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A28585 The continuation of An historicall discourse of the government of England, untill the end of the reigne of Queene Elizabeth with a preface, being a vindication of the ancient way of parliaments in England / by Nath. Bacon of Grais-Inne, Esquire. Bacon, Nathaniel, 1593-1660.; Bacon, Nathaniel, 1593-1660. Historicall and political discourse of the laws & government of England. 1651 (1651) Wing B348; ESTC R10585 244,447 342

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Henry the Third of whom they who listed might be perswaded but few beleived the thing nor did himself but thence takes his flight up to a Jus Divinum or some hidden Fate that called him to the worke but even there his wings failed him and so he falls flat upon the Peoples Election De bene esse Some of these or all together might make Title enough for a great man that resolved to hold by hooke what he had got by crooke and therefore trussing them up all together he enters his claime to the Crown As comming from the blood Royall from King Henry and through the Right that God his grace hath sent me with the help of my Kinne and Freinds to recover the same which was in point to be undone for want of good Governance and due Justice The extract of all is that he was chosen by the People and Parliament then sitting And allbeit that by the Resignation of Richard the Second the Parliament might seem in strict construction of Law to be expired together with the Kings power who called them together yet did not that Parliament so apprehend the matter but proceeded not onely to definitive Sentence of Deposing him but declared themselves by their Commissaries to be the three States and Representative of the People of England maintaining thereby their subsistency by the Consistence of the Members together although their Cheif was for the present like a head in a trance till they had chosen Henry the Fourth to succeed in the Throne by this means preventing the conceit of discontinuance in the very Bud of the Notion Much like his entry was his continuance a continuall tide of Forraine and Domesticke Warre and Conspiracy enough to exercise his great Courage although he was more Wise then Warlike being loath to take up Armes for well he knew that a sick Title never sleeps but in a Bed of Peace and more loth to lay them down for besides Victory whereby he gained upon his Enemies in time of Warre he knew how to make advantage of them in time of Peace to secure his Freinds to keep others in awe to inforce such Lawes as stood with reason of State and the present posture of Affaires and where Lawes failed to fill up the period with Dictates of his owne will And upon this Account the Product was a government full of Ulcers of Blood-shed without regard of Persons whether of the Lay or Religious Order without Legall triall or priviledge of Clerke So was Arch Bishop Walden Dethroned Arch Bishop Scroope put to death and Dukes were dismounted without Conviction or Imputation saving of the Kings displeasure Taxes multiplied although begotten they were upon the Parliament like some monstrous Births shewne to the World to let it know what could be done but concealed by Historians to let it know what may not be done Yea the priviledges of Parliament invaded in point of Election A thing that none of his Predecessors ever Exemplyfied to him nor none of his Successors ever Imitated him in nor had he purposed it but that he was loath the People should know more of the Government then needs must To keep off Forrain troubles he made Peace with France for longer time then he lived yet was ever infested with the Sword of Saint Paul in behalf of Richard the Seconds Queene and with the Factions betweene the Houses of Orleance and Burgundy in which he had interested himselfe to preserve the Forraine Neighbour-hood in Parties one against another that himselfe might attend his owne Security at home He would have moved the Scots but they were already under English Banners nor could he reach so farre having so many Enemies even in his owne bosome The Welsh were big with Antiquity and Mountains of Defence they beginne to bethinke themselves of their Ancient Principality hold the Kings Armes at hard Duty till by Lawes enacted in Parliament they lost their Liberties of bearing Office Ministeriall or of Judicature of holding Castle of Convention without the Kings Licence yea of Purchase and so by degrees were brought downe from the height of a Free Principality to be starved in their Power and inferiour to a Free People And thus the Welsh on the one side the discontented Lords on the other and Mortimars Title in all so busied the King as though he lopped off the tops as they sprang up yet they sprang forth as they were lopped nor was it the Kings lot all this while to finde out the Root of All or to strike at that Lastly when time had made all troublers weary yet he stil sits upon thornes he was jealous of his Subjects jealous of his Son yea jealous of himself It being ever the first and last of his thoughts how to keep his Crowne For the most part of his Reigne he was troubled with the walking Ghosts of Richard the second ever and anon he was alive he was here he was there and so the Peoples mindes were alwayes kept at random but when all these Spirits are conjured downe Richard the seconds Ghoste is yet within Henries owne breast So ruled Henry the fourth an unhappy confident man that durst undertake more then he would did more then he ought was successfull in what he did yet never attained his end to be sure of his Crowne and quiet of minde For a plaister to this sore he turned somewhat towards Religion but shewed it more in Zeale to Church-men then workes of Piety and therefore may be thought to regard them rather as his best freinds in right of Arch Bishop Arundell then as in relation to Religion yet as if he overlooked that he desires their prayers becomes a strict observer of superstitious rights is fiery Zealous against the Lollards intends a journey into the holy Land and Warr against the Infidels the common Physick of guilty Kings in those dayes Breifly he did will to do any thing but undoe what he had done and had done more had his journey to the holy Land succeeded but whither hastned or delayed by a prophesie of the ending of his dayes falls not within my Penn to censure entring upon the worke he died in the beginning of his purposes in the midst of his feares never came to the holy Land and yet yeilded up his last breath in Jerusalem THe Parliament was then sitting and was witnesse of the death of Henry the fourth as it had beene of his entrance upon the Throne as if purposed to see to the cours of the Crowne in the doubtfull currant betweene the two Houses of Lancaster and Yorke and to maintaine their own honor in directing the Scepter according to their warranty upon a late intaile by act of Parliament yet did not all rest upon this for the Heire of Henry the fourth was a man every inch of him and meant not to Moote upon the point His Father died a King and he his Heire had the Crowne and was resolved to hold it A rough young man he