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A41682 Londinum triumphans, or, An historical account of the grand influence the actions of the city of London have had upon the affairs of the nation for many ages past shewing the antiquity, honour, glory, and renown of this famous city : the grounds of her rights, priviledges, and franchises : the foundation of her charter ... / collected from the most authentick authors, and illustrated with variety of remarks. Gough, William, 1654?-1682. 1682 (1682) Wing G1411; ESTC R24351 233,210 386

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into Ireland Yet thither we hear of the Kings sending him oftentimes secret Messengers and comsorting him with many rich gifts and the next year we read of his being fetch'd home again to still the grudges springing up between the King and his Nobles and continue amity amongst them which prov'd but so much the more mischievous to the Realm For this exorbitant Favourite's power more and more encreasing he having the keeping of the Kings Treasure and Jewels convey'd many of them some of great value out of the Land and brought the King by means of his wanton Conditions to manifold Vices as Adultery and others whereupon by the Lords Counsel and Resolution taken at Lincoln he was shortly after exil'd into Flanders to the Kings great displeasure In comes Gaveston again though he had before abjur'd the Realm with this condition by the Barons added that if he were found again in any Lands subject to the King's dominions he should be taken as a Common Enemy and Condemned But being recall'd by the King he ventures on his favour and afterwards demeans himself worse and worse In so much that we read that he disdain'd the Lords of England and of them had many spiteful and slanderous words so that there 's the less wonder that the Queen and the whole Court were sorrowful because they saw the King as Stow words it not very sound so great was his Joy and Jollity for his receiving him in safety Whereupon the Lords of one mind saith my Author consented to put him to death which they soon after effected by taking the Castle wherein he was and so having him in their hands smote off his Head For this was the King grievously displeas'd with those Lords and vow'd we hear to revenge his Death so that after this he sought occasion against them to grieve and displease them If the foremention'd disorders with many before express'd by Authentick Writers to have fallen out under this King If Treachery Robberies Rapes Extortions Divisions Civil discords at home slights contempts and losses abroad and much blood-shed in Battels fought and lost both at home and abroad If murrain of Beasts and scarcity of Grain dearness of Victuals sickness and mortality of Men ravages and outrages of cruel insulting Enemies and almost a general desolation in several places of the Land be glories that can eternize a Man's memory to succeeding Generations I know not whether this Kings Name and Reign may ever be forgotten as long as England stands a fixt Island in the midst of the Ocean In the midst of these troubles and crosses you are not to suppose the City of London scap't free from partaking in the Common misery of the Land In the first of this King's Reign I find that he and his new Married Bride were received joyfully by the Citizens and so conveyed to Westminster but the times afterwards grew so cloudy and full of storms that I don't think they had over much reason to rejoyce more than the rest of their poor distressed fellow Subjects Yet Providence in good time delivered the City out of these troubles and with advantage too as may be observed and remark't in the end of this and beginning of the next Kings Reign Twice more particularly in this Kings Reign do we read of a breach made on the Cities Priviledges by constraining the Citizens at their own charges to raise and maintain a certain number of Soldiers and send them whether they were appointed but the last time it seems it was conditionally that it should not be made a President which possibly was to appease them when they refused to go out of the City to fight unless they might according to their liberties as Stow says return home again the same day before Sun-set For 't is plain how great soever their respect was towards their Soveraign that they had no great kindness for some about him And therefore when aid and assistance was requested of them against the Queen who with her Son Edward was newly Landed and pretended Reformation of abuses they made this plea or excuse as favouring rather Reformers than makers of Grievances yet with profession of due obedience and Honour to the King the Queen and their Son who was after his Father the Right and Lawful Heir to the Crown At the Parliament of Whitebands held in the twefth of this King whether the Barons came in Arms the Citizens were the Keepers of the Kings peace in the City a thousand of them well Armed by the Majors order watching by day and as many by night in divers Wards and at several Gates thereof under the inspection of two Aldermen with Officers assigned to Ride about every night to oversee them and the rest of the Citizens were enjoyned to have their Arms in readiness upon a very short warning for more surety And what pray now was the effect of all this but that the peace was kept the City guarded it and no disturbance hapned that I read of notwithstanding there was so great an Army then on foot Ill men were removed several things were ordained for the good of the Realm Transactions were carried on without violence or blood-shed the Parliament was peaceably dissolved and every one returned home in quietness safety and security But on the contrary afterwards in the later end of this Kings Reign when the Courtiers were much disgusted in the City by reason of many violences committed and much harsh dealing used by some towards their fellow Subjects in the time of their power under the wings of Authority and pretence of Law and Justice the Citizens were so far from keeping the King's peace as before that they soon shew'd openly their favour good will and kindness for the Queen who under the glozing pretence of reforming the ill Government was come into the Land with a considerable force of Soldiers and had sent to the Mayor and Commonalty for their aid help and assistance in carrying on this her pretended Reformation A work generally highly acceptable to all such as think themselves oppressed and glorious in the Eyes of the people but such is the misery fate and infelicity the frailty and imperfection incident to all sublunary attempts that it very seldom if ever fully answers the expectation of every one concern'd Neither was the Citizens affection to the Queen and her Party barely shewn in words and expressions but it went much farther and was publickly brought into Act by beheading such as they took to be the Queens enemies not so much as sparing the Bishop of Exeter himself a great man among the spiritualty who had been there left by the King to have the Rule of the City in his absence The occasion is said to have sprung from his stiff and peremptory demanding of the Keys of the City Gates by vertue of his Commission which highly exasperated the Commons against him and so much the more because as was the saying he had rais'd an Army to withstand the Queen a fault
then thought unpardonable by the Londoners who in words and deeds espoused the Queen's Cause seis'd on the Tower of London and kept it for the Queens use and not long afterwards received her into their City with great Joy and Honour A demonstrative evidence in my opinion of the City's strength and power For if London when she pleas'd could maintain the King's peace in the midst of Arms as was shewn above so inviolably as that none dar'd in opposition to break it and afterwards in the very same age and within the compass of half a dozen years did actually assert the Qeens cause and assist her in her proceedings as was pretended for Reformation of the Realm tho the Consequence thereof was in truth the unfortunate Kings resignation what greater instance can there be to shew her great influence upon the whole Nation in those unsetled times London having so visibly appeared in favour of the Queen the Prince and his party and contributed so much towards this notable revolution of affairs we have no reason to think but that out of Common gratitude her Citizens were to be aboundantly rewarded and that they themselves out of self interest and natural Prudence would so well and wisely look to their own affairs as to make hay while the Sun shines to the procuring new grants and Graces and so accordingly we find the event For in the first year of Edward the third Fabian tells us he confirmed the Liberties and Franchizes of the City making the Major Chief Justice in all places of Judgment within the same next the King every Alderman that had been Major Justice of Peace in London and Midlesex and such as had not been Justice in his own Ward Granting them also the Fee-farm of London for three hundred pounds and that they should not be constrained to go out of the City to ●o fight or defend the Land for any need A priviledge greater than what was claimed as their liberty in his Fathers days when unwilling to engage against the Queen and Prince they refused not to go out on condition of returning the same day as is related before But the most beneficial of all the grants was that the Franchises of the City should not be seized into the Kings hands but only for Treason or Rebellion done by the whole City It having before been a Common thing to have their Liberties seized on as hath been plainly manifested in the Precedent Relation on almost every petty disgust conceived by the Court against them were it but for the pretended offence of a particular Officer or for mony alledged to be owing by the City to some great ones at Court or some such like small trivial pretence But now at this time they took such care to have their Liberties setled and secured by this Royal Grant that it may be thought almost if not wholly a thing impossible for the City to forfeit her Charter and have it justly according to that grant taken from her The bringing of Southwark under the Rule of the City and the power allowed their Major to appoint such a Bailiff there as liked him best was a very advantagious favour at the same time by this King Edward bestowed on London but not comparable with the former grant which may most deservedly be esteemed Paramount to all others A particular Officer may offend and oftentimes does nay many may but for a City a whole City so great and glorious a City as London Traiterously to Rebel and so forfeit all her Liberties Priviledges and Franchises at one clap seems to me so great a contradiction as to imply little less than an Impossibility in Nature not to go a step or two higher This King being one of the most powerful Princes of his time and in the strength of his age very succesful in his Wars against the French King 't is not for us hastily to imagine there was any occasion given for so wise and good a King to contest with his Subjects much less with his Loyal Citizens We are rather to expect to hear of the City's Triumphs and glory the Joy and rejoyceing wherewith she often received her Victorious King returning Conquerour from France the frequent Justings Tiltings and Tournaments shewn thereat for his Recreation and entertainment the Wealth Riches and Ability of her head Officers whereof one to Londons great glory is said to have sumptuously feasted four Kings at once in the thirty first of this Kings Reign besides the famous Black Prince many Noble Knights and others to whom with the King he gave many Rich Gifts the splendor of the Citizens in general o● publick occasions and the harmonious concord of all in their own private and particular concerns relating more especially to the Cities good order and Government This King may be supposed too great and too good either to create or to permit differences and discord at home He had wherewithal to exercise his Wisdom and valour abroad in forreign Countries and such success too in his Enterprizes as might make him both feared and beloved by his Subjects at one and the same time Yet notwithstanding such still was Londons power strength and resolution to maintain her Liberties that this Victorious Prince Conquerour over others having sent out Justices into the Shires to make enquiry about his Officers offences and delinquences and the City of London not suffering as Stow tells us any such Officers to sit as Justices in their City as Inquisitors of such matters contrary to their Liberties he thought good rather to appoint those Justices their Sessions in the Tower for Inquisition of the damages of the Londoners and they refusing unless conditionally to answer there and a tumult thereupon arising among the meaner sort claiming their Liberties he esteemed it greater prudence to wave the Justices sitting as to that place and forgive all offences than to enter into a contest with such powerful tho Loyal Subjects as the Londoners were and such undaunted assertors of their own rights priviledges franchises and liberties For as 't is plain the City was very potent so we may as certainly perhaps conclude the Citizens no less suspicious of any thing done under the shadow of this Kings Authority if but looking towards the least breach of their Priviledges as the Commons of England in general seem to have appeared jealous of their Common liberty when upon this Kings laying claim to the Kingdom of France they procured a Law whereby it was enacted that the King should not Rule England as King of France and so Subject them to the insolencies of a fellow-Subjects Deputyship Would you know what esteem and respect the house of Commons in this King's reign had for ●he City Look in Cotton's abridgment of the Records ●n the Tower and there you may find the Commons ●ver and anon petitioning the King that the City ●f London may enjoy all her Liberties and the King's ●nswers generally to such petitions seem rather to ●rant than
his Name to the Place Those Monkish Writers scarce thinking their Hero's Valour sufficiently Celebrated unless they make them meet with and encounter some such Gygantick Adventures where the little Knight shall be sure to over-come the great Gyant Brute having bestowed Cornwal upon Corineus after he had throughly searched the Land for the Pleasure he took in Thames he laid There as we are told the Foundation of a City about the Second Year after his Landing in this Isle and in remembrance of Old Troy named it Troynovant which Name it held till the Time of King Lud near upon One Thousand and Sixty Eight Years from whom 't was named Lud's Town afterwards London as shall be declared in Process of Story What Repute and Esteem this City was of in those Days as being Builded by the First Founder of the British Empire I shall leave to the Reader 's Consideration who may find it honoured with the Sepulture of many of their Kings as of Brute himself and his Eldest Son Locrine to whom in the Division made by his Father fell Middle England for his Share wherein Troynovant was situated To whom may be added Cunedagius and Gorbodug the Father of Ferrex and Porrex the Last of Brute's Line But now the Coast begins to clear up a little more after the Storms of Civil Wars by the Success of Mulmutius Dunwallo Son of Cloton Duke of Cornwal This Dunwallo having vanquished the other Competitors and settled the Land caused a Temple to be builded in Troynovant and named it the Temple of Peace the same according to some Men's Opinions that now is called Blackwell-Hall a Place well known to the Clothiers His Fame is much increas'd by the many good Ordinances he made which were called Mulmutius's Laws and used long after his Decease That this City of Troynovant was of Repute and Renown in this so Famous a Man's Days is hardly to be doubted of by him that considers so eminent a Circumstance as the Building of a Temple of Peace within the Circuit of this City as an Effect of that Peace he had so happily settled in the Land and it may be in Gratitude to the Citizens who probably favour'd his Cause and so might much influence his Actions and Enterprizes In the same Temple of Peace was he laid after his Death which he had been the Occasion of Building in his Life In the Time of Belinus and Brennus his Sons after their Reconcilement Accord we read of their going to Troynovant with their Lords and Friends where after many things ordered for the Common Benefit of the Land they joyntly agreed to lead both their Hosts over the Sea to subdue other Countrys the Smart of which Voyage the Romans felt sufficiently under Brennus and his Gauls By Belinus we sind that an Haven was built in the same Troynovant with a Gate over it call'd even at this Day Belings-gate on whose Pinnacle was set a Brazen Vessel which contain'd the Ashes of his Body burnt after his Death In this City we likewise find that Gurguintus was Buried and also Guintellius his Son from whose Wife Marcia came the Marcian-Law fam'd long after ●mong the Britains and Saxons These being of some Eminency in their 〈…〉 Buried in this City after their Deaths It 〈…〉 safely be concluded That they 〈…〉 therein as their Principal City and 〈…〉 of the Realm Yet we read of other 〈…〉 Note in those Times and after as of 〈…〉 one where Archigallo before depos'd by his Lo●●s for his ill Government was through the Intercession of Elidurus his Brother then Reigning at a Councel of the Britains by him call'd restor'd to his former Dignity When the same Elidurus had gain'd the Assent of his Barons and the good Will of the Commons However Troynovant seems in those Days to have been esteem'd a Place of Security and mention of a Tower therein we find on Occasion of the same foremention'd Elidurus's being sent thither by his unkind younger Brothers to be safely kept as a Prisoner therein The succeeding Times are so barbarous that but little considerable is left upon Record concerning any Actions then done untill we come to the Reign of Lud Eldest Son of Heli which began about Sixty Six Years before our Blessed Saviours Incarnat●on according to Stow. This Man is much prais'd by the Historian for his Worthy Actions and Honourable Deeds for his Valour Liberality and Hospitable House-keeping and his repairing Old Cities and Towns Especially in Troynovant he is Recorded to have caused many Buildings to be made encompassing it also round with a strong Wall of Lime and Stone In the West-Part whereof stands a Gate by him Builded and known even at this Day by the Name of Ludgate For his Love to this City he used most to abide therein Whereupon it was called Caer-Lud or Lud's Town Whence by Corruption and shortning of Words comes the present Name London whereby it shall be called for the future and the former Name Troynovant laid aside in this following Relation Lud dying after an Honourable Reign he was Buried in the aforementioned Gate of his named Port-Lud or Lud-gate where are yet standing the Statues of Him and his Sons as a lasting Monument of his Memory In Cassibellan's Reign the next Successour but whether Son or Brother to Lud is not agreed upon by all Authors we find considerable mention made of London in the Story through Occasion of Cassibellan's Victory over the Romans newly Landed under the Leading of Julius Caesar and twice repelled by the Britain's Valour London was the Place appointed by the King to Celebrate this Victory return Thanks to his Gods and Rewards to his Valourous Knights Here therefore we read of a great Assembly held of his Lords and Knights and of the King 's keeping a Noble and Solemn Feast for all Comers and the Exercise of all kind of Games in those Days used But Difference arising at the Wrestling between a couple of Young Noble Knights allied One of them to the King and the Other to Androgeus Earl or Duke of London as he is somewhere called and from Words these Hotspurs coming to Blows occasion'd such sideing and variance amongst the Company that many were wounded and the Kings Nephew slain to the great disturbance of the Court. For Disgust hence growing between the King and Androgeus to whom the King had given the City of London with the Dukedome or Earldome of Kent besides an Honourable Education suitable to his Birth he being Lud's Eldest Son and so Heir to the Kingdom according to some Writers the other being but his Brother and this Disgust producing War wherein the King was likely to be much the stronger Androgeus recalls Caesar with his Romans to his Aid and assists them in their Landing and joyning his whole Power soon turn'd the Scales bringing Victory to the Romans and an Overthrow and Loss of their ancient Freedome to Cassibellan and his Britains So considerable was the Assistance that Androgeus with
of the Realm so much by Conque●● as on Conditions accordingly here 's menti●● made of one Grant The Occasion of Stephen's coming to the Crow● contrary to his own former Oath swore to Ki●● Henry and in prejudice to Maud's Claim is R●corded by one Author to have been the Oath one Hugh B●got sometime King Henry's Stewar● who swore that the Late King in his presence little before his Death chose this Stephen for 〈◊〉 Heir by reason that he had received some disco●tent at his Daughters hands Whereunto the 〈◊〉 giving easy Credence admitted him King 〈◊〉 Favour of the Londoners did doubtless at th● time condu●● not a little to his advantage in p●●ferring him an able Man before a weak Woma● For Stow's Annals inform us That he was receiv●● by the Londoners when he had been repulsed at ●ther Places certainly it redounded to his 〈◊〉 Benefit afterwards as hath been related before Another Addition of Strength might be his not imposing heavy Taxes upon the People which it may be increased their Love to him and made so many side with him As indeed we find upon his first Admission that he sware among other things before the Lords at Oxford to forgive his People the Tax of Danegelt Neither do I read of any Taxes that he raised upon the Commons It is affirmed positively in the C●ll●ction of Wonders and Remarkable Passages that he raised none with which Stow likewise agrees So that a King 's needless laying of many heavy and grievous Taxes upon his People occasions him to lose much of their Love and his forbearing it when he hath Power in his hands unites his Subjects Hearts the faster to him But instead of Taxes we read of this Kings permission given to his Lords to build Castles or Fortresses upon their own Grounds Many whereof we find pulled down in the next King's time they having been the occasion of many Miseries in the Land and the ready means to foment Civil Wars therein which generally brings greater Damages to the Common●lty than a few Impositions and Taxes can be presumed to do This King Stephen was twice Crowned but for what cause or for what intent is not so easily known whether it was that he thought his Imprisonment had diminished somewhat of his Royalty or else thinking by a second Coronation to ●lude the Force of the Oath made at the first I find not delivered Certain it is soon after my Author tells of his taking away a Castle from the Earl of Chester who before had appeared against him on Maud's side with a very considerable Strength but had been afterwards reconciled to the King But what is much more considerable we read not long after of the King 's new danger and ill Success and of his Party being weaken'd particularly by the loss of London For Duke Henry after King coming into England with a great Army after some small Success gets up to London and wins the Tower as much by Policy and fair Promi●es saith my Author as by Strength Then he had Opportunity enough to caress the C●tizens being so near them and it may be he got not the Tower without their Consert if not by their Affistance Hereby we find that he retrieved what his Mother's Haughtiness before had lost and so having got the City's Affection and Power he was in a fair way to obtain his Desires as he did not long after For we quickly read of Mediators and Treaties of Peace between these two Competitors which took Effect at last though the Interest and Policy of some hindered it for a time In Conclusion the King was fain to consent to the adopting the Duke his Heir so that he might Reign during his Life Which justly to perform the King being sworn with his Lords Spiritual and Temporal in the next place we hear of their riding up to London as if to bind the bargain it was requisite to ask the consent of that Honourable City whose Favour seems to have been of so great weight in those unsettled Times as to turn the Scales twice once in the King's behalf and erewhile on the Duk●'s Such was their Influence such their Power as to pull down and set up in a manner whom the Citizens pleased Happy was this Agreement to the Land by settling peace therein as beneficial likewise was it to the Duke it being a fair Step to the Throne whereon we find him mounted within a little time For not long after this Accord we hear of the King's Death Whether the Troubles of his Mind or Diseases of his Body brought him to his End vexation for the disappointment of his Designs in being after a sort compelled to adopt his Competitor his Enemy for his Son and Heir or Grief for the loss of London's Favour which helped to effect so great a Turn in his Affairs I shall not determine It might be one it might be the other or neither or all conjoyned that became the occasional Causes so to phrase it of his Death I like not to be very positive where I am not very certain Stephen's Death making thus way for Henry to ascend the English Throne he became one of the ●reatest Kings that ever ruled this Land for the Largeness and Extent of his Territories if we reckon the Inheritance he enjoyed from his Father the Land he held by the Title of his Mother the Dowry he had with his Wife and what he ob●ained by the Success of his Arms Yet notwith●tanding all this he lived not free from Troubles ●nd intestine Broils which sprung much out of his ●wn Bowels So that the Glory of his Youth be●an somewhat to be eclipsed by the Misfortunes of ●is elder Years He Crowned his eldest Son li●ing King sometime before the middle of his ●eign to the end as one Author affirms that he ●ight have full Power and Authority to rule this ●and and People while his Father was busied in ●ther Countrys where some of his Lands lay This ●ight be one Reason but the King having learnt 〈◊〉 experience to his Mother's Loss and his own ●ost how easy it was for Stephen to attempt and ●ain the Crown being present on the Spot while ●●e right Heir was far distant in the vacancy of the ●hrone may be supposed in his intent to have designed the hinderance of such an Intrusion for the future by Crowning the next Heir King while he himself lived I read that Stephen had some such design to have Crowned his Son King in his own days as he declared at a Parliament called at London An. Reg. 17 to have fixt the Crown the surer to his Posterity But the B●shops refused the Deed Which I do not find they did so much out of Conscience or in Favour to M●●d's Title as by the Command forsooth of the Pope who in those days was very apt to be clapping his Fingers into almost ever● ones Pye where he thought any good pickin● might be had This King Henry got but little by Crowning
care and vigilance Wh●● the occasion of this difference was I have not yet read ●ut to appease it I find a Counsel of the Lords called 〈◊〉 Westminster Fabian gives it likewise the Title of a Parliament which continued Three weeks and more To this Council came the Lords with great companies ●articularly the two contesting Parties intending it seems 〈◊〉 have lodg'd within the City So desirous so ambiti●us of pretending to London's favour that such seem 〈◊〉 have thought the bare lodging therein might have ●dded to their strength But upon the Mayors consult●●g with such as the King had left Rulers in his Ab●●nce and through the advice of the King's Brother it ●as concluded that neither the said Edward nor the said ●arl should come into the City there to lodge nor any ●●at held upon either side And further it was provi●ed that all within the City of the Age of 15 years ●nd above should be in Arms to watch and keep the ●ity day and night and that the Gates should be kept ●ut by day and certain men in Arms keep every Gate 〈◊〉 the City For the further safeguard of the City and 〈◊〉 keeping of the Peace therein the aforementioned ●ulers came into London and there lodged with their ●ompanies and such other persons as they assigned to ●●rengthen the City if need required Do people 〈◊〉 mathematical Demonstration Look here and see ●hat care's taken to keep the City safe and harmless ●nd in Peace as if then the Land must needs be in ●uiet too Preserve the City and its just Liberties and ●●en the Nations Quietness Peace and Safeguard is ●●rongly secured Behold here the Eyes of the Nation 〈◊〉 upon the City of London and her Actions and ●here's the party that dare strike while she Guards ●●eps and preserves the Kings Peace while he is ●●eased to busie himself in foreign Countries Such as ●ill not believe but what they see and so know let ●●em here credit their own Eyes if they be not Popish Transubstantiators or shut them to keep the light 〈◊〉 After the King was returned to London from 〈◊〉 the Sea by his order many of their lodgings 〈◊〉 altered direction was taken between the aforesaid 〈◊〉 testing Parties and a new Assembly of Parliament 〈◊〉 signed Anno 44. William Fitz Richard being Mayor 〈◊〉 Browning Richard Coventre Sheriffs after Candl●●●● by the Kings Command a Folk-Moot was called 〈◊〉 Pauls-Cross whither he came in person with his B●●ther Richard King of the Romans and many oth●● Nobles and commanded the Mayor that every str●●ling of 12 Years and above should before his ●●dermen be sworn the day following to be true to 〈◊〉 King and his Heirs Kings of England and that 〈◊〉 Gates of the City should be kept with armed Men 〈◊〉 before was determined Not long after this we 〈◊〉 of more suspicions of a breach between the King 〈◊〉 his Barons which in few years broke out into an 〈◊〉 War What did all this swearing then avail Those amo●●● the Children of men who look abroad into the world 〈◊〉 take notice of the common course of the Generality of 〈◊〉 living or are much conversant with the Monuments 〈◊〉 the dead may find it no very difficult matter to obser●● that let men take never so many Oaths make never so ●●ny Covenants Promises and Compacts that if they 〈◊〉 come to have Apprehensions that those to whom th● have sworn themselves endeavour to make use of th● religious Ties and Obligations designed at first 〈◊〉 mutual preservation to encroach upon their Liber●● deprive them of their Priviledges their Properti●● their Birth-rights to the enslaving of them and th● whole Posterity all former Subscriptions Oaths 〈◊〉 Promises Pacts and Covenants will scarce avail 〈◊〉 with the most But if Experience should chanc● legitimate their doubts and Fears by the others actual endeavours in the open face of the World it is rarely seen but that notwithstanding past transactions they will make the greatest opposition they can against the others arbitrary pretences And so all former religious Bonds are snapt asunder like Tow burnt by the Fire They who imposed Oaths for such ill intents might have considered if they pleased that many in such cases would not have scrupled at all to have broke them Or if any of the more devout had been a little ●●icer they could not doubtless be ignorant in those days what Remedies might have been bought for Money out of the Popes publick Store-house if other common ways of Evasion would not have pass'd currant with them How many of that nature have ●affed up and down in the World it may not be unwor●hy of our consideration sometimes to revolve in our minds if it be a thing feasible to bring them within ●hat compass True indeed quoth the subtile Sophi●ter I have sworn Allegiance but a latter lesser Tie 〈◊〉 invalid when a greater Obligation lies upon me True an Oath lies upon me but here 's my Liberty Life and Religion lying all at stake I was born free what can dispense with me to deprive me of my Birth-●ight Life is sweet Self-preservation is near and ●ear to me by the Instinct of Nature 'T is natural to ●reated Beings to defend their Lives against such as ●●ould destroy them what then can oblige me to suf●er my Life violently to be taken away by anothers in●●ry whenas I dare not deprive my self thereof by my ●wn Endeavours unless I will run into so foul an Of●●nce so unnatural a Fact as to proclaim my self to ●●e World a Self-Murtherer and so force my Soul to ●y out of my Body before I know 't is my Creator's ●ill she should My Religion is to obey God above ●●d before Man my Soul is his that gave it me and where 's the Obligation that can impower me justly 〈◊〉 give away that which is not my own to bestow 〈◊〉 my Religion which I believe is according to the La● of the Almighty stand or fall at another mans pleasure Must I take the matter manner and height of my D●votions from the imperious dictates of another's 〈◊〉 and that too upon the account of my Oath Must destroy my Religion in effect or else I cannot keep in shew Besides know ye not that my Oath was co●ditional Mutual Bonds make mutual Obligation Service was vow'd where Protection was promised an● expected Can any but an Idiot be supposed to swe●● away himself to be destroyed instead of being defended Must I still pay Obedience upon account of former C●●venants where I cannot get due Protection and ha●● but little encouragement to expect it though it was 〈◊〉 first promised since that now thence I fear utter rui●● and infallible destruction instead thereof With 〈◊〉 Inventions some may chance to be full and it may 〈◊〉 to make them seem more authentick they can produ●● them under the Printer's Hand 'T is in Print an A●gument which may sometimes weigh much with 〈◊〉 inconfiderate inobserving Persons who consider 〈◊〉 how
and Profit of the Realm which Oath by his license and most gracious favour they ●ntended to observe and keep One of the Ingredients ●hat according to the Royal Psalmist goes to the com●osure of a Citizen of Zion who shall abide in the Lords Tabernacle and dwell in his Holy Hill is that ●e changeth not though he sweareth to his own hurt ●nd moreover continued the Mayor to avoid all oc●asion that might grow of grudge or variance be●ween him and his Barons within the City they would ●ut all Aliens and Strangers out thereof if he were so ●ontented The King shewed as if he was well plea●●d with this Answer so that the Mayor with his fa●our departed and sent Answer to the Barons ac●ording to the same their Liberties alway upholden ●id saved The Barons lying so near London and ●ith so considerable a strength 't was time for those ●obles who were against those Statutes to be pack●●g as fast as they could for fear of the associated ●ords But the King is said to have sent after them ●●vers Persons of his Houshold and of the Citizens of ●●ndon to induce them to return and tarry with him 〈◊〉 that season according to the Mayor's former words all Aliens suspected of any favour owing to the one Party or the other were put out of the City Impartiality is rarely found among the Children of men though it is so commendable a Virtue not to have respect of Persons But not long after we hear of their being placed in Offices many of them in Winds●● Castle by Edward the King's Son So usual is it for contesting Parties to receive and prefer one anothers outcasts No wonder then if we sometimes see the same done in private Families when at variance among themselves which is so oft acted over and over again in publick differences Then Watch and Ward was kept dayly in the C●ty and in the night certain assigned to ride about the Town with some Foot-Men allotted to them to search all the Town over But hence harm ensuing by reason that evil disposed Persons under colour o● Watch-Men seeking for strangers robbed and spoile● many Houses in one part of the City while the ridi●● Watch was in another place a standing Watch was o●dained in every Ward The mind of the City being made known by their publick Mouth the Mayor 't was time for men of a different Interest to endeavou● to draw the King further off from it Accordingl● we find the King departs from the City when ●● heard the Barons were coming into it The Baro●● enter the City the Sunday before St. Margaret's day and the King shortly after returns to Westminster wi●● the Queen and ohers of his Council Soon after 〈◊〉 Hugh le Spencer is made Chief Justice and Keeper 〈◊〉 the Tower by consent both of the King and the B●rons Upon the morrow following Maudlin Day was a Writ directed to the Mayor and Alderm●● charging them that the King's Peace be firmly 〈◊〉 within the City for in the same it was expressed th● the King and his Barons were lovingly agreed Fu●thermore in the same Writ it was commanded that if within the Precincts of the City were any person or persons known that would withstand the foresaid Ordinances and Statutes that all such should be attached and put in Prison and their Goods also attached for the King till they knew his further Pleasure Well had it been for many great persons if this agreement had lasted longer but like other Worldly things this new peace was also transitory However here we meet with another instance of the Cities Concern of the Cities Power of the Cities Influence 'T was the Citizens concern to keep the Peace thus happily and quietly made 'T was their Power you here find engaged to see to it And their Influence upon either party you may guess by the due care taken to inform them of the late mutual Agreement In these days of Misrule and time of the Barons residing in the City we are given to understand that many Robberies were committed by divers therein and much harm done but little corrected they were so born out and maintained by their Masters Such is the too too common effect of Civil broils The Commons of the City were far out of Rule by the incensing of riotous Persons so that in the Assemblies and Courts kept at Guild-Hall or other places Worshipful men were little or nothing regarded and simple indiscrcet persons carried away the voice As the City was in those days powerful so the Lords seem well to have known it when to obtain the more favour of the Citizens they willed them to shew them if they had any of their Liberties withdrawn that they might again to them be restored and also to think of some new ones to their Weal and Profit and they would labour to the King to have them granted Can any one desire greater Evidence than Ocular Demonstration The City had a great many good and beneficial Liberties and Franchises already granted to the Emulation and Envy of many of her ill-willers Yet here our own Eyes may easily certifie us of a large offer voluntarily made to her Citizens by such as had Power to encrease them had they had the discretion at that time to have made a good use of it For the Mayor having upon this kind offer assembled the Commons at Guild-Hall and willed the Officers to devise such things as might be beneficial to the City they counselling together are said to have made such a note of Statutes Provisions and Ordinances to their own singular Profit and so prejudicial to all other Foreign Merchants coming to the City to all other Fairs and Markets of England and the universal Weal of the Realm that upon overseeing them the Heads told them they were neither lawful nor charitable and such as they knew would not be admitted So common is it in too too many concerns for private Interest to be brought up in the Van while the publick is left lagging behind as it were a loof off in the Rear The Heads of the City willing the Commons to devise other Ordinances their first being so uncharitably ordered and they I know not upon what account nor upon whose Incitation proving refractory and refusing both those and others right necessary for the Common-Weal of the City were rejected and put off saith my Author For men to go to logging of Bills when they cannot otherwise hinder their passing is a known Practice After St. James's day we hear of the Barons departure from London towards Windsor where they turned out the Aliens before plac'd therein by the King's Son Edward who thereupon with other associates rode to the King with Complaints in their Mouths against the Barons for spoiling them of their Goods But these being then put off by the King with a promise of Justice till more of his Council were with him he with other Attendants sailed into France whence being returned after Michaelmas to
of the Castle and Lodged by his Assignment except these five Persons viz. T●●mas Fizt Thomas Mayor Michael Tony Steven Bukker●● Thomas Pywellyson and John D●flete These five 〈◊〉 the King given to his Son Edward at whose co●mandment they remained in the said Tower long ●●ter notwithstanding the King 's safe Conduct to 〈◊〉 before made What became then of the King's wor● But who durst oppose a waking Lyons The 〈◊〉 Hunter in the fable lik't not to deal roughly wi●● him till his long Teeth were broken out and his 〈◊〉 cut off When upon the bruit of Queen Mary'● 〈◊〉 with Child King Philip of Spain her Husband 〈◊〉 to be chosen the Childs Guardian if the 〈◊〉 should Decease and offered the Parliament great ●●surances and Bonds of Security for his redelivery 〈◊〉 the Kingdom at the appointed time that Gentlem●● shew'd himself no Fool who when the assuranc● were likely to find acceptance stood up and inq●●●ed who should 〈◊〉 the Bond And the Parliame●● enough approv'd him when they immedintly the●● upon rejected the King's specious offers 'T is very d●●advantagious and often injurious to the Weak to 〈◊〉 making of bargains with the more Powerful who 〈◊〉 strong enough to break their Promises and Covena●● with Impunity or keep them but e'en as they pleas● When the tydings of the usage of the Mayor and th● rest at Windsor came to London whereas many 〈◊〉 fear had absented themselves before upon this new● many more convey'd away themselves and their good secretly into diverse parts of England so that many of them are said never to have return'd after In the 49th Year November the 6th We find tha● the King came to Westminster and shortly after gave to diverse of his Houshold-Servants near about sixty Houses and Housholds within the City so that the Owners were compell'd to redeem their Houses and Housholds with all the goods in them or else to depart and suffer such Persons to enter to whom th●●nd Houses were given This grant is said to have ●●●ended likewise to all the Lands Tenements Goo●● 〈◊〉 Chattels which the said Citizens had in any other ●●●ces of England Riches have often made Persons 〈◊〉 singled out for offendors while the poor Man ●● the mean time scapes free few envying him his Pove●ty After this was 〈◊〉 Constable of the Tower ●●de Custos or Guardian of the City who chose 〈◊〉 Adrian and Walter Hervy Citizens to be Bayliffs 〈◊〉 him and to him to be accountable to the King's 〈◊〉 Then took the King pledges of the best Men's 〈◊〉 of the City that 〈◊〉 peace should be surely kept 〈◊〉 th● same These were put into the Tower ●nd 〈◊〉 kept at their Parents cost Shortly after 〈…〉 Labour and S●it made the foresaid Londoners ●● the keeping of the Bayliff of the Castle of Windsor 〈◊〉 deliver'd and came to London except 〈…〉 viz. Richard Bonaventure Symon De'Had●st●k William De Kent and William De Glocester who with 〈◊〉 other five afore excepted were still kept in the Tow●r of Windsor Then dayly Suit and Labour wa● made to the King to have his Gracious Favour and ●o know his Pleasure what fine he would have of the City for their Transgressions and Displeasure by them ●o him done The former Transactions seem to bea● a Tendency hereunto The Citizens were prevail'd upon to resign up themselves their Lives and Goods into the King's hands submitting all to his Mercy that a good large fine might be the easier levied of them and the Nation the better made to beleive that the City was well dealt with for paying no more when as the King might have seiz'd upon all they having surrendred in a manner wholly upon discretion To what else tend the many preparatives before rehears'd but to make this bitter Pill go down 〈◊〉 smoother and quieter with them The Book ●●quai●ts ●● that the King asked 40000l and 〈◊〉 stood at ●0000 Marks I But the City alledged 〈◊〉 themselves that the poor Commons of the City 〈◊〉 of many were gone away were the Trespassers 〈◊〉 that the best of the City by these riotous Perso● were robid and spoil●● and had lost a great part o● their Substance in this 〈◊〉 some time by the R●vers of the Sea as the Wardens of the five Ports and others For these and many other considerations 〈◊〉 Citizens besought the King of his most Gracious 〈◊〉 your and Pity to take of them as they might ●ear This matter thus depending the King depart●● 〈◊〉 Westminister to Northampton having a little 〈◊〉 his departure Ordain'd Sir John Lynd and M● John 〈◊〉 Clerk to be Guardians of the City and Tow●● they ●eing nam'd in the King 's Writing 〈…〉 Steward 's of the City Upon the Day after th● King was gone these Two Stewards sent for Tw●●ty Four of the most notable Men of the City an● warned them to appear the Day following before th● King's Councel at Westminster At their appeara●●● it was shown unto them by Sir Roger Leyborn that t●● King's mind was That they should have the Rule o● the City in his absence under the foresaid Senescha●● and for to see good Rule kept in the City they should be sworn there before his Councel They were there upon sworn and countermanded unto the City The City's fine was inagitation till about Christmas 〈…〉 End was made with the King by such friends a● the City had about him for the Sum of 20000 Marks for all transgressions and offences by them before done some Persons excepted whom the King had giv'n to his Son Edward being those afore nam'd kept in the Tower of Windsor For the payment of this Sum at Days by agreement set where Sir 〈…〉 and Mr. Robert Wareyn Clerk assign'd to take 〈…〉 After Surety by them receiv'd and sent to 〈◊〉 King at Northampton the King sent immediately 〈◊〉 to th● Citizens a Charter under his Broad 〈…〉 may be seen in Eabian my Author in these 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 needless to make many comments 〈…〉 upon this affair Through the whole it is ●●●ifest that the City was of considerable Power and 〈◊〉 so that the King thought not good to exaspe●●● the Citizens too much least evil should have 〈◊〉 of it To make a Bridge of Gold for a flying 〈◊〉 is no mean Policy Doubtless it was well 〈…〉 Court that they us'd not the 〈◊〉 violence 〈…〉 Baron's Party was not wholy destroyed as yet in 〈◊〉 hand though it was very much crush'd How 〈◊〉 the whole City joyn'd therewith might ha●e 〈…〉 pois'd if not turn'd the Scales had sh● been 〈◊〉 ●ar●hly dealt with I rather crave leave to 〈…〉 the Readers consideration than hastily presume 〈…〉 'T is certain enough that within less than 〈◊〉 Years the Cause was in great likelihood to have 〈◊〉 reviv'd to purpose had not convenient course 〈◊〉 taken to ●ush it a sleep again without rashly ●●●ceeding to the highest extremities as you may find 〈◊〉 the sequel of the History After the aforesaid 〈◊〉 was receiv'd by
Then the Commons f●●getting their late punishment or rather too much remembring it and intending revenge withou● fear or dread of their King took certain of the Aldermen and cast them into Prison sequestring their Goods and spoiling much thereof And thereupon ran to Guild-hall and chose for their Mayor 〈◊〉 or Ruler of the City take which name you please Sir Richard de Culworth Knight and for Bayliffs Robert de Lynton and Roger Marshal and discharg'd the old Mayor and Sheriffs These the fruits of Civil Broils This being done we read in the next place that all such Prisoners that were in Newgate Ludgate and Criplegate or in any other Prisons within the City because of the Baron's War before passed were delivered and set at liberty Thus each Party when in Power strives to weaken and suppress their opposites and strengthen the●● own side What avails Laws Customes and Ordinances in the midst of Armies How suddainly ● how unexpectedly is the wheele turn'd who kno●● how soon the Barons War had been anew reviv'd had not Powerful Mediators interceded to the p●●vention of more blood shedding The Oxford S●●tutes stood in deed repeal'd by the Winchester Parliament but who can divine what new devices the wit of men backt with Power might in time ha●● found out to retreive their late overthrown cause had not Providence so dispos'd mens minds to peaceable Councels as to bring these new troubles to 〈◊〉 quicker end When the Legate beheld all this Discord we are told he repented him of his former Counce● given to the Mayor which we may easily belie●● without looking for any proofs thereof For th● Legate might well think himself accus'd in man● men's thoughts as one of the occasional Causes 〈◊〉 much of this disorder though it may be they mig●● not be so uncharitable as to believe him any othe●● then an accidental not designed Causer thereof 〈◊〉 seems by the History to have endeavour'd somewh●● to vindicate his Reputation when he saw he coul● not reform the Earl by threatning him with 〈◊〉 Censures of the Church and to accurse him as th● Disinherited were For that was always one o● the best Weapons the Popish Clergy were most de●trous at If any grievously displeas'd them no ma●ter what the cause was good or bad allowable by the Divine Laws or not to Curse him with Bell Book and Candle was their usual accustomed Practise Whosoever believes me not let him go to the Martyrologies see whether he can then beleive his 〈◊〉 eyes Yet I do not find let the instance here 〈◊〉 that this their Cursing had so general an 〈◊〉 upon all men as they would have had it 〈◊〉 they got it well backt by the Civil Magistrates ●●thority Therefore their common use was as 〈◊〉 had opportunity to inch out the Spiritual 〈◊〉 with the Temporal What did many value 〈◊〉 have their Souls given away to the Devil if they 〈◊〉 keep their Bodies out of Prisons from being ●●livered over to the Secular Power by the Clergy 〈◊〉 seem thus as it were by craft to call the Ma●istrate the Devil A plain case when Men to exalt ●●eir own Worldly grandure or out of Animosity to ●●venge a particular private peek or quarrel under ●●●tence of Religion usurpe a Power over Men's 〈◊〉 and Consciences which belongs not at all to 〈◊〉 or else turn the Edge of it to a use quite ●●●trary to the Primitive Institution it quickly 〈◊〉 its Ancient Vigour and Esteem and from a ●●error it becomes a scorn to persons of understan●●●g able enough to discern men's wicked preva●●cation from true Religion Were it not for the 〈◊〉 De Excommunicato c●piendo in some Cases Men 〈◊〉 little value Excommunication or look upon 〈◊〉 otherwise than a Scare-Crow to fright Children and Fools what 's hanging were it not for choak●●g To proceed after this menace and threat of the 〈◊〉 we are told that he commanded Divine Service to be said without Note and the Church doors to be shut in time thereof and that no Bell ●●ould be rung unto it to the Intent that the disinherited who stood accursed should not enter the Churches to hear it Upon three Weeks after Easter we hear that the King came to Ham a few miles from London whether likewise came the Legat soon after Then the King's host made divers assaults upon the City but it seems with little or no hur●to the Town it was so strongly fortified My Author makes mention of Guns and other Ordinances but I question whether he speakes not rather after the fashion of the Age he liv'd in than after the true use of armes in those more elderly times For the first invention of Gunpowder by Bertholdus Swart the G●rman Monk is plac'd by Chronologers a considerable time after In this time of variance the Legate upon his Party and the King of Romans upon the other party for alliance between him and the Earl of Glocester labour'd so to the King that Peace was spoken of During the Treaty the Soldiers lying in Southwarke made many Robberies in Surry and other places Neither did the King's Palace at Westminister escape for we hear that some of them rowd over thereto and Spoil'd it drunk up the Kings wine brake the glass of the Windows wasting and destroying other Necessaries thereunto belonging and came likewi●● sometimes into London and Robbed there Disorderly unruly Soldiers little regard any one unless they be kept under Strict discipline Sacred or Propha●● much the sameto many of them Some of these ●avenous Spoilers being taken are recorded to have had a severe Punishment inflicted on them through the Earl of Derby's means whose Body or C●g●zance they bare viz. bound hands and leggs put into a Sack and ●o cast into Thames About 〈◊〉 day was the Peace between the King and the Earl c●●cluded After this Conclusion the Earl removed out of the City and was lodg'd again in Southwark The King entred the City the Sunday before Mids●●er day according to the Book And forthwith the King's Proclamation were made through it of the peace made between the King and the Earl Af●●r was liberty given to the disinherited Persons of Eleven Days respit to shift for themselves either to depart to such Places where they might be in some Surety or else to agree to the former Composition made by the Legate viz. To pay the Fifth part of the Yearly Value of their Lands certain Persons only excepted as is before related As touching the Earl and such other as before were not disinherited together also with the Citizens of London they were clearly to be forgiven and Pardoned Then were restored to their Offices Aleyn Sowch Mayor Thomas Basynge and Robert de Cornhil Sheriffs And the Aldermen before deposed were again likewise restored to their Wards and Offices A happy Reconciliation Next comes the relation of the Legate's interdic●ing all the City the Wednesday following which endured from six of the clock in the Morning till three the next
Citizens dis●greement But if such was the effect of the Ci●izens contest what then may we think of those who ●urposely create those differences and stir up danger●us animosities among them upon slight trivial ●orn out pretences that from the like cause or occasion the like effect may follow At Candlemas by discreet and wise peaceable means the forenamed Sir Walter Harvy was set in Authority as Major and so remained the whole year after In the third year the King confirmed the Liberties of the City and granted some new Thus you see after a storm comes fair weather In this year we meet with a Relation concerning Walter Harvy how that in the first year of this King after long controversy and strife with the Aldermen he was made Major of London at a Folkmoot or Common-Hall at Pauls-Cross and so continued that year but in this third year occasion was found to remember and as the event seems to intimate revenge it For being accused of divers perjuries and other detestable deeds contrary to his Oath for them and for making Assemblies of the Commons who favour'd him he was depriv'd of his Aldermanship and turn'd out of the City Council for ever and for keeping the Kings peace within the City for the term of his life was bound to the good behaviour upon the suretiship of twelve persons 'T is not unusual for the Commonalty and heads of the City to be at difference each with other Here 's one who seems a promoter of the Commons power over-power'd himself by his Enemies for making assemblies of the Commons and other Crimes objected to him true or feigned I know not however thence was taken a pretence to thrust him out of his former power These Folkmoots or Assemblies of the Commons seem to have been very unpleasing t● the chief Rulers of the City and their power disgusted as may be guess'd from the fore-pass'd transactions in King Henry's days where we may remember that the Commons were the men wh● had power allotted them by the Parliament at their Folkmoot or Common-hal to grant the King Licence to depart out of the Land for a Season 'T were they who most firmly adher'd to the Barons standing up in defence of those Parliament Statues made at Oxford but few of the chief Rulers of the City comparatively are noted to have appear'd openly in that fam'd contest of the Barons War In the fourth year occasion was taken against Michael Tony upon some demeaours of his in the Welch War to accuse him of Treason of which he was arraign'd judg'd and condemn'd and after drawn hang'd and quartered This man doubtless had been a noted stickler in the Barons War for I find one of that Name among the five persons so long kept in Prison in Windsor Tower after the Barons overthrow till mony bought them out as is before related Princes once highly offended may openly profess to forgive the offending party but they do not however so soon forget him Tho David pardoned Shimei during his life and swore to him not to put him to death with the Sword yet as good a Man as he was he charg'd his Son Solomon to bring down his hoary head to the grave with blood and so accordingly we find an occasion was afterwards taken by Solomon to revenge his former cursing his Father David by commanding Benaiah who went out and fell upon him that he dyed This year was the famous Statute of Mortmain first enacted that no man should give Lands or Rents to the Church without the Kings Special Licence which Statute had afterwards many additions annext to it to make it the stronger For the Lay-fee was in great danger to be devour'd by the Spiritualty such Arts did the Clergy use on mens minds to augment their power and Riches Tho now our Courts of Law are fixt at Westminster yet in these Ancient times it was not so for we read that this King in his sixth year remov'd his Courts of Kings-Bench Chancery Common-Pleas and Exchequer to Shrewsbury and afterwards return'd them back again to the no small damage of the Records thus carried to and fro This King held his Parliament at London in his seventh year for Reformation of his Coyn much clip't and diminish'd This storm fell chiefly upon the Jews by reason of the Inquest charg'd in London to enquire of this matter Whereupon were cast two hundred and ninety seven persons before the Major and other Justices sitting at London and afterwards Executed at sundry times and places My Author hath left upon Record that among these there were but three Englishmen all the rest were Jews or Jews born in England Famous is the 12th year for the Conquering and sub●●●●ing of Wales to the English Scepter and div●sion of it b● King Edward into Shires whereupon were ordain'd Sheriffs and other Officers therein as were then us'd in England David Brother to Lewellyn late Prince of Wales who was condemned to be drawn hang'd and quarter'd as a chief ●●irrer and beginner of the Welsh War in time of a Parliament held at Shrewsbury was shortly after Executed and his head sent to London to be s●t by his Brothers which had been order'd to be plac'd the ●ear before on London-Tower In this year was Edward of Carnarvan born the first of our English Kings since William the first that I read of publickly unking'd and depos'd by his own Subjects The great Conduit standing against Saint Thomas of Acres in Cheapside owes his foundation to this year The 13th year may be noted for the Kings seizing the Franchises and Liberties of London into his own hands on the day kept in Memory of Saint Pauls Conversion so that he discharged the Major Gregory Rokisle and admitted for Custos or Guardian of the City Stephen Sandewich who continued till the Monday following the Purification of the Virgin Mary when being discharg'd Sir John Breton s●ands upon Record charg'd for the residue of the year My Author writes that the cause of this displeasure the King bore to the City is not shewn of a certainty He mentions an old Pamphlet whereby it appears that the Major took bribes of the Bakers and suffer'd them to sell bread lacking six ounces in a penny Loaf for which the King was sore displeased but to him this seem'd no convenient cause that the Liberties of the City should be seiz'd for one man's offence Wherefore he rather supposeth it was for a more grievous cause However it is observable from History that it was a Common thing in Elder times to seize the Cities Charters on pretences slight enough of any sense till the Citizens grew so wise as at convenient seasons to procure new grants and graces to prevent such seizures for the future And that it is not still so feasable and practicable is the grief I believe and heart-burning of some in the world The 14th year of this King may be accounted famous for the Statutes called Additamenta Gloucestriae made at a
deluded though besides the affections and contrary to the inclination of the rest of the Nation could he but have prevailed upon the Londoners by threats or fair words to have sided with him But their opposition quite spoil'd the Game and kept the Duke off the Cushion a Duke stil so Tryumphant were they in Power Prudence and Loyalty Wherefore to satisfie his restless reven geful Spirit the Duke ceas'd not till he had got the old Major put out and a new one Elected the Aldermen depos'd and others set in their places So little did their late Complicance and humble Procession avail them while the Commonalty remain stiff firm and unshaken as well by the Dukes power and greatness as by his Threats and Menaces He had gain'd a great Ascendent over the weak Kings affections but yet for all that could not sway this Honourable City to his Interests and the Interest of his then prevalent Faction at Court The Citizens Loyalty is plainly shewn beyond denial in Couragiously adhering to the Juster claim and Title of the abus'd Nephew and preferring his Birthright before the Pretensions of his Uncle who Ruling the King and those about him thought also to have over-rul'd the City too Their Prudence is manifest in that they wisely chose to yield many things to the times for peace sake but when neck and all was in danger they would not budg a foot nor stir one step further to humour all the Dukes in Kent or Christendom Neither is their power less conspicuous who not only dar'd but did oppose this high minded Duke in the Days of his Visible Grandeur and prov'd a match by far too hard for him For in a short time comes the News of the Old Kings ●●ing at the point of Death and presently we have the Londoners sending the chiefest and worthiest of their Citizens to the young Prince and his Mother then Resident not far from the City declaring their ready minds and good wills to accept him for their true and Lawful King upon ●is Grand-Fathers Decease beseeching him on the behalf of the Citizens and City of London that he would have the City Recommended to his good Grace submitting themselves only to ●is Rule and bowing to his Will and Pleasure ●nder his Dominion to serve in Word and Deed as being known to be so much at his Devotion as not only ready to spend their Goods and E●●ates for his sake but also to jeopard their lives ●n his behalf as Stow expresses it in John Phil●●ts Oration in the beginning of the life and Reign of King Richard the second who was thus ●o undeniably setled in the Throne of his Fore-●athers by the Cities apparent interest and vi●ible influence upon the Councels of the Nation in that great turn and change of affairs The Cities power seems plainly demonstrated give me therefore leave to bring one instance more of their wisdom caution and prudence in these dangerous because unsetled times before I pass ●n to other particulars The young King being ●hus entred upon the Government it was thought good by the King or those about him to have ●ome care taken to accommodate former differences especially such as had hapned between this potent Duke and the more powerful City Wherefore several persons of Eminency were speedily sent to London to salute the Citizens in the new King's name and acquaint them how the Duke in all things had submitted himself to the Kings will 't was time for 't is certain he had lost the day though not perhaps his high-tow'ring Ambition and that they should do so in like manner and then the King would endeavour a Reconciliation to the City's honour and advantage Fair words and large promises But the worthy Citizens were not Birds to be caught with chaff much less to be hamper'd in a Noose of their own making They were for no Resignations it seems at Discretion though to the dearest Friend alive They knew the King to be but young and weak to help them in such a troublesome business if they should so heedlesly desert their own Cause and put the staff out of their own hands by their own Consent They had enemies enough still they might think at Court as long as the Duke was there and his flattering favourites who might possibly over-rule at least if not over-aw the King to their prejudice should they render all they had at pleasure into his hand by their own voluntary Act and Deed when as they knew themselves well able to defend their liberties and properties in a legal way without hazarding them upon so intire a submission as was required without Reserve Wherefore upon consultation this Medium was at length found out that if the noble persons sent to them with that message would be bound to the Citizens that their submission should not redound to the temporal loss or bodily harm of any Citizen or prejudice of their City they would gladly obey the King's Commandment This those eminent persons of quality undertook by Oath and upon their Knighthood And so upon this surety away go the Citizens to Court and being soon brought before the King besought him as the Annalist words it to reform the peace betwixt the Duke and them affirming that they were ready in all things to submit themselves unto his will and pleasure not as though they confessed they had made any fault against the Duke consider this but as men that came at this time for the benefit of peace and honour as well to the King as the Duke to pacifie the hearts and mitigate the pleasure of both That this was their intent is evident enough from their own request before made to the King that he would vouchsafe to make a good and profitable end of this discord For that they fear'd not the Duke is most certain from the precedent passages and that they were all of a suddain fallen deeply in love with him and his party I can hardly believe No no They love the Nephew too well to dote upon the Uncle and may they always be so minded upon a good account The Citizens having thus prudently though we see not without great caution referr'd themselves to the King the Duke readily accepted of this form of peace as not hoping possibly for such an other opportunity nor expecting so honourable Conditions a second time if refus'd the first and upon his knees became Intercessor to the King to take the cause in hand under the form by the Londoners expressed and so a Reconciliation was made between these two contesting Parties the Duke with an Oath promising them his friendship for the future and in token thereof bestowing a kiss of peace upon each of them before the King at the same time Whereupon the Citizens return'd home with joy and gladness rejoycing that the Duke was brought to such humility who a little before had in great Pride demanded of them for his favour an hundred Hogsheads of Wine and an infinite number of precious
Stones So great a value did this high-flown Duke set upon his grace and favour till the Citizens of this honourable City by their power and prudence had brought down his haughty spirit a Peg or two lower and that visibly too For we don't find him as ambitious as he still continued so openly aspiring to Englands Crown for the future how successfully soever his Son made a Rape thereon at the end of this Princes Reign under the pretence of I know not what hidden right accruing to him from his Mother We read indeed I confess in Cotton's Abridgment of the Records that in the seventeenth of this King the Earl of Arundel laid several things to the Dukes charge as not honourable for the King to suffer in him nor fit for him to do being a Subject as that he went Arm in Arm with the King and his Men wear the same Livery the Kings did which seems to shew much of Arrogancy and Ambition to say no more besides some other Objections but herein he was so far justified by the King himself that the Earl was ordered to crave the Dukes Pardon in full Parliament in a certain form of words appointed him In Stows Annals also we meet with an Accusation brought against him in the seventh of this Kings Reign tending to prove his intent and design suddainly to oppress the King and take upon himself the Kingdom but it seems little notice was taken of it by the King himself who was to have lost most had it been attempted Successfully and doubtless as little believ'd otherwise surely the Schedule containing the time place and other Circumstances had not been presently delivered into the Dukes hands nor the accuser committed at his request to the charge of his near Kinsman nor the occasion of his violent Death so little inquired into afterwards The Duke was not so powerful nor so great a Terror but the City was as well able still to deal with him and his whole party and make as vigorous opposition as ever in defence of their Soveraign Lord the King if occasion should have offered it self This we have reason to believe was known in those days to all the Nation much more to the Duke himself from former experience who therefore may be suppos'd not any more to have aspir'd openly whatever secret fires of Ambition lay hidden within his breast whether or no he design'd and attempted ought by unseen Plots and Conspiracies I leave to the Judicious Reader to believe or not as he pleases without speaking to or for in the case Besides the decree of an over-ruling Providence Common equity in siding with what was reputed the juster title natural humanity in defending the young and weak and a well grounded affection to the Prince for his Father and Grand-Fathers sake one the famous Black Prince the other the Glorious Edward the third their King and Sovereign we may conclude the generality of the Citizens had the greater aversion to the Duke and his faction because he was a known favourer of Wickliff and his Doctrines whether on a good account or only out of any Ambitious Design I shall not determine in this place and so look't upon perhaps as little better than another Juli●n the Apostate For we are to know that Londons Religion and consequently the Nations was at that time Popish and the generality of the People in Town and Country Romes Votaries who had Wickliffs Doctrine in as great detestation then under the Notion of Heresy as we Protestants have it now in esteem under the Seal and assurance of Truth As indeed for many of the ages past from our ever-blessed Saviours Birth through which I have drawn the thread of this discourse and under the succeeding Kings for above an hundred years Popery continued the National Religion under the power and prevalency of which perswasion was the body of the Citizens bred up who prov'd so famous in their Generations for their powerful influence on the grand concerns of the Nation in every considerable turn and change of the times before the Reformation And when England was made happy with this blessed alteration the Cities Power Strength and Esteem remain'd the same in effect as ever the change of her Religion introducing no change therein unless for the better she encreasing proportionably in every age in Wealth Riches and Honour as the Nation grew stronger and stronger And still continues as visibly conspicuous under Protestantism as before under the Romish Faith a thing easy to be demonstrated in due time and place How influential the Cities actions were upon the Nations affairs and her Love advantagious to the Orphan Prince in securing his Claim Right and Title to the Crown in his Grand-Fathers life time and setling him quietly on the Throne at his Death in spight of all the opposition the deep designs and daring Spirit of his Aspiring Uncle John of Gaunt and his faction could make when they had got the reigns of publick Government into their own hands through the Old Kings Connivance hath been the subject of several of the aforegoing pages The next thing of course falling under present consideration is to observe how this Honourable City of London behav'd her self after she had lent her ●ssistance to raise this Young Prince from the ●eanness of a Subject to the Royal Dignity and Grandeur of a King under the Name of Richard the Second what place she held in his affections ●nd of what esteem in the eyes of all the rest of ●he people But where shall I begin and when ●hall I end Sooner may I be wearied with read●ng and tir'd with writing than fail of matter ●o exercise my Pen so copious is my Subject and ●o full of Variety For in my searches into the Histories of this Kings Reign I find it plain to a ●emonstration that the City carried a great sway ●mongst all Ranks and Degrees from the Prince ●o the Subject from the King the Supream to ●is subordinate Magistrates and Ministers and was highly Honour'd Rever'd and Respected ●mong the Nobility Gentry and Commonalty ●f the Land both in the calm of peace and the ●oisterous storms of civil distractions I begin first with the Honourable House of Commons the known representative of the Commons of England and concerning them ob●erve out of Sir Robert Cotton's exact Abridgment of the Records in the Tower revis'd by William Prynne Esq that in the first Parliament of this King in his first year among other Petitions of the Commons there is to be found one particular division under the Title of Petitions for the City of London wherein the House of Commons become express Petitioners so great was the Cities influence over their Debates and so high a respect had they for her to the King for many considerable Grants in favour of the Citizens and to them very advantagious and beneficial As that all their Liberties may be confirm'd with a Non obstante That they attend upon no Commandment
esteemed most amiable and counted highly powerful since she is to be admired for the goodness and greatness under which comprehend the large Riches Power and Spirit of particular Citizens incorporated into Her For the first let me instance in the commendable diligence of her Mayor Adam Baume who upon a very great scarcity of Corn in the fifteenth of this King providently took care to have Corn brought to L●●don from forreign Parts to the relief of the whole Realm and add hereunto the Charity of the Aldermen who for the furtherance of so good a Work laid out each of them a sum of mony in those days very considerable to the same purpose and bestow'd the Corn thus procur'd in convenient places where the Poor might buy at an appointed price and such as had no ready mony upon Surety to pay the year following besides the common Act of the Mayor and Citizens in taking two thousand Marks out of the Orphans Chest in Guildhall for the same intent In Proof of the later viz. The Greatness Riches Power and Spirit of particular Citizens I challenge all the Cities in the world besides to shew me such another Example as that of John Philpot Citizen of London the Citizens Orator to this King in the beginning of his Reign who in the second year observing the young Kings inability the Nobles neglect and the oppressions of the poor Commons voluntarily hir'd Souldiers with his own mony rig'd out a Fleet at his own charge and hazarded his own Person to defend the Realm from Pirates Robbers and incursions of Enemies and therewith successfully took in a little time Mercer the Scot with all his Ships which he had before violently taken from Scarborow and fifteen Spanish Ships besides laden with much Riches which came to his Aid Can Rome her self shew me a like Parallel As for the Fabij they were a whole Family among the Patricians and Crassus himself a great Magistrate in the heigth of that Common-wealths Grandeur amidst Equals and Inferiors whereas this publick-spirited Person liv'd still a Subject under a limited Monarchy none of the greatest nor the strongest then in the World This noble Act some would have thought should have deserved great praise and commendation and so it had among the Common People but among the great Lords and Earls it met with Reproach and Detraction as being a manifest reproof of their carelesness and negligence and he himself was endanger'd thereby they speaking openly against it as done unlawfully without the Councel of the King and his Realm though his design could not be denyed to have been very honest in the general Had he suffered for that unpresidented Act because it was deficient in some formalities required by Law the Statesmen of the times therein instrumental without all peradventure had appeared as odious in the Eyes of the Commons as some of the chief Episcopal Clergy-men in a Protestant Country within the Memory of Man would have made themselves obnoxious to the Peoples Censure should they have publickly burnt Vindiciae Pietatis i. e. a Vindication of Godliness from the imputation of folly and fancy which I have heard intimated as if thought of because it wanted such an Imprimatur as the Law demanded and was writ possibly by an Author not altogether Episcopal in his declared Judgment But to pass on If such were the superemient and supererogating Acts of particular Citizens so many Ages ago to what an height of Wealth Greatness and splendor must we needs think the City to have arriv'd at this day some Centuries of years since that time If ten thousand Pounds was a Mayors Estate heretofore we may give a shrew'd guess at the Cities advancement and encrease in Riches since now that the same is made the limited sum for the Citizens to swear themselves not worth who desire to avoid the chargeable Honour and Honourable charge of the Shrievalry Nay to go a step or two further now adays we find her Sheriffs Revenue commonly reputed at double the value and others of her Citizens thought able to number their thousands by scores What if I had also added that some are esteem'd so wealthy as not to know an end of their Riches Certainly such if any must needs come under the denomination of men vastly rich in worldly goods So that this glorious and Triumphant City seems in many things able to vy with if not out-vy the Quondam Mistress of the World Rome her self She exceeds her in Antiquity as being founded in Fabian's Compute above four hundred years before her and hath this advantage of her now that whereas Rome is confest and acknowledged to be in the wane of her power and Greatness both as to her Civil and Ecclesiastical Authority London still continues on the rising hand Rome 't is visible hath suffer'd a considerable diminution as to her former extent and Jurisdiction in both capacities whether she be lookt upon as once head of the world or now pretended head of the Church but London plainly appears to be dayly getting ground both in Fame and Reputation as well as building And whereto she may come in time belongs to a Prophet not an Historian to declare She is already become the Fam'd Metropolis of this our little World and Rome was but Empress in a greater Neither was she anear so influential over the greatest part of that how much soever thereof she had under her Dominion as London is known to be at present over all ours Having thus shewn the influence this Honourable City had upon the Commons of this Land in Peace and amidst tumultuous disorders and the great respect both King and Nobles in Conjunction had for her I should now proceed to disengage my self of an obligation I presume lying on me from part of a promise before made to declare the esteem the Lords when singly consider'd had of her strength and power But before I pass on more immediately thereto I crave leave to observe the great variety and difference in Parliamentary transactions and proceedings under this King within the compass of whose Reign we find but two years on Record viz the nineteenth and twenty second wherein there was not a Parliament called and assembled in one place or other by his Authority sometimes oftner and so those Acts of Edward the third were exactly kept for eighteen years running wherein it is ordained and established that a Parliament shall be holden once every year and more often if need be which being omitted but one year in twenty one and not observed in the twenty second we may easily think it prov'd fatal to the unfortunate King that in the next Parliament he should be depos'd by his own Subjects and the Crown set upon anothers head And is it any wonder to see things so injurious and unjust sometimes done in National Assemblies when in a vein of contradiction they make Ordinances so diametrically opposite each to other as was done in this Kings time For we find parties
against his lawful Soveraign and not be Treason If you say by Election of the State you speak not reason for what Power hath the State to Elect while any is Living that hath Right to Succeed But such a Successor is not the Duke of Lancaster as descended from Edmund Crouchback the Elder Son of King Edward the Third though put by the Crown for deformity of his Body for who knows not the falseness of this Allegation Seeing it is a thing Notorious that this Edmund was neither the Elder Brother nor yet Crook-Back't though called so from some other reason but a goodly Personage and without any deformity And your selves cannot forget a thing so lately done who it was that in the Fourth Year of King Richard was declared by Parliament to be Heir to the Crown in case King Richard should dye without Issue But why then is not that Claim made Because silent Leges inter Arma What dispu●●ng of Titles against the stream of Power But however it i● extream Injustice that King Richard should be condemn'd without being heard or once allowed to make his Defence And now My Lords I have spoken thus at this time that you may consider of it before it be too late for as yet it is in your Power to undo that justly which you have unjustly done Much to this Purpose was the Bishop's Speech but to as little purpose as if he had gone about to call back Yesterday The Matter was too far gone and scarce a Person there present that had not a Hope of either a private or publick Benefit by that which was done Yet against this Speech of the Bishop there was neither protesting nor excepting It passed in the House as but one Man's Opinion And as for the King it was neither fit he should use much Severity against any Member of that Parliament which had so lately shewed so much Indulgence towards him nor indeed safe to be too hot in his Punishment when he was yet scarce warm in his Government Yet for a warning to use their Liberty of Speech with more Moderation hereafter the Bishop was Arrested by the Marshal and Committed to Prison in the Abby of St. Albans but afterwards without further Censure set at Liberty till upon a Conspiracy of Lords wherein he was a Party he was Condemned to Dye though through Extremity of Grief he prevented Execution Thus far the Chronicle King Henry is now got into the Throne Richard being thrust into a Prison and afterwards into his Grave and yet I don't find him so secure and well settled but that he had many 〈◊〉 Enemies ever and anon to Contest with and 〈◊〉 a few secret disguis'd Ones to fear and suspect with so many prickly Thorns was his new-gotten Crown lin'd Therefore we have little reason to believe he would ever wilfully disoblidge that City whose Power and Strength he so well knew The Mummery design'd by some discontented Lords to be acted upon him at Twelfthtide at Windsor in the First of his Reign The Battle fought between him and Sir Henry Hotspur at Shrewsbury in the Third The Rising about York in the Sixth And the Battle of Bram●am Moore in the Eighth besides several other secret Attempts and Conspiracies were as so many Admonitions to him to Fortify himself what be could with the Citizens love and affection as his surest earthly Bulwark and Defence next to his prosperous Success in the aforesaid Contests which prevented the discontented from coming near enough to London to attempt the raising there of new Broils and Commotions to disturb his Repose and the Cities Peace if he had any Evil-willers therein capable of receiving ill Impressions As perhaps he had but few there such Care he took to oblidge them and scarce any occasion given to breed Murmurs and Complaints among them For He who meerly at the Commons request in the Fifth of his Reign remov'd Four of his Menial Servants out of his House when he openly declar'd in Parliament he then knew no cause thereof but only for that they were hated of the People and so often gratified his House of Commons in their Petitions about his prime and principal Officers and privy Councellors must needs be thought more ready to encrease the Number of his Friends than to make himself more Enemies especially in a City of such 〈◊〉 Riches Power and Strength as London was 〈◊〉 known to be beyond denial dispute or contradiction The City flourished under this King in the Renovation of old the Guildhall of London and the Erecting of new publick Structures the Conduit upon Cornhil and the Stocks-Market-House was famous abroad for the abundance of her Traffique and number of her Traders and increas'd at home in Repute and Renown by the prevailing of her Mayor and Commonalty in their Contest with the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury and other Lords and Knights about pulling up the Wares in Thames over which by their Charter they claim'd a large Power as Conservators of that their beloved River besides the many grounds and reasons the King had to Glory in his confidence of the Love and Loyalty of her Citizens and rejoyce in the continuance of their Affection to him and his Family As is evident from the timely Advertisement the Mayor brought him in the First of his Reign of the Conspiracy of the discontented Lords who under the colour of Christmas Pastimes as Mumming c. design'd Treacherously to have Slain him to the forcing him very seasonably as incredulous as he was before into a belief of the reality of the Plot and accompanied him the same Night from Windsor to London whereby he purchas'd to himself Security disappointed the Conspirators and got time and opportunity to punish the Plotters And may also be inferr'd from the successful care the Mayor Sheriffs and other Citizens took in stilling the midnight difference happening in Eastcheap on Midsomer-Eve in the Twelfth of his Reign when two of his youn●●● Sons Sup't there late at Night and might 〈◊〉 have been greatly indanger'd had the 〈◊〉 lasted any time These are Instances I 〈◊〉 expresly mention'd in History and who knows ●ow many more there might be that were never so ●uch taken Notice of by the Writers of that Age ●s to be carefully transmitted to Posterity by their 〈◊〉 Peradventure there were many more Eviden●●s But I will not so much insist upon an Argument ●hat is but barely possible and probable nor with ●●lly and impertinence enough stay to beg the ●oint of the Reader upon an uncertain surmise and ●●njecture Though it would be as absurd in him 〈◊〉 affirm That all things ever done in the World 〈◊〉 the Invention of Letters have been commit●●d to Paper as it would be monstrously Ridiculous 〈◊〉 to pretend to have seen and read all things remarkable that ever were Wrote of this Honourable City and her praise-worthy Actions 'T is enough for my weakness and inability if I can tolerably make out what I have here design'd concerning
assuredly raised about their ears to their mutual disadvantage had they been guilty of such unadvised rashness and daring presumption as to slight and contemn her Magistrates Order and Resolution An other stands on Record in the same Author and other Writers among the next years transactions under the Ma●oralty of Godfery Boleyn and Shrievalries of William Edward and Thomas Reyner For upon the Kings Calling of a grand Councel at London to accommodate differences and the Lords of each Party coming up thereto with great Retinues they having from Four-hundred to One-thousand-Five-hundred in a Company lodging some within some without the City holding their Consultation apart each from other as if at mutual defyance and ready to put all to the decision of the Sword the Mayor kept Five-thousand Citizens as Fabian Numbers them dayly in Arms riding about the City and Subburbs to preserve the peace and for the night Watch provided Two-thousand to give Attendance upon three Aldermen till Seven a clock next morning that the day Watch was set by reason whereof continues my Author good order and rule was kept and no man so hardy once to attempt the breaking the Kings peace The Councel was held in quietness and a Reconciliation patch'd up for the time For who durst move when the City says nay Several such Instances are to be seen in the Chronicles and have been hinted before in the precedent Relation And if need were I might produce the Disturbance likely to have hapned in the Fourth year of this King by the Bishop of Winchesters meanes then at Variance with the Protector the Duke of Gloucester when upon strict Commandment given to the Mayor he set a sure Watch by night that kept out the Bishops Servants by force and would not permit them to enter the City over the Bridg whereupon a pacification was at length concluded between these two great Men their differencies in time amicably adjusted and the City seems to have protected the Protector himself But that I hasten to the fecond general Head before propos'd under which I am to make out the visibility of the City's affection to the house of Yorke distinguish'd from that of Lancastor by the white Rose their particular badg and thee ffect thereof her influencing the nation in their favour in behalf of the Yorkists Interest to the raising it up above the Lancastrians And this may be demonstrated beyond contradiction both from the suspicions fears and jealousies of the Queen and the Court that in their Hearts the Citizens bore too great Respect to the other side and would assist them upon Occasion and from their actual joyning at last openly with the Yorkists in word and deed to the visible exaltation of that Family above the other whereby the White Rose grew up amain and flourished not only above the rest of the flowers of the field but also above the Red though it's whiteness was first ting'd with a Scarlet dye and the Red had lost much of it 's before lovely ruby Colour so much blood was there shed in this unhappy Contest It being related out of Philip de-Comines that within his Remembrance in the Civil-Wars of England dyed above Eighty Persons of the Blood Royal. For the proof of the Queens Suspicions or others Apprehensions Instances more than one or two and a triumvirate of Witnesses may be brought Stow tells us before the battail of St. Albans how that the King having assembled his Power to oppose the Duke of York then marching towards London at the Head of an Army his meaning was rather to meet the Duke in the North parts than about London where it was thought he had too many friends and therefore departs with speed from Westminster on the same ●ntent And afterwards acquaints us that upon the difcharging of York and Salisbury of their high Offices and Places of Government about the King This change among the Nobility caus'd sudden alterations and attempts which he calls Seditious to spring in the Commonalty especially in the City of London Fabian informes us that the Queen caus'd the King to remove in his Thirty-fifth from London to Coventry and their held him a long season as suspecting the City of London and deeming it to be more favourable to the Duke of York's Party than to Hers. Baker gives us much the same Story under the Notion of the Queens perswading the King for his Health and Recreation to make a Progress into Warwickshire as finding the little Respect the Londoners bore to Her Party or the Kings And Stow shall here bring up the Rear to back their Informanions with this expression that because the Duke was had more in estimation among the Citizens than either the King or Queen she caus'd the King to make his Progress as perceiving she could attempt nothing against him near to the City of London If we consider Actions and respect Matters of Fact we shall find the Yorkists often received at London when the Lancastrians were either expresly refus'd or at least compell'd to get further off into other parts for their better security and safeguard After the Yorkists had won the Battel at St. Albans London was the place whereto they presently remov'd carrying the King along with them and kept there their Whitsuntide with great Joy and Solemnity When an Assault was made at Court upon the Potent Earl of Warwick a great Yorkist as he was coming from the Councel Table by the Kings Servants with Intentions to have Slain him London was the place whereto he Row'd in all hast as soon as got into his Barge and thereby escaping the danger intended he Consults with the Principals o● his Party and retires afterwards to Callice Thi● was the place to which the Chronicle saith the Earl of Salisbury his Father was coming up with some Thousands of Men when he was necessitated to Fight his Way through his Enemies i● Bloreheath Field Here likewise was Warwick received encouraged and refreshed in the 38th of Hen. 6. before the Battel of Northampton when the Lord Scales appointed by the other side with some Troops to go and secure the City was directly refused admission by the Mayor and being received into the Tower he was besieged by Land and Water and they of the City planted great Guns against it and break the Walls in divers places And after the fatal over-throw of the Lancastrians at the aforesaid Battels hitherto was the King conveyed by the Party a Prisoner in effect tho' in shew a King as if eager there to shew their Triumphant Success or else further to secure to themselves the Londoners good will love and affections by their Presence For Fabian tells us they return'd hither in haste upon their obtaining this Victory the Duke of York comes out of Ireland to them and after a Report banded about the City that King Henry was to be Deposed and the Duke to be made King to make Tryal doubtless of the peoples mind and sound the Citizens
dearly belov'd Liberties when they might with greater ease and as effectually gently walk them down as a certain Person is said to have express'd it on a much later Occasion The City petition'd and address'd and she was follow'd by the Country She waited a while with patience and the secluded Members that were chosen in forty and from forty eight kept out of the house till fifty nine for almost twelve years space were restor'd in peace and quietness though under some few Obligations And so there was again the face of a House of Commons Being restor'd they dissolv'd themselves in a short time after to make way for another ass●mbly call'd a Parliament though some thought in th●se times that the Parliament of Forty had been dissolv'd long before by his late Majesties death and so might haply think this a needless Ceremony It being most certain that that Parliament ow'd its beginning to the Kings Writ although its continuance was thought to depend on the continuing Act as long as the King liv'd Yet notwithstanding the House of Commons had actually dissolv'd themselves and it was become the receiv'd opinion that the Parliament of Forty was in Law dissolv'd before upon the old Kings death the next Assembly Stylo Communi Parliament would not barely stick to either of these ways but thought good likewise themselves by vertue of their Authority to declare that Parliament of Forty dissolv'd Whether or no they thought that the bare Act of a single house of Commons without King and Lords could not in Law be took for a formal Repeal of the former continuing Act made by King Lords and Commons joyntly and so rejected it as really insignificant in its self though made use of for the time and out of a Cautious foresight dreaded some ill consequences attending the receiv'd opinion of the long Parliaments being dissolv'd by the Kings death whether or no the continuing Act were formally repeal'd by as good Authority as made it lest thence in time no body knows when occasion might be taken to argue that if a Kings death repeals one unlimited Act it may likewise on the same ground vacate all by him made and so by affirming the same of all other Princes since the first William a foundation might be laid for the Introduction of Arbitrary Power when evil minded Pretenders are absolute enough to attempt it with hopes of Impunity I pretend not to determine For I remember my self to be a Relater of matters of Fact not a Reader of Law Cases Therefore I proceed to acquaint the Reader that that Assembly though call'd without the Kings Writ yet by his Majesty afterwards most Graciously own'd and acknowledg'd for a Parliament thought it fitting and convenient to declare and enact that the Parliament begun and holden at Westminster the third day of November in the sixteenth year of the Reign of the Late King Charles of blessed Memory is fully dissolved and determined They are the words of the Act to be seen in the Statute-book Cap. 1. 12 Car. 2. This was the Assembly that blessed us with his Majesties actual Restauration towards which there had been made so many steps a little before by the Loyal Nobility Gentry and Commonalty of the Land and the Worthy Citizens of this Honourable City Whose publick Reception and Triumphant Cavalcade through the City of London to White hill was very remarkable for the splendid appearance of the Citizens to conduct him the Gallantry shewn by them on so acceptable a Solemnity and the many demonstrations of joy and gladness they gave him worthy themselves and that glorious day which they had so long expected and contributed so much of their assistance to hasten For which I have a passage or two more to produce besides what hath been already brought For the first out of the supplement to Baker I quote his Majesties most Gracious Letter To his Trusty and well belov'd the Lord Mayor Aldermen and Common Council of the City of London wherein he Honourably acknowledges the publick and frequent Manifestations of their affections to him and the Encouragement and good Example ●hey gave the Nation to assert the Ancient Government and thereupon concludes with large Promises of Extraordinary kindness to this his Native City to the Renewal of their Charter Confirmation of all priviledges granted by his Predecessors and the adding of new favours to advance the Trade Wealth and Honour thereof The next is a Commemoration of the Cities Joyful Resentment of this Letter and the Kings Declaration enclos'd in it as it was was express'd by the Grateful Duty of the Common-Council who immediately upon the reading of them ordered a Present of Ten thousand Pounds to be made to His Majesty and a thousand pounds to each of his Brothers And likewise deputed several of the Aldermen and worthy Citizens to attend upon His Majesty from the City with a Presentment of their most Dutiful acknowledgments for his Clemency and Goodness towards them So desirous were they to give him the greatest demonstrations of their affection and Loyalty before his Return and Judiciously Wise as well as Loyal to set all parts of the Nation a good Example to imitate in a ready manifestation of their Duty and Allegiance to him after his Return Neither in this would they be behind hand with any of them all For the City of London as being the first the richest and most Honourable and the Seat of Kings for many ages might Judge it self oblig'd as the Supplementer insinuates in point of duty and Reputation to exceed all the rest in the Glory of their performances towards their Soveraign But whatever the Citizens did think of the Obligation on either side certain enough it is that the reiterated expressions of their Loyalty to the King were Honourable and Meritorious to the highest degree For to the splendor of their former Preparations at his first Reception and Triumphal Entrance they added the cost of a most magnificent Entertainment at Guild-hal for that very purpose richly beautified and adorned whither the King his two Brothers the Lords of the Privy Council the two Houses of Parliament and the chief Officers of State were conducted July the fifth 1660. in great Pomp by the Lord Mayor and the Grandees of the City and treated in a Royal manner with the choicest of Delicacies with excellent Musick and whatever else could be thought on or delightful for so Illustrious an Assembly As if the Citizens thought it not enough to entertain the King but for his sake were resolv'd to put themselves to the charge of gratifying others for their Loyalty Where 's now the Man can bring me a parallel hereto General Monk appear'd and London concur'd and then the House of Commons of the Parliament of forty is immediately reviv'd a face of the Ancient Government restor'd a new Parliamentary Assembly call'd the King sent for home to enjoy his Fathers Throne and most peaceably settled therein without the noise of War or