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A54682 The antiquity, legality, reason, duty and necessity of præ-emption and prourveyance, for the King, or, Compositions for his pourveyance as they were used and taken for the provisions of the Kings household, the small charge and burthen thereof to the people, and the many for the author, great mischiefs and inconveniences which will inevitably follow the taking of them away / by Fabian Philipps. Philipps, Fabian, 1601-1690. 1663 (1663) Wing P2004; ESTC R10010 306,442 558

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pay those Thraves of Corn which would far exceed the Pourveyance charged upon that County or have compounded for them or do pay them to such as have obtained Grants of the Lands and Revenues belonging to that Hospital Or that he whose Royal Ancestor King Henry the second took a care as appears by the black book in the Exchequer that the Barons of the Exchequer who were then taken to be a part of the Kings houshold should have their provisions at easier rates then others Et de victualibus suae domus in urbibus Castellis maritimis nomine consuetudinis nihil solvunt Quod si minister vectigalium de hiis quicquam solvere compulerit dummodo presens sit serviens ejus qui suis usibus empta fuisse oblata fide probare voluerit Baroni quidem exacta pecunia restituetur inde in integro improbus exactor pro qualitate personae pecuniarum penam luet and pay nothing for custom for the victuals or provisions for their houses in Cities Castles and Maritime places and if any Officer should compell them to pay any thing for them whilst●their servants were ready to testifie and prove that they were bought to their use the money was to be again restored and the party so wickedly exacting it amerced or fined according to the quality of his person And that our succeeding Kings and Princes causing a Pourveyance and provision of Diet to be made for the Justices of Assize Justices of the Peace at the Assizes Sessions by the Sheriffs in every County making an allowance for the same out of the Exchequer Q. Elizabeth in Anno 1573. finding that to be troublesome inconvenient for the Sheriffs ordained that charge to be defrayed out of her Coffers as may appear by a Copy of a letter from the Lords of her Privy Councel communicated unto me by my worthy and learned friend Mr. William Dugdale and here inserted and that expence being since ordered to be defrayed out of the Fines and profits of the Counties after the rate of four shillings per diem at the Assizes Sessions to every Justice of the peace and two shillings per diem to the Clerk of the Peace and the King being at more then 10000 l. per annum charges to the Judges of the superior Courts at Westminster who by their Circuits do to save his people a great deal more charges cause a cheap and impartial Justice to be twice in every year brought into every County and is at many other yeerly expences to others in the administration of Justice for which Cromwell and his fancied Parliaments thought a large yeerly allowance to be little enough makes an yearly allowance of one thousand one hundred and six pounds thirteen shillings and four pence per annum to the Lord President of Wales and the Justices attending that Court for the provisions of their Diet with an allowance of Dyet to the Justices of Wales in their great Sessions twenty four shillings per diem to the Domestick Clerks or servants of the Lord Chancellor an allowance of Forty Marks per annum to the Kings Remembrancer in the Exchequer which may shew what cheapness was formerly for the diet of himself and of his eight Clarks who ought to table with him the like for the Treasurers Remembrancer and his twelve Clarks and to the Clark of the Pipe five pence per diem for his diet every day when he sitteth in Court and the like to the Comptroller of the Pipe should be now put to seek his own Provisions or Pourveyance at the dearest most disrespectful rates or that the Kings servants and Officers of his houshold in whose honor or dishonor the Majesty whom they serve as that of David was in the reproach of his servants or Embassadors sent to the King of Ammon is not a little concerned should now for want of the Pourveyance or Compositions for them complain that the beauty is departed from the Kings house his servants are become like Harts that finde no Pasture and they that did feed plentifully are desolate in the streets And that the servants of the Abbot of St. Edmunds Bury were in a better condition when as he could allow John de Hastings the Steward of the Courts of his Mannors who claimed the said Office by inheritance a Provision when he came at night unto him for eight horses and thirteen men with an horse load of Provender and Hey sufficient Wine and Beer twenty four Wax Candles in the Winter time and twelve in the Summer eight loaves of Bread for his Greyhounds two Hens for his Hawks pro se hominibus suis honorabilem sustentationem in Cibo potu and an honorable provision for himself and his servants in meat and drink And as those of the children of Israel which returned from the Captivity lamented the difference betwixt the glory of the first and second Temple bewail the desolation of the house wherein the Kings honor dwelled and the alteration reducing of it to what it is now from that which it was in the raigns of Queen Elizabeth King James or King Charles the Martyr And that Foraigners and Strangers who were wont so to magnifie and extoll the Hospitality state and magnificence of the King of Englands Court and house-keeping as that Philip Honorius after an exact survey of many other Kingdoms and their Policies hath publikely declared that no Nation in the world goeth beyond our Brittain in the honor of the Kings Court and houshold in maggior numero di servitori con maggior distinctioni d' officii e gradi multitude of servants Officers and distinction of degrees and cannot be ignorant of the respects and honor done by all Nations to Foraign Princes though no Monarchs or their superiors in their passages and journeys through any Towns or Cities beyond the Seas by making them presents of Wine Fish Oats and the best of houshold provisions which those places afforded and that even those mechanick souls of Hamborough and Amsterdam can think it worthy their imitation shall finde the King of England whose Ancestor Offa King of the Mercians in Anno Dom. 760. would be so little wanting to himself and his posterity in the preserving the honor and rights of Majesty as he ordained that even in times of peace himself and his successors in the Crown should as they passed thorough any City have Trumpets sounding before them to shew that the person of the King saith the Leiger book of St. Albans should breed both fear and honor in all which either see him or hear of him to be so scanted de ea sublimitate amplitudine augustaque illa Majestate in that honor and reverence which his predecessors would never abate any thing of as his Officers and servants like some Beggars who are not used to be trusted with a Mess of Pottage to be put into their hands when they buy it at the
Coronation The King is willing to doe the same and that all Statutes of Pourveyors be observed 11 H. 4. The King promiseth convenient payment for victuals taken by his Pourveyors Thomas Chancer chief ●●tler to the King sheweth what prices of wine the King ought to have of every Ship and how much the King was deceived thereof that the Citizens of London being exempt from the same did use notwithstanding to make strangers free thereof The King sent for the Citizens heretofore and further willeth that none shall enjoy any such liberty unless he be there a Citizen res●a●t and dwelling 3 H. 5. The Commons pray that no Ship be taken to serve the King by any Letters Patents but that the same Letters Patents may be seen before the Maior and other Officers of the Town that hire of the fraight may be by them made and ready payment had The Statutes heretofore made shall be observed 18 H. 6. Order was taken for the payment of the Kings debts and provision of his Houshold and authority committed to the Kings Council to take order concerning Pourveyors and the fourth part of the Tenth and Fifteenth to be imployed to the payment of the Pourveyance for his Houshold 20 H. 6. The Commons pray that certain Lords such as the King shall please may have authority to settle good order in his Houshold and that ready money be paid for victuals carriages and other dispenses of the same House Be it as is desired provided that this extend not to impeach any Assignments Grants Payments Benefit or Interest to any man lawfully granted or had before this Parliament 27 H. 8. cap. 24. The Kings Pourveyors may for the provision of the King Queen and their Children take all victuals corn and other kinds of things whatsoever according to their Commissions as well within the Liberties and Franchises as without any Grants Allowance or other thing to the contrary notwithstanding 1 2 Phil. Ma● It was ordained by Act of Parliament That no Commission of Pourveyors should continue above six moneths the County to be named where Beeves Weathers Lambs Calves Swine Salt-fish Corn Butter Cheese Bacon Conies Pigs Geese Capons and Hens and any other provision of victuals were taken the proportions and numbers of them and a Docquet to be made all things taken And cap. 6. No victuals shall be taken by the Kings Pourveyors within five miles of the Universities of Cambridge and Oxford nor in Oxford or Cambridge upon pain of forfeiture of four times the value provided that the Act be not put in execution at any time or times whensoever the Queen and her heirs and successors shall please to come to both or any of the said Universities or within seven miles of either of them but be suspended during that time and no longer 5 Eliz. cap. 5. Composition Fish heretofore granted to the Queens Majesty by the Subjects of this Realm travailing into Iseland may be taken by her Majesties Officers and Pourveyors in such sort as the same hath been lawfully used to be taken before the making of this Act saving to the Queens Majesty her Heirs and Successors and to all other persons such Fishes as be known and used to be called Regall Fishes whereunto her Majesty or the said other persons have or shall have right or interest for such recompence as heretofore hath been accustomed 13 Eliz. cap. 21. Reciting the said Act of the 2 and 3 of King Phillip and Queen Mary and that since divers of the Townships Inhabitants and Res●ants within the Limits and Precincts aforesaid having converted the benefit of the said Act to their private use and commoditie without any profit or commodities to the poor Schollars of either of the said Universities whereby the Queens Majesty was not only not served of provision of Corn Grain and other victuall to be taken for her Majesties-provision but also the said Universities were defrauded of the benefits and commodities to them intended It was ordained that no person whatsoever nor the Pourveyors of the Queen her Heirs and Successors nor no Badger or Poulter should take or bargain grain or victuals within the compass of five miles of the said Universities or within the Towns of Oxford and Cambridge without the consent of the Chancellors or Vice-Chancellors in writing under the Seal of either of the said Universities first had in writing And if any person or persons within the said Precincts should refuse reasonably to serve the necessary provision of the said Universities that then it should be lawfull to any of the Queens Majesties Takers or Pourveyors to provide any corn or victuall of any such person or persons within any part of the precinct aforesaid for the use of the Queen as should be declared and notif●ed to the said Pourveyors or Takers to be persons not worthy of the said priviledge for not reasonably serving the necessities of the said Universities by the Chancellor or Vice-Chancellor for the time being of either of the said Universities with the assent of the two Justices of Peace res●ant within the said Universities Town or County under the hands and Seals of the said Chancellor or Vice-Chancellor and the said two Justices of the Peace as the said Pourveyors or Takers lawfully may in any other place within the said Precinct and not otherwise Provided that the Act shall not be put in execution at any time or times whensoever the Queens Majesty her Heirs and Successors shall come to any of both the Universities or within seven miles of either of of them but shall be in suspence during that time only and no longer And King Henry the seventh who in the rage and scuffle of a fortunately fought Battel at Bosworth field having found his Crown thrown into a Hathorn or bush of Thorns as a presage of the cares which usually attend the wearers and by marriage once accounted the best of unions happily established himself in the Kingdom and stopt the issue of blood betwixt those two great contending Families of York and Lancaster and having afterwards as no giddy but a probable tradition hath left it in the successive memories of the servants of the Royal houshold for the better government and order of his Expences of his House and their provision of Diet put a rate or Reiglement as well in the quantity as quality and price thereof which in those cheaper times was little less then the Market rate or but that which might reasonably be afforded It continued uncomplained of in the Reign of King Hen. 8. when Cardinal Wolsey Lord Chancellor of England and the Kings Privy Council made certain Reiglements Constitutions touching the well ordering government of the Kings Houshold the motives thereof were therein expressed to be al honne●r de Diu a honneur profit de Saint Eglise al honneur du Roy a son profit du profit de son peuple for the honor of God and the honour
should be And that it was and will be for the good of the people unless the oppressing and cheating one another shall be understood to be for their good that the King and his subordinate Magistrates should correct and regulate the deceits and excess of rates and prices in Markets as those of the Fishmongers of London were by King Edward the first when they were fined five hundred Marks pro illicitis negotiis Forstallamentis aliis transgressionibus in officio suo Piscatorum for Forstallings and other unlawful practises in their Trades or as King E. 3. did when upon a Complaint made by the Commonalty of the City of London that the Butchers such a watchful eye was then kept more then now upon the deceits of Trade did stick and fasten the fat of great or fat Oxen upon the flesh of the lean whereby to promote the sale and price in deceptionem populi to the damage and deceipt of the people he commanded the Maior to provide a remedy or as an Assise of Bread and good and needful Ordinances for Bakers Brewers Inholders Vintners and Butchers was set and made there being an old Assise book made and Ordained in Anno 12 H. 7. by the Lords of the Privy Councel to Queen Elizabeth viz. John Archbishop of Canterbury Sir Christopher Hatton William Lord Burghley Henry Earl of Derby Charles Lord Howard Henry Lord Hunsdon Thomas Lord Buckhurst Sir Francis Knowles Sir Thomas Heneage Sir John Fortc●cue and Sir John Wolley or the Decree if had been observed which was made in the Star Chamber the thirteenth day of November Anno 11. of the Raign of King Charles the Martyr after consultation had with diverse Justices of the Peace and the Certificate of all the Judges of England viz. Sir Thomas Richardson Knight Sir Robert Heath Knight Sir Humfrey Davenport Knight Sir John Denham Kt Sir Richard Hutton Knight Sir William Jones Knight Sir George Croke Knight Sir Thomas Trevor Knight Sir Ge●rge Vernon Knight Sir Robert Barkley Knight and Sir Francis Crawley Knight and confirmed by the Kings Letters Patents under the great Seal of England the 14. day of December then next following that No Inkeeper or Ostler within the Cities of London and Westminster or ten miles distant who have since made such excessive rates as have affrighted many of their Customers away who finde it less chargeable to come to London in passage Coaches or send their horses back into the Country to finde out more honest Inkeepers should take above six pence for Hay for a horse standing night or day nor more then six pence for a peck of Oats of the measure called Winchester measure No Tavernor or Victualler selling Wine by Retail should sell or make ready for sale any sort of Flesh Fish or other victual save bread nor procure to be set up the Trade of a Cook within the same house or in any Shop or Room thereunto belonging or in any house near adjacent nor permit or suffer any Flesh Fish or other Victual except bread to be brought into the house to be there eaten by any of his Guests And did likewise upon hearing of divers Inkeepers who could not deny but that the rates before specified were competent further ordain that where Grain and Hey should at a further distance from London be sold at lesser prices there the rates prices should be accordingly And that that Ordinance should continue in the County of Middlesex untill it should be made to appear to the Justices of the Kings Bench and in other Counties and places to the Justices of peace that because of the increase of prices in the parts adjoyning greater rates should be necessary to be permitted and that thereupon other rates should from time to time be set and being set were commanded and en●oyn●d to be strictly and duely observed untill by the like authority they should be altered And cannot deny but that if the King and his Royal Progenitors if they could ex praevisione by some foresight of things to come of which supernatural eminencies there is a non datur or denyall even to Kings and Princes have understood that their ancient and lawful rights of Pourveyance and Prae-emption would in return of all their benefits daily and yearly heaped upon their subjects have been ever thought to have been a grievance or oppression or endeavored to be withheld from them they might have saved as much and more as that would have come unto by reserving upon all their bounties and grants or Leases of their Mann●rs or Lands their Pourveyance or houshold provisions or when they gave Lands of inheritance rendring small or disproportionate Rents or Fee Farms to the greater yearly value which they now appear to be might have added so much of Pourveyance or provisions as might have taken away that causeless murmur against the Pourveyance which our old Saxon King Aethelstane who raigned here in Anno Dom. 938. understood to be so necessary for his housekeeping as when he had subdued the Wel●h Princes made them his Tributaries he caused them to Covenant with him at Hereford not onely to pay him yeerly twenty pounds weight of Gold and three hundred of Silver but five hundred head of Cattl● with Hawks and Hounds to a certain number towards which payment by the Statutes of Howel D●a saith our Industrious Speed the King of Aberfraw was charged at sixty six pounds an Early Composition rate for Pourveyance the Prince Dinemore and the Prince of Powys being to pay the like sums of money And that now to deny it unto the Crown is a greater injustice and injury then to have denyed it to Queen Elizabeth King James or his son King Charles the Martyr or in some hundred years before for that then our Kings and Princes might have preserved themselves and their successors from the rapines and unconscionable rates and prices of houshold provisions which some of his subjects might have forborn to impose upon their King though they do it upon others That if in the Raign of King Henry the seventh a Law or Act of Parliament had been made that for one hundred and fifty years after to the end to make a Treasury or provision of money which Common-wealths and many Kingdoms are not without for the protection and defence of the people against invasions or emergent evils the prices taken in the Markets more then formerly over and above the genuine and real worth of the Commodities should be collected and laid up for the good of the Publike or that all that took Lands to Farm should pay ten times the former yearly value and all things bought in the Market should like the King of France his Salt be for some things at three or four times or for others at ten fifteen or 20. times beyond the true value it would not be imaginable how near the peoples murmuring would have arrived to that of the Children of Israel in the Desart when they
Elizabeth if they stood upon equall terms with him and owed him neither gratitude allegiance or subjection That he who is so great a looser by the change alteration of times and his own his Royal Progenitors bounties and indulgences might howsoever be allowed to be a little gainer in that one particular of the Compositions for his Pourveyances for in every thing else he is abundantly a very great looser and ought as well to take an advantage by it as the Clergie and Impropriators of England doe by the rise and encrease of their Tithes and imp●ovement of their Glebes and are sure to be gainers by the difference in the value and price of commodities when as they sell their corn at the highest rates and make the improvement of their Glebes to follow the rise of money and the Markets And may take it to be no Paradox or stranger to any mans understanding or belief that the King who by his Lawes hath ordered that reasonable prises and rates should be taken for victuals and houshold provisions for himself and all his people and if his Sheriffs Justices of Peace Clerks of the Markets and the Lords and Stewards of Court-leets had but imitated the care of their Predecessors in the execution of the trusts committed unto them by their Soveraign and his Laws or of the Sheriffs in the reign of King Henry the third when as the King by his Writ being petitioned to give the Sheriffe of Bedford a power to dispence with the Vintners in the Town of Bedford for selling wine above the rates assize doth it in these words Rex c. Vic. Bed salutem Quia Villa de Bedeford distat a quolibet portu maris duas dietas tibi praecipimus quod permittas Vinitar Bed Sextarium vini Franc. vendere pro 8. denar sextarium vini Andeg. Wascon de Blanc pro 10 d. non obstante c. Teste R. c. allowing them to take for a pint and a half if the Sextarie was then accompted to be no greater a measure of wine 7 d. and for the like measure of white wine of Anjou and Gascoine 10 d. And had not as they doe daily too much neglected the execution of the Laws and laid by their duties to God their King and Country and by being over wakefull and diligent to improve their estates and private interests taken a Nap or fit of sleeping in point of time farre beyond that of the seven notorious Sleepers might at this day have been out of the reach of the causeless murmur of those who as they were seduced and fooled by Oliver and his Associates in the greatest of iniquities can make a Non causa to be a cause of their Complaints and of a grievance to themselves when as they and many of their fellow Subjects are and have been the only and immediate causes of it and if rightly considered is a reall grievance to the King and to all that buy more then they sell. And that if the King and his Laws had been as they ought to have been better obeyed and observed in such a Land or Kingdome as England is which is justly accompted to be blest with so much peace and plenty and such an over-plus of all things good and pleasant as well as necessary for the sustenance of the People or Inhabitants thereof as a deer year is not heard of above once at the most in ten or twenty years but many very cheap ones The rates or prices agreed upon by the Counties in the fourth year of the reign of Queen Elizabeth would have been enough and sufficient or more then enough if the Acts of Parliament of 25 H. 8. ca. 2. to suppress the enhaunce of the then Market rates which may well be supposed to have been much cheaper then what it was in Anno 4 of Elizabeth and the Statutes of incerti temporis or King Henry the third 3 4 Ed. 6. ca. 19. 5 Ed. 6. ca. 14. against Forestallers had been duly put in execution And that the 12. Counties bordering upon London and adjacent as Middlesex Essex Kent Surrey Sussex Hertford Buckingham Berkshire Bedford Oxford Cambridge and H●ntington Shires making no small gains by the vent and rise of their provisions and commodities and an high improvement of their Lands beyond all other Counties and Parts of England would if the Markets had been regulated and kept down to such just and reasonable prices as might have been well enough afforded have for want of their now great rates for victuals and commodities night and day sent unto London that greatest belly and mouth of the Kingdome and their racking or improving of their Lands been constrained to let fall and diminish their rates and prices and follow the regulating of the Markets and make their prices and rates to be conformable to the Laws and plenty of the Kingdome which would have brought unto them and their Estates a greater or more then supposed damage many times and very far exceeding the pretended losses of serving in their proportions of the Kings provisions as they were agreed upon And if this shall not be believed without experiments or demonstrations they may be quickly brought to assent unto that which will certainly p●ove to be a truth that if the King should as King Henry the second keep his Court and Parliament for a time at ●larendon in Wiltshire or as King Edward the first did keep his Court and Parliament in Denbigh-shire at Ruthland too often mistaken and called Rutland or at Carnarvon in Wales or at York where whilest he was busie and imployed in his Warres against the Scots he kept his Terms and Court for seven years together or as many of the former Kings did keep their Christmas and other great yearly Festivals sometimes at Nottingham other times at Worcester Lincoln and other places far remote from London And as the Sun yearly diffuseth his li●ht and heat in his journey through the Tropicks some at one time and some at another unto all parts of the world or as the blood in the body naturall daily circulates visits and comforts all the parts of it should enrich comfort most of the parts of his Kingdom with the presence and influence of his Courts and residence Those rates and prises in the Composition for Pourveyances would rather prove to be too high a rate and allowance then too little As it happened to be in Anno 1640. when the late King and Martyr was enforced to be with his Court and Army about Newcastle upon Tine on the borders and confines of Scotland where the cheapness of victualls and other provisions at the Market rates in those parts fell to be very much under the Kings rates or allowance according to the Compositions for his Pourveyance made in the Reign of Queen Elizabeth which the Inhabitants and People thereabouts understood so well as a great store and farre more p●ovisions being daily brought in at those rates then
the King and his then more then ordinary numerous retinue could expend he was which many that were then present can testifie enforced by a Proclamation to forbid the bringing in of great quantities or more then was necessary And if the rates which Queen Elizabeth accepted her provisions to be served in by the Counties had been agreed to have been paid in money and not in kind and had by the fall of the Markets which the Lawes well executed would in a Kingdome of peace and plenty have easily brought to pass been too high a rate and more then the provisions served in kind would have amounted unto those who made that agreement for themselves and the Counties and places which they represented could not have receded from it no more then she or her Successors if the provisions served in kind should have grown cheaper or might have been had for less money or been bought by her Officers at easier rates then the Compositions could without the help of a Proviso with honour or Justice have desired that her provisions might not have been served in kind by the several Counties of England and Wales but that the money or rate then agreed upon to have been the price of those provisions should have been yearly paid into the Exchequer to be disposed of for that purpose which probably might have been the reason that at the first agreement made by several Counties for the Compositions some for 3 years some for four and some for seven there was a proviso that either party disliking which until our mad times or quarrelling with the fifth Commandement and finding fault with every thing that fed not the rebellious humour was not at all done by the Counties should be at liberty and free from that agreement For there can be no reason unless ingratitude and unreasonableness neglect of Laws and Duties breach of Faith and Contracts and reasonable Customes unto the King and Soveraign shall be installed virtues and put in the seat of reason and understood to be no otherwise that when all the Lands of the twelve adjacent and neighbour Counties of London have been so exceedingly and to such a height improved and the Lands of all the other Counties of England and the Dominion of Wales have by neighbourhood and communication largely likewise and more then formerly improved and raised their rents and estates by the rise and greater prices given for Corn Cattel Victuals and all other Houshold Provisions more then they were heretofore the Landlords made to be so very great gainers and the Tenants if they be no great gainers sure enough to be made savers by heightening the prices of Corn Cattel and all other victuals and houshold provisions the King only should bear the burden and not partake of some of the fruits if there were nothing else to require or deserve it of their great advance and increase in all their Estates and Revenues And that he by whose power alliance and interest with forreign Princes the People of England doe enjoy the trade as well inward from for●aign parts as outward into them the many priviledges and immunities procured for our Merchants by his famous Progenitors and Predecessors as that of Burgundy and the Neatherlands France Spain Portugal Ligorne the Russian or Muscovy Trade the Hanse or Hamborough Turkish and East-Indie Trades for all which but Burgundy and the East-land Trades our Merchants are beholding to Queen Elizabeth and King James the Rex Pacificus with the Trades now begining to florish in and with our English Colonies in Virginia Bermudas Barbados St. Christophers Mevi● New-England and Sianam c. which doe serve to augment our plenties and delicacies in England and his protection of them and all their Trades with forreign Princes by his Leagues Confederacies and Ambassadors and allowing them the freedom of the Seas and Ports and that beneficiall Trade for the London Woodmongers or Colliers to Newcastle upon Tine for coals where their Chaldrons by which they buy are more then double to what they sell and measure by at London and the owners of the Colleries to gain their custome doe not only sell at cheap and easie rates but give and allow them for nothing seven and sometimes eight or nine Chaldron of their great and double chaldrons or measures in every twenty or score of chaldrons and notwithstanding their easie and small rates can by engrossing and keeping them upon the River of Thames unsold and a combination and confederacy among themselves sell their coals at 24 or 30 s. a single or London chaldron and think that also not to be gain or profit enough unless they can upon any Frost or increase of winter weather or the news sometimes but feigned or pretended that a Ship or two of coals were cast away by storms raise their coals 2 3 5 10 or 20 shillings more in a chaldron when they please to the damage of the Rich and great oppression of the Poor who buy their coals by the peck and must pay a greater rate for them then their labours small earnings every day from 4. in the morning until 12. at night will amount unto and did in the times of Rebellion and pretence of Gods glory to be advanced by it continue their mystery of trade and oppression to such a height impudence as when it was proved at a Sessions at the Old-Baily in London that they might sell cheaper and the Lord Maior and Justices had put a rate upon coals and ordered that they should sell accordingly neither the fear of Laws or Magistrates was able to perswade them to an obedience or diswade or deterre them from their Liberty of sinning should be denied such a legal antient and reasonable duty And may believe that the granting and permitting of Marts Fairs and Markets at home and the improvement of his Subjects Estates Revenues a five times mo●e in some places and ten in others within the space of 200 years last past and 20 times more then what they were before that period by their peace and liberties may very well deserve so small an acknowledgement and return and so petit a priviledge as the having of a Praemption and his Provisions served in for his household at reasonable prices which is no more then what the Law it self enjoyneth to be done unto all the People and Subjects of England from the highest to the lowest and to the poorest as well as unto the aboundantly or indifferently rich And that when in our Magna Charta or great Charter of our Liberties the Praeemption Pourveyance was not denied upon present payment for all under 40 shillings and for the rest within forty dayes after and the Cart-taking upon the payment of ten pence a day for a Cart with two horses and fourteen pence a day for three secundum antiqua pretia after the old rates for which now are allowed better rates and being afterwards confirmed by King Henry the third in a solemn procession