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A59082 An historical and political discourse of the laws & government of England from the first times to the end of the reign of Queen Elizabeth : with a vindication of the ancient way of parliaments in England : collected from some manuscript notes of John Selden, Esq. / by Nathaniel Bacon ..., Esquire. Bacon, Nathaniel, 1593-1660.; Selden, John, 1584-1654. 1689 (1689) Wing S2428; ESTC R16514 502,501 422

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instigation of her Father whose Conscience told him that the Title to the Crown by inheritance was weakned by his own precedent himself coming to the same by Election of the People contrary to the Title of his Brother Robert. Nevertheless this was not the first time that the English Crown refused to be worn by practice for Henry the first being dead Steven the younger Son to a younger Sister of Henry the first put up head who being of the Royal Stem a Man and a brave Souldier by the ancient course of the Saxons had Title enough to be thought upon in a doubtful Succession Besides he was a rich man and had enough to raise up his thoughts to high undertakings had a Brother a Bishop and Legate to the Pope here in England one who was of a high spirit and vast power advantages enough to have quickned a much duller spirit than his was who was a Son of a Daughter to William the Conquerour And to make him yet more bold he had the upper ground of the Heir who was a woman disadvantaged by a whispering of wilfulness and customary Government like an Empress which was too high a sail for an English bottom wherein so precious a Treasure as the Subjects Liberties was to be shipped Thus provided Steven stepped up to the English Throne and with protestations of good Government entred and made up the match both for Crown and Scepter the People waving the Title both of Empress and Heir The pretensions of the E. of Bloys elder Brother to Steven gave way to the common Law and Liberties of the Subject to fasten root and gather strength after the violence of the Norman blasts was out of breath thus making way over Hedge and Ditch of all Oaths till the King was quietly setled in the Throne Quietly said I that I must retract for he never had quiet during his life though generally he was victorious and did as much as a King could do that had the passions of a man and Souldier to give the Subjects content The true cause whereof was an errour in the tying of the Knot wherein he neither became theirs nor they his for the Fealty that was sworn to him was but conditional and eousque and yet the King's promises were absolute and better observed than the Peoples were possibly because his Engagements were more For besides his Protestations the King pledged his Brother the Legate to the people and mortgaged himself to his Brother and to boot gave both to the Clergie and Barons liberty to build and hold Castles for their private security The issue whereof may remind that too much countersecurity from the King to the people is like so many Covenants in Marriage that make room for jealousie and are but seeds of an unquiet life And thus it befel this King's Reign His first troubles are brought in by Historians as if they dropped from Heaven yet probably came immediately from without viz. from beyond Sea where the Empress was for as the King's Engagements were in their first heat on the one side so was also the Empress's Choler on the other side and therefore might make the first assault And the King 's first success therein falling out prosperously for him gave him a conceit that he was strong enough to encounter his own Covenant although in truth he invaded but the skirts thereof I mean that collateral security of Castles for by experience he now feels that they are blocks in his way he must therefore have them into his own power But the Clergie loth to forgo their pawn till they had their full Bargain for now they were working hard for investitures of the Mitred Clergie under the patronage of a Legate that had the King in bonds acted their parts so well as they engaged the Nobility for their liberty of Castles in which Atchievement the King was taken prisoner The Empress betakes her self to the Clergie and by the Legate's means procures a kind of Election to be Queen But she sick of the Womans humour and thinking too much of the Empress and too little of the Queen and forgetting that the English Crown would not fit an Empress unless she could fit her head first to it choaked her own Title by Prerogative and so let the Crown slip through her own hands which fell upon the head of Steven again who maintained it by his Sword after by Composition and then died a King. And thus like a Vapour mounted up by the Clergie tossed by Tempests for a time and at length falling he gave way to the Crown to have its free course to the Empress's Son by Geoffery Plantagenet This was Henry the second the most accomplished for Wisdom Courage and Power of all his Predecessors and one that wanted nothing but purpose to have undone what the foregoing Princes had done in the setling of the Liberties of the People for the Subjects were tired with the unquiet former times and the Clergie in distraction through the Schism in the Popedom between Victor the fourth and Alexander the third and very unfitting all were to dispute the point of Prerogative with so mighty a Prince And it was the wisdom of God to order his affairs so as that he was not very fit to dispute with the people in that case for his Title to the Crown was not very excellent being neither Heir to the last King that Reigned nor to the last of that Title I mean to Henry the first but Son only to the Empress who was now alive and by descent was to be preferred before all other His Title therefore is clearly by compact and agreement made between the Lords King Steven and himself all being then ready to try the right by the Sword to that to which none of them had any right at all at that time but by the favour of the people Nor did the King ever after dispute the strength of this Title although before he died his Mothers death conveyed over to him what right of descent soever was consistent with the Law of the Crown nor did occasion favour him thereto for as it is never seen that any man is honoured by God with many advantages without proportionable employment for the same so it befel with this King His great Territories in France brought jealousie in the rear and thence strife and contention with France enough to turn his thoughts from waxing wanton against his own people and therefore his wisdom taught him to prefer peace at home to the chief of his Prerogative to become somewhat popular and yet to lose nothing of a King thereby His way was to keep the Church-men down that had during his predecessors time grown whether more obstinate against the King or insolent over the people is hard to judge and in this he had the people to friend and might have prevailed much more than he did but that the people feared the threats of Rome more than he and he if not guilty of Becket's death
make a Law somewhat short of a full freedom and yet outreaching that of Bondage which we since have commended to posterity under the Forest-Charter And yet for all that it proved a hard matter for Kings to hunt by Law and the Law it self is a Yoke somewhat too heavy for a Commonwealth to bear in old age if self-denying Majesty shall please to take it away CHAP. XXXV Concerning Judges in Courts of Justice THus far of the several Tribes and numbers of this Commonwealth which like so many Conduit-heads derived the influence of Government through the whole body of this Island and in every of which Judiciary power acted it self in all Causes arising within the verge of that Precinct some of which had more extraordinary trial before the King and his Council of Lords according as the parties concerned were of greater degree or the Cause of more publick concernment Examples hereof are the Cases between the Bishop of Winchester and Leoftin in Aetheldred's time and between the two Bishops of Winchester and Durham in Edward's time But custom made this Court stoop to smaller game in latter times and to reach at the practice of the County-Court by sending the Kings Writs to remove certain Causes from the cognizance of those rural Judicatories to their sublime determination And thus became the Council of Lords as an Oracle to the whole Nation and the King amongst the rest as the Priest that many times rendred the Answer or Sentence of that Oracle in his own sense and had it confirmed to him by an Oath se judicium rectum in Regno facturum justitiam per concilium procerum regni sui tenturum so as though he was the first in view yet the Council of Lords was the first in nature and the Cynosure to direct his tongue and actions From this Fountain issued also streams of Judicature into all parts by Judges itinerant under the Kings Commission to reform errors punish defaults in the ordinary rural Judicatories and to dissolve hard and knotty Cases and these were occasioned at the instance of the party and Alfred whose birth this was sent them forth in way of Association with the Sheriff Lord of the Fee or other ordinary Magistrate CHAP. XXXVI Of the Proceedings in Judicature by Indictment Appeal Presentment and Action FOr the proceedings in course the Saxons were wont to begin with matters belonging to the Church and afterward to Secular causes in which if the matters were criminal the most ancient way of proceeding was by Appeal of the party complaining But afterward in cases that concerned Damage Injury or Violence done to the Body of a man or his Estate the King was found to be therein prejudiced besides the prejudice immediately done to the Subject for a man disabled in Body or Estate is disabled to serve the King and the Publick and upon this ground a way was found out to punish the offender by Indictment besides the satisfaction done to the party wronged The proceedings against such Delinquents were by attachment of the party who thereupon gave Pledges for his appearance If the party could not be found a fugam fecit was returned and that was a conviction in Law and pursuit was made after the party by Huy and Cry. If he was thereby taken the ancient way was that of Hallifax-Law but in latter times he was imprisoned or admitted to Bail if the offences were bailable and if the party bailed made default or did not abide the Trial his Bail suffered as Principal If no Bail could be procured the Delinquent was imprisoned till he was legally acquitted but this imprisonment was only in nature of restraint If the Delinquent was found upon the Huy and Cry and would not yield himself he was in repute a common Enemy and as a Wolf any man might kill him as the Law was also the same in case of Vtlary At the time of tryal if at the Kings suit the Delinquent was indicted in this manner by any party present I D. C. do say for the King that I. S. is defamed by good men that he upon day of c. into the House and Goods of did cast fire and the same did burn or if it were for Bloodshed with a Sword did strike and wound him in the left arm and that this was done Feloniously or if the case required Traiterously and if I. S. deny the same I will for the King prove the matter against him as the King ought to do that is to say by Witnesses and Twelve men But if the complaint was at the suit of the party then the Prosecutor sued him upon Appeal in manner following I. C. appealeth D. H. here present for that E. Father Brother Son or Vncle according as the case was to I. C. being in the peace of God and of our Soveraign Lord the King at the dwelling house of E. at c. the said D. H. upon the day of in the year of with a Sword made a Wound of two inches long and six inches deep in the left pap of the body of the said E. whereof he died and this was done Feloniously and of Malice forethought And if the said D. H. shall deny the same the said I. C. is ready to prove the same against him in his body or as a Monk Woman or Clerk behoveth to prove the same that is by Champion for neither Monk Woman nor Clerk was by Law to justifie by Battle in their own person The several causes of Appeal and Indictment may be found in the Law-books to whom I refer the Reader it not being within the compass of this Discourse to fall upon the particulars I shall onely observe the difference between Indictments former and latter and between them and Appeals viz. that Appeals are positive Accusations in the name of the Prosecutor of the fact done by the party appealed whereas Indictments were onely a publication or affirmation of the same of a fact done by the party indicted and wherein Not guilty pleaded served onely as in nature of a Quere to usher in the votes of the Freemen concerning the fact Secondly the difference between former Indictments from these in these days consists in this that the ancient Indictments were in the name of one man those of the later sort are in the name of the Jury and the former were onely of a same the later of the fact A third way of bringing Controversies unto judgement concerned onely such matters as were of less consequence and these were introduced by way of Presentment in the name or behalf of the King in nature of a positive Accusation of one for a Crime first laid down generally and then asserted by a particular fact in this manner I say for our Soveraign Lord the King That H. here is perjured and hath broken saith against the King because whereas H. is or was Chancellour of the King and was
the antiquity hereof that I have met with than the name it self which importeth that it sprang up whiles as yet the names of Angles and Saxons held in common cognizance and might arise first from the grant of the Lords to their Tenants and so by continuance become usual And by this means also might arise the custom of Copy-holds of this nature so frequent especially in those Eastern parts of this Island where the Angles setled and from whom that part had the name of the East Angles Another custom of descent remaineth and that is to the Children indifferently and it is called Gavel-kind or Gave-all kind and by the very name seemeth at the first to arise rather from the donation of the Parent or other Ancestor contrary to common custom than by common Law otherwise no need had been of an especial name In the Original it seems it equally concerned all both Sons and Daughters as partners and for want of such the Brothers and Sisters It seemeth to be first the Law of the Goths or Jutes for it remaineth in use in these parts of the Eastern Countries But in latter times this estate was also tailed or cut out sometimes to the Sons and Daughters severally that is the Sons or Brothers to have two parts and the Daughters or Sisters one part othertimes to all the Sons and for want of such to all the Daughters And thus these courses of estates passed over Seas to the Southern part of this Island where that people most setled in a double stream the first from the Athenians that loved the stateliness of their Families the other from the Lacedemonians who desired rather the continuance of their Families than their greatness The manner of conveying of Estates between party and party was either by act of the party executed in his life-time or after his death Such as were executed in the life-time of the owner and were such as for the most part were in matters of great moment were Estates passing by deed of Conveyance in writing And for this way the Saxons were beholding to the Latines who taught them that course both for form and language And Alfred enforced by a particular Law viz. That all such as hold Lands by Deed in Writing should hold them according to the intent thereof and not alien the same contrary thereunto the intent thereof being proved by the Witnesses The nature of the Conveyances in these ancient times may appear by a Deed of one of the Kings of this Island about 400 years before the Conquest whereby he granted Four Plough-lands in the Isle of Thanet unto an Abbess wherein instead of that which we now call the habendum the words are contulimus possidendum c. and after that followeth the uses of the Deed tuo usui c. and then concludes with a Warranty in these words tu vero successoresque tui defendant in perpetuum nunquam me haeredesque meos contra hanc chartulam aliquando esse venturos the effect of which last clause may appear by the Law of the sale of Goods which in those times was that if the sale of Goods warranted did not hold the loss should light upon the sellers The Deeds were usually subscribed with the name of him that made the Conveyance or passed the Estate and if he could not write his name as it befel often then the Deed was under-signed with his mark For Withered King of Kent used the sign of the Cross in subscribing his Grants pro ignorantia literarum They used also in those days to seal their Deeds for so much the conclusion of King Ina's Charter to the Abbey of Glastenbury importeth in words to this effect in English I Ina the King do confirm this Grant and Liberty by subscription of my own hand and under the seal of the holy Cross. True it is Ingulphus tells us that Seals to Deeds were of Norman original I believe his intent is concerning Seals of Wax annexed or affixed unto Deeds Lastly in those days also they used to attest their Deeds by subscribing the names of such as were present who being of greater or meaner rank rendred the credit of the Deed accordingly more or less valuable and upon this ground did the acknowledging or proving of Deeds before the King Bishop County or Hundred first arise That was the Roman fashion but the more ancient German way of Conveyance was by Livery and Seisin as most suitable to their ignorance who had Learning in as slight account as the Lacedemonians had and cared for no more than would serve the turn of natural necessity A property they had both in Lands and Goods and where that resteth no man can deny them the natural way of giving and receiving by delivery And therefore though matters of ordinary use seldom come into the observation of story and this petty ceremony might very well pass sub silentio yet we are not altogether left destitute of the footsteeps thereof in antiquity For Aethbald the Mercian King above Eight hundred years ago gave the Monastery of Cutham with all the Lands thereunto appertaining to Christ-Church in Canterbury and for the confirmation thereof commanded a clod of earth with all the Writings to be laid upon the Altar Another monument hereof more ancient by the space of above an hundred years we find in that Grant of Withered King of Kent of four Plough-lands in the Isle of Thanet the latter part whereof this Clause concludes thus Ad cujus cumulum affirmationis cespitem hujus supradictae terrae super sanctum altare posui Every man had liberty to execute the Law of his Inheritance in his life-time but some were surprized with sudden occasions and unexpected issues and ends and in such cases they did what they could to declare their intents by last Will which by common intendment being in writing hath occasioned some to think that the Saxons in their original had no use thereof being as they conceived so illiterate as not to have the use of writing But the Character remaining to this day evinceth the contrary nor can those words of Tacitus Et nullum est testamentum in any rational way be expounded in this sence if we consider the Context which runneth thus Haeredes successores cuique liberi nullum est testamentum Which in my opinion founds in this sence The Heirs and Successours to every one are his Children and there is no testamentary power to disherit or alter the course of Descent which by Custom or Law is setled Otherwise to deny them the use of all testamentary power was a matter quite abhorring the custom of all the Grecians from whom they learned all that they had Nevertheless the Saxons had not been long acquainted with the Romanists but they had gotten that trick of theirs also of disheriting by last Will as by the testament of Aethelwolf and others
even of such as know it do seriously consider how far it may yet and even now be charged upon the account of this Nation Serious as it was it was soon forgotten nor would the King be long holden with promises some unhappy Star struck him in his birth he had been too hard for his promises and now having the Pope at his Elbow he can dispence with his Oath and bid defiance to an Execration and in flat defiance of the Grand-Charter professeth oppression accumulates forreign Counsellors and forreign Guards contemns his own people ushers in the Pope's Extortions upon them to fill up the measure thrives in nothing but in the match of his Son and Successor with a Sister of Spain and yet that also helps to hasten on the publick poverty and that a Parliament that brought forth a bloudy issue although not by any natural power but occasionally For the Barons mean now no longer to trust to promises strangers are banished the Realm and others of the English bloud stepped into their places and Revenues But this was not all the King must confirm the Grand-Charter and thereto he addeth not onely his own Oath but causeth the Prince his Son to confirm the same in like manner It is likewise propounded to him that the chief Officers of the Kingdom may be chosen such as the Parliament shall like of And that other Laws meet for the government of the Kingdom might be established of all these the King made no bones And to make men believe that he was in good earnest he was contented to disrobe and disarm himself and invest the Barons both with Sword and Scepter retaining nothing but the Crown for himself This had been safety enough for the Kingdom but that it was a conclusion without an agreement for as it was on the King's part made from a principle of shame and fear so it was determined in anger for after that the King had been thus drest and girt for the space of Four or Five years whatsoever he thought all the while it is no matter he began first to stretch his Conscience and having the Pope's Dispensation to help soon makes his Oath to fly assunder although his Son had for the present more Conscience But the other girt held more stoutly for the Lords had the Sword chained to their Arm by the King 's own grant Liceat omnibus in regno nostro contra nos insurgere ad gravamen nostrum opem operam dare ac si nobis in nullo fenerentur and the Lords maintained their hold though not without some jealousies amongst themselves And it is very probable had the King been a little longer breathed with patience he might have had his will upon easier terms for the Lords were not so jealous of one another as the Commons were jealous of the Lords that they meaned to rule onely for themselves But the King now being in a wood and bemired so as he must now resolve to get all or lose all and so either satisfie his natural desires or the remainder of his politick power entred the field with the aid of those Commons that chose rather to be oppressed by one King than many Lords And thus the Lords received the first blow and gave the first foil Afterwards being worsted by their own divisions and jealousies they left a victory to the King that might have made him absolute if he had been moderate but pursuing revenge too far he was distasted of his own party that looked on him as a Polyphemus that intended to devour the Enemy first that he might more freely feast upon themselves in the issue This made victory follow the King afar off and taught the King that the end of Civil War must be attended with moderation in the Conquerour so far as may stand with publick safety or otherwise he that is Conquerour to day by Sword may be conquered to morrow by Jealousie Thus many humours consumed and all parts tired after four years continual War the State cometh to its right Wits The King's gains in all this bloudy sweat may be summed up in two heads First that he had liberty to chuse his principal Officers of State by advice of the Lords and them also to displace by like Counsel Secondly in that he gained though at a dear rate wisdom to observe the state of affairs and to apply himself according to occasion so lived Henry the third for three or four years after these troubles long enough to let the World know that he was able to govern like an English King and to teach his Son by his own late experience to be a wise governour betimes For Edward the first being trained up in the Tragedy of a Civil War wherein he was one of the chief actors and having expiated the bloudy way of his riotous youth by his Holy War as they called it now he betakes himself to amends making by Justice in Government having found by his Father's experience that a Kingdom well governed like good husbandry preserves the owner but being neglected destroys both He came over in his third year in August was crowned in September summoned a Parliament in February following but adjourned it till after Easter and then it is found that the Church of late had been ill governed the Clergy-men grieved by many ways the people otherwise handled than they ought to be the Peace ill kept the Laws less used and Delinquents less punished than was meet and in the sence of these inconveniencies were the Laws of Westminster the first made wherein the world may see the great difference between the Prince and the King in one and the same man. The most part of those Laws were little other than plaisters applied to particular botches of those times wherein the King dealt with a tender hand as if he feared to ulcerate any part and especially the Clergie and therefore delivered the last Law in a petitionary way to the Clergie because it concerned the execution of Justice in prohibited times and yet bound up all with a salvo to himself and his prerogative like a wise King that would neither lose right nor do rong nor yet stickle to debate with his Subjects now whenas his eye was upon a further mark For Leolin the Prince of Wales had affronted him and though he could not endure affronts yet could he dissemble them for advantage and so he suffered the Parliament to run its course that he might have done the sooner Otherwise he had a seed of his Father's conceit that Laws are not made for Kings as appeared afterward for after he had gotten his Army into the field he took a fifteenth which was granted to his Father and this was inaudito more but there was no disputing with power and therefore the Subject must be contented rather to score it up against the future than require present pay so dangerous a thing it is for England that Kings should have occasion to
faithfully carried on by him that Justice it self could not touch his person unjustice did and he received this reward from his Nephew Henry the Sixth that he died in the dark because the Cause durst not endure the light Now is Henry the Sixth perswaded that he is of full Age he had laid aside his Guardian the Duke of Gloucester but forgetting to sue out his Livery he betakes himself from the Grace of God into the warm Sun as the Proverb is changing the Advice of a faithful experienced wise Counsellour for the Government of an Imperious Woman his Queen who allowed him no more of a King than the very Name and that also she abused to out-face the World. And after she had removed the Duke of Gloucester out of the way undertook the sway of the Kingdom in her own person being a Foreigner neither knowing nor caring for other Law than the Will of a Woman Thus the Glory of the House of Lancaster goes down and now a Star of the House of York appears in the rising and the people look to it The Queen hereat becomes a Souldier and begins the Civil Wars between the two Houses wherein her English party growing wise and weary she prays Aid of Ireland a Nation that like unto Crows ever wants to prey upon the Infirmities of England The Wars continue about sixteen years by ●its wherein the first loss fell to the English party the pretensions being yet onely for good Government Then the Field is quiet for about four years after which the clamour of ill Government revives and together therewith a claim to the Crown by the House of York is avouched Thereupon the Wars grew hot for about four years more and then an ebb of as long Quiet ensues The Tide at last returns and in two years War ends the Quarrel with the death of Fourscore Princes of the Bloud-Royal and of this good man but unhappy King. Unhappy King I say that to purchase his Kingdoms Freedom from a Foreign War sold himself to a Woman and yet lost his Bargain and left it to Observation That a Conscientious man that marries for by-regards never thrives For France espied their advantage they had maintained War with England from the death of Henry the Fifth with various success The Duke of Bedford being Regent for the English for the space of fourteen years mightily sustained the fainting condition of the English Affairs in those parts and having crowned his Master Henry the Sixth in Paris in the ninth year died leaving behind him an honourable Witness even from his Enemies That he was a brave Commander a true Patriot and a faithful Servant to his Lord and Brother Henry the Fifth and to his Son Henry the Sixth But now the Duke of Bedford is dead and though France had concluded a Peace with the English yet they could not forget the smart of their Rod but concluded their Peace upon a Marriage to be had with a Woman of their own bloud and interest And what they could not effect by Arms in th●●r own Field they did upon English ground by a Feminine Spirit which they sent over into England to be their Queen and in one Civil War shedding more English bloud by the English Sword than they could formerly do by all the men of France were revenged upon England to the full at the English-mens own charge For what the English gain by the Sword is commonly lost by Discourse A Kingdom is never more befooled than in the Marriage of their King if the Lady be great she is good enough though as Jezabel she will neither reverence her Husband obey her Lord and King nor regard his people And thus was this Kingdom scourged by a Marriage for the sin of the wise men that building upon a false Foundation advised the King in the breach of Contract with the Earl of Arminiack's Daughter And thus the King also for that hearkning to such Counsel murthered the Duke of Gloucester that had been to him a Father yielded up his Power to his Queen a masterless and proud woman that made him like a broken Idol without use suffered a Recovery of his Crown and Scepter in the Parliament from his own Issue to the Line of York then renewing the War at his Queens beck lost what he had left of his Kingdom Country and Liberty and like the King that forgot the kindness of Jehojada lost his Life by the hand of his Servant CHAP. XIV Of the Parliament during the Reigns of these Kings THe Interest of the Parliament of England is never more predominant than when Kings want Title or Age. The first of these was the Case of Henry the Fourth immediately but of them all in relation to the pretended Law of the Crown but Henry the Sixth had the disadvantage of both whereof in its due place The pretended Law of the Crown of England is to hold by Inheritance with power to dispose of the same in such manner by such means and unto such persons as the King shall please To this it cannot be denied divers Kings had put in their claims by devising their Crown in their last Will but the success must be attributed to some power under God that must be the Executor when all is done and which must in cases of Debate concerning Succession determine the matter by a Law best known to the Judge himself Not much unlike hereunto is the Case of Henry the Fourth who like a Bud putting up in the place of a fading Leaf dismounts his Predecessor First from the peoples regard and after from his Throne which being empty sometimes he pretended the resignation of his Predecessor to him other whiles an obscure Title by descent his Conscience telling him all the while that it was the Sword that wrought the work But when he comes to plead his Title to Foreign Princes by protestation laying aside the mention of them all he justifies upon the unanimous consent of the Parliament and the people in his own onely person And so before all the World confessed the Authority and Power of the Parliament of England in disposing of the Crown in special Cases as a sufficient Bar unto any pretended Right that might arise from the House of Mortimar And yet because he never walks safely that hath an Enemy pursuing him still within reach he bethinks himself not sure enough unless his next Successours follow the dance upon the same foot To this end an Act of Parliament leads the Tune whereby the Crown is granted or confirmed to Henry the Fourth for life and entailed upon his Sons Thomas John and Humphrey by a Petition presented 5 Hen. 4. Thus Henry the Fourth to save his own stake brought his Posterity into the like capacity with himself that they must be Kings or not subsist in the World if the House of York prevails And so he becomes secured against the House of York treading on his heels unless the Parliament of England shall
in the French Wars the Duke of Gloucester obtained the same power and place But Henry the Sixth added a further Title of Protector and Defender of the Kingdom and Church of England this was first given to the Duke of Bedford and afterwards he being made Regent of France it was conferred upon the Duke of Gloucester And towards the latter time of Henry the Sixth it was granted by him to Richard Duke of York This Title carried along with it a power different from that of a King onely in honour and the person so adorned may be said to sway the Scepter but not to wear the Crown And therefore in the minority of Henry the Sixth whenas the Government was ordered by the Parliament and to that end a Protector was made and he well guarded with a Privy Council and they provided with Instructions one of them was That in all matters not to be transacted ordinarily but by the King 's express consent the Privy Council should advise with the Protector But this is not so needful in regard that it concerneth the power of executing of Laws which by right of the liberty of the Subject is the known duty of the Scepter in whose hands soever it is holden And therefore I shall pass to the Legislative Power wherein it is evident that the Protector 's power was no whit inferiour to the King's power For First the Protector Ex Officio by advice of the Council did summon Parliaments by Writs even as the Kings themselves under their own Test and if they did not bear the Royal Assent yet did they direct the same and received Petitions in Parliament to them directed as to Kings and every way supplied the room of a King in order to the perfecting publishing and enforcing of Law to Execution Secondly the Parliaments holden by Protectors and Laws therein made are no whit inferiour to those by the King whether for Honour or Power And therefore if a Parliament be holden by the Lord Warden and sitting the Parliament the King in person shall arrive and be there present neither is the Parliament interrupted thereby nor the power thereof changed at all though the power and place of the Wardenship of the Kingdom doth utterly vanish by the personal access of the King because in all places where the King is subservient to the Kingdom or the Commonwealth the Lord Warden in his absence is conservient unto him being in his stead and not under him for the very place supposeth him as not because not present And this was by a Law declaratively published at such time as Henry the Fifth was Regent of France and therefore by common presumption was likely to have much occasion of residence in that Kingdom a●● it holdeth in equal force with all other Laws of the highest size which is the rather to be noted because it is though under a Protector obligatory to the King and makes his personal presence no more considerable than the presence of his shadow For the King spent three whole years in the French Wars and during that time never saw England where nevertheless in that interim three Parliaments had been holden one by the Duke of Bedford and two by the Duke of Gloucester in the last of which this Law was made And in truth if we look upon this Title of the Kingdoms Guardianship in its bare Lineaments without lights and shadows it will appear little better than a Crown of Feathers worn onely for bravery and in nothing adding to the real ability of the governing part of this Nation Neither were the persons of these Magnificoes so well deserving nor did the Nation expect any such matter from them Edward the First was a wise King and yet in his absence chose Edward the Second to hold that place he being then not above fourteen years of age Afterwards Edward the Second's Queen and the Lords of her party were wise enough in their way and yet they chose Edward the Third to be their Custos Regni then not fourteen years old his Father in the mean time being neither absent from the Kingdom nor deposed but onely dismissed from acting in the administration of the Government Edward the Third follows the same example he first makes his Brother John of Eltham Custos Regni and this he did at two several times once when he was but Eleven years old afterwards when he was about Fourteen Then he made his Son the Black Prince upon several occasions three times Lord-Warden of the Kingdom once he being about Nine years old and again when he was Eleven years old and once when about Fourteen years old Lastly Edward the Third appointed his Son Lionel Duke of Clarence unto this place of Custos Regni when as he was scarce Eight years old all which will appear upon the comparing their Ages with the several Rolls of 25 E. 1. 3 5 12 14 26. 19 E. 3. If therefore the work of a Custos Regni be such as may be as well done by the Infants of Kings as by the wisest Counsellor or most valiant man it is in my opinion manifest that the place is of little other use to this Commonwealth than to serve as an attire to a comely person to make it seem more fair because it is in fashion nor doth it advance the value of a King one grain above what his Personal endowments do deserve Hitherto of the Title and Power the next consideration will be of the original Fountain from whence it is derived wherein the Precedents are clear and plain that ordinarily they are the next and immediate Off-spring of Kings if they be present within the four Seas to be by them enabled by Letters-Patents or Commission But whether present or absent the Parliament when it sate did ever peruse their Authority and if it saw need changed enlarged or abridged both it and them Thus was the Duke of Gloucester made Lord Warden in the time of Henry the Fifth he being then in France in the room of the Duke of Bedford The like also in Henry the Sixth's time when as the King was young for then the Parliament made the Duke of Bedford Lord Warden and added unto that Title the Title of Protector Afterward at the Duke's going over into France they committed that service to the Duke of Gloucester if I forget not the nature of the Roll during the Duke of Bedford's absence and with a Salvo of his right Not unlike hereunto was the course that was taken by the Parliament in these sullen later times of Henry the Sixth whereof more hereafter in the next Paragraph Lastly The limitation of this high power and Title is different according to the occasion for the Guardianship of the Kingdom by common intendment is to endure no longer than the King is absent from the Helm either by voluntary deserting the work or employment in Foreign parts though united they be under the Government of the same King together
Franchises were sometimes in the Saxon more generally in the Latine but seldom or never in the Norman Dialect and that Pleadings and Indictments were entred in like manner in the Latine Tongue as formerly by an old custom brought in by the Clergie was used for the Clergie who had gotten the Key of Knowledge and Law into their own custody laid it up it that Language whereof the Commons had little knowledge that they might thereby be enforced to depend upon these men for Justice as well as for Piety The Normans therefore either found it too hard to alter the former custom in such cases or else thought it the wisest way to chuse the Latine as a third Language indifferent as well to the Normans as Saxons and best understood of any foreign Tongue besides and yet endeavoured to bring both Peoples into one Language as they were intended to be one People and to press the use of the Norman Tongue in publick affairs so far as might consist with good Government and Justice leaving time and occasion to work the issue which doubtless was much and had been more had the Norman Race continued in the Throne But falling out otherwise the English bloud prevailed in the head and the Language continued possession mixed onely with some Norman words as the people also were a mixed people So as the Language was not changed though it was altered Lastly it is affirmed that the Normans did impose a new custom called Coverfeu and it is thought by some to be a meer Vassalage that every man at the noise of the Bell every night must put out both Fire and Candle and yet it is a matter of so small concernment that being in its own nature convenient Scotland received it without such coercion and it can be reputed for no other than a seasonable advice which any Corporation in time of danger might order within their own Precinct without transgressing the Liberty of the Subjects Of less consequence is that change which is alledged was brought in by the Normans in the sealing of Deeds of Conveyance by setting a print upon Wax annexed to the Deed which formerly was wont to be by setting a print upon the blank at the end of the Deed and yet it is looked upon by some as a Trophy of Conquest or absolute Government Concerning which I will not dispute whether the Normans first brought in this course but shall rest in this That the King being about to compleat the unity of the Laws in the superstructure as well as in the fundamentals if herein and in some other particulars the English submitted to the Normans they likewise stooped to the English Law in other things And therefore such Concurrences ought not to be imputed unto a conquering power but unto moderation amongst a company of wise men Thus having glanced at the changes of Property Laws Tenures Language and some Customs we come to that which is the main occasion of all these Complaints I mean unlawful Taxes Afforrestings and other such Oppressions upon the Estates of the People concerning which I purpose not to contend for much thereof is like to be true The Norman Kings especially the two Williams were under continual occasion of Expence many Wars more Provocations which kept them ever in Action and that wrought their spirits into an immoderate heat little inferiour unto Rage and so they might soon out-reach their bounds and sit heavie on the People and in such occasions no man escaped Norman nor English Clergie-man nor Lay-man nor did the Kings themselves come off such gainers but that they might sometimes put up their gettings into their own eyes and see never a whit the worse And yet to do them right they were not always of such sad influence but had their lucida intervalla especially he that had the least cause I mean the Conquerour who certainly was a man of a serious regard and did not onely remit sometimes his Rigour in exacting where he ought not but also forbear to require that which he had some colour to demand For whereas the Dane-guelt was left unto him in the nature of an Annuity he was contented to turn it into a sum in gross and to demand it onely Cum ab exteris gentibus bella vel opiniones bellorum insurgebant and it was then done consultis magnatibus These things thus considered might have mollified somewhat the Pens of angry Writers and where they fail may be caution to Readers to consider occasions and dispositions of Princes and so long as Laws hold in Title to construe the irregularities of Princes to be but as steps out of the path to avoid a little dirt that a man may get home the more cleanly and therefore rightly can derive no other Title of absolute Soveraignty to their successours than to hold by infirmity And thus the Government under the Normans at the worst was but like that of childhood following sudden and present desires not wise enough to plot for absolute Monarchy nor to keep off a Polity which still rooted underneath though the fruit while it was now green was harsh and unpleasant I shall conclude this Norman Discourse with this Advertisement That notwithstanding the words Conquerour and Conquest have often fallen from my Pen and hereafter may do the like yet can I see no reason why divers succeeding Kings coming to the Crown by argument of the Sword and not by right of Descent may not deserve the Laurel as well as the first Norman King onely because Fame hath fancied him that Title under a kind of prescription I do the like CHAP. LVII Of the Government during the Reigns of Steven Henry the 2. Richard the 1. and John. And first of their Titles to the Crown and dispositions in Government I Have cut out this Portion of One hundred twenty and five years containing the Reigns of these Kings apart from their Successours in regard of their Titles all of them being under one general Climate and breathing one air of Election and Compact between them and the People Now was the Issue male of the Stock of Normandy quite wasted I mean in relation to succession by inheritance for although it was the lot of Henry the first to have many Children yet it was not his happiness to have many Lineal nor to hold what he had nor of them all was there left above one that might pretend to the Crown and it a Daughter who was the great Grandmother to all the succeeding Kings till this day Onely King Steven like an unruly Ghost coming in upon the Stage troubled the Play during his time This Daughter of Henry the first was married to the Emperour Henry the fourth and surviving him was in her Father's life-time acknowledged to be his Heir the Sea having formerly swallowed up the remainder of his hope Unto her the Lords sware Fealty as to the next Successour in the Throne after the decease of her Father being led thereto by the