Parliament for the performance and accomplishment of the same Arbitrement A Proviso with some Amendments was offered to the Bill for reformation of Inholders common Cooks and Tavern Keepers and being twice read after the Question was upon the Division of the House by the advantage of the number of forty persons Ordered to be ingrossed and added to the Bill and then afterwards upon another Question and like Division of the House the Bill with the Proviso was dashed with the difference of twenty eight persons Post Meridiem In the Afternoon the Master of the Rolls and M r Serjeant Barham did bring from the Lords a Bill for the appointing of Wharfs and Keys for the unlading and discharging of Merchandizes and withal a Message from them that some of this House may be appointed to have Conference with some such of their Lordships as shall be thought meet touching such private Bills in both Houses as upon their Conference together shall be thought fittest to be Examined whereupon it was Ordered that twelve of this House shall be appointed for that purpose viz. M r Treasurer M r Captain of the Guard M r Wilson Master of the Requests Sir Henry Ratcliffe Sir Rowland Hayward Sir Thomas Scott Sir John Thynne Sir Henry Wallope Sir George Penrudock M r Popham M r Sampoole and M r Yelverton The Bill concerning Authority given to the Justices of the Queens Majesties Forests Chaces and Parks was read the second time and committed this day afterwards The two Bills for Denizens and the Bill for Presentations by Lapse being amended were sent up to the Lords by M r Treasurer and others M r Serjeant Barham and M r Doctor Vaughan brought word from the Lords that their Lordships do require that the Committees of this House may confer with them to Morrow in the Morning before eight of the Clock in the Parliament Chamber M r Comptroller M r Chancellor of the Exchequer M r Captain of the Guard Sir Henry Gates Sir Henry Ratcliffe Sir Thomas Barrington Sir Nicolas Arnold Sir Henry Knivett M r Recorder of London M r Sampoole M r Stanhoppe M r Crooke M r Snagg M r John Vaughan M r Serjeant Jeffries M r Serjeant Lovelace M r Edward Horsey M r Robert Wroth M r Colby M r Topclyffe M r Bowyer M r John S t John M r Dawney M r Robert Colshill M r Digbie and M r Birkhed were appointed in Committee for the Bill concerning certain Authority given to the Justices of the Queens Majesties Forests Chaces Parks and Warrens Nota That this Bill having been sent down from the Lords to the House of Commons on Wednesday the 7 th day of this instant March foregoing should without all question never have been referd to Committees upon the second reading this instant Thursday except the said House of Commons had taken such just exceptions at the same as they afterwards made known to a Committee of the Lords and by reason of which finally the same was stopped from further passing The further carriage and proceeding of which business being wholly omitted in the Original Journal-Book of the House of Commons through the great negligence of Fulk Onslow Esq at this time Clerk of the same I have thought good to supply it out of a written Memorial or Copy thereof I had by me because it may appear upon what just grounds and solid reasons the Members of the said House did refuse to pass the said Bill and although it doth not certainly appear whether the said Proceedings in the said Bill between the Committees of either House were this day or no yet I have referred it thereunto as the most probable and likely time in respect that there is no further mention made of this Bill or business in either of the Original Journal-Books of the Upper House or House of Commons upon any ensuing day during this present Session of Parliament These things being thus premised the foresaid Memorial or written Discourse of this business doth now ensue to be inserted The Committees before-named having upon deliberate consideration of the parts and of the scope of the said Bill touching Authority to be given to the Justices of the Queens Majesties Forests c. found the same not convenient to proceed did nevertheless out of their respect unto the Lords from whom the Bill had been sent down desire first to satisfie them before they utterly refused and dashed the said Bill and did thereupon send unto their Lordships who as it appeareth by the Original Journal-Book of the Upper House did this Afternoon sit to offer them Conference which they accordingly accepted and thereupon there did assemble in a place appointed as Commissioners or rather as Committees for the Lords the Earl of Sussex the Earl of Rutland the Earl of Leicester the Lord Grey of Wilton and the Lord Hunsdon having for their assistance standing by the two Chief Justices and the Queens Attorney General upon these the foresaid Committees of the House of Commons by Order of the same House gave their attendance and by Sir Walter Mildmay K t Chancellor of the Exchequer the second of the said Committees in the name and by consent of the rest said to the Lords in effect as followeth viz. That whereas a Bill touching the enlargement of the Justices of Forest-Authority had passed from their Lordships and was sent to the House of Commons the same had received there two readings and upon the second reading was greatly impugned by many Arguments made against it nevertheless the respect they had to their Lordships moved them to stay any further proceeding therein to the hazard of the Bill until by some Conference with their Lordships the House in such things as were objected might be satisfied To that end he said the House of Commons had sent them to attend upon their Lordships and so entring into the matter said That of many things spoken to the hindrance of the Bill they would trouble their Lordships but with some few such as they had noted to have been of most value by which he said their Lordships should find that the House of Commons did take the Bill to be unnecessary chargeable dangerous obscure For the first that whereas in the preamble of the Bill it was pretended that one principal cause of this Act was that the Justices of the Forests having no Authority to sit
in the days of our Predecessors by the punishment of such inconsiderate and disorderly Speakers hath appeared And so to return Let this serve us for an Example to beware that we offend not in the like hereafter lest that in forgetting our duties so far we may give just cause to our gracious Soveraign to think that this her Clemency hath given occasion of further boldness and thereby so much grieve and provoke her as contrary to her most gracious and mild consideration she be constrained to change her natural Clemency into necessary and just severity a thing that he trusted should never happen amongst wise and dutiful men such as the Members of this House are thought always to be Between which Speech and the reftoring of the said M r Wentworth unto the House although it be not mentioned in the before-cited written Memorial of the said Speech I had by me as appeareth plainly by the Original Journal-Book of the House of Commons these ensuing Passages intervened in the said House as followeth viz. M r Treasurer M r John Thynne Sir Nicholas Arnold Sir Henry Gate M r Marsh and M r Cromwell were sent to the Lords for Conference presently touching the reforming of some amendments of this House in the Bill which came from the Lords for taking away the benefit of the Clergy from persons Convict of Rape and Burglary M r Doctor Vaughan and M r Doctor Barkley did bring from the Lords the Bill for preservation of Pheasants and Partridges All the Privy-Councel being of this House the Lord Russell M r Captain of the Guard the Masters of Requests M r Treasurer of the Chamber the Master of the Wardrobe the Master of the Jewel-House Sir Henry Knivett Sir Thomas Scott Sir John Thynne Sir William Winter M r Crooke M r Popham M r Yelverton M r Norton M r Sampoole M r Alford and M r Skinner were appointed to meet this Afternoon at two of the Clock in the Exchequer Chamber touching Conference for the manner of Petition to be made unto the Queens Majesty touching Marriage Vide on Friday the 9 th day of this instant March foregoing and on Wednesday March the 14 th in the Afternoon ensuing These intervening Passages being thus transcribed out of the Original Journal-Book of the House of Commons now follows the manner of the restoring of the aforesaid Peter Wentworth Esquire being partly transcribed out of the abovesaid Original Journal-Book and partly out of the before-mentioned written Memorial or Copy thereof in manner and form ensuing M r Peter Wentworth was brought by the Serjeant at Arms that attended the House to the Bar within the same and after some Declaration made unto him by M r Speaker in the name of the whole House both of his own great fault and offence and also of her Majesties great and bountiful mercy shewed unto him and after his humble Submission upon his Knees acknowledging his fault and craving her Majesties Pardon and Favour he was received again into the House and restored to his place to the great contentment of all that were present This business of M r Wentworth being thus at large set down now follows a great part of the residue of this dayes Passages out of the Original Journal-Book of the House of Commons it self The Bill for the Lord Stourton was read the third time in setting down of which Bill it seemeth the time of the reading is erroneously entred for this was doubtless the second reading and that the third as appeareth plainly by the Original Journal-Book it self was not until Tuesday the 13 th day of this instant March ensuing when the Bill also passed and it is the rather probable that this was but the second reading as is also set down in a written Memorial of this business I had by me in respect that it was upon this reading spoken unto ' and referred to Committees but as it should seem before the said Bill was agitated in the House or referred to Committees this business intervened which is Entred in the Original Journal-Book of the House of Commons in manner and form following M r Doctor Lewes and M r Doctor Yale did bring from the Lords the Bill touching taking away the benefit of the Clergy from Persons Convict of Rape and Burglary to be amended in the former addition of amendment thereof by this House whereupon the same being presently amended was together with the Bill of Addition to the former Statutes for amending and repairing of High-ways the Bill with the Amendments and Proviso for the repairing of the Bridges and High-ways near unto the City of Oxford the Bill for the Hospital of S t Cross near Winchester and the Bill for the Lord Viscount Howard of Bindon sent up to the Lords by M r Secretary Smith and others with the Bill also for maintenance of the Universities and of the Colledges of Eaton and Winchester to be reformed in the Amendments of their Lordships in the same Bill Which business being over-passed as it is inserted out of the Original Journal-Book of the House of Commons now follows the dispute in the House upon the foresaid second reading of the Lord Stourton's Bill which is supplied out of a written Memorial or Copy of that business I had by me with very little alteration or addition It was first alledged in the House of Commons against the further proceeding of the Bill for the restitution in Blood of the Lord Stourton whose Father was Attainted of Murther and thereby his Blood corrupted by some in the said House that the said party who now sued to be restored in Blood had before given cause for men to think that he would not hereafter be worthy of so much favour and by some other that there wanted in the Bill sufficient provision for such as had been Purchasers from his Father Grandfather and other his Ancestors To the first Objection it was said in the House That seeing her Majesty had so graciously yielded to his Petition there was no doubt but she was well satisfied in all such things as might touch him and therefore no cause that this House should mislike her gracious Favours to be extended to any of her Subjects in such Cases but rather to hope that he being a young Nobleman would prove a good Servant to her Majesty and the Realm as divers of his Ancestors had done The second Objection was thought worthy of consideration That if the saving which was already in the Bill were not sufficient there might be other provision added This dispute concerning the foresaid Bill being thus transcribed out of the foresaid written Memorial or Copy thereof I had by me now follows the Committees names who were appointed thereupon out of the Original Journal-Book of the House of Commons being as followeth M r Chancellor of the Exchequer the Master of the Wardrobe M r Recorder of London M r Norton M r Sampoole M r Dalton M r Savile M r Marsh M r Yelverton M r
the Pope and his Confederates are so notorious unto us and seeing the dangers be so great so evident and so imminent and seeing that Preparations to withstand them cannot be made without support of the Realm and seeing that our Duties to God our Queen and Country and the necessity that hangeth upon our own Safeguards be reasons sufficient to perswade us let us think upon these matters as the weight of them deserveth and so provide in time both by Laws to restrain and correct the evil affected Subjects and by provision of that which shall be requisite for the maintenance of Forces as our Enemies finding our minds so willing and our hands so ready to keep in Order-our Country and to furnish her Majesty with all that shall be necessary may either be discouraged to attempt any thing against us or if they do they may find such resistance as shall bring confusion to themselves honour to our most Gracious Queen and Safety to all of us M r Norton pursued the same Admonition and required the House to proceed to a manner of executing it which in his opinion was to appoint all the Privy-Council of this House and certain other fit Persons to consult of Bills convenient to be framed according to the said Motion to be presented to the House which Motion also was well allowed and Committees appointed to meet in the Exchequer-Chamber that Afternoon at two of the Clock viz. All the Privy Council of this House Sir Thomas Heneage Treasurer of the Chamber the Masters of Requests Sir George Carie Knight Marshal M r Fortescue Master of the Wardrobe M r Recorder of London M r Serjeant Fenner M r Serjeant Fleetwood Sir James Harrington Sir William More Sir Thomas Scott Sir John Brockett Sir Henry Radclyffe M r Yelverton M r Henry Gates M r Hutton M r Philip Sidney Sir Henry Leigh M r Woolley Sir Thomas Shirley Sir Henry Knivett M r Norton M r Aldersey Sir Rowland Hayward M r Matthew Sir Robert Wingfeild Sir Thomas Porter Sir Thomas Parrot M r John Price M r Aylmer Sir George Speak M r Lieutenant of the Tower Sir Thomas Cecill Sir Arthur Bassett M r Crooke M r Robert Wroth M r Edward Lewkenor M r Thompson M r Layton M r Edward Stanhope M r Charles Morrison M r Gilbert Talbot Mr. Edward Cary Mr. Peter Wentworth Mr. Sandes Sir Robert Stapleton Sir Nicholas S t Leger Sir James Mervin Sir William Winter Sir Edward Unton Mr. Fabian Philipps Mr. Edgecombe Sir Henry Woodhouse Mr. Payton and Mr. Digby It was Ordered that the House should be called upon Saturday next at two of the Clock in the Afternoon William Hanney Servant to Mr. Anthony Kirle having on Monday the 23 th day of January last past been present in the House of Commons about the space of half an hour being no Member of it and having been thereupon committed to the Serjeant of the House was this Forenoon brought to the Bar by the Serjeant who humbly upon his Knees submitted himself to the grace and favour of this House acknowledging his fault to proceed only upon simplicity and ignorance whereupon after some Examinations when he had willingly taken the Oath against the Popes Supremacy he was remitted by the House paying his Fees In the Afternoon about two of the Clock the said Committees did meet in the Exchequer Chamber where M r Norton spake very well to those matters which had been propounded by Sir Walter Mildmay in the Forenoon and did thereupon exhibite certain Articles to the like purpose which were by the Committees considered and some others added unto them And it was Ordered that M r Serjeant Flectwood M r Serjeant Fenner M r Serjeant Flowerden and M r Yelverton and Mr. Norton should set down the matters upon which they had there agreed and having digested them into Articles should exhibit them at the next meeting of the Committees which was appointed to be on Friday next at two of the Clock in the Afternoon On Thursday the 26 th day of January the Bill for avoiding of Counterfeit Instruments under Counterfeit Seals of any Office or Offices was read the second time and committed unto Mr. Vice-Chamberlain Mr. Chancellor of the Exchequer Mr. Treasurer of the Chamber Sir Thomas Brown Mr. Sands Mr. Cromwell and Mr. Atkins who were appointed to meet on Saturday next at two of the Clock in the Afternoon in the Exchequer Chamber The Bill for avoiding of Incumbrances against Purchasers was read the second time and Ordered to be ingrossed The Bill that Actions upon the Case shall be brought in proper Counties was read the second time and after sundry Arguments was upon the question committed to Sir George Cary Sir George Speake Mr. Serjeant Fenner Mr. Wroth and others who were appointed to meet this Afternoon at two of the Clock in the Temple-Church On Friday the 27 th day of January Seven Bills of no great moment had each of them one reading of which the first being the Bill for the speedy recovery of Debts was read the first time The Bill for the Reformation of the Clerk of the Market and the Proviso added unto it was read the second time and committed unto Mr. Treasurer Mr. Comptroller Mr. Lieutenant of the Tower Sir Thomas S t Poole Mr. Grimsditch and others who were appointed to meet on Monday next in the Afternoon at two of the Clock and the Clerk of the Market to be Licensed to attend them and to be heard before them if he will The House being moved did grant that the Serjeant who was to go before the Speaker being weak and somewhat pained in his Limbs might ride upon a Foot-Cloth Nag This day lastly in the Afternoon was a Motion made by Mr. Norton to have a Committee appointed to draw two Bills the one against secret and stoln Contracts of Children without the consent of Parents c. The other against exacting upon the Clergy by Ordinaries and by under-Collectors of Tenths and it was committed to Sir Walter Mildmay and himself Post Meridiem The Committees appointed on Wednesday last the 23 th day of this instant January to meet this Afternoon at two of the Clock in the Exchequer Chamber about the framing and drawing up the two Bills of Religion and the Subsidy met accordingly where the Articles and heads that concerned them were appointed to Mr. Norton to Pen and bring to the House the next day On Saturday the 28 th day of January Three Bills of no great moment had each of them one reading of which the last being the Bill for the preservation of Woods was read the second time and committed unto Mr. Lieutenant of the Tower Sir Thomas Scott and others who were appointed to meet at the Temple-Church upon Monday next at two of the Clock in the Afternoon Two Bills also had each of them their second reading of which the first being a Bill against the erecting of Iron-Mills near the City of London and the
Justice of the Common-Pleas having informed this House touching the State of the Record mentioned in the Bill for the Lord Zouch and the said Lord Zouch having been here likewise heard at the Bar and the said Record having been here seen and perused in this House and read by the Clerk it was resolved that Sir Thomas Sampoole Mr. Recorder of London Mr. Harrington Mr. Cromwell Mr. Lewkenor and Mr. Cowper do consider of the Decree heretofore made in the Chancery touching the said matter and of the Exemplification of the said Record and meet to Morrow Morning at seven of the Clock in the Forenoon in the Committee Chamber of this House and afterwards to make Report Vide touching this matter on Friday the 17 th day of this instant March following Mr. Treasurer touching the Committee yesterday with the Lords for the Bill of maintenance of the Borders against Scotland declared that their Lordships in the Conference yesterday seem'd to marvel much that their Lordships having first passed a Bill with them for the said purpose and sending it down to this House this House would without requiring further Conference with their Lordships take upon them to make a new Bill for the same matter and not proceed with the said Bill thereof which came from their Lordships And their Lordships thought this House ought not so to have done neither could well by Warrant of any former Precedents of this House And further that some of the said Committees of this House then answered unto their Lordships that this House had cause to do as they did and might likewise well so do Mr. Vice-Chamberlain very excellently setting forth the great benefits and blessings of God upon this Realm in the Godly most loving and careful Government and Ministry of her Majesty and withal the great earnest most faithful and dutiful zeal and obedience of this House unto her Highness no less in every particular Member of the same than is or can be in any other Subject of this Realm whosoever noble or other as hath and may well appear by them all in their Actions And also taking occasion of the Bill lately very gravely carefully and dutifully considered and dealt in by this House for the due care and preservation of her Majesties Honour Fame and Dignity but nevertheless dashed by the Lords in the Upper House and not in this House nor in the default of this House moved that this House would yet notwithstanding for many great and weighty respects by him most excellently amply and effectually and no less aptly declared proceed to some such course for due provision to the same end of the safety of her Highness Honour Fame and Dignity as by some of this House for that purpose to be selected shall seem meet to express and shew the faithful hearts careful love and dutiful obedience of such thankful Subjects unto so Gracious Provident and Merciful a Prince Whereupon were appointed all the Privy-Council being of this House M r Treasurer of the Chamber M r Knight Marshal M r Doctor Dile Master of the Requests Sir Thomas Sanpoole Sir William fitz William Sir William Moore Sir Thomas Shirley M r Recorder of London M r Sands M r Atkins M r Cowper M r Cromwell M r Norton Sir Henry Gate Sir George Turpin M r Wolley M r Beale M r Thomson M r Crooke M r Nicholas S t Leger M r Vincent Skinner M r Pister Mr. Edward Lewkenor Mr. Diggs Mr. Dalton and Mr. Alford to meet in the Exchequer Chamber between one and two of the Clock this Afternoon to confer for the drawing of a Bill against to Morrow Morning for the safety and preservation of her Majesties Honour Fame and Person accordingly Vide concerning a Bill on Wednesday the first day of February foregoing much to this purpose as also on March the 13 th Monday foregoing The Bill for restitution in Blood of Philip Earl of Arundel was read the third time and passed upon the Question On Wednesday the 15 th day of March Two Bills of no great moment had each of them one reading of which the first being the Bill for maintenance of Mariners and of the Navigation was read the second time and two Provisoes also to the same Bill were twice read and committed unto Mr. Lieutenant of the Tower Sir Thomas Sampoole Mr. Aldersey Mr. Grice Mr. Lewkenor Mr. Norton and others who were appointed to meet at the Temple-Hall at two of the Clock this Afternoon Two Bills also had each of them one reading of which the Bill for the more indifferent Tryal by Juries was read the third time and dashed upon the Question Six Bills were sent up to the Lords by Sir Henry Ratclyffe Sir Thomas Cecill Sir Edward Horsey Mr. Lieutenant of the Tower and others whereof the fifth was the Bill for restitution in Blood of John and Dudley S t Leger and the last for the more indifferent Tryal by Juries Mr. Treasurer reported that according to the Order and Commission of this House to him yesterday and others he and others of the Committees had met together and drawn a new Bill and so delivered the Bill in the House to be read The Bill against seditious words and rumors uttered against the Queens most Excellent Majesty was twice read and upon the Question Ordered to be ingrossed Mr. Attorney General and Mr. Doctor Gibbon did bring from the Lords the Bill for fortifying of the Borders against Scotland with some Amendments which Bill had passed this House before and was sent to their Lordships from this House On Thursday the 16 th day of March Three Bills of no great moment had each of them one reading of which the third being the Bill for Exposition of the Statute of Bankrupts was read the third time and dashed upon the Question Sir Thomas Sampoole one of the Committees in the matter for the Lord Zouch whose names see on Monday the 13 th day of this instant March foregoing made report of their Travel therein and of the Estate of the Title of the said Lord Zouch to the Mannor in demand and thereupon the said Lord Zouch was afterward with his Councel heard at the Bar. Vide concerning this matter on Tuesday the 14 th day of this instant March foregoing and also on Friday the 17 th day of the same Month following Mr. Doctor Clark and Mr. Doctor Barkley did bring from the Lords a Bill before-passed this House touching the abolishing of certain deceitful stuffs used in the dying of Cloths and now returned by their Lordships with some Amendments and Provisoes thereunto added The Bill against seditious words and rumors uttered against the Queens most Excellent Majesty was read the third time and after sundry Motions and Arguments and some Amendments added were thrice read and the Bill passed upon the question Mr. Cope standing up and offering to speak unto the House said unto Mr. Speaker and Charged him with these Speeches that is to say That Mr. Speaker
prayer and thanksgiving accordingly The Master of the Rolls and the Lord Chief Baron did bring word from the Lords that their Lordships do desire present Conference with some of this House in a matter of great importance and that their Lordships have appointed of themselves seventeen Whereupon were Chosen presently thirty four of this House viz. M r Treasurer M r Comptroller M r Chancellor of the Exchequer the Lord Russell Sir Thomas Heneage M r Sollicitor M r Beale M r Wolley Sir Robert Germin Sir John Higham M r Doctor James Sir Richard Knightley Sir George Carey M r Edward Lewkenor Sir Henry Cock Sir William Moore M r Edward Barker M r Branker the Master of the Requests M r George Greenfield Sir Edward Dymock M r Skinner M r Atturney of the Wards Sir William Mallory M r Strickland M r David Williams M r Harris M r Henry Barkley Sir Thomas Shirley M r Robert Bowes M r Recorder of London M r Morrice M r William Knolles M r Faunshaw Sir Drew Drury M r Oughtred M r George Digby and Mr. Cheek who repaired then presently to the Lords accordingly Mr. Yelverton being of the Learned Councel of one of the Creditors of Edward Fisher Esquire and coming into this House for him and also some of the Creditors of the said Edward Fisher being likewise present in this House at the Bar the Bill had in their presence its second reading and further Order was then given that they be here again to Morrow in the Morning at the first sitting of this Court Vide concerning this matter on Monday the 22 th day of February ensuing Three Bills of no great moment had each of them one reading of which the last being the Bill concerning the assurances of Sir Thomas Lucie and others the Proviso of it having been once read had it self the third reading and passed upon the question with the foresaid Proviso The last former Committees returning from the Lords Mr. Chancellor of the Exchequer one of the said Committees declared unto the House that they attended the Lords in the Upper House according to the direction of this House to them in that behalf given and that they found the Lords not to want many of that number which was signified unto this House from them and withal that there were likewise almost as many of the Committees of this House as were by this House appointed for that purpose And that the Lord Treasurer being the chiefest of the Committees of the Lords shewed unto the said Committees of this House that their Lordships of the Upper House being of such quality and calling as they are known to be are one Member of the Parliament And also that the Knights Citizens and Burgesses of this House representing the whole Commons of this Realm are also another Member of the same Parliament and her Majesty the Head And that of these three Estates doth consist the whole Body of the Parliament able to make Laws And that none of the said two Houses without the other can in any wise make Laws And withal that therefore of ancient Courtesie and Custom both the same Houses have used mutual Conference each with other in matters of doubt happening amongst them from time to time in making and establishing of Laws and that yet notwithstanding their Lordships have heard by Speeches abroad not out of this House for they are not to take knowledge of any thing in this House that a Bill to provide remedy against fraudulent Conveyances passed with their Lordships and lately sent down from them to this House was upon a second reading thereof in this House denied to receive a Committee whereof their Lordships do greatly marvail and think it very strange not having known the like course used in this House before especially the Bill being so good and necessary for the Common-Wealth and so specially recommended from their Lordships to this House both at the first sending down thereof to this House and sithence And being as their Lordships are informed upon the reading thereof the first time nothing spoken unto at all and now lately at the second reading thereof argued unto both with the Bill and against the Bill by sundry on both sides learned in the Laws and of good account and discretion otherwise which doth greatly import the Bill very much to deserve Conference without all contradiction And further declaring that the said Bill was very well favoured and liked of her Majesty yea in so much that her Highness used to call it her own Bill that it was framed and drawn by her Highness learned Councel very maturely and advisedly digested in the Upper House with the privity and assistance of the Judges there attending considered of also in a Committee amongst their Lordships themselves and with very great deliberation passed also with them and as before specially recommended unto this House from them moved in Conclusion that this House would have such further consideration for proceeding in some convenient course in the said Bill by Conference or otherwise as may in good discretion seem requisite And not doubting but as their Lordships think many of this House have mistaken and misconceived some part of the said Bill so their Lordships upon Conference had they doubt not will resolve and satisfie them in the same And therefore they desire to be advertised of the Answer of this House therein as soon as may be conveniently Vide de ista materia in die sequenti On Tuesday the 16 th day of February a Motion was made for Mr. Kirles releasment from his Imprisonment and thereupon he was brought into this House and kneeling upon his Knees making very humble submission unto this House and acknowledging his fault alledging it also to have proceeded of ignorance and not of wilfulness and likewise having paid to the Serjeant of this House to M r Stepneth's use three pound six shillings eight pence set down by M r Morrice and M r Sands according to the former Order of this House was discharged paying his Fees after he had first taken the Oath of Supremacy Vide concerning this matter on Wednesday the 10 th day and on Thursday the 11 th day of this instant February foregoing Upon a Motion made by M r Doctor James that a Member of this House yesterday having given great offence unto this whole House in charging this whole House generally with matter of accusation in those things which they do offer and prefer unto this House only by way of Petitions and Motions for redress of certain griefs in dutiful and convenient manner may not so go away with those undecent forms of Speech but be further called to Question for the same M r Atkins was thereupon Licensed by the House to interpret his said Speeches in his place without being Commanded to the Bar who in very humble sort declared his intention was very sorry for his over-sight craved their good opinions and submitted himself to the good satisfaction of this
this House the summary cause of her Majesties calling and assembling of this great Council at this time which was he said not to make any more Laws as being many more already than well executed nor yet for any Subsidy albeit if need so required the same were convenient enough to be done but said he to consult for such matters as the like were never erst heard of nor any Parliament called for in former time that can be found or read of And so very excellently plainly and effectually made relation of the horrible and wicked practices and attempts caused and procured by the Queen of Scots so called meerly tending to the ruine and overthrow of the true and sincere Religion established in this Realm the Invasion of Foreign Forces into this Realm Rebellion and Civil Wars and dissension within this Realm yea and withal which his heart quaked and trembled to utter and think on the death and destruction of the most Sacred Person of our most Gracious Soveraign Lady the Queens Majesty to the utter desolation and conquest of this most Noble Realm of England And so discoursing of the matter and great execrable Treacheries and Conspiracies of the said Queen of Scots even from the first to the last in particularities very amply and effectually such of them at the least as have been hitherto discovered shewing also very manifestly and evidently the proofs and all other circumstances of the same Treachery and Conspiracies and so thinketh good for his part that speedy Consultation he had by this House for the cutting of her off by course of Justice for that otherwise our said Soveraign Lady the Queens Majesties most Royal Person cannot be continued with safety concludeth with this Sentence Ne pereat Israel pereat Absolon Which done M r Chancellor of the Exchequer M r Chancellor of the Dutchy and M r Secretary Woolley using each of them severally very effectual Speeches at large touching the said horrible Treasons and Conspiracies caused and procured by the said Queen of Scots the House did then rise the time being far spent with reservation nevertheless by M r Speaker remembred for further Speech therein to be had by others of this House to morrow again and a saving also till some other more convenient time for such of this House as shall please to speak to the said Bill of Inrollments upon the said second reading of the same accordingly Vide 7 th November Monday On Friday the 4 th day of November M r Recorder of London having made Declaration unto this House that divers of the Members of the same do find themselves grieved for that their Servants attending upon them are daily arrested contrary to the ancient Liberties and Priviledges of this House and having further moved also that a like Committee of this House may at this time be appointed as had been the last Parliament for the examining and reporting Cases of Priviledge It was resolved and agreed by the House that the same shall be exercised and done accordingly And for the performance thereof the said M r Recorder Sir Henry Gate M r Robert Wroth and M r William Fleetwood were appointed by the Authority of the House Upon the Motion of M r Speaker putting the House in remembrance of continuing and further prosecuting of the great Cause they dealt in yesterday divers Speeches were made to that effect by Sir James Croft Comptroller of her Majesties Houshold Sir Francis Knowles Treasurer of the same Sir William Herbert Sir Thomas Scot M r Francis Bacon M r Alford M r Throgmorton M r Barker M r Dalton M r Biynbrigg and M r Sollicitor by all which it was concluded That considering the late horrible Treasons and Practices conspired against the Life of the Queens Majesty and also for the procuring of Foreign Invasion in respect of the Attempt and also for endeavouring to raise Rebellion within the Realm for and by Mary late Queen of Scots therefore of necessity present remedy and provision must be had for preventing the like attempts and practices hereafter which could never be unless the said Scottish Queen did presently suffer the due Execution of Justice according to her deserts And then upon the further Motion of the said M r Sollicitor for a Committee of this House to be had to confer of some convenient and fit course to be taken by Petition and Suit to her Majesty in that behalf with request also unto the Lords to joyn therein with this House to her Highness if it please them thereupon this Committee following was nominated and appointed in that behalf accordingly viz. all the Privy Council of the House Sir William Herbert Sir Thomas Scot Sir Henry Gate Sir William Moore Sir Thomas Manners Sir Thomas Fairfax Sir Robert Jermin Sir John Petre Sir Henry Cock Sir Henry Cobham Sir Henry Knyvet Sir John Higham Sir Thomas Stanhope M r Fortescue Master of the Wardrobe M r Randal M r Osborne M r George Moore M r Cromwell M r Beale M r Wroth M r Burlace M r George Carie M r Doctor Stanhopp M r Dale Master of Requests M r Francis Hastings M r Sollicitor M r Attorney of the Wards M r Serjeant Snagg M r Morrice M r Sandes M r Dalton M r Bacon M r Alford M r Barker M r Bainbrigge M r Throckmorton M r Corbett M r Palmes M r Pate M r Skinner M r Amersam M r Edward Lukenor M r Thynne and M r Hellyard Recorder of York who were all of them appointed by the House to meet in the Exchequer Chamber at two of the Clock this Afternoon On Saturday the 5 th day of November M r George Moore entring into some discourse touching the great Cause concludeth after sundry great and weighty reasons first shewed that only Popery is the chief and principal root of all the late horrible and wicked treacheries and practices and the Queen of Scots a principal branch issuing from the same root and the most perillous and full of poyson of all the other branches thereof for that the Papists in very deed for the most part not knowing the Person of the said Queen of Scots do wish the Establishing of her in the Crown of this Realm rather in respect of Popery which she would set up than for any affection they bear to her Person and so likewise for the most part all of them either wish or could easily bear the death of our Soveraign Lady the Queens Majesty though perhaps they would not shew themselves to be Actors or Dealers therein He therefore moveth that it may be joyned in the Petition for the great Cause that her Majesty may be moved to retain no Servants about her Highnesses Person but such only as may be well known both to profess the true and sincere Religion and also to be every way true and faithful Subjects And further that the Laws already in force against Papists may be put in due Execution Which Speeches being ended M r Speaker shewed that the
made by M r Speaker to the House for giving leave to M r Dillington a Member of this House to depart into his Country for his service there which was then granted The Bill for Regrators of Barley had its second reading and a Proviso to the same Bill presently after that was twice read and the Bill was committed unto Sir Henry Cock M r Salkington M r Alford M r Aldersey and others and the Bill and Proviso was delivered to the said Henry Cock who with the rest was appointed to meet upon Monday next in the Afternoon in the Guild Hall On Munday the 6 th day of March the Bill for continuance of Statutes with the Proviso was read the second time and committed unto all the Privy Council of this House M r Sollicitor Sir William Moore Sir Thomas Browne and others who were appointed to meet to morrow in the Afternoon in the Exchequer Chamber The Bill for Orford-Haven was upon the second reading committed unto Sir Robert Jermin and others to meet to Morrow at the Guild Hall The Bill for bringing in of Fish into this Realm was upon the second reading committed unto M r Recorder M r Sandes M r Grice M r Dalton the Burgesses of the Cinque-Ports and others who were appointed to meet to Morrow in the Afternoon at the Guild Hall and the Committees also for the Bill of Ingrossers to meet at the same time and place Mr. Chancellor of the Exchequer moved that the Bill for the Purveyors should be further considered by the Committees this Afternoon in the Exchequer Chamber and further he moved that the Committees would at the same time and place meet for the further consideration of the benevolence that was offered to her Majesty in respect of the great charges her Majesty is to sustain in the Low Countries Mr. Gresham hath Licence to depart into his Country This day William White was brought into the House to answer his contempt for arresting of Mr. Martin a Member of this House who answered that he caused him to be arrested the 22 d day of January which was above fourteen days before the beginning of the Parliament The House ordered that the Precedents should be sought and thereupon proceeding should be had according to the direction of the House and referred to the report of Mr. Morrice Mr. Recorder Mr. Cromwell and Mr. Alford On Tuesday the 7 th day of March the Bill for the Subsidy was read the third time and before the rising of the House this morning was sent up to the Lords by Mr. Treasurer and others The Bill for the Attainders was brought in again by the Committees with a Proviso for M r Inglefeild Item another Proviso for the Lord Lumley The Bill was brought in again by the Commit tees for Purveyors with Amendments which Bill with the Amendments was upon the second reading committed to be ingrossed The Bill for restraint of Horse-Stealing and other Beasts sent from the Lords by M r Serjeant Gawdie and Mr. Attorney had its first reading and was delivered to Mr. Morrice It is Ordered That Edward Fisher now remaining Prisoner in the Fleet shall be brought to this House to Morrow to Answer such things as shall be objected against him Vide on Thursday the 9th of March following Mr. Stoverd Burgess for Woodstock hath leave to depart about his necessary business Sir Thomas Scott and his Son have leave to depart On Wednesday the 8 th day of March Mr. Stoughton and Mr. Wallop had Licence from the House to depart Three Bills of no great moment had each of them their first reading of which the first was a Bill for the true performance of the last Will of Sir James Harvey The Bill for Confirmation of Attainders brought in again by the Committees and now again upon divers reasons upon the reservations committed to the former Committees and all that will may come to the Committees Vide the said Committees on Saturday the 25 th day of February foregoing The said Committees to meet this Afternoon in the Exchequer Chamber This day the Bill for Orford-Haven was brought in again by the Committees Nota There was a former Bill for Orford-Haven in the County of Suffolk read in the first meeting of this Parliament and committed on Monday the 7th day of November last past which it seemeth being disliked by the said Committees was rejected and a new Bill brought in again this second meeting of the same upon Friday the 24th day of February foregoing and lastly committed again after the second reading upon Monday the 6th day of this instant March last past Upon a Motion made by Sir John Higham that it were convenient to have the Amendment of some things whereunto Ministers are required to be sworn and that some good course might be taken to have a learned Ministry it was thought sit that some convenient number of this House might be appointed to confer upon some reasonable Motion to be made unto her Majesty for redress in these things Whereupon these persons ensuing were appointed viz. All the Privy Council of the House Sir John Higham Mr. Sollicitor Mr. Recorder Mr. Dr. Lluen Sir Henry Cock Sir Robert Jermin Mr. Doctor Cosins Sir Thomas Browne Mr. Brograve Mr. Beale Mr. Fortescue Mr. Richard Browne Sir William Moore the Master of the Requests Mr. Wroth Mr. Morrice Mr. Conisby Mr. Tasborough Mr. Fanshaw Mr. Hastings Sir Richard Knightley Mr. Bronker Mr. Amersham Mr. Hearly Mr. Francis Baker Mr. Stanhop Sir Walter Rawleigh Mr. Saunders Mr. Thomas Farmer and Mr. William Fleetwood Thomas Stampe Esquire one of the Burgesses for Wallingford in the County of Berks is licensed by Mr. Speaker to be absent for his necessary affairs On Thursday the 9th day of March Thomas Hudson Esquire Burgess for the Town of Barnstable in the County of Devon ' is for his necessary affairs licensed to depart also for the Service of her Majesty to be imployed in causes of Musters with the Earl of Bath her Majesties Lieutenant of the said County The Bill for Orford-Haven with the Amendments brought in by the Committees was by the House Ordered to be ingrossed Two Bills also had each of them one reading of which the last being the Bill for Fines was read the second time and committed with the Bill for Errors in Fines unto Mr. Serjeant Snagg M r Sollicitor Mr. Lewkenor and others to meet this Afternoon at two of the Clock at Serjeants-Inn Hall in Chancery-lane The Bill for Confirmation of Attainders was brought in again by the Committees with the Addition which being twice read was Ordered by the House to be ingrossed Vide the said Committees on Saturday the 25th day of February foregoing This day Edward Fisher by vertue of her Majesties Writ was brought into the House to Answer divers his misdemeanors as well for indirectly taking away as imbezelling certain Evidences remaining in a Cubbard which was locked and sealed up by Mr. Recorder and others Vide on Tuesday
it until the foresaid Proviso should likewise have its third reading and that which further confirms the not passing of it at this time is because upon Monday the 20 th day of this instant March following divers Committees were appointed to go up unto the Lords and to confer with them about this said Bill Sir George Hastings hath pardon of his absence this Parliament Two Bills had each of them one reading of which the last being a Bill against Extortion of Sheriffs was twice read and committed unto M r Philips Mr. Harris Mr. Wroth Mr. Cromwell and others who were appointed to meet in the Afternoon in the Middle-Temple Hall On Saturday the 18 th day of March Four Bills of no great moment had each of them one reading of which the last being the Bill for Recusants with the Proviso was read the third time and passed upon the Question Mr. Speaker declared to the House from her Majesty That she thanked God understanding of their great love unto her in regard of her charges sustained in the Low-Countries and that her Majesty was contented this Afternoon that some convenient number of them should have Audience before her Majesty Whereupon these persons were appointed by the House all the Privy-Council of this House Sir Robert Jermin Sir John Higham Sir Henry Cock Sir Thomas Browne Mr. Fortefoue Master of the Requests Sir John Peter Sir William Moore Mr. Wroth Mr. Tasborough Mr. Markham Mr. Revel and Mr. George Moore Vide concerning this business on Saturday the 11 th day of this instant March foregoing The Proviso that persons Arrested by Informers may appear by Attornies was read the third time and passed upon the question Mr. Wingfield was brought into this House to Answer his misdemeanor against Mr. Walton a Member of this House for that as Walton informed Mr. Wingfield did offer to draw his Weapon upon him and gave evil Language which Mr. Wingfield denied and said for that his Brother ..... was slain by ..... of Walton and Walton being an Accessary to that Murther he said he could not well take it and knew not what might happen Whereupon Mr. Speaker exhorted him to remit all that was past seeing that he had taken the course of Law for his Brothers Death unto which Exhortation Mr. Wingfield yielded and so was discharged The Bill for payment of Fishers Debts was sent from the Lords with a Proviso and Amendments which were thrice read and assented unto by the House upon the Question Two Bills were brought up to the Lords from the House of Commons the first touching Exemplifications and Constats of Original Conveyances made to the Queens Majesty and the second for limitation of time touching Writs of Error upon Fines and Recoveries The sending up of these two Bills is not at all mentioned in the Journal-Book of the House of Commons which happened in this place as in divers others of this second meeting of this present Parliament through the inexperience and negligence of Mr. William Onslow who supplied the place of Mr. Fulk Onslow Clerk of the said House being detained from thence by sickness and therefore it is supplied out of the Original Journal-Book of the Upper House On Monday the 20 th day of March Three Bills of no great moment did each of them pass upon the Question after the third reading of which the first was the Bill to prevent Extortion in Sheriffs and Under-Sheriffs c. for Executions The House appointed divers to go up to the Lords to confer with them about the Bill for continuance of Statutes who were as followeth Mr. Chancellor of the Exchequer Mr. Attorney of the Wards Mr. Morrice Mr. Saunders Sir William Moore Mr. Cromwell Mr. Hare and Mr. Francis Bacon Vide concerning this Bill on Friday the 17 th day of this instant March foregoing The old Committees appointed on Wednesday the 15 th day of this instant March foregoing in the Bill for the payment of Hanfords Debts were to meet this Afternoon in the Middle-Temple Hall and the Bill which came from the Lords and the new Bill drawn by the said Hanford which was once read were both delivered to M r Comptroller being one of the said former Committees Six Bills were sent up to the Lords the first touching the Sale of Edward Fishers Lands the second for the more speedy and due Execution of certain Branches of the Statute made in the twenty third year of the Queens Majesties Reign Intituled an Act to retain the Queens Majesties Subjects in their due obedience the third for continuance of Statutes the fourth to prevent Extortion in Sheriffs Under-Sheriffs c. the fifth for abridging of Proclamations to be made upon Fines levied in the Court of Common Pleas and the sixth to avoid fraudulent Assurances made in certain Cases with a Proviso annexed and Amendments Nota That the sending up of these six Bills is not at all mentioned in the Journal-Book of the House of Commons and therefore it is supplied out of the Original Journal-Book of the Upper House On Tuesday the 21 th day of March the Bill for exemplifying Letters Patents was read the third time and passed upon the question The Bill new brought in for the payment of Hanfords Debts he himself being present assented to it and did subscribe every leaf with his own hand whereupon the Bill was read twice and Ordered to be ingrossed The Bill to avoid fraudulent Conveyances made in certain Cases by Traytors was sent down from the Lords to the House of Commons Two Bills also of no great moment were sent up from the said House to the Lords The sending up of these two Bills to the Lords or the sending down the first Bill to the Commons is very negligently omitted in the Original Journal-Book of the House of Commons and are therefore inserted as the like was done Yesterday and upon divers other dayes out of the Original Journal-Book of the Upper House The Bill for payment of Hanfords Debts was read the third time and passed upon the question The Bill for breeding of Horses in the wast grounds of Devon and Cornwall was read the second time A Proviso offered by Mr. Conisbie to be inserted into the same Bill which being read the Bill and the Proviso were dashed upon the Question whether they should be ingrossed or no. The Bill for the continuance and perfecting of divers Statutes was sent from the Lords to the House of Commons by Serjeant Gawdie and Doctor Carew A new Bill also for the sale of Thomas Hanfords Lands was sent up to the Lords as it should seem by Mr. Treasurer and others The mutual sending of these two Bills from either House to other is very negligently omitted in the Original Journal-Book of the House of Commons and is therefore inserted out of the Original Journal-Book of the Upper House An Order delivered by M r Cromwell Entred by consent of the House WHereas upon complaint made to this House upon Monday the 21 th
the same would be much prejudicial to the Ancient Liberties and Priviledges of this House and to the Authority of the same M r Beale likewise shewing himself to be of the same mind with M r Wroth and insisting upon the preservation and maintenance of the former usual and ancient Liberties and Priviledges of this House in treating of Subsidies Contributions and other like benevolences amongst themselves without any Conference therein at all had or used with the Lords of the Higher House doth give an instance of a former precedent in the like Case and offered to shew forth the same precedent to this House which being omitted in the Original Journal-Book it self is here inserted out of the aforesaid Anonymous Journal more particularly mentioned at the beginning of this present Journal and was as followeth In Anno nono H. 4. the two Houses being divided about the Subsidy and the Higher House desiring a greater Subsidy than was granted by the Lower House hereupon twelve that were sent as Committees to the Lords came down and informed what was desired by the Upper House namely a greater Subsidy and to that end Conference to be had with them of the House of Commons The Commons thought themselves grieved therewith and so returned their Answer that they would consider what was meet to be done in so general a matter but thought the Conference a Derogation to the priviledge of the House Hereupon the King Answered that he could not neither was it fit to violate the priviledge of his Commons but in all things thought it just to prefer them Which said precedent being thus inserted out of the Anonymous Journal the rest that followeth is continued out of the Original Journal-Book it self taken in the House and committed to writing by M r Fulk Ouslow at this time Clerk of the House of Commons For it should seem the Speaker and the greater part of the House very well approving and being satisfied fully with the aforesaid precedent cited by M r Beale yet those of her Majesties Privy Council and the Courtiers also at this time of the House were still earnest for admitting of a Conference with the Lords And thereupon Sir Robert Cecill spake again and did put the House in remembrance of the great and urgent necessity for the speedy prevention and avoiding of the great and eminent perils and dangers of this Realm and State to be effected both by Consultation and also by provision of Treasure and thinketh good that Conference of this House were had with the Lords as a matter very behoofful Especially for that their Lordships some of them being of her Majesties Privy-Council do know both the purposes and strength of the Enemies on the one side and also her Majesties present store of Treasure more or less on the other side much better than those of this House do Resolveth for his own Opinion still to give his consent that Conference be had therein with the Lords by the Committees of this House according to their Lordships said former Motion and request for the same Sir William Brunker stood up and reciting the said great present necessity of consultation and provision and that it cannot be otherwise but that the proportion of convenient supply of Treasure answerable to the greatness of the dangers which are imminent must needs require a greater Mass of Treasure to be had than hath been as yet treated of in any resolution by this House And then the Question being urged and by the Order of the House propounded whether Conference should be had with the Lords upon the Motion of the Committees of the Lords to the Committees of this House in this Case or no it was upon the doubtfulness of the Voices twice given upon the Question thereof twice propounded resolved upon the division of the House That no such Conference should be had with the said Committees of the Lords by the said Committees of this House for the number of them which were for the said Conference and said I went out of the said House and were found to be in number but a hundred twenty eight whereas those that were against the said Conference and said No sate still in the House being in number two hundred and seventeen So that the matter was over-ruled by eighty nine Voices with which the Order and Judgment of the whole House went thereupon accordingly M r Serjeant Fleetwood and M r Doctor Ford do bring from the Lords a Bill Intituled an Act for the better assurance and confirmation of the Jointure of the Lady Margaret Countess of Cumberland After the delivery of this Bill thus sent from the Lords the House proceeded in the further agitation of the foregoing great business which by the bringing down of the last mentioned Bill from their Lordships had been a while interrupted For it having been already over-ruled by the House that there should be no Conference admitted with the Lords touching the matter of the Subsidy which their Lordships had desired it was therefore Ordered upon a Motion made in the House that some Answer might presently be sent from thence to their Lordships to satisfie them touching their said Motion for Conference for that in respect the said Conference had been already denied and had been voted to be prejudicial to the Liberties of the House by the Judgment of the same that a convenient number of this House should be appointed presently in the name of this whole House to give unto their Lordships most humble and dutiful thanks with all due reverence for their said Lordships good favourable and courteous offer of Conference with this House in the said Cause and to signify unto their Lordships that this House cannot in those Cases of Benevolence or Contribution join in Conference with their Lordships without prejudice to the Liberties and Priviledges of this House and of the infringing of the same and therefore do in most humble wise request and desire their good Lordships to hold the Members of this House excused in their not assenting unto their Lordships said Motion for Conference for that so to have assented without a Bill had been contrary to the Liberties and Priviledges of this House and contrary also to the former precedents of the same House in like Case had Which done all the former Committees of this House were presently appointed to declare the said Answer of this House unto their Lordships and M r Chancellor of the Exchequer appointed to declare the same And for this purpose were nominated and chosen All the Privy-Council now in this House being four Sir Henry Unton M r Wroth M r Beale Sir William Brunker Sir Walter Raleigh Sir Charles Cavendish Sir Edward Hobby Sir Thomas Cecill Sir George Carey Sir Robert Sidney Sir Thomas West M r Anthony Cooke M r Tasborough Sir William Moore M r George Moore M r Serjeant Yelverton Sir Francis Drake Sir Francis Hastings Sir William Knowles Sir Fulk Griffin M r William Haward Sir Charles Blunt Sir John Harrington M r Herbert Master of Requests M r Arthur George Sir Thomas Conisby
and some Motions touching the severance or uniting of the Bills it was Ordered that the Bill be read again upon Thursday next The Bill concerning coming to Church and receiving of the Communion was read the first time Sir John S t Leger moved the House for his Mans Priviledge and it was committed to M r Recorder M r Bedoll and M r Dalton and they to meet this Afternoon at M r Recorders and make report to Morrow On Tuesday the 10 th day of April M r Speaker recited a Commandment from the Queens Majesty to spend little time in Motions and to avoid long Speeches The reason whereof being omitted in the Original Journal-Book of the House of Commons it is therefore supplied out of that often before-cited elaborate Journal more particularly mentioned at the beginning of this present Journal in manner and form following That this Advertisement grew of somewhat spoken by M r Bell the 7 th day of this instant April concerning Licences granted by her Majesty to do certain matters contrary to the Statutes wherein he seemed as was said to speak against her Prerogative but surely so orderly did he utter what he spake as those who were touched might be angry but justly to blame him might not be This Advertisement being thus transcribed out of the aforesaid Anonymous Journal now follows the residue of this days passages out of the Original Journal-Book of the House of Commons it self in form following Sir Owen Hopton moved for the Commission of Motions and Petitions to have the Council added unto them and also a greater number of others and delivered a Paper of Notes of the Motions made Upon a Motion made for M r Garnons who is reported to stand Excommunicate it is Ordered that he shall Answer it in the House Six Bills of no great moment had each of them one reading of which the last being the Bill touching Monasteries was read the first time M r Treasurer made report of the Committees doings for the Subsidy whose names see on Saturday the 7 th day of this instant April foregoing and brought in Articles which were well liked and thereupon the same Commissioners were appointed to proceed with the drawing of the Book Two Bills also had each of them their first reading of which the first was the Bill for the validity of Burgesses not resiant Touching matters of Religion M r Mounson brought report that the Bishops pray to have the Lords moved by this House to assign a Committee to confer with this House And thereupon it was Ordered presently that the same Commissioners do immediately go to the Lords with this Message to know their pleasure for appointing some to confer about the Book for Doctrine M r Treasurer returned report that the Lord Keeper hath Answered he will open it to the Lords Four Bills of no great moment had each of them one reading of which the second being the Bill for Cloth-workers was read the first time And the third being the Bill B. had its first reading Vide Maii 17. postea what Bill B. meaneth Sir Richard Read and M r Doctor Yale did bring an Answer to the Message viz. that the Lords have appointed twenty of themselves whereof ten of the Clergy and ten of the Temporalty to meet at two of the Clock this Afternoon in the Star-Chamber And thereupon were added by the House to the former Commissioners the Master of the Rolls Sir Henry Norrice Sir William Buts M r Austley M r Serjeant Manwood M r Stooks M r Fleetwood M r Carleton M r Eglenby M r Yelverton M r Dalton and M r Robert Snagg which meeting was about matters of Religion Vide abunde Maii 17. postea On Wednesday the 11 th day of April the Bill for Lestwithiell was read the first time M r Fleetwood brought in a Bill against Rogues The Bill against fraudulent Gifts and Conveyances was read the second time and was delivered to certain of the House to amend presently upon a Motion made by M r Dalton to have it to extend to the defrauding of Heriots Three Bills of no great moment had each of them one reading of which the second being the Bill for Sewers was read the second time and Ordered to be ingrossed And the Bill D. had its first reading Vide Maii 17. post what Bill D. meaneth M r Seckford Master of the Requests prayed longer time to consider of the Bill of fraudulent Gifts and Conveyances and that the Committees may be Sir John White M r Seckford Master of the Requests M r Serjeant Manwood Geoffry Loveland M r Mounson M r Bell M r Fleetwood M r Thomas Snagg M r Barber and M r Dalton to meet to Morrow in the Afternoon in the Temple Church The Bill for not returning persons of the Queens Majesties Houshold on Juries was read the first time The Bill for Bristol was read the second time and Ordered to be ingrossed Whereupon followed divers longSpeeches and Arguments touching the same Bill which being omitted in the Original Journal-Book of the House of Commons are here supplied out of that often before-cited Anonymous Journal of the same House more particularly mentioned at the beginning of this present Journal in manner and form following viz. M r Comptroller first moved that before some Committees were appointed both parties might be heard and the Controversy appeased M r Fleetwood argued that there might appear rashness or indiscretion in them who should now reverse what of late they had done but leaving to speak thereof he entred into a good Discourse of the Prerogative which might thereby be touched if they should endeavour to overthrow her Majesties Letters Patents to whom by Law there is power given to Incorporate any Town and she is Sworn to preserve her Prerogative he vouched the Clerk of the Parliaments Book to be that no man might talk of the Statute of Wills c. but that the King first gave Licence for that his Prerogative in the Wards was hereby touched He shewed likewise the Statute of Ed. 1. Ed. 3. and H. 4. with a saving of the Prerogative In King Edward the Sixths time Licence was sued for to the Lord Protector to talk of matters of Prerogative he remembred the Book of 2 Edw. 6. for the Parliament of Ireland called by the Chief Judge as is for him lawful where it was questioned what by Parliament might be done whether they might depart with any of the Kings Towns Forts or Piers it was agreed they might not and so he concluded that to talk thereof for as much as her Majesties Letters Patents and Prerogative were touched Rege non consulto was perillous He also made mention of the Statute which authorizeth all Merchants to Traffick by Sea Nisi publice prohibentur he saith others were prohibited M r Young of Bristol in the behalf of the Commons reasoned to this effect First Shewed the loss to the Queen of her Custom then the private Monopoly wrought and occasioned by the
which is contained in it I have thought it worthy the transcribing it being as followeth M r John Young after that the said Bill of Subsidy had been read the first time offered the House some Speech and silence being obtained he spake to this effect that the burden of the Subsidy and charge by Loans imposed by the Prince upon us and the charge of the richest and most noblest Prince being considered it were not amiss if it ------ But what should here follow is hard to be conjectured in respect that here the aforesaid Anonymous Journal breaketh off abruptly Sir Robert Read and M r Doctor Yale did bring from the Lords a Bill against Bulls c. procured from the See of Rome as a Bill amongst the residue of necessary Bills meet to be considered of and prayed Expedition for the reading and passing thereof The Bill for the Erection of seven Banks or Stocks of money was read the first time On Monday the 23 th day of April the Bill for Bristol which was committed on Thursday the 12 th day of this instant April preceeding and brought in by M r Comptroller on Saturday the 21 th day of the same Month foregoing was this day upon the Question Ordered to be ingrossed M r Serjeant Manwood M r Serjeant Lovelace M r Bell M r Mounson M r Baber M r Fenner M r Shute and M r Bedell are added to the former Committees for Vagabonds but it should rather seem that those were the first Committees appointed in this Bill and that this was the second reading thereof for on Friday the 13 th day of this instant April foregoing it had its first reading and in the mean time since between the said day and this present committing of it there is no mention made in the Original Journal-Book of the House of Commons that the said Bill was at all read the second time or committed The Bill for reformation of Promoters was read the first time and after many long Arguments rejected And M r Attorney of the Dutchy M r Recorder of London M r Sands M r Sampoole M r Bell M r Popham and M r Alford were appointed to make a new Bill and to meet in the Temple Church upon Wednesday next at two of the Clock in the Afternoon M r Norton M r Fenner and M r Fleetwood were appointed to draw a Bill for the preservation of Wood and to receive information of all such as for that purpose shall repair unto them The Bill against Bulls c. procured from the See of Rome was read the first time and M r Attorney of the Dutchy M r Serjeant Jeffry M r Wilbraham M r Yelverton M r Norton and M r Sands were appointed to consider of the Bill and to meet at the Temple Church at three of the Clock this Afternoon The Bill against untrue Demeanors of Tellors Receivors Treasurers and Collectors was read the second time and after many long Arguments was committed unto M r Chancellor of the Dutchy M r Chancellor of the Exchequer M r Heneage Mr. Attorney of the Dutchy Mr. Seckford Master of the Requests Mr. Bell Mr. Alford Mr. Iresby Mr. Yelverton Mr. Sampoole Sir John Thynne Sir Nicholas Arnold Mr. Norton Mr. Knivet Mr. Mounson and Mr. Dalton either to alter or add unto the Bill or else to make new Provisoes at their discretions and to meet at the Savoy upon Thursday next at two of the Clock in the Afternoon On Tuesday the 24 th day of April Three Bills had each of them one reading of which the third being the Bill against Fugitives was read the second time and after many long Arguments was upon the Question committed unto Sir Thomas Smith Mr. Bell Mr. Mounson Mr. Thomas Snagg and Mr. Yelverton who were appointed to meet in the Star-Chamber at two of the Clock in the Afternoon It was Ordered by the House that a Note be made against to Morrow of the Titles of all the Bills offered unto this House and to be then read to the end the House may make their choice with which of them they will first proceed On Wednesday the 25 th day of April Sir Robert Lane Sir Henry Gate Mr. Henry Knolles Sen. Mr. Astley Master of the Jewel-House Mr. Sands and Mr. Wentworth were appointed to attend the Lord of Canterbury his Grace for Answer touching matters of Religion Vide Apr. 6. antea May 17. postea at large The Bill for respite of Homage was read the second time and M r Recorder of London Mr. Fleetwood M r Sands and M r Baber were appointed to mend the Bill presently The Bill lastly for the Subsidy was read the second time On Thursday the 26 th day of April Two Bills of no great moment had each of them one reading and were Ordered to be ingrossed of which the second was the Bill for Conservation of Order and Uniformity in the Church The note of the Titles of the Bills being read it was Ordered that M r Treasurer Sir Arthur Mildmay Sir Thomas Smith Sir Christopher Heydon Sir Henry Gate Sir John Thynne Sir Nicholas Arnold M r Serjeant Manwood M r Serjeant Lovelace M r Stocks M r Alford M r Yelverton M r Fleetwood M r Norton and M r Dalton shall be Committees for appointing such Bills for the Common-Weal as shall be first proceeded in and preferred before the residue but not to reject any and are appointed to meet at the Star-Chamber to Morrow at two of the Clock in the Afternoon Nota That the appointing of the abovenamed Members of the House for the purposes aforesaid as it is in it self a very rare President and may prove worthy of often imitation so it should seem that the House was induced unto it upon a Message sent unto them from the Lords by M r Treasurer and others on Saturday the 21 th day of this instant April foregoing by which they advised them to expedite the more publick and necessary Bills and pass by those of less moment The two Bills concerning certain offences to be made Treason were twice read and upon the division of the House were Ordered to be joined together and made one Bill with the difference of thirty six Voices upon the said Division and after long arguing it was upon the Question Ordered to be ingrossed M r Sollicitor and Mr. Doctor Huick came from the Lords to demand Bills with speed if any were ready and were answered that within few days their Lordships shall receive some The Committees in the Bill against Fugitives as also in the Bill of Bulls c. procured from the See of Rome which were committed on Monday the 23 th day of this instant April foregoing were this day appointed to meet in the Star-Chamber at three of the Clock to Morrow in the Afternoon On Friday the 27 th day of April the Bill against Usury was read the second time and Ordered to be ingrossed Four Bills also had each of them their third reading and
River of Thames was read the second time and committed to the former Committees in the Bill for preservation of Woods It was Ordered that the House should be called on Wednesday next in the Afternoon The Bill touching the Defeasances of Statutes of the Staple was read the second time and committed unto Mr. Vice-Chamberlain Mr. Chancellor of the Exchequer Mr. Humfrey Gilbert Mr. Sands and others who were appointed to meet on Monday next at three of the Clock in the Afternoon in the Exchequer Chamber The Bill for the Assize of fuel was read the second time and committed unto the same former Committees in the Bill for Woods and at the same time and place A Motion was made by Mr. Alsord and pursued by Mr. S t Poole and Mr. Snagg touching composition for Purveyances and assented to have Conference by Mr. Treasurer and Mr. Comptroller on Thursday next Post Meridiem In the Afternoon the Committees met again in the Exchequer Chamber about the two Bills for Religion and Subsidy The Articles which were exhibited by Mr. Norton concerning the Bill of Subsidy were allowed by the Committees and he appointed to draw the said Bill accordingly and the Articles agreed for the rates and times of Taxations Certificates and payment of a Subsidy and two Fifteenths On Monday the 30 th day of January the Bill touching 〈◊〉 of the Sea was read the second time and committed unto the Master of the Jewel-House Sir Thomas Scott Sir William Winter Sir William Moore Sir Arthur Bassett Mr. Grimsditch Mr. Layton Mr. Aldersee Mr. Rogers Mr. Shirley Mr. Boyes Mr. Knight and Mr. Borrey who were appointed to meet to Morrow at two of the Clock in the Afternoon in the Exchequer Chamber Three Bills of no great moment had each of them one reading of which the last being the Bill for the speedy recovery of Debts was read the third time and passed upon the question Mr. Attorney General and Mr. Doctor Clerk did bring from the Lords two Bills viz. An Act against slanderous words and rumors and other seditious practices against the Queens Majesty and an Act for avoiding of slanderous Libelling The Bill for avoiding of certain Incumbrances against Purchasers was read the third time And a Proviso to this Bill was once read and dashed upon the question and likewise the Bill passed upon the question On Tuesday the 31 th day of January the Bill for the speedy recovery of Debts which passed this House yesterday was upon Motion made to this House by Mr. Speaker upon the mistaking of this House of some part of the said Bill amended upon the question with interlining of these words viz. such and of Debts the whole sentence wherein these interlined words are contained being thrice read and the Bill again passed upon the question accordingly The two Bills sent yesterday to this House from the Lords being against seditious practising and slanderous Libelling had each of them its first reading The two Bills that passed this House yesterday being for the speedy recovery of Debts and for the avoiding of certain Incumbrances against Purchasers were sent up to the Lords by Mr. Vice-Chamberlain Mr. Chancellor of the Exchequer and others The Bill for furniture of Armour and Weapons had its first reading Upon Motions made yesterday to this House by Mr. Diggs for maintenance of the Navy and Mariners and also for a supply of Souldiers and setting idle persons on work and by Fishing to procure increase of Gain and Wealth to the whole State of this Realm it is Ordered that the consideration hereof be committed unto all the Privy-Council being of this House and that as many of this House as are acquainted with that matter of Plot and device may attend them at their pleasure and to meet upon Friday next at two of the Clock in the Afternoon in the Exchequer Chamber The Bill for punishing of unlawful having two Wives at once was read the second time and committed to Mr. Doctor Dale Master of the Requests Sir Thomas Browne Mr. Recorder of London M r Layton Mr. Alford Mr. Grimsditch Mr. Newdigate Mr. Snagg Mr. Thomas Bowyer and M r Greenfeild who were appointed to meet at two of the Clock in the Afternoon upon Saturday next in the Exchequer Chamber On Wednesday the first day of February Two Bills of no great moment had each of them one reading of which the first being the Bill touching Partition of Lands between the Coheirs of John sometime Earl of Oxford was read the first time Upon a Motion made unto this House by Mr. Norton that two Porters of Serjeants-Inn in Fleetstreet have much misused him in his attending the service of this House it is Ordered by this House that the Serjeant at Arms do forthwith fetch the same two Porters unto this House Mr. Chancellor of the Exchequer in the name of the residue of the Committees for the Bill against counterfeit Instruments and Seals of Offices and of himself declared unto the House that they have upon consideration had amongst them thought good to make a new Bill for those purposes to be offered to this House and so delivered in both the old Bill and the new Three Bills also had each of them one reading of which the third being the Bill against slanderous words and rumors and other seditious practices against the Queens Majesty was read the second time and an Addition offered to this Bill by Mr. Norton was once read and with the Bill committed unto all the Privy-Council being of this House M r Treasurer of the Chamber all the Serjeants at Law of this House and others And the Bill was delivered to Mr. Treasurer who with the rest was appointed to meet upon Friday next at two of the Clock in the Afternoon and the Committee for Mr. Diggs his Motions are deferred till Saturday next at two of the Clock in the Afternoon in the said Exchequer Chamber Vide Febr. 14. following Nota That here a new Addition inserted into a Bill which had been twice read was committed with the said Bill although it had been read but once Mr. Serjeant Anderson and Mr. Dr. Barkley did bring from the Lords a Bill for avoiding of disorders and abuses in Sheriffs and Under-Sheriffs and other like Ministers John Owld Porter of Serjeants-Inn in Fleetstreet and William Kenn his Servant being present here at the Bar and charged with their misbehaviour rather excusing than submitting themselves it is upon good proof of their said misbehaviour testified by three Gentlemen of this House besides Mr. Norton Ordered that both the Master and Servant be committed to the Serjeants Ward till further Order shall be taken And that Mr. Speaker may in the mean time set the said William Kenn the Servant at Liberty upon his Submission if he shall so think good Two Bills of no great moment had each of them one reading of which the second being the Bill against the multitude of common Inns and Ale-Houses was read the first time
them read the second time and committed unto M r Recorder of London Mr. Serjeant Fenner Mr. Sands Mr. Grevill Mr. Christmas Mr. Boyes Mr. Cromwell and Mr Newdigate Mr. Henry Knolles the younger and Mr. Townesend were appointed to be with Mr. Speaker at this House at two of the Clock this Afternoon to examine the matter of Outlawry pretended against Walter Vaughan Esquire Knight for the County of Caermarthen And that the said Mr. Vaughan be then there present to Answer therein for himself as well as he can and the said Committees to make report unto this House of the state of the Case to the end this House may thereupon proceed to order accordingly Vide concerning this matter on the 18 th day of this instant February following Mr. Secretary Wilson declaring the travel of the Committees in Examining of the Printer that did Print Mr. Halls Book signified unto this House that the said Printer whose name is Henry Bynnyman upon his Examination before the Committees said that one John Wells a Scrivener in Fleetstreet did deliver the written Copy to him and when the Book was Printed he delivered one Book to Henry Shirland in Fridaystreet Linnen-Draper to be sent to Mr. Hall and that afterwards about a year past he delivered to Mr. Hall six of the said Books and at Michaelmas Term last six other of the said Books and one more to Mr. Halls man shortly after and said that Mr. Hall promised to get him a Priviledge whereupon he adventured he saith to Print the Book and saith that the Copy was written by Wells the Scrivener and that he received of the said Shirland Linnen-Cloth to the value of 6 l 13 s 4d. for Printing the said Book And that he staid of his own accord the publishing of the said Books till he were paid where Mr. Hall was contented that they should have been put to sale presently Which report so made by Mr. Secretary and withal that Mr. Hall and the Printer were both then at the Door the said Mr. Hall thereupon was brought to the Bar and being charged by Mr. Speaker in the behalf of the whole House with the setting forth the said Book containing very lewd and slanderous reproach not only against some particular Members of this House but also against the general State and Authority of this whole House denied not the setting forth of the said Book protesting the same to be done by him without any malicious intent or meaning either against the State of this House or against any Member of the same praying this whole House if he had offended in so doing they would remit and pardon him affirming withal very earnestly that he never had any more than one of the said Books and upon due consideration of his own rashness and folly therein willed that all the said Books should be suppressed and then was Mr. Hall sequestred Henry Bynnyman the Printer was brought to the Bar who affirmed in all things as Mr. Secretary Wilson before reported and further that he had Printed fourscore or an hundred of the said Books and was thereupon sequestred Henry Shirland was brought to the Bar who there confessed that Mr. Hall did write a Letter unto him and sent the said Book unto him willing him to get it Printed And that thereupon he delivered the Book to the said Bynnyman to have it Printed Wells the Scrivener being present with him and said further that Mr. Hall had paid him again the twenty Nobles which he before had paid the Printer and so he was then sequestred And the said Wells brought to the Bar upon his Examination saith that when he was Apprentice with one Mr. Dalton a Scrivener in Fleetstreet the said Mr. Hall lying then about Pauls-Wharf sent unto his said Master to send one of his Men unto him and that thereupon his said Master sent him unto the said Mr. Hall who when he came delivered to him a Book in written hand willing him to carry it home with him and Copy it out and said that when he had shewed it to his Master his Master Commanded him to write part of it and his Fellows some other part of it and his said Master as he remembreth did write the rest of it What his Master had for the writing of it he knoweth not And being further Examined saith that yesterday last past he delivered one of the said Books to Sir Randal Brierton from the said Mr. Hall and then the said John Wells was sequestred And afterwards all the Privy-Council being of this House Mr. Knight Marshal Mr. Recorder of London Mr. Serjeant Flowerdewe Mr. S t Leiger Mr. Cromwell Mr. Atkins the Master of the Jewel-House Sir Thomas Browne Sir Thomas Scott Mr. Nathanael Bacon Mr. Beale Mr. Norton and Mr. Alford were added to the former Committees for the further proceeding to the Examination of the matter touching Mr. Hall the Printer the Scrivener and all other persons Parties or privy to the publishing of the said Book set forth in Print by the means and procurement of the said Mr. Hall and to meet upon Wednesday next at two of the Clock in the Afternoon in the Exchequer Chamber Which done Mr. Hall being brought to the Bar again Mr. Speaker declared unto him that this House mindeth further to examine the particularities of the matter wherewith they have charged him and do therefore commit him to the Serjeants Ward with this Liberty that upon Wednesday next in the Afternoon being accompanied with the Serjeant he may attend at the Exchequer Chamber upon the Committees in the Cause and was thereupon had out of the House Henry Bynnyman the Printer John Wells the Scrivener and Henry Shirland Linnen-Draper being brought all three to the Bar were by Mr. Speaker injoined in the name of the whole House to give their attendance upon the said Committees at the time and place aforesaid and also at all times in the mean season thereof if they shall happen to be called by them or any of them and so were had out of the House And further it is Ordered by this House that Mr. Speaker do send the Serjeant for John Dalton late Master of the said John Wells and to charge him also to attend upon the said Committees at the said time and place in like manner Vide concerning this matter on Tuesday the 14 th day of this instant February following On Tuesday the 7 th day of February the Bill for the Cloth-Workers of London was read the second time and committed to the former Committees in the Bill for Cloths called Tauntons and Bridgwaters who were appointed on Saturday the 4 th day of this instant February foregoing Mr. Treasurer one of the Committees for the great causes brought in a Bill for restraint of disobedient Subjects and also Articles for the granting of the Subsidy which Articles were then read by the Clerk and agreed by the whole House to be delivered by Mr. Speaker to Mr. Attorney General to draw a
Arthur Hall for his said offence And upon another Question it was resolved and Ordered in like manner that the same Fine should be five hundred Marks And upon another like question it was likewise resolved and Ordered that the said Arthur Hall should presently be removed severed and cut off from being any longer a Member of this House during the continuance of this present Parliament and that the Speaker by Authority from this House should direct a Warrant from this House to the Clerk of the Crown-Office in the Chancery for awarding of the Queens Majesties Writ to the Sheriff of the said County of Lincoln for a new Burgess to be returned into this present Parliament for the said Borough of Grantham in the lieu and stead of the said Arthur Hall so as before disabled any longer to be a Member of this House And upon another question it was also in like manner resolved and Ordered that the said Book and Libel was and should be holden deemed taken and adjudged to be for so much as doth concern the errors aforesaid condemned Which done the said Arthur Hall was brought in again to the Bar unto whom the Speaker in the name of the whole House pronounced the said Judgment in form aforesaid and so the Serjeant Commanded to take Charge of him and convey him to the said Prison of the Tower and to deliver him to the Lieutenant of the Tower by Warrant from this House to be directed and signed by the said Speaker for that purpose Vide concerning this matter on Saturday the 4 th day Monday the 6 th day and Wednesday the 8 th day of this instant February foregoing On Wednesday the 15 th day of February Four Bills of no great moment had each of them one reading of which the third being the Bill for granting of one Subsidy two Fifteenths and Tenths was read the second time and Ordered to be ingrossed On Thursday the 16 th day of February the Bill against the Family of Love was read the second time and committed unto Sir Thomas Scott Sir William Moore Sir John Brockett M r Beale and others who were appointed to meet this Afternoon at two of the Clock in the Exchequer Chamber M r Vice-Chamberlain one of the Committees in the Bill for counterfeit Seals who were appointed on Thursday the 26 th day of January foregoing brought in the old Bill amended by the Committees and a new Bill drawn by the said Committees according to the same amendments whereupon the same new Bill was twice read and Ordered to be ingrossed The Bill for punishment of unlawful Marriages which was delivered to M r Doctor Dale and other Committees was this day brought in by M r Grimsditch one other of the Committees and a new Bill for that purpose made by the consent of the same Committees After sundry Speeches used against Sir Rowland Hayward one of the Committees in the Bill against Iron-Mills for an error by him done in preferring a new Bill for that purpose to the House not agreed upon by the more part of the residue of the Committees urging some infliction to be laid upon him or at least his Submission with an acknowledgment of his said error therein to the House it was upon a Motion made by M r Speaker and his Declaration of the Proceeding of the said Sir Rowland Hayward with him in the bringing in of the said latter Bill Ordered by the House that the matter of the said Prosecution should be no further dealt in or medled with as a thing of too small moment for this House to be troubled with or spend time in Three Bills also of no great moment had each of them one reading of which the last being the Bill for ratification of an award for certain Copyholders in the County of Worcester was read the third time and passed upon the Question The Calling of this House appointed to have been this Afternoon is for greater causes deferred till another time On Friday the 17 th day of February Five Bills of no great moment had each of them one reading of which the fourth being the Bill for limitation of Formedon in the Descender and the fifth being the Bill against the excessive multitude of Attornies in the Court of Common-Pleas was read the second time and with the former committed unto both Masters of the Requests M r Lieutenant of the Tower Sir Thomas Sampoole M r Attorney of the Dutchy M r Sands M r Carleton M r Layton M r Grimpston M r Vaughan M r Dalton M r Boyes and M r Grimsditch and both the Bills were delivered to M r Doctor Dale Master of the Requests who with the rest was appointed to meet in the new Hall in the Temple at two of the Clock this Afternoon The Bill touching the Children of Aliens and Strangers was once more read with the former amendments and other amendments now presently inserted three times first read was passed upon the Question after many Arguments first had and made Francis Drake Esquire was Licensed this day by M r Speaker to depart for certain his necessary business in the service of her Majesty Francis Vaughan Esquire one of the Burgesses for the Borough of Wilton in the County of Wiltshire was this day Licensed by M r Speaker to be absent for his necessary business at the Assizes On Saturday the 14 th day of February Two Bills of no great moment had each of them one reading of which the second being the Bill for the naturalizing of certain English mens Children born beyond the Seas was read the first time The Bill for the repealing of certain branches of certain Statutes touching the making of Woollen-Cloths and another Bill touching the Shipping of Cloths were each of them committed upon the first reading unto the former Committees for Cloths who were appointed on Saturday the 4 th day of this instant February foregoing The Bill for preservation of Pheasants and Partridges was read the second time and committed unto M r Chancellor of the Dutchy M r Knight Marshal Sir Thomas Cecil Sir Thomas Scott M r Beamond and others who were appointed to meet at M r Chancellors of the Dutchy at two of the Clock in the Afternoon upon Monday next The Bill for Gavelkind Land within the City of Chester was read the third time The four Bills last past before this present day were sent up to the Lords by M r Treasurer and others The Bill against unlawful Hunting of Conies was read the second time and after many Arguments rejected upon the question of ingrossing M r Chancellor of the Exchequer declared that the Committees appointed by this House to have Conference with the Lords touching the Bill for Religion have sundry times met together with their Lordships about the same Bill and that the same Bill is by the said Committees in some parts altered changed and amended and in some other parts abridged and some others added unto and so delivered in the same
their several places the Knights Citizens and Burgesses of the House of Commons had notice thereof who thereupon repairing thither as many as conveniently could were let in and standing all together at the Rail or Bar at the lower end of the Upper House Sir Thomas Bromley Knight Lord Chancellor by the Queen Commandment declared unto them the Causes of the Assembling of this Parliament But what those Causes were neither the Original Journal-Book of the Upper House nor that of the House of Commons do at all mention in setting down the other daily Passages of this Parliament de Anno isto 27 Reginae Eliz. But in respect they are set down the above-mentioned Catalogue of Honour imprinted at London An. Domini 1610. pag. 〈◊〉 and that it is most probable that were there inserted out of the Collections or Memorial of some Member of the House of Commons at this Parliament therefore I have thought good to supply it verbatim as it is there set down The said Lord Chancellor declared unto them in her Majesties name that this Assembly of Parliament was for three causes called viz. For the glory of Almighty God and the furthering of Religion for the health and preservation of her Royal Majesty and the welfare of the Common-Weal Which after that he had a loud and most eloquently at large declared turning his Speech unto the Knights and Burgesses standing on a heap together below he willed them to make choice of their Prolocutor and to give notice of him so Chosen unto the Lords of the Privy-Council from whom they should expect what the Queens Pleasure and Answer was concerning him so Chosen to be afterward presented The substance of this Speech being so shortly set down in the said Catalogue of Honour I thought good to transcribe although it were imprinted because it doth much augment and perfect this present Journal of the Upper House The residue whereof doth next in order follow out of the Original Journal-Book of the same House there being only added now and then as the occasion offered it self some Observations and Animadversions upon it Nota Also that no names of any of the Lords Spiritual or Temporal are noted to have been present this day which happened through the negligence of the Clerk of the Parliament but it may be conjectured who they were by the names of such whose presence is noted on Thursday next following being the 26 th day of this instant November on which said day the presence of such Lords as attended this Parliament is first marked Then follow the names of the Receivors and Triors of Petitions which is the more remarkable at this time because it is said that the Clerk of the Parliament did read them by the Lord Chancellors Commandment whereas it should seem at other times and which is agreeable also to the course at this day he doth presently stand up of himself as soon as the Lord Chancellors or Lord Keepers Speech is ended and reads the said Receivors and Triors names yet the entrance aforesaid is at this time set down in the said Journal-Book in manner and form following Tunc having before-mentioned the Lord Chancellors Speech Parliamenti Clericus ex mandato Cancellarn omnibus Petitionibus exhiberi volentibus Receptorum Examinatorum nomina formâ subsequenti recitavit Then follows all in French of which the names were these Receivors of Petitions for England Ireland Wales and Scotland Sir Christopher Wray Lord Chief Justice of England Sir Gilbert Gerrard Master of the Rolls Sir Thomas Gawel Knight one of the Justices of the Kings-Bench Doctor Clarke and Doctor Ford. Receivors of Petitions for Gascoigne and other Countries beyond the Seas and the Isles Sir Edmund Anderson Knight Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas Sir Roger Manwood Lord Chief Baron Francis Windam one of the Justices of ..... Doctor Awbery and Doctor Barkley Such as will deliver Petitions must so do within six days next ensuing Triors of Petitions for England Ireland Wales and Scotland The Archbishop of Canterbury the Earl of Leicester Lord High Steward of England the Earl of Darby the Earl of Rutland the Bishop of Winchester the Bishop of Salisbury the Lord Howard of Effingham Chamberlain of the Queens House the Lord Gray of Wilton the Lord North. All these or any four of them calling unto them the Lord Keeper of the Great Seal the Lord Treasurer and also the Queens Serjeants at their leisure to meet and hold their place in the Chamberlains Chamber Triors of Petitions for Gascoigne and the Countries beyond the Seas and the Isles The Archbishop of York the Earl of Oxford Great Chamberlain of England the Earl of Warwick the Earl of Pembroke the Bishop of Norwich the Bishop of Chester the Bishop of Rochester the Lord Cobham the Lord Lumley and the Lord Buckhurst All these or four of them calling to them the Queens Serjeants and the Queens Attorney and Sollicitor to hold their place when their leisure did serve to meet in the Treasurers Chamber Breve returnatum which was returned this Morning quo Johannes Episcopus Gloucestren praesenti Parliamento interesse summonitus fuit qui admissus est ad suum praeheminentiae sedendi in Parliamento locum salvo jure alieno Dominus Cancellarius continuavit praesens Parliamentum usque in diem crastinum horâ nonâ On Tuesday the 24 th day of November the Lords met in the Upper House but nothing was done saving the continuance of the Parliament by the Lord Chancellor until nine of the Clock the next Morning On Wednesday the 25 th day of November there was a like meeting of the Lords but nothing done saving the continuance of the Parliament by the Lord Chancellor unto two of the Clock in the Afternoon the day following But no presence of the Lords is noted on this day in the Original Journal-Book On Thursday the 26 th day of November the Commons having chosen their Speaker who upon his Presentment to the Queen was this day to be allowed of in the said place her Majesty Accompanied with divers of the Nobility came into the Upper House about three of the Clock in the Afternoon whose name and the names of such Lords Spiritual and Temporal as are marked in the Original Journal-Book of this Parliament to have been present this day do here ensue Regina Archiepiscopus Cantuar. Dominus Thomas Bromley Miles Cancellarius Archiepiscopus Eboracen Dominus Barleigh Dominus Thesaurarius Angliae Marchio Winton Comites Comes Oxon. Magnus Camerarius Comes Arundell Comes Kantiae Comes Darbiae Comes Wigorn. Comes Rutland Comes Cumberland Comes Sussex Comes Bathon Comes Pembrooke Comes Hartford Vice-Comes Mountague Vice-Comes Bindon Episcopi Episcopus London Episcopus Winton Episcopus Meneven Episcopus Sarisburien Episcopus Petriburgen Episcopus Norwicen Episcopus Roffen Episcopus Cestren Barones Dominus Howard Camerar Dominus Zouch Dominus Willoughbie Dominus Dacres Dominus Cobham Dominus Grey de Wilton Dominus Lumley Dominus Stourton Dominus Mountjoy
speedy dispatch of the same The Bill touching process of the peace awarded out of the Court of Chancery and Kings Bench was upon the third reading committed again unto Sir Heury Nevill M r Sollicitor M r Cromwell and others and the Bill was delivered to the said M r Cromwell who was with the rest appointed to meet to morrow in the Afternoon in Lincolns-Inn Hall M r Recorder of London one of the Committees in the Bill against Idle and incontinent life brought in the old Bill and also a new Bill M r Sandes one of the Committees in the Bill touching Apprentices brought in the old Bill and also a new Bill On Thursday the 11 th day of March it was ordered that the House should be called together upon Saturday in the Afternoon and then also a Collection to be made for the poor M r Francis Hastings being imployed in Post in the service of her Majesty was upon a motion made thereof by M r Speaker dispensed with and excused for his absence Francis Bromley Esq one of the Knights for the County of Salop was Licensed for his great business at the Assizes to depart Sir William Moore M r Cromwell and M r Utreght were appointed to examine one John Bland a Currier of whom the House had heard that he said concerning the Tanners Bill lately read in the House that the Bill had been allowed upon the reading although a great part of it had been omitted Vide on Saturday the 13 th day of this instant March following Three Bills of no great moment had each of them one reading of which the second being the Bill for continuance of Statutes was upon the second reading committed again to the former Committees to whom were added these following viz. M r Strickland M r Recorder M r Heyle M r Sollicitor and M r Sands to which Bill six Provisoes or additions were twice read and two of them rejected and four of them Committed to the four Committees who were appointed to meet this Afternoon in the Exchequer Chamber and so for the Bill of the Savoy M r Serjeant Rodes and M r Doctor Barkeley did bring from the Lords three Bills of which the second was the Bill for the increase of Pheasants and Partridges M r Hammon one of the Committees in the Bill for the true answering of Tythes brought in the old Bill and also a new Bill The Amendments and Additions of the Lords to the Bill against Jesuites and also the amendment of this House added to their Lordships said amendments and also to their Lordships Schedule were read and at large considered and agreed upon by the whole House Which done upon further debating of the form and manner of the finishing thereof it was thought fittest by some of the oldest Parliament men of this House and by the Clerk that their Lordships should be moved to reform their amendments according to the direction of our amendments in their said amendments before we insert theirs into the said Bill On Friday the 12. day of March The Bill for two Fifteenths and Tenths and one entire Subsidy granted by the Temporalty was read the third time and passed upon the question The Proviso to the Bill for reformation of Errors in Fines and Recoveries in the twelve Shires of Wales and Counties Palatine was read the third time and passed with the Bill upon the question The Proviso to the Bill for the maintenance of the Hospital of Eastbridge in Canterbury had its third reading and the Ordinances of the now Bishop of Canterbury were then read also and so left to be further considered of in conference with the Lords touching some words needful to be added in some part of the said ordinances The Bill touching the Water-bayliff with some amendment by Proviso was brought in again by Sir Henry Nevill one of the Committees Sir Walter Mildmay Chancellor of the Exchequer one of the Committees in the Bill for the Savoy shewed that they the said Committees have met together about the said Bill and that they think meet that the Master of the Savoy do deliver unto this House a note of the names of the Lessees that they may be called and heard what they can say for themselves touching their several interests The Bill for continuance of Statutes was brought in with some amendments by M r Cromwell and M r Hammon two of the Committees with one Proviso also for the Ports allowed of by the Committees and the three other Provisoes residue of the four former disallowed by them and so rejected by the House and the amendments twice read the Bill was ordered to be ingrossed And the Proviso this day offered touching limitation of time for bringing in of Sutes upon the Penal Laws now revived was after sundry Speeches respited to be further considered of in the mean time of ingrossing the Bill Mr. Tasborough one of the Committees in the Bill for the better imploying of Lands Tenements c. given to the maintenance of High-ways and for relief of the Poor brought in the Bill with some Amendments and Additions of Provisoes On Saturday the 13 th day of March Mr. Cromwell one of the Committees in the Bill touching Process of the Peace brought in the Bill with some Amendments which were twice read and then Ordered to be inserted into the Bill which was already ingrossed after which the said Bill and amendments did pass the House upon the question after the third reading Two Bills of no great moment had each of them one reading of which the first being the Bill against the abuse of Corn and Grain was twice read and Ordered to be ingrossed Upon report made unto this House by Mr. Speaker that one John Bland a Currier of London had given out to some honourable persons that this House passing the Bill of the Shoomakers had proceeded contrary to an Order taken in the same House which he said was that the Shoomakers Bill should not be further read till the Curriers Bill were first read before and hath likewise reported that the Curriers could have no Justice in this House and also that this House passed the said Shoomakers Bill when there were scantly fifty persons in the House and that if their Friends had been there at that time the said Shoomakers Bill had not passed at all And further reported that the Bill for the Tanners lately read in this House was not all read out but some leaves thereof left unread at all Which Speeches being very slanderous and prejudicial to the State of this House and not meet to be passed without due consideration therein to be had it was thereupon resolved That Sir William Moore Mr. Cromwell and Mr. Utreght should presently examine the said Bland being now without the Door of this House who did then go forth for that purpose accordingly and returning back into the said House from the Examination of the said John Bland Sir William Moore shewed that the said Bland being charged by
Stourton Dominus Darcie Dominus Sandes Dominus Windsor Dominus Wentworth Dominus Borough Dominus Cromwell Dominus Evers Dominus Rich. Dominus Willoughby de Parham Dominus Darcie de Chiche Dominus Shandois Dominus S t John Dominus Buckhurst Dominus Delaware Dominus Compton Dominus Cheney Dominus Norris The Lords being all set in this Order in their Parliament-Robes and the Judges placed with other Attendants and Assistants of the Upper House being also before the said Lords Commissioners had taken their places on the right side of the Chair of State the Lord Chancellor shewed forth the Queens Majesties Letters Patents by which She committed full Power to the Archbishop of Canterbury the Lord Burleigh Lord Treasurer of England and the Earl of Darby to supply her place in the said Parliament which were as followeth viz. Hodie cùm omnes Proceres Robis Parliamentaribus induti in suo Loco quisque sederent Milites Cives Burgenses qui ad hoc praesens Parliamentum summoniti fuerunt praesso essent jam universt tam Proceres quàm Communes Reginae adventum expectarent Thomas Bromley Miles Dominus Cancellarius exponit omnibus Regiam Majestatem maximis urgentissimis causis adeò esse impeditam ut non queat impraesentiarum commodè interesse ut decreverat Nihilominus inquit sua Majestas Literis suis Patentibus plenam potestatem commisit Reverendissimo in Christo Patri Johanni Cantuar. Archiepiscopo totius Angliae Primati Metropolitano ac praedilecto fideli suo Willielmo Domino de Burleigh Domino Thesaurario Angliae ac charissimo Consanguineo suo Henrico Comiti Darbiae ad facienda nomine suo omnia singula quae in dicto Parliamento gerenda essent ut per easdem Liter as Patentes 〈◊〉 apparet quas hiis dictis Dominus Cancellarius Clerico Parliamentar publicè legendas tradidit Earum autem tenor sequitur in haec verba ELizabetha Dei graetiâ Angliae Franciae Hiberniae Regina fidei Defensor c. Omnibus ad quos praesentes Literae pervenerint Salutem Sciatis quòd cùm de advisamento Concilii nostri pro quibusdam arduis urgentibus negotiis nos statum defensionem Regni nostri Angliae ae Ecclesiae Anglicanae concernen quoddam Parliamentum nostrum apud Civitatem nostram Westmonaster 29 o die instant mensis Octobris teneri ordinavimus quia verò propter certas causas ad Parliamentum praedictum non potuerimus interesse nos de circumspectione sideliate industria Reverendissimi in Christo Patris Johannis Cantuar. Archiepiscopi totius Angliae Primat Metropolitan ac praedilecti fidelis nostri Willielmi Domini de Burleigh Domini Thesaurarii Angliae ac charissimi Consanguinei nostri Henrici Comitis Darbiae plenam fiduciam reportand eisdem Archiepiscopo Willielmo Domino de Burleigh Henrico Comiti Darbiae duobus eorum ad Parliamentum praedictum nomine meo inchoand tenend negotiáque praedict exponend declarand ac exponi declarari faciend necnon in negotiis illis Parliamento praedicto ac omnibus sin gulis in eo procedend ad faciend omnia singula quae pro nobis per nos pro bono regimine gubernatione praedicti Regni nostri Angliae ac aliorum Dominiorum nostrorum eidem Regno nostro pertinen ibid. fuerint faciend necnon ad Parliamentum illud si necesse fuerit continuand adjournand prorogand de assensu Concilii nostri praedicti plenam tenore praesentium committimus prtestatem Dante 's ulteriùs de assensu ejusdem Concilii nostri tam universis singulis Archiepiscopis Episcopis Comitibus Vicecomitibus Baronibus Militibus quàm omnibus aliis quorum interest ad Parliamentum nostrum praedictum conventur similit tenore praesentium firmiter in Mandatis Quòd eisdem Archiepiscopo Willielmo Domino Burleigh Henrico Comiti Darbiae duobus eorum intendant in praemissis in fornia praedicta In cujus rei testimonium has Literas nostras sieri fecimus Patentes Teste meipsa apud Westmonasterium vicesimo octavo die Octobris Anno Regni nostri vicesimo octavo Per ipsam Reginam c. The Letters Patents foregoing being read the said three Lords Commissioners leaving their own places went to a Seat prepared for them on the right side of the Chair of State beneath the steps Then the said Lord Chancellor going first to the said Lords and conferring a while with them went to his accustomed place and there made intimation of the Cause of this present Summons of Parliament which as he said were no usual Causes not for making of Laws whereof her Majesty thought there were more made than were duly executed nor for Fifteenths and Subsidies although there were some cause yet her Majesty would not charge her loving Subjects so far at this time But that the cause was rare and extraordinary of great weight great peril and dangerous consequence Then he declared what dangerous practices had been contrived of late and how miraculously the Providence of God had by discovery thereof beyond all humane Policy preserved her Majesty the destruction of whose Sacred Person was most traiterously compassed and imagined Here he shewed what misery the loss of so Noble a Queen would have brought to all Estates and said That although some of them had suffered according to their demerits yet one remained that by due course of Law had received her Sentence which was the chief cause of this Assembly and wherein her Majesty required their faithful advice and therefore said he you may orderly proceed therein And you of the House of Commons are to make present choice of some one amongst you to be your Speaker and to present him unto the Lords Lieutenants as soon as conveniently you may Assoon as the Lord Chancellor had ended his Speech the Clerk of the Parliament stood up and read the Names of the Receivors and Tryors of Petitions in French which were as followeth Receivors of Petitions for England Ireland France and Scotland Sir Christopher Wray Knight Lord Chief Justice Sir Gilbert Gerrard Knight Master of the Rolls Sir Thomas Gawdy Knight one of the Justices of ..... Doctor Awberry and Doctor Ford. Receivors of Petitions for Gascoigne and other Lands and Countries beyond the Seas and of the Isles Sir Edmund Anderson Knight Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas Sir Roger Manwood Knight Lord Chief Baron Francis Windham one of the Justices of ..... Doctor Barkeley and Doctor Cary. Tryors of Petitions for England Ireland Wales and Scotland the Archbishop of Canterbury the Earl of Darby Lord High Steward of England the Earl of Rutland the Earl of Essex the Bishop of London the Bishop of Winchester the Bishop of Salisbury the Lord Howard of Essingham Lord High Admiral of England the Lord Cobham the Lord Grey of Wilton Tryors of Petitions for Gascoigne and other Lands and Countries beyond the Seas and of the Isles the Archbishop of York the Earl
ingrossing thereof and so the Bill upon the question and division of the House was passed by the yielding of the negative Voices without going through with telling of the whole numbers on both sides and was sent presently up to the Lords by Sir John Parrot and a little after two other Bills the one to avoid Horse-stealing and the other touching forcible Entries were likewise sent up to the Lords by Mr. Treasurer and others The Bill against such as steal and imbezel the Goods Chattels or Treasure of her Majesty being put in trust with the same was read the first time The Bill that Aliens Children shall pay Strangers Customs was read the third time and a Proviso added unto it thrice read the Bill and Proviso upon the question and division of the House dashed with the Yea sixty four and with the No seventy four Mr. Doctor Cary and Mr. Powle do bring from the Lords the Bill for relief of the City of Lincoln with an Addition of this word yearly added to their former Amendments for the explaining of the same Amendments All which Amendments being thrice read were upon the question assented unto by this House Nota That this Bill was brought down from the Lords to the House yesterday and therefore it should seem upon some doubts the House made touching their Lordships Amendments it was carried back again and those Amendments explained by the word above-mentioned and so being brought down again this day the said Amendments were thrice read and passed the House On Saturday the 29 th day of March Mr. Doctor Stanhop and Mr. Powle do bring from the Lords the Bill lately passed this House for continuation and perfecting of certain Statutes with a Schedule unto the same added and annexed by their Lordships and the same Schedule being thrice read passed upon the Question The Bill for the relief of the City of Lincoln being perfected according to the Amendments of the Lords and the Bill also for continuance of Statutes with the Schedule to the same were sent up to the Lords by the Master of the Wardrobe and others The Amendments of the Committees of this House to the Bill against excess of Apparel was denied upon the Question to be opened unto the House The Bill against such as steal or imbezel the Goods Chattels or Treasure of her Majesty was brought in again by Mr. Harris one of the Committees in the same as not to be sufficiently considered of for lack of time the same Bill consisting of many parts Mr. Serjeant Puckering and Mr. Serjeant Shuttleworth did bring word from the Lords that their Lordships do pray present Conference with some twenty or more of this House to meet with their Lordships in the nether room of the Upper House and the rest not to depart until the return of the same Committees Whereupon were appointed for that purpose all the Privy Council of this House Sir William Hatton Mr. Wroth Mr. North Mr. Lieutenant of the Tower Mr. Wade Mr. Mills Mr. Juers Mr. Henry Grey Sir Edward Dymock Mr. Robert Bowes Mr. Harris Mr. Heydon Mr. Francis Moore Sir George Barne Mr. Robert Cecill Mr. Shirley Mr. Dyer Mr. Hare Mr. Ralph Bowes Sir Francis Hinde Mr. Preston Mr. White Mr. Hill Mr. Henry Brooke and the Master of the Jewel-House Mr. Treasurer in the name of the rest of the Committees did bring word from the Lords that their Lordships have had Conference amongst themselves of the great practices and Treasons heretofore intended against her Majesties Person State and Kingdom And therefore ..... What should here follow is wholly omitted by the great negligence of Mr. Fulk Onslow at this time Clerk of the House of Commons as also the Speeches of Mr. Vice-Chamberlain of Mr. Secretary Wolley of Sir John Parrot Mr. Comptroller and of Mr. Fortescue for the inserting of which said Speeches there is left a blank of near upon two whole Pages and yet it may be probably gathered what the scope and end of all the said several and respective Speeches were out of a question following which Mr. Speaker propounded at the end of them viz. That seeing most of all those Treasons which had been practised against her Majesty had been either Plotted in Spain or procured by Spain and all the Rebellions during her Highness Reign raised either in England or Ireland had been countenanced from thence to which as the upshot of all that his late intended ambitious and blood-thirsty Conquest yet fresh in memory may be added That therefore her Majesty would be pleased to denounce open War against him the said King of Spain as against a most dangerous Enemy of her Majesty and her Realms Upon the said Speeches Mr. Speaker maketh the question and thereupon it was resolved by the whole House for joining with their Lordships in request to her Majesty to be delivered by the Mouth of Mr. Speaker for concurring with their Lordships for denouncing of War against the King of Spain at the time of his going up with the Subsidy and after the offer and delivery of the same Subsidy Mr. Doctor Cary and Mr. Doctor Stanhop did bring from the Lords two Bills viz. The Act of the Queens Majesties most gracious and free Pardon and also the Act of four Fifteenths and Tenths and two Subsidies which had before passed this House The Bill of the Queens Majesties most general and free Pardon being once read passed thereupon Which said Bill so passed was presently sent up to the Lords by M r Fortescue and others Nota That this is all which is found in the Original Journal-Book of the House of Commons and therefore the Conclusion and Dissolution of this Parliament next ensuing are supplied out of that of the Upper House Her Majesty being as it should seem this very Forenoon come unto the Upper House and there set the House of Commons having notice thereof with Serjeant Snagg their Speaker repaired thither who after his delivery of the Bill of Subsidy did move her Majesty as may be very probably conjectured according to the former resolution had this day in the said House as aforesaid that her Majesty would be pleased to denounce open War against the Spanish King who had so lately threatned destruction to her Majesty and her Realms by that his not long since open and Hostile Invasion After which her Majesty having given her Royal Assent unto the passing of sixteen publick Acts and eight private Acts being all the Statutes that passed this Parliament Sir Christopher Hatton Knight Lord Chancellor by her Majesties Commandment Dissolved the same THE JOURNAL OF THE House of LORDS An Exact and perfect Journal of the Passages of the House of Lords in the Parliament holden at Westminster Anno 35 Reginae Eliz. Anno Domini 1592. which began there on Monday the 19 th Day of February and then and there continued until the Dissolution thereof on Tuesday the 10 th Day of April Anno Domini 1593. THERE is little extraordinary in
M r Dyer M r Doctor Awbery M r Edward Barker M r Robert Sackvile Sir Henry Poole Sir Edward Stafford Sir Thomas Read Sir Henry Cock M r Lewkenor Sir John Points and Sir Edward Carey who forthwith went up to the Lords of the Upper House with the Message of the said Answer accordingly And shortly after returning again from thence to this House the said M r Chancellor of the Exchequer made report of their delivery of the said Answer to the Lords and shewed that their Lordships well hoped to have had Conference with this House according to their former request And so wished this House to have due care and great consideration touching the speedy provision of a convenient supply of treasure to be had according to the present great necessity of the said Cause And shewed that their Lordships desired to see those precedents of this House by which this House seemeth to refuse the said Conference And so gave end to his Speech for that time One being no Member of this House and yet found to have sitten in this House during the greater part of this Forenoon was brought to the Bar and being there examined by M r Speaker of his name and place of abode answered his name to be John Legg and that he was Servant to the Earl of Northumberland and pleading simplicity and ignorance for his excuse and alledging that he had some business to do with M r Doctor Herbert Master of the Requests from the said Earl his Master and that therefore he entred into the said House not thinking any harm nor knowing the danger thereof And so humbly praying pardon was in the end committed to the Custody of the Serjeant of this House till this House shall upon further Examination of the matter take other Order The Bill for Naturalizing of William Sidney and Peregrine Wingfield was twice read and upon the Question was Ordered to be ingrossed Four Bills also had each of them one reading of which the second being the Bill touching George Ognell Esquire had its first reading The substance whereof is taken out of the aforesaid Anonymous Journal more particularly mentioned at the beginning of this present Journal in manner and form following viz. One Trussell having sold the Mannor of Binsley to Ognell for good consideration and afterwards of purpose to defeat this Purchase caused himself to be Indicted of Felony done in Kent before the Seal to Ognell and was thereof Attainted and with relation of the Felony defeated Ognells purchase It was Enacted that this Attainder should be void only as in respect of this Purchase and to that end to be as if Trussell had never been Attainted nor no Lords to have any Escheats or other by reason of this Attainder Her Majesty understanding this was pleased to remit her Interest M r Speaker perceiving some men to whisper together said that it was not the manner of the House that any should whisper or talk secretly for here only publick Speeches are to be used Nota that these two particulars are only supplied out of the aforesaid Anonymous Journal and that which followeth and also that which went before is inserted out of the Original Journal-Book it self Sir Edward Dymock moved that a Commit tee of this House may be appointed for a speedy Conference to be had touching the present necessary provision and Supply of Treasure to be had for the defence of this Realm and State And thereupon the former Committees for the Subsidy whose names see before on Monday the 26 th day of February last past were ordered to meet upon Monday next at two of the Clock in the Afternoon in this House to confer in this Case On Monday the 5 th day of March Two Bills of no great moment had each of them one reading of which the second being the Bill against the stealing of Oxen Kine Sheep and Lambs was upon the second reading committed unto M r Wroth M r Sands M r Recorder of London and others and the Bill was delivered to M r Wroth who with the rest was appointed to meet in this House to Morrow at two of the Clock in the Afternoon The Bill concerning salted Fish and salted Herrings was read the second time and thereupon committed unto Sir Francis Drake Sir Thomas Sherley the Burgesses of Yarmouth Plymouth Hall and Saltash the Burgesses of all the Port Towns Mr. Robert Wroth Sir Henry Knivet and others and the Bill was delivered to Mr. Wroth who with the rest was appointed to meet upon Wednesday next at two of the Clock in the Afternoon in the Exchequer Chamber Nota That after the Commitment of these Bills ensued divers Speeches touching that great business of Conserence with the Lords which had been very largely debated on Saturday last in the House All which said Speeches being either very shortly and imperfectly set down in the Original Journal-Book of the House of Commons or wholly omitted and for which three intire pages and more are there left Blank to have inserted them in which are set down the names only of some of those that spake them therefore they are supplied out of the aforesaid Anonymous Journal very elaborately taken by some Member of the said House during this Parliament and do here next ensue in manner and form following Mr. Beale desired to satisfy the House by reason it was conceived by the Lords the other day that upon his Motion and by his precedent shewed the House was led to deny a Conference with the Lords he acknowledged he had mistaken the question propounded For there being but a Conference desired by the Lords and no confirming of any thing they had done he thought we might and it was sit we should confer And to this end only he shewed the Precedent That in the 9 th year of H. 4. the Commons having granted a Subsidy which the Lords thought too little and they agreed to a greater and would have the Commons to confirm that which they had done this the Commons thought they could not do without prejudice to this House Wherefore he acknowledged himself mistaken in the Question and desired if any were led by him to be satisfyed for that he would have been of another opinion if he had conceived the matter as it was meant Sir Thomas Heneage propounded the Question anew and thought that with the priviledge of the House and by precedents to be shewed there had been Conference with the Lords used upon the like Motion Sir John Wolley thought that the former denyal grew upon mistaking of the Question and upon better consideration would have the matter reversed and now to assent to that which was denyed before Sir Henry Knivett moved that for the freedom of the House it might be concluded amongst them a matter answerable at the Bar for any man to report any thing of any Speech used or matters done in this House
Friday the 11 th day of this instant November foregoing delivered some particular informations to Mr. Chancellor and a Licence with a Blank to M r Speaker Vide concerning this matter on Wednesday the 16 th day of this Instant November foregoing M r Winch one of the Committees in the Bill to keep Horses from stealing who were appointed on Wednesday the 16 th day of this instant November foregoing shewed the meeting of the Committees and some Amendments in divers parts of the Bill and so delivereth in the Bill with some Amendments and the Bill was re-delivered unto him again to be further considered of by the Committees and the Committees names were read and thereupon were appointed to meet again at two of the Clock in the Afternoon of this present day in the Middle-Temple Hall M r Bourcher moved the House touching the discovery of the Counsel of the same by some Member thereof as it should seem for his said motion is set down very briefly and imperfectly in the Original Journal-Book of the said House neither is there any other issue of it there inserted than that Sir Edward Hobbie moved to have the matter proceeded to further Examination and the Party to be named Sir John Fortescue Chancellor of the Exchequer brought in the Articles for the three Subsidies and six Fifteenths and Tenths with the manners and days of Payments which being read unto the House and well liked of were presently delivered to Mr. Sollicitor to draw the Book Vide December the seventh Wednesday postea On Tuesday the 22 d day of November the Bill for the necessary habitation and relief of the Poor Aged Lame and Blind in every Parish was read the second time and committed unto the former Committees for erecting of Houses of Correction and punishment of Rogues and Sturdy Beggars who were appointed on Saturday the 19 th day of this Instant November foregoing The Bill for relief of Hospitals poor Prisoners and others impoverished by casual losses was upon the second reading committed unto the former Committees for erecting of Houses of Correction and punishment of Rogues c. Vide Committees names pag. seq The Bill for Supply of Relief unto the Poor was upon the second reading committed unto the said former Committees for erecting of Houses of Correction and punishment of Rogues c. The Bill for setting the Poor on work was read the second time and dashed upon the third question for the Committee and rejected upon the question for ingrossing The Bill for petite Forfeitures to go to the relief of the Poor was upon the second reading committed unto the former Committees in the Bill for erecting of Houses of Correction and punishment of Rogues and sturdy Beggars Sir Edward Hobby moved the House for priviledge for Sir John Tracie being a Member of this House and now presently at the Common Pleas to be put on a Jury Whereupon the Serjeant of this House was presently sent with the Mace to call the said Sir John Tracie to his attendance in this House which was thereupon so done accordingly and the said Sir John then returned to this House The Bill for the better relief of Souldiers and Mariners was upon the second reading committed unto the former Committees for erecting of Houses of Correction and punishment of Rogues and sturdy Beggars who were appointed on Saturday the 19 th day of this instant November foregoing and Mr. Arnold was added unto them The Bill for the better governing of Hospitals and Lands given to the relief of the Poor was upon the second reading committed unto the former Committees for the erecting of Houses of Correction and punishment of Rogues and Sturdy Beggars and Mr. Hubbard was added unto them The Bill for Hospitality was read the second time and dashed upon the questions for committing and ingrossing The Bill for the relief of the Poor out of Impropriations and other Church Livings was read the second time And after some Speeches both with the Bill and against the Bill upon the doubtfulness of the double question for the committing was upon the division of the House rejected with the difference of twenty nine Voices viz. with the Yea a hundred and seventeen and with the No a hundred forty six The Bill for levying of certain sums of money due to the Poor was upon the second reading committed unto the former Committees for erecting of Houses of Correction and punishment of Rogues and Sturdy Beggars And the Bill for extirpation of Beggery was committed to the same Committees And then were the said eleven Bills concerning the relief of the Poor and the punishment of idle and sturdy Beggars delivered to Sir Robert Wroth together with the names of the Committees whose names being for the most part omitted upon the said Saturday the 19 th day of this instant November foregoing when the said first Bill touching the erecting of Houses of Correction and punishment of Rogues and sturdy Beggars was first committed unto them are here all expresly named with such as were added unto them Now in respect that nine other Bills were this present Tuesday referr'd likewise to them as Committees to consider of them being a thing scarce to be pattern'd that one and the same Committee had at one and the same time eleven Bills in agitation before them though all upon the matter tending to a like end and purpose the said Committees were as followeth viz. Mr. George Moore Masters Attorneys of the Dutchy and Court of Wards Mr. Francis Bacon Sir Thomas Philips Sir Thomas Cecill Sir William Moore Sir Robert Wroth Mr. Edward Philips Mr. Recorder of London Sir Thomas Maunsell All the Readers of the Houses of Court Mr. Nathaniel Bacon Mr. Miles Sandes Mr. Finch Mr. Colbrond Mr. Edmund Boyer Mr. Edward Leukenor Mr. Henry Warner Mr. John Boyer Mr. Rosse Mr. Whalley Sir William Cornwallis Mr. Lea Mr. Hext Mr. Richard Mills Mr. Thomas Smith Mr. Lea of Lincolns-Inn All the Serjeants at Law Mr. James Harrington Mr. Wingfield Sir Thomas Hobbie Sir Anthony Cope Mr. Mark Steward Mr. Henry Yelverton Mr. William Coke Mr. George Rotheram Mr. Fettiplace Mr. Winch Mr. Hide All the Knights of Shires the Burgesses of Hull Mr. John Hare Mr. Coleman Mr. Hugh Biston All Citizens of Cities and Mr. Tasborough to which Committees this present Tuesday also were added Mr. Arnold and Mr. Hubbard Sir Edward Hobbie one of the Committees in the Bill against Counterfeiting of the hands of the Lords who were appointed on Saturday the 12 th day of this instant November foregoing shewed their meeting yesterday and complaining that albeit Yesterday last in the Afternoon was appointed for their meeting and the Committees names with the time and place read yesterday in the House none except Mr. Comptroller Mr. Chancellor himself and one other more of the said Committees came to the said Committee so that nothing was done therein And so the names of the said Committees being eftsoons now read by the Clerk the
Crows And the Bill to revive the Act against Rebellions were each of them read the second time and thereupon Ordered to be ingrossed The Bill that the Queens Majesty shall have divers temporal Lands of the Archbishops and Bishops in recompence of Tenths and Parsonages Impropriate was read the third time and passed upon the Question and Division of the House viz. With the Bill a hundred thirty four and against the Bill ninety The Bill for Restitution in Blood of Henry Howard Jane Howard and Katherine Wife to the Lord Barkley was brought from the Lords by Doctor Lewes and others M r Carnefewe declared to the House that ..... Thrower Servant to the Master of the Rolls did say against the State of the House that if a Bill were brought in for Womens Wyers in their Pastes they would dispute it and go to the Question and that he heard the Lords say as much at his Masters Table and that these words were spoken on Wednesday last before Easter at Lincolns-Inn Whereupon the said Thrower being brought to the Bar by the Serjeant denied these words to be spoken by him and Carnefewe affirmed them whereupon Thrower was Committed to the Serjeants keeping Vide concerning this matter on Saturday the 15 th day of this instant April foregoing On Tuesday the 18. day of April the Bill for taking and having of Apprentices and Journey-men was read the first time and as it should seem committed to M r Arnold to consider of The Bill for making of Frizes in length and breadth in Wales was read the second time and Ordered to be ingrossed Two Bills had each of them one reading Of which one being the Bill for the Unity of the Service of the Church and Ministration of the Sacraments was read the first time John Griffith Esq Knight for Flintshire in Wales hath License to go home for the delivery of Records at the next County On Wednesday the 19. day of April the Bill for Lading in long Bottoms and for Uniformity of Common-Prayer and Service in the Church were read the second time and Ordered to be ingrossed On Thursday the 20. day of April the Bill for the Restitution in Blood of Henry Howard younger Son to the late Earl of Surrey Lady Jane Howard Lady Katherine Howard Wife to Sir Henry Lord Barkley and Lady Margaret Howard was read the first time And the Bill to revive the Act for killing of Rooks and Crows was read the third time and passed Two Bills had each of them one reading of which the latter being the Bill for the Unity of Service in the Church and Administration of the Sacraments was read the third time and passed the House The Bill lastly for the Watermen of the Thames to have Harque-Buts Shots c. was read the second time and as it should seem was committed to M r Cambden and others not named On Friday the 21. day of April the Bill to carry Corn out of the Realm The Bill that Timber shall not be made for Cole to make Iron The Bill that Hides of four years old shall be made for sole Leather And a Bill for the good Order of Servants of Husbandry and Artificers and their Wages were each of them read the first time On Saturday the 22. day of April for that this day M r Speaker with most of the House were all the Forenoon to hear the Arraignment in Westminster-Hall of the Lord Wentworth for the loss of Calis they sate not till the Afternoon at which time the Bill that Tanners shall convert Hides of Beasts of four years old and a half into soal Leather was read the second time April the 23. Sunday On Monday the 24. day of April the Bill for Restitution in Blood of Henry Howard c. was read the second time but no mention is made that it was either Ordered to be ingrossed or referred to Committees because it had been formerly sent from the Lords Three Bills had each of them one reading of which the first being the Bill for the dissolution of Houses of Monasteries Abbies Priories c. erected since the Death of King Edward the VI. was read the first time The Bill lastly for preservation of Spawn and Fry of Fish was read the third time and passed the House And the Bill to take Goods and Merchandize was read also the third time and passed the House upon the Division thereof viz. with the Bill eighty four and against the Bill sixty six Robert ap Hugh Knight of Carnarvonshire had Licence to be absent for his great business at the Assizes at Denbigh on Monday next On Tuesday the 25 th day of April the Bill against burning of Timber into Cole to make Iron in certain places was read the second time Nine Bills were sent up to the Lords by Sir Anthony Coke and others of which one was the Bill for the preservation of Spawn of Fish c. And another was for the Uniformity of Common Prayer for Service in the Church and Administration of the Sacraments The Bill for Wages of Servants and Labourers And the Bill for Dissolution of certain Abbies Priories Hospitals c. were each of them read the second time The Bill for the Restitution in Blood of the Lord Dacres of the South was sent from the Lords by M r Read and others Two Bills lastly of no great moment had each of them one reading being the third and passed the House Of which one was the Bill to revive an Act against unlawful Assemblies and the other for punishment of Sorcery and Witchcraft and Buggery to be Felony On Wednesday the 26 th day of April Two Bills of no great moment had each of them one reading Of which the first being the Bill for Restitution in Blood of the Lord Dacres of the South was read the first time Two Bills of no great moment had each of them one reading of which the first being the Bill for making searching and sealing of Woollen Cloths was read the second time and thereupon Ordered to be ingrossed The Bill restoring to the Crown the Antient Jurisdiction over the State Ecclesiastical and Spiritual and abolishing of Foreign Power repugnant to the same with a Proviso added thereunto by the Lords was sent down from their Lordships by Serjeant Weston and the Queens Attorney which being omitted in the Original Journal-Book of the House of Commons is therefore supplied out of that of the Upper House On Thursday the 27 th day of April the Bill for searching and sealing of Woollen-Cloths was read the third time and passed the House and was sent up unto the Lords by M r Secretary The Bill for Answering of Customs and laying Goods and Merchandizes on Land was read the third time and passed the House and was sent up to the Lords by M r Secretary with the Bill of Supremacy reformed concerning which Bill of Supremacy Vide on Tuesday the 21 th day on Wednesday the 22 th day and on Saturday the
Dei gratiâ Angliae Franciae Hiberniae Reginae fidei defensor c. Sexto in quem diem praesens hoc Parliamentum Prorogatum fuerat convenerunt Domini tam spirituales quam Temporales quorum nomina subsequuntur Archiepiscopus Cantuarien Marchio Winton Thesaurarius Comes Suffex Comes Huntington Episcopus London Episcopus Roffen Dominus Clinton Admirallus Dominus Howard Camerarius Dominus Cobham Dominus Hunsdon Qui cum convenissent una cum populi atque Burgensium ut vocant satis magna frequentia praedictus Archiepiscopus Cantuarien paucis verbis declaravit conventum Procerum populi quem Parliamentum vocant in hunc diem destinatum à dicta domina Regina ccrtis quibusdam de causis considerationibus illam ad id specialiter moven differri in tricesimum diem Aprilis prox futurum atque ut tam proceribus quam populo palam fieret Regiam Majestatem ita constituisse Literas Commissorias dict Dominae Reginae Francisco Spilman Armig Clerico Parliamenti publicè clarâ voce legendas in manus tradidii Earum autem Tenor sequitur in haec verba Elizabetha Dei gratiâ Angliae Franciae Hiberniae Regina fidei defensor c. Reverendissimo in Christo Patri Matheo Cantuarien Archiepiscopo totius Angliae Primati Metropolitano ac Charissimo Consanguineo Consiliario suo Willielmo Marchioni Winton Thesaurario Angliae ncc non charissimis consanguineis suis Thomae Comiti Sussex Henrico Comiti Huntingdon Reverendis in Christo patribus Edmundo Episcopo London Edmundo Episcopo Roffen ac etiam praedilectis fidelibus consiliariis suis Edwardo Domino Clinton magno Admirallo suo Angliae Willielmo Domino Howard de Essingham Domino Camerario suo ac praedilectis sidelibus suis Willielmo Domino Cobham Gardiano sive Custodi quinque portuum suorum ac Henrico Domino Hunsdon salutem Cum nuper pro quibusdam arduis urgentibus negotiis nos statum defensionem Regni nostri Angliae ac Ecclesiae Anglicanae concernen praesens hoc Parliamentum nostrum apud Civitat nostram Westmonasterii duodecimo die Januarii Anno regni nostri Quinto inchoari teneri ordinaverimus à quo die idem Parliamentum nostrum tunc ibidem tent continuat fuerat usque decimum diem Aprilis tunc prox sequen ac post diversas Prorogationes idem Parliamentum nostrum usque ad in instantem Quintum diem Octobris Prorogatum ibidemque tunc tenend prosequend Sciatis tamen quod certis urgentibus causis considerationibus nos specialiter moven idem Parliamentum nostrum ulterius Prorogand duximus de sidelitate igitur prudentiâ circumspectione vestris plurimum considentes de avisamento assensu Concilii nostri assignavimus vos tres vestrum dantes vobis novem octo septem sex quinque quatuor tribus vestrum tenore praesentium plenam potestatem facultatem authoritatem hoc instan die Jovis ad praesens Parliamentum nostrum nomine nostro ad in tricesimum Aprilis prox futur usque praedictam Civitatem nostram Westmonasterii Prorogand continuand ibidemque tunc tenend prosequend ideo vobis mandamus quod circa praemissa diligenter intendatis ea in formâ praedicta effect ualiter expleatis Damus autem universis singulis Archiepiscopis Ducibus Magnatibus Comitibus Vice-Comitibus Episcopis Baronibus Militibus Civibus Burgen ac omnibus ahis quorum interest ad dictum Parliamentum conventur tenore praesentium firmiter in mandatis quod vobis in praenissis faciend pareant obediant intendant prout decet In cujus rei testimonium has Literas nostras fieri fecimus Patentes Teste me ipsa apud Westmonasterium Quinto die Octobris Anno Regni nostri Sexto The like Commission bearing date 30. die Aprilis An. 7 Eliz. was directed unto the Archbishop of Canterbury the Marquess of Winchester Lord Treasurer the Duke of Norsolk Earl Marshal of England the Earl of Arundel the Earl of Shrewsbury the Earl of Derby Thomas Earl of Sussex the Earl of Huntingdon the Earl of Pembroke the Earl of Warwick and the Earl of Leicester the Bishop of London and the Bishop of Rochester the Lord Cobham Warden of the Cinque-Ports the Lord Wentworth and the Lord Hunsdon Authorizing them 17 16 15 14 13 c. or three of them to Prorogue and continue the Parliament ut supra in the other Commissions mutatis mutandis unto the 4 th day of October next coming Teste me ipsa apud Westmonasterium 30 die Aprilis Anno Regni nostri Septimo On which 30 th day of April the Lord Treasurer the Duke of Norfolk the Earl of Arundel the Earl of Derby the Earl of Sussex the Earls of Huntingdon Pembroke and Warwick the Bishop of London the Lord Admiral the Lord Chamberlain the Lord Cobham the Lord Wentworth and the Lord Hunsdon did meet in the Parliament Chamber and in due and accustomed Form did Adjourn the Parliament unto the 4 th day of October according to the said Commission last specified and caused the said Commission to be publickly read by Francis Spilman Esq Clerk of the Parliament in hearing of the Commons then also present according to antient Custom in that behalf On the 4 th day of October Anno Regni Reginae Eliz. Septimo The like Commission ut supra bearing date the said 4 th day of October directed unto the Archbishop of Canterbury the Marquess of Winchester Lord Treasurer the Duke of Norfolk Earl Marshal of England the Earl of Sussex Chief Justice of all Forrests c. on this side Trent Ambrose Earl of Warwick Master of the Ordnance the Bishop of London and the Bishop of Rochester Edward Lord Clinton great Admiral of England William Lord Howard of Effingham Lord Chamberlain Thomas Lord Wentworth and Henry Lord Hunsdon authorizing them 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 and 3. ut antea mutatis mutandis to Prorogue and continue the same Parliament in Septimum diem Februarii prox futurum Teste me ipsa apud Westmonasterium 4 die Octobris Anno Regni nostri Septimo Which Commission was read by the Clerk of the Parliament in the Parliament Chamber in presence of ten of the Commissioners and of the Commons Memorandum quod hodie septimo die Februarii Anno Regni Eliz. Dei gratiâ Angliae Franciae Hiberniae Reginae sidei defensor c. Octavo in quem diem praesens hoc Parliamentum Prorogatum suer at convenerunt Domini tam spirituales quam temporales quorum nomina subsequuntur viz. Archiepiscopus Cantuarien Nicolaus Bacon Miles Custos magni Sigilli Marchio Winton Thesaurar Dux Norfolc Comes Marescallus Marchio North Comes Sussex Comes Warwick Episcopus London Episcopus Roffen Dominus Clinton Admirallus Dominus Howard Camerarius Dominus Wentworth Dominus de Hunsdon Qui cum convenissent unà cum populi atque Burgen ut vocant satis magnâ frequentiâ praedictus Nicolaus Bacon
Regina ac tempore cujus contrarii memoria hominum non existit in eadem usitat approbat breve de Cap. ad satisfaciendum versus cundem Tho. Gonnell pro debito damnis praedictis in placito praedicto prosequi returnari deberet antequam aligned breve de seire facias versus manucaptores praedictos in loquela illa impetrari seu prosequi deberet licet consuetudo sorma captionis recognitionum in Curia praedict a usae suerunt in sorma praedicta viz. Si contigerit cundem Thomam Gonnel in placito praedicto convinci tunc iidem Manucaptores concesserunt quilibet corum per se concessit tam debitum praedictum quàm omnia hujusmodi damna nune custag ' quae praesato Johanni Hunt in ea parte adjudicentur de terris Catallis suis cerum 〈◊〉 it sieri ad opus praedicti Johannis Hunt 〈◊〉 si consigerit praedictum Thomam Gonnell debitum damna illa praefato Johanni Hunt minimè 〈◊〉 aut si pri onae Marescal ' Dominae Reginae coram ipsa Regina ea occasione non reddere c. Et peturt iidem Richardus Harbert Johannes Awbery Willielmus Filian Simon Browne quod Judicium praedictum processus super 〈◊〉 praedicta de seire 〈◊〉 prosecut in Curia dict' Dominae Reginae coram ipsa Regina revocetur adnulletur penitus pro nullis habeatur Et super hoc Domini per 〈◊〉 Justiciariorum post longam maturam deliverationem uno consensu adjudicaverunt ..... quod judicium praedictum processus super brevia praedicta de scire sac ' prosecut ' in Curia dictae Dominae Reginae coram ipsa Regina revocetur adnulletur penitus pro nullis habcatur On Wednesday the 10 th day of March to which day the Parliament had been on Monday last continued Eight Bills of no great moment had each of them one reading of which the first being the Bill for Confirmation of Letters Patents made unto the Dean and Chapter of Norwich was read prima vice Six Bills also were brought up to the Lords from the House of Commons of which the first being the Bill for Provision to be made for the Surety of the Queens Majesties most Royal Person and the continuance of the Realm in Peace was read prima vice On Thursday the 11 th day of March Six Bills had each of them one reading of which the first being the last recited Bill for Surety of the Queens Royal Person c. was read secunda vice And the second being the Bill for the good Government of the City and Borough of Westminster in the County of Middlesex was read tertia vice with a Schedule and certain Amendments quae communi omnium procerum assensu conclusa dat' Doctori Barkeley Servienti Rolls in Domum Communem deferend Then the Lord Chancellor continued the Parliament unto two of the Clock in the Afternoon About which hour the Lords Spiritual and Temporal meeting six Bills of no great moment had each of them one reading of which the second being the Bill concerning the Lady Marchioness of Winchesters Jointure was read secunda vice commissa to the Master of the Rolls and the Lord Chief Justice of the Common-Pleas For as much as in the matter depending now in Parliament by Writ of Error brought by John Akerode Thomas Stanfeild and divers others against Richard Whalley Defendant for reversing of certain Errors supposed by the said Plaintiff to be in the said Defendants Grandfathers form of Pleading and other things in his Recovery of the Mannor of Eringden in the County of York it hath appeared to this honourable Court by the Certificate of the Lords Chief Justices the Master of the Rolls and others being by this Honourable Court appointed Committees to hear and examine the matter privately before them that the Writ of Error and the scire facias are insufficient in Law for divers Causes opened to this Court. Therefore it is Ordered by the Lords that the same Writ of Error shall abate and the Plaintiffs to pursue their further remedy as they shall thing good On Saturday the 13 th day of March to which day the Parliament had been on Thursday last continued the Bill for Provision to be made for the Surety of the Queens Majesties most Royal Person and the continuance of the Realm in Peace was read tertia vice quae communi omnium Procerum assensu conclusa with one amendment in the 44. line that is after this word left put out so as and in place thereof put in foreseeing that This amendment was made after the third reading and before the Bill was put to the question and was delivered to Doctor Barkeley and Serjeant Rodes to be carried to the Lower House with the Bill for the better observing of the Sabbath day with request for that there are whole Sentences inserted into the said Bill for the Sabbath day and the Bill would remain a very soul Record it might be fair written again Vide concerning this Bill of the Sabbath on Wednesday the third day and on Saturday the 6 th day of this instant March foregoing Two other Bills lastly of no great moment had each of them one reading of which the second being the Bill for Oxford-Haven was read tertia vice expedita Four Bills lastly were brought up to the Lords from the House of Commons of which the first was the Bill of one entire Subsidy and two Fifteenths granted by the Temporalty On Monday the 15 th day of March to which day the Parliament had been on Saturday last continued prima secunda tertia vice lecta est schedula of the amendments of the Bill against Jesuits sent from the House of Commons quae communi omnium procerum assensu conclusa est with an Addition to the said Schedule added by them of the House of Commons data Doctori Barkeley Servienti Rolles in Domum Communem deferend Six several Bills also of no great moment had each of them one reading of which the first being the Bill for Consirmation of the Subsidy of six shillings in the pound granted by the Clergy was read prima vice commissa ad ingrossandum Three Bills lastly were sent up to the Lords from the House of Commons of which the first was the Bill for the renewing continuance explanation and perfecting of divers Statutes Then the Lord Chancellor continued the Parliament unto two of the Clock in the Afternoon about which time the Lords Spiritual and Temporal Assembling Four Bills of no great moment had each of them one reading of which the first being the Bill for the payment and satisfaction of the Debt of William last Lord Marquess of Winchester deceased due to the Queens Majesty was read prima vice On Tuesday the 16 th day of March Seven Bills of no great moment had each of them one reading of which the first being the Bill for the
accordingly M r Serjeant Puckering and M r Attorney General do bring word from the Lords touching the Motion made of this House in that behalf for M r Sollicitor his Attendance to be given in the service of this House being a Member of the same That their Lordships having had consideration of the said Motion of this House in that behalf are of opinion that the said M r Sollicitor is to continue his Attendance in the Upper House of Parliament and not in this House for that he was called by her Majesties Writ to serve and attend in the said Upper House of Parliament long before he was Elected or Returned a Member into this and also that the said M r Sollicitor by force of her Majesties said Writ had served in the said Upper House since the beginning of this said Session now already almost by the space of one whole Month. On Tuesday the 4 th day of March the Amendments in the Bill touching Writs of Covenant c. and a Proviso added were both twice read and upon the question Ordered to be ingrossed M r Grafion one of the Committees in the Bill for repealing of certain Statutes delivered in the Bill with some Additions and shewed the reasons and also delivered in both the Bill and the Additions Two Bills did each of them pass upon the third reading of which the first was against Common Informers and the second for the assurance of the Jointure of Anne the Wife of Henry Nevill Esquire in which there were several Amendments inserted All which Amendments being thrice read in the end after some Speeches had the Bill was palled upon the question which said Bill with another were sent up to the Lords by Mr. Vice-Chamberlain and others The Master of the Wardrobe one of the Committees touching Conference and search of Precedents for resolution to be had upon the Message of her Majesty delivered unto this House by a Committee of the Lords concerning the passing of the Bills against the abuses of Purveyors and Process and Pleadings in the Exchequer sheweth that they have met and travailed in the said Commitment and so reciting some particularities of their proceedings doth refer the residue of the report thereof unto Mr. Cook one other of the said Committees who likewise setting down at large the whole travail of their search and Conference concludeth their resolution to be if the House shall so think good that in most humble and dutiful wise this House by their own Mouth Mr. Speaker do exhibite unto her Majesty the causes and reasons moving this House to proceed in the two said Bills in such sort as they had done which course after sundry other Speeches was thought fittest by this House to be prosecuted and best to stand with the Liberties and the honor of this House and resolved further that this their resolution might be imparted unto the Lords that with their Lordships good favours this House meant so to do And it was thereupon then also further thought good and prayed by this House that Mr. Vice-Chamberlain being a Member of this House would be pleased at the humble Petition of this House unto her Majesty to know her Majesties most gracious pleasure what number of this House her Majesty would vouchsafe to attend upon her Highness with Mr. Speaker and at what time Which resolution of the House touching their said course in proceeding in shewing unto her Majesty the causes and reasons of their dealings in the said Bills against the abuses of Purveyors and Process and Pleadings in the Exchequer in such sort as they have done was committed unto Mr. Vice-Chamberlain and such others of the House as were sent up with the two last mentioned Bills to the Upper House to signisie their said resolution at the same time unto their Lordships After which the Bill touching the gaging of Casks and other Vessels c. having been read the second time and committed unto Mr. Treasurer Mr. Wroth Mr. Alford and others Mr. Vice-Chamberlain and the rest returning from the Lords he shewed that according to the Commission of this House they had delivered the Message of this House unto those of the Committees of the Lords from whom the Committees of this House had before received this Message from her Majesty shewing them that this House by their Lordships good favours had determined to become Suitors to her Majesty to render unto her Highness the causes and reasons of their Proceedings in the said two Bills by the Mouth of Mr. Speaker And that thereupon he said they were then to hear but not to Answer And that afterwards this House should hear further from their Lordships Vide concerning these matters on Saturday the 15 th day on Monday the 17 th day and on Thursday the 27 th day of February foregoing as also on Thursday the 6 th day Saturday the 8 th day Monday the 17 th day of this instant March On Wednesday the 5 th day of March the Bill concerning Richard Southwell had its first reading Mr. Treasurer one of the Committees in the Bill against Pluralities and Non-Residents appointed on Saturday the first day of this instant March foregoing shewed the meeting and proceeding of the said Committees brought in the old Bill and also a new Bill shewing the reasons of making the same new Bill and doth in the names of all the said Committees pray a present reading of the same new Bill Whereupon the same was then read accordingly for the first reading Which done upon a Motion by sundry of this House for a second reading presently Mr. Treasurer shewed unto the House that all the residue of the said Committees likewise willed him in the name of them all to move this House for a second reading of the same Bill Whereupon the said Bill was read the second time and Ordered to be ingrossed The Bill for the maintenance of the Pier of Dover was read the second time and after sundry Speeches committed unto all the Privy Council being of this House Mr. Mills Mr. Alford Sir Edward Hobby and others who were appointed to meet to Morrow at two of the Clock in the Afternoon in the Exchequer Chamber The Bill against Forestallers Regrators and Ingrossers was read the first time and upon further Motion read again for the second reading and upon the division of the House after the question it was upon another question after the same division with the yielding of the negative Voices Ordered to be committed unto all the Privy Council being of this House Mr. John Hare Mr. George Moor Sir William Moor Mr. Grimston Mr. Cromwell and others who were appointed to meet on Friday next in the Exchequer Chamber at two of the Clock in the Afternoon Sir Thomas Throckmorton Knight one of the Knights returned into this present Parliament for the County of Gloucester having lain sick here in London is licensed to repair into the Country to his own House for recovery of his health On Thursday the 6