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A44656 The life and reign of King Richard the Second by a person of quality. Howard, Robert, Sir, 1626-1698. 1681 (1681) Wing H3001; ESTC R6502 128,146 250

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or in lieu thereof great Sums of Money in the said Letters expressed By which manner of Writing he forced many of such Religious out of fear to fulfil his Will and Command whereby they were heavily impoverisht and opprest in manifest derogation of Ecclesiastical Liberty by which Pretext the said King Richard did incur Perjury XXIII Item In most of the great Royal Councils when the Lords of the Realm the Judges and others being charg'd that they would faithfully Council the King in Matters relating to his State and that of his Kingdom The said Lords Justices and others very often in giving Counsel according to their best Discretion have been by the King suddenly and so fiercely chidden and reproved that they have not dared to speak the Truth in giving their Advice for the State of the King and Kingdom XXIV Item The Treasures Crowns Reliques and other Jewels viz. The Goods of the Kingdom which time out of mind have been Reposited in the Treasury of the Kingdom for the Honour of the King and preservation of his Kingdom against any sudden Event or Exigency the said King Going out of his Kingdom into Ireland did take away and caused the same to be carried with him without the consent of the States of the Kingdom Whereby this Kingdom had been vastly impoverisht if God by the retaking of the said Goods against the said Kings Will had not otherwise provided And furthermore the said King did cause the Rolls of Records touching the State and Government of his Kingdom uo be destroyed and rased to the great prejudice of his People and disinheriting the Crown of the said Kingdom And all this as 't is probably believed in favour and support of his evil Governance XXV Item The said King was wont as it were perpetually to be so variable and dissembling in his Words and Writings and so contrary to himself and especially in writing to the Pope and to Kings and other Lords out of the Kingdom and within it and also to others his Subjects that no man living that knew his Conditions could or would confide in him nay he was reputed so unfaithful and unconstant that it became scandalous not only to his own person but also to the whole Kingdom and especially amongst Foreigners of all the World that came to know the same XXVI Item Although The Land and Tenements the Goods and Chattels of every Freeman by the Laws of the Realm used from all time heretofore ought not to be taken from him unless they be forfeited Yet the said King purposing and longing to weaken such Laws in the pretence of very many Lords and others of the commonalty of the Kingdom hath frequently said and affirmed That the Life of every one of his Svbjects and his Lands Tenements Goods and Chattels are his the said Kings at his will and pleasure without any forfeiture Which is utterly against the Laws and Customs of the Kingdom aforesaid XXVII Item Although it was Fnacted and Ordained and is hitherto Confirmed That no Freeman shall be taken c. nor any way destroyed and that the King shall not pass nor send any to pass upon him but by the Lawful Judgment of his Peers or by the Law of the Land Yet by the Will Command and Order of the said King very many of his Liege People being maliciously accused for having publickly or secretly said something that might tend to the disyraise scandal or disgrace of the person of the said King have been taken and Imprisoned and brought before the Constable and Marshal of England in the Court Military in which Court the said Liege People being accused would not be admitted to make any other Answer than that they were no way guilty and would justifie the same and defend themselves by their Bodies and not otherwise notwithstanding their Appellors were young men stout and lusty and those so accused antient and impotent maim'd or infirm Whereby not only destruction of the Lords and grandees of the Kingdom but also of all and singular persons of the Commonalty of the same may probably ensue Since therefore the said King hath wilfully acted contrary to such a Statute of his Kingdom 't is not to be doubted but he hath thereby incurred the Crime of Perjury XXVIII Item Although the People of the Realm of England by vertue of their Leigeance are fully enough bound to their King and the said King by the Laws and Customs of his Kingdom is enabled to Correct and punish his People if in any kind they Transgress yet the said King desiring to trample on and too much oppress his People that he might the more freely execute and follow the Humour of his foolish and unlawful Will by his Letters to all the Counties of his Kingdom did Injoyn and Command That all his Subjects as well Spiritual as Temp●ral should make certain Oaths in general which were too grievous to them and which might probably cause the final destruction of his People and that they should confirm such their Oaths under their Letters and Seals To which Royal Command the People of his Kingdom did submit and pay Obedience that they might not incur his Indignation or Displeasure and also for fear of Death XXIX Item When Parties contending in the Ecclesiastical Court in Causes meerly Ecclesiastical and Spiritual had endeavoured to obtain from the Chancellor of England Prohibitions to hinder the lawful Process in the said Courts and the said Chancellor had justly refused to grant the same yet the said King by Letters under his Signet has frequently prohibited the Ecclesiastical judges to proceed in such Causes thereby evilly infringing the Liberties of the C●urch in the Grand Charter approved to the Conservation whereof he was sworn and damnably incurring Perjury and the Sentence of Excommunication against such Violators thereof by the Holy Fathers pronou●ced XXX Item The said King without any reasonable or lawful cause whatsoever or any other process of Law did in his Parliament encompass'd in warlike manner by armed men adjudge Thomas of Arundel Lord Archbishop of Canterbury Primate of all England his Spiritual Father absenting himself by the Treacherous Counsell of the said King to Banishment against the Laws of his Kingdom so by him sworn to as aforesaid XXXI Item By inspection of the Testament of the said King Sealed with the Great and Privy Seal and also with his Signet among other things there is contained this clause or Article Item we will that the residue of our Gold the true debts of our House-hold Chamber and Wardrobe being paid for payment whereof we bequeath Twenty Thousand Marks reserving to our Executors Five or Six Thousand Marks which wee will by them to be expended towards the more plentiful maintainance of the Lepers and Chaplains to celebrate before them by us founded at Westminster and B●rmondeseye shall remain to our Successor provided alwaies that he approve ratify and confirm and hold and cause to be holden and firmly observed all and singular
the most part subdu'd and dispers'd by the active valour of Hugh Spenser Bishop of Norwich who gathering an Army together set upon the Rebels with incredible fury pursuing them from place to place and giving no Quarter to any of them It is to be noted That these Rebels in several Shires held correspondence and their Leaders sent abroad their Epistles of Advice and encouragement some of which as they were afterwards taken and own'd I shall insert for the Readers diversion that he may admire the style of these popular Orators and observe what strength of perswasion there was in Non-sense A LETTER of John Ball to the COMNONS in Essex IOhn Sheep sometime S. Mary Priest of York and now of Colchester Greeteth well John Nameless and John the Miller and John Charter and biddeth them beware of Guil in Borough and stand together in Gods Name and biddeth Piers Plowman go to his werk and Chastise well Hob the Robber and take with you John Trewman and all his Fellows and no mo John the Miller hath yground small small small The Kings Son of heven shall pay for all Beware or ye be wo know your Frende fro your Foe have ynough and say No and do well and better and flee sinne and seek peace and hold you therein And so biddeth John Trewman and all his Fellows Another IOhn Ball gretyth you wele All and doth you to understand he hath rungen the Bell Now ryght and●myght wyll and skyll God spede every yee dele Now is time Lady help to Ihesu the Sone and thid Sone to his Fadur to make a gode end in the name of the Trinity of that is begun Amen Amen pur Charite Amen Another IOhn Bell S. Mary Prist gretes wele all manner men and byddes them in the Name of the Trinity Fadur and Son and Holy Ghost stond manlyche togedyr in trewthe and helps trewthe and trewthe shall helpe yowe Now regneth Pride in prise and Covetous is hold wise and Lechery without en shame and Glotony without en blame Envie regneth with treason and slouthe is take in grete sesone God do bote for now is the time Amen in Esex Southfolc aud Northfolc Jack the Millers Epistle JAKK Mylner asket help to turn his Mylne aright He hath Grounden small small The Kings Son of Heven he shall pay for all Look thy Mylne do a right with the four Sailes and the Post stand in stedfastnesse With right and with might with skill and with will lat might help right and skill go before will and right before might than goeth our Mylne aright And if might go before right and will before skill than is our Mylne mysadyght Jack the Carter's JAKK Carter pryes yow all that yee make a gode end of that yee have begunnen and doth wele and ay bettur and bettur for at the even men heryth the day for if the end be wele than is all we le Lat Peres the Plowman my Brother duele at home and dyght us Corn and I will so with yow and help that yee may so dyght your mete and your drynk that yee none fayle Lokke that Hobb Robbyoure be wele chastised for lesing of your Grace for yee have grete nede to take God with yow in all yowr dedes for now is time to beware Jack Trewman's Scroll JAkk Trewman doth yow to understand that falseness and gile havith regned to long and trewth hath been sett under a Lokke and falsneth and gile regneth in everylk Flokke No man may come trewth to both syng Si dedero Speke spend and speed quoth John of Bathon and therefore sinn fareth as wilde flode trew love is a way that was so gode and Clerks for welth worth hem wo. God do bote for nowze is time The Storm being thus happily over-blown the Rebels suddenly master'd and a competent Force raised to secure the Peace of the Kingdom it was quickly thought fit to revenge such an Affront and bring the Delinquents to justice In order to which the King as soon as he could do it with safety to Himself and the Publick revokes his former Charters of Manumission and Pardon by a Proclamation under His Great Seal in these Terms RICHARD by the Grace of God King of England and France and Lord of Ireland To all to whom these Presents shall come Greeting Although in the late detestable Disturbance horribly made by divers of Our Liege People and Subjects rising up against Our Peace certain Letters Patent of Ours were made at the importunate Instance of the Rebels containing That We have freed all Our Leige People Common Subjects and others of the several Counties of Our Realm of England and them and every of them discharged and acquitted from all Bondage and Service And also That we have pardoned them all manner of Insurrections by them against Us made and all manner of Treasons Felonies Transgressions and Extortions by them or any of them committed As also all Outlawries Publisht against them or any of them on those Occasions Or that we have granted to them and every of them Our firm Peace And that Our Will was That Our said Liege People and Subjects should be free to buy and Sell in all Cities Burroughs Towns Markets and other Places within the Kingdom of England and that no Acre of Land which holds in Bondage or Villenage should be accounted higher than at Four Pence And if any were before held for less that it should not be raised for the future Yet for that such Our Letters did Issue without Mature Deliberation and unduly We well weighing that the Grant of the said Letters doth manifestly tend to the very great prejudice of Us and Our Crown and to the Disinherison as well of us and the Prelates and Nobility of Our said Realms as of the Holy Anglicane Church and also the the Damage and Incommodity of the Commonwealth Therefore by the Advice of Our Council We have Revoked made void and do utterly annul the said Letters and whatever hath been done or follow'd thereupon willing that none of what state or condition soever he be shall any way have or reap or enjoy any liberty or benefit whatsoever of or by the said Letters For We will and 't is our intention by the Advice of Our sound Council for the future to impart such Grace and Favour to all and singular although they have grievously forfeited their Allegiance as shall be well-pleasing and profitable to Our Realm and with which Our faithful Subjects may reasonably hold themselves contented And this we do notifie to all persons concern'd by these Presents Commanding the same to be Proclaimed in all Cities and Towns Villages c. And further We strictly require and command That all and singular as well Free as Bond-men shall without any contradiction murmuring resistance or difficulty do and perform the Works Customs and Services which to us or any other their Lords they ought to do and which before the said Disturbance were used to be done
invincible against the power of your Enemies and the most firm Band of Peace and hearty Love towards your Subjects as well for the increase of your owu good and advantage in respect of God and the Salvation of your Soul as for the unspeakable comfort of all the People which you govern On whose behalf we intimate these things anto you That we have it Settled Granted or Confirmed by ancient Constitution by a Custom laudable and approved and which none can gain-say or contradict That the King can Assemble the Lords Nobles and Commons of the Kingdom once a year unto his Parliament as the highest Court of the Realm in which all Equity ought to shine bright without any scrup●e or spot clear as the Sun when ascending to the Meridian where as well Poor as Rich may find a never failing Shelter for their Refreshment by restoring Tranquility and Peace and removing all Kind of injuries where publick Grievances or Errors are to be redress'd where with the most prudent Councill the state and Goverment of the Kingdom is to be treated of That the King and Nations Foes within and their Enemies abroad may be discovered and repulsed by such means as most conveniently and honourably it may be done and also with wholsom deliberation therein to fore see and order how the necessary Burdens of the King and Kingdom may with most ease the publick Want ●onsidered be supplied And they conceive also that since they are to support publick Charges incumbent they should have the Supervisal too how and by whom their Goods and Fortunes are expended They say moreover that this is their Priviledge by ancient Constitusion that if the King wilfully estrange himself fram his Parliament no Infirmisy or necessary Cause disabling him but obstinately by his ungovernable Will shall withdrow himself and be absent from them the time of Forty days as not regarding the vexation of his People 〈◊〉 nor their grievous Expences That then from that time it shall be or is lawfull for all and every of them without any damage from the King to go home and every one return into his own Country And Now You for a longer time have absented Your Self and for what Cause they know not have refus'd to come amonst them To this the King Now do We plainly discover that our People and the Commons intend to resist and are endeavouring to make Insurrections against us and in such case nothing seems better to us than to call in our Kinsman the King of France and from him to ask Advice and Aid nay even to submit Our Self to him rather than to Truckle to our own Subjects To which they answered thus THis Council is not sase for You but rather tends to inevitable destruction For the King of France is your Capital Enemy and the much greatest Adversary to your Kingdom and if be should once get footing on your Land would sooner endeavour to dispoil you of it to invade your Kingdom and to drive you from your Throne than in the lest to lend you his assisting hand if at any time which God forbid you should stand in need thereof Rather therefore recall to your Memory how your Grandfather King Edward the Third and in like manner your Father a Prince of the same Name and Renown with Sweat and Hazards during their whole Lives through innumerable Labors indefatigably contended for the conquest of the Kingdom of France which by hereditary Right appertained to them and after them to you by Succession Remember how many of the Nobles what innumerable Troops of the Commons of England as well as those of France lost their Lives and underwent the peril of Death in that Quarrel Remember the inestimable Treasures the People of England freely parted with for the maintanance of that War And yet what is more to be lamented they have in your time sustained so many Taxes for the support of your Wars as that now they are reduced to such incredible Poverty that they can neither pay their Rents for their Livings nor assist their King nor afford themselves even the Necessaries of Life Thus The Royal Power is impoverished and an unhappy condition brought upon all Great Men and Nobles of the Kingdom as well as the Commons weakned and undone For a King cannot be poor that has a rich People nor that King be rich whose Subjects are Poor Nor do these Ills redound alone to the King but to all the Nobility and Great Men every one in his Rank and degree And all this is brought to pass by the evil Ministers of the King who have ill-Governed both King and Kingdom to this day and unless we do quickly set our helping hands to the Work and raise the healing Prop the Kingdom of England will in less time then we think of be miserably subverted But there is yet one part more of our Message remaining on the behalf of your People to be imparted to you That we have an ancient Constitution and it was not many Ages since experimented it grieves us that we must mention it That if the King through any evil Council whatever or through a weak Obstinacy or Contempt of his People a perverse froward Will or irregular Course shall alienate himself from his People and refuse to Govern by the Laws and Statutes of the Realm by the laudable Ordinances and and faithful Advice If he shall throw himself headlong into wild Designs and stubbornly exercise his own singular Arbitrary Will That from that time it shall be lawful for his People by their full and free Assent and Consent to Depose that King from his Throne and to establish some other of the Royal Stock upon the same in his stead Which grievous and unhappy Dissention That it may never spring up amongst your People That your People by no such lamentable Divisions pleasing only to your Enemies may ever through your evil Counsellors be subvered That this Kingdom so honourable and above all the Nations in the World from your Fathers days hitherto most famious in War may not now in your time through the Distractions of ill Goverment he miserably laid waste That the Title and Inscription of these Miseries may never be placed as a scandalous Mark upon your Reign and this unhappy Age. Recal we beseech you your Royal Mind from such foolish and pernicious Councils and whatsoever they are that suggest such matters to you do not only not hearken to them but totaly remove them from you for in a time of danger it will be found that they can no ways effectual serve you c. By these and such kind of Speeches the King laying aside his Anger was reduced to a better Temper and being pacified promised That after Three days he would come to the Parliament and with Mature Advice willingly Acquiesce to their Petitions The King then came as he had promised and John de Fortham Bishop of Durham was removed from the Office of Treasurer and the Bishop of Hereford made
by the Mediation of the Queen the Archbishop of Canterbury and other Bishops the King by the consent of the Lords against whom they had offended pardon'd the Sentence of Death But they were Out-law'd and Banisht for ever into Ireland Two and two to be kept in a place limited within certain Bounds which if they should presume to go out of they were immediately to be Executed on their former Judgment And for their Maintenance were allowed out of the Kings Exchequer as follows viz. To Fulthorp 40 l. per annum to Burgh 40 Marks to Belknappe 30 l. to Holt 40 Marks and to Care and Locton 20 l. per annum apiece This being done a General Pardon is pass'd for all Treasons and Seditions whatsoever and an Oath saith Walsingham exacted not only of all the Inhabitants of the Land but of the King too to stand to the Regulation of the Lords meaning as I conceive those so Commissioned and Authorized for one years space by King and Parliament as aforesaid And then the Parliament broke up in the Month of July After Whitsontide the Earl of Arundel again puts to Sea and burns-sinks and takes Fourscore French Ships And likewise Seizes the Isles of Ree and Oleroon the latter famous for the Laws Marine there said to be Compos'd and agreed upon with the City of Rochel and divers other places About the same time the Scots entred England as far as Newcastle in which young Peircy Son of the Earl of Northumberland and for his Valour and Fury in Arms Surnamed Hot-spur being them Ingarrison'd he with a small Party fought with them and with his own hand slew W. Douglass their Commander in Chief but being at last over-powr'd by the coming in of the Earl of Dunbar was himself taken Prisoner though at the same time he set free his Countrey For he had first so weakned them by the destruction of their Men that they durst not stay longer but in hast and disorder retreated into Scotland After Harvest a Parliament was again held at Cambridge in which many wholsome Laws pass'd As against Beggars Riding Arm'd giving Liveries to excessive Retinues Touching Labourers and Apparel suitable to peoples Ranks And especially That none should go out of the Realm to the Pope to procure the Grant of any Benefices in England without the Kings leave on penalty of being put out of the Kings protection Also a Tax was granted to the King being a Tenth of the Clergy and a Fifteenth of the Laity In the Year 1389 a grievous Discord happen'd at Oxford between the Welsh and the Northern Scholars wherein several were slain and further mischief threatned but by the Mediation of the Duke of Glocester the Broil was composed and divers of the Welshmen dismiss'd the Vniversity In May the King held a Great Council at Westminster and on Holy-Road-day being led by the Advice of certain Whisperers entred suddenly into the Council-Chamber and taking his Seat Demanded How old they took him to be Being answered Somewhat upwards of One and twenty years Then replyed He I am of full Age and capable to manage my Inheritance my self for sure 't is unjust that I should be in a worse condition than any other in my Kingdom for every Heir after the death of his Ancestor comes to his Estate and takes it into his own hand at one and twenty years of age This the Lords perhaps might be unwilling to Grant but more unable and afraid to deny And therefore the King went on with his Speech 'T is well known that for many years I have lived under your Tutelage and Governance and for the pains therein We thank you but now having attained to Our Legal Age We are resolved to be no longer in Ward but to take into Our hands the Government of Our Realm and to appoint such Officers and Ministers as We think fit and remove others at Our pleasure Accordingly he forthwith commanded the Bishop of York then Lord Chancellour to Resign the Seal which being done the King put it up in his Bosom and went away but soon after returned and gave it to William of Wickham Bishop of Winchester making him Lord Chancellor He likewise turn'd out the Bishop of Hereford from the Office of Treasurer and put in another in his room and chang'd several other chief Ministers of State partly to shew his Authority partly to satisfie his Displeasure As particularly he suspended his Vncle the Duke of Glocester and the Earl of Warwick and others from his Privy Council and admitted others in their stead that Humour'd him more but Honour'd him less The Earl of Arundel likewise was removed from the Admiralty of the Sea wherewith he had been entrusted by the Parliament and the same given to the Earl of Huntington Soon after this certain Detractors circumventing the King had so far prevail'd as to make him believe That the Duke of Glocester was contriving some Designs against him But upon the Dukes Examination the falshood and Malice of those Reports did appear And the King blusht to consider his own Credulity against so near and eminent a Relation yet though some of the Spreaders thereof were there present when the Duke would have questioned them for the same the King charged him as he lov'd him not to stir farther in the matter This Summer the King being at his Mannor of Sheen in July on a sudden there appeared such innumerable Swarms of Gnats that all the Air was darkned with them who skirmisht and fought one with another till the Slain fell down in heaps and being swept together with Brooms amounted to the quantity of many Bushels-full and the rest who seem'd to come off and were reckoned about a third part of the whole flew away which was by many esteem'd as an ill-boding Prodigy About the same time the Disciples of Wickliff in those days called Lollards being very numerous their Presbyters took upon them after the manner of Bishops to confer Holy Orders Asserting that every Priest had as much power of Binding and Loosing and Administring other Ecclesiastical Functims as the Pope himself either had or could bestow And though the Prelates had notice hereof yet out of negligence or rather fear they did not much concern themselves to suppress them save only the stout Bishop of Norwich who swore That if any of that Sect should presume to Preach in his Diocess he would either Burn or Behead them In November the Duke of Lan●aster after three years absence return'd into England from Spain having matcht his Daughter to the King of Castile's Son And the King of England having summon'd a Council at Reading the said Duke understanding that his Majesty had conceived Displeasure against divers great Lords to prevent the Mischiefs that might thereby arise immediately after his Arrival posted thither by whose good Offices the King's Resentments were diverted and Matters for the present pacified In the Year 1390 being the 13 year of King Richard's Reign on Munday after