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A54695 Tenenda non tollenda, or, The necessity of preserving tenures in capite and by knight-service which according to their first institution were, and are yet, a great part of the salus populi, and the safety and defence of the King, as well as of his people : together with a prospect of the very many mischiefs and inconveniences, which by the taking away or altering of those tenures, will inevitably happen to the King and his kingdomes / by Fabian Philipps ... Philipps, Fabian, 1601-1690. 1660 (1660) Wing P2019; ESTC R16070 141,615 292

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Oath of him That he would not deal falsly with him nor with his Sons son but according to the kindnesse that he had done unto him and to the Land in which he had Sojourned And that Abraham thereupon swore which somewhat resembles our Oath of Fealty or Fidelity and took Sheep and Oxen for then Pecus was instead of pecunia which is derived a Pecude and gave unto Abimelech and both of them made a Covenant It will though as in many other matters not tending to mans Salvation which are not expressed in the sacred Story there is not so full and clear a light evidence as to intitle the holding of Land by the service of going to War to so great a Warrant or Original as that of a Scripture direction or example Notwithstanding be no wild or improbable conjecture that some such or the like obligations more than the affections good will of the people did lye upon them or their Estates not to forsake their King and Country in time of Wars and distresse the Law of Nature teaching the necessity of the Members readinesse and combination to preserve the head its well being as well as their own Estates and well beings in that of their King or Supreme Governour and every mans particular in the General when as the antient Inhabitants of the Earth or some of them at least as appears by Iacobs blessing to his Sons upon his Death-bed became Servants to Tribute and Moses by the advice of Iethro his Father-in-law did choose able men ou● of all Israel and made them Heads over the people and Rulers which were afterwards called Captains of thousands Rulers of hundreds fifties and tens to be as a standing and certain Militia and all the people young and old that had not rebelled with Absalom went out with David Rehoboham his Grandchild ou● of the two Tribes of Iudah and Benjamin could muster an hundred and fourscore thousand chosen men which were Warriors to preserve their Prince in War and defend his as well as their own Estates and that some such or the like obligations passed betwixt Solomon and Hyram King of Tyre when he gave him the twenty Cities in the Land of Gallilee And that from thence either by Tradition or Travel of Philosophers or wise men into those more knowing Countries and Regions of Palestine or Egypt where Gods chosen and peculiar people of Israel had a nearer communication with him and his Divine Illuminations or by those secret dictates and the Edicts Statutes and Decrees of the Law of Nature whereby as the Judicious and Learned Hooker saith Humane Actions are framed and the Chincks and Crannyes by which the wisdom of the Almighty that intellectual worker as Plato and Anaxagoras stiled him is wont imperceptibly to diffuse impart its impressions into the Customs and manners of men That custom now about 2293 years agoe used by Romulus in his new established City or Empire of Rome took its rise or beginning of appointing the Plebeian or common people to make choyce of whom they could out of the Patricij Senators or Eminent men to protect them in their causes or concernments in recompence or lieu whereof the Clyents were to contribute if need were to the marriages of their Daughters redeem them or their Sons when they were taken Captives in War as bearing a reverence or respect to their Lords or Patroni to the end that they might be defended by them that they should reciprocally propter beneficium the help favour received from them maintain and defend their dignity and that duty or Clientela was therefore not altogether improperly called Homagium or Homage as a Service pro beneficio prestandum for a benefit had or to be injoyed accipitur pro patrocinio protectione and taken to be as a patronage and protection insomuch as upon the Conquest or reducing of any province into their obedience they did in Clientelam se dare Romanis acknowledge a Duty or Homage either to the Senate or certain of the Nobility or great men to be their Patroni or Protectors quae necessitudo or near relations which were betwixt t●em id serebat saith Oldendorpius ut Clientes perpetua Patronorum protectione defenderentur ac vicissim eos omni obsequio colerent brought it so to pass that the Clyents enjoyed a constant protection of their Patrons or great men and exhibited for it a duty and obedience unto them From which kind of Customes and usages Tutandae vitae ac fortunarum omnium for the defence of life and estate veluti scintillis quibusdam caepit initium benificiariae consuetudinis quae aucta est multum propter continuam bellorum molestiam as from increasing sparkes or small beginnings that beneficial Custom taking its original which by continuance of wars and troubles was much increased another kind of Clientela was introduced though there be as Craig saith a great difference betwixt Clientela and Vassalagium qua vel dignitas vel praedium aliquod alicui datur ut et ipse istius posteri et haeredes beneficii auctorem perpetuo agnoscant et quasi pro Patrono colant ejusque caput existimationem et fortunas tueantur whereby either some dignity or lands were given to any one to the end that he and his heirs should always acknowledge the giver to be the Author of that benefit reverence and esteem him as their Patron and defend him and his life reputation and fortunes In resemblance whereof or from the eommon principle of Reason that private or particular men or their estates cannot be safe or in any good condition where the publick is either afflicted or ruined was the use or way of Tenures in Capite or Knights Service found out and approved by Kings and Emperours ut cum delectus edicitur in militiam eant vel vicarium mittant vel certum ce●sum domini aerario inferant that when a muster was to be made or a going to War they should either go in person or send one in their stead or pay a certain ra●e in mony and was so antient and universal as whilst the Germans would intitle themselves to be the first of Nations introducing it the Gaules or French were so unwilling to come behind them as they indeavour out of Caesars Commentaries to make themselves the right owners of it where he saith that Eos qui opibus inter Gallos valebant multos habuisse devotos quos secum ducerunt in bello Soldarios sua lingua nuncupatos quorum haec erat conditio ut omnibus in vita commodis cum ijs fruerentur quorum amicitiae se dedissent quod si quid pervim accidisset aut cundem casum ferrent ipsi aut mortem sibi consciscerent the Gauls which were rich or had good Estates had some which were devoted unto them which followed them in the Wars in their language were called Souldiers and injoyed a livelyhood
vel quibuscunque illatis a multis retroactis temporibus et omnia inquisita sub sigillis suis inclusa secum coram Baronagio ad tempus sibi per breve praefixum Four Knights men of known worth and wisdom loving and beloved of their Countryes to enquire what grievances or oppressions the smaller sort of people suffered by the greater and also of all injuries and ●●ongs done by any person whatsoever either lately or formerly and to certifie it under their Seals to the Barronage which what ever they were or if ever or never recorded for they have not for ought appears been certified or recorded no Record or Historian of that or the after times have said that Tenures in Capite and by Knights service were thereupon retorned to be oppressive or so much as inconvenient Neither are to be found amongst any of those huge heaps of evils which Mathew Paris that sower and honest Monk of St. Albons who lived in those times and especially remarked them hath delivered to posterity The 24 Reformers or Conservators of the Kingdom in that Kings Reign appointed by the Baronage never intimated any thing of their dislike of that honourable institution It was not complained of upon the refusal of Roger Bigod Earl of Norfolk Marshall of England Humphry Bohun Earl of Hereford and Essex Constable of England and Gilbert de Clare Earl of Glocester and Hertford great and mighty men and of Princely Estates to go at the Command of King E. 1. unto his Wars at Gascony upon pretence that the warning was to short whereby the Kings displeasure was so much incurred a● Bohun and Clare to escape the Seisure and forfeiture of their Lands and to purchase his favour again were glad each of them to marry one of his Daughters without any Dowry and surrender their Earldoms Honors Offices and Lands unto him take back Estates thereof in Tayle to them and the Heirs of their Bodies upon their wives to be severally begotten and Bigot surrendring also to him his Earledom and Marshals rod together with all his Lands and taking Back a grant of an Estate for life in his honors and Lands the reversion to the King if he should not have any Issue of his Body begotten the King in Parliament pardoned them and John de Ferrari●s and other Earls Barons Knights and Esquires and all other of their fellowship confederacy and Bond and all that held twenty pounds Land Per annum whether in chief of the King or other that were appointed at a certain day to pass over with him into Flanders their rancour and evil will and all other offences committed against him Were not in the Roll of general grievances which the Arch-Bishops Bishops Ea●ls Barons and Commons sent him when he was at the Sea side ready to take shipping into Gascoigne concerning his Taxes and other impositions Neither any vestigia or footsteps to be found of any grievance by them in that grand search or inquiry by the Commissions of Traile Baston in or about the 33 of E. 3. after intruders into other mens Lands exactions and oppressions or in the presentments in the Eyres when the Justices thereof in several Kings reigns carefully travailed into the several Counties and places of England and found out and returned the complaints and oppressions of every County and where the Natives themselves the witnesses cannot be supposed to be so much their own enemies as to conceal the Countries oppressions the Jurors were solemnly charged to present them upon their Oaths and if they should omit to do it had the malice of their Neighbours to watch accuse their Perjuries and the severity of the Judges to punish any failings in their duty Or in the Reformation which the Lords Ordainers as they were afterwards called in or about the fifth year of the Raign of King E. 2. pretended to make in that unadvised Commission which he granted them for the Government of the Kingdome No pretence or so much as a murmur against them by the Reformers in Wat Tylers and Jack Straws commotion when they were so willing to overthrow and extirpate all the Nobility and Gentry which should withstand their rude and unruly designs of making all Bondmen free and taking away Villenage and of making Wat Tyler and several other of their party Kings in several Counties and to devise what Laws they listed Or by Jack Cade or Captain Mend-all as he falsely stiled himself when many a grievance was picked up to colour his Rebellion in the reign of King H. 6. but could find nothing of that for a garnish of his Roguery Or Robert Ket the Tanner in the reign of King E. 6. sitting in judgment amongst the Rabble under his tree as they called it of Reformation where Tenures and Wardships being so obvious and every where insisted upon they would not probably have omitted them out of the Roll or list of their complaints if there could have been but a supposition or dream of any grievance in them which being the more noble beneficial and better sort of Tenures may better deserve an approbation of the People and Parliaments of England than Tenures in Villenage which by an Act of Parliament in 25 E. 3.18 may be pleaded and a Villain seized though a libertate proba●d● be depending And it was enacted in the Parliament of 9 R. 2.2 that if Villaines fled into places infranchised and sued their Lords their Lords should not be barred thereby and by an Act Parliament in 8 H. 6.11 that a Villain should not be admitted or put to be an Apprentice in the City of London and by an Act of Parliament in 19. H. 7.15 If any Bond-man purchase Lands and convey away the Lands the Bond-man being ●estui que use of th●se Lands they shall be seised by the Lord. Nor did the Act of Parliament of 25 E. 3. which provided that none should be constrained to find men of Armes H●blers nor Archers but by common assent and grant made in Parliament mistake when it inserted a saving and exception of all those that held by such services Neither did the Commons in the Parliament of 5 R. 2. upon the Repeal in Parliament of the Manumissions of Bond-men extorted from the King by Wat Tyler and his Rout or men of Reformation think they did themselves or those they represented any hurt when they cryed with one voyce that the Repeal was good and that at their request the Repeal was by whole assent confirmed Tenures in Capite and by Knights service were not complained of in the Parliament of 13 R. 2. though the Commons in Parliament had prayed and were allowed that euery man might complain of the oppression of what person or Estate soever without incurring the pain of the Statute of Gloucester which under great penalties prohibited false Newes and Lies of the Nobility and great men of the Realm Chancellor Treasurer Justices of both Benches and other great
as an Escheat annexed to the Crown of England And as litle when any held of the King in Capite by some other Service and not in Chivalry and by Knight Service as the Town of Shrewsbury to cause 12 Towns-men apud Angliae Reges excubare cum in illa urbe agerent To watch and ward about the Kings Person which the affrighted Cromwel with his guilty and terrified Conscience would have been well content with totidemque concomitare cum venatum prodirent and as many to attend him whilst he rode on hunting Or when Richard Pigot of Stanford in the County of Hereford or his Ancestors had two Yard Land given him there by the King to hold in Capite per servitium conducendi Thesaurum Domini Regis which Sir Edward Coke calleth Firmamentum pacis et robur Belli the Foundation of Peace and strength of War de Hereford usque ad London quotiescunque opus fueries sumptibus Domini Regis et in redeundo sumptibus suis propriis et etiam summonendi Episcopium Hereford ad portas Manerij dicti Episcopi de Bromyard si contingat Dominum Regem praedictum Episcopum implacitare By the Service of conducting the Kings Treasure from Hereford to London as oft as there should be occasion at the Kings charge in going thither and at his own in his retorn and to summon the Bishop of Hereford at the Gates or door of his Manour of Bromyard when it should happen that the King should implead him Never troubled the heart of Roger the Kings Taylor when the King gave him a good quantity of Land in Halingbury in the County of Essex tenendum per Serjeantiam solvendi ad Scaccarium Domini Regis unum Acum argenteum quolibet anno in cras●ino Sancti Martini To hold the Serjeanty of paying yearly at the Exchequer upon the morrow of St. Martin a silver Needle Nor did the Donees or those who had those Lands of so free a gift or bounty esteem them to be any burden could it be heavy or troublesome to their Heirs or those that should succeed them in those Lands whenas our Kings did successively give away so great a part of the Lands of England as were holden in Capite and by Knight Service either to follow or serve them in the Wars for their own defence as well as theirs or for their attendance wh●rein they received more honour than their Princes gained by it at their Coronations or other great Solemnities by grand Serjeanty or by petit Serjeanty to present them at some times of the year with a Rose or a Hawk or a pair of Spurs or an Arrow to keep them a Hawk or Hounds provide necessaries in their Progresse for their houshold Expences Sumpter Horses in their Journey to some particular place Straw for their Bed and Rushes for their Chamber as if they gave away all to receive almost nothing for it and so willingly as be put themselves to some trouble to devise what kind of grateful acknowledgments should be made them in a perpetuity or as far as they could reach to a supposed or hoped for Eternity that many of their Tenures where there were not necessaryes in war or peace reserved do seem to be but so far for pleasure and merryment as they did not care what was reserved so it was but something as to hold the Kings head at Sea when he should sail betwixt Dover and VVhitsand or hold the Cord by which the Sail was tyed when the Queen not to shoot with Guns and Canons as some of the Covenanters for the late Kings good could find the way to do at his deer Wife the Queen Mother that now is should pass the Seas into France cum multis aliis with many other sortes and kinds not here to be enumerated without the trouble of a volume which those honester times having a better opinion of gratitude and not thinking it to be so crazy or mortal as now every one finds it to be did liberally create and bestow No wrong was done to them that had Lands given to them and their Heirs by a Mesne Lord before the Statute of Quia emptores terrarum as our forefathers the Saxons long before the Conquest believed when as Byrhtrick a Saxon of great note and eminency in Kent holding Lands of Aelsrick a Mesne Lord did by his last will and testament in the first place give to his natural Lord a Bracelet of fourscore marks of Gold one Hatchet of half as much four Horses two of them trapped two Swords trimmed two Hawks and all his Hounds and to the Lady his wife one Bracelet of thirty marks of Gold and one Horse to intreat that his Testament wherein he devised great quantities of land to divers persons and to charitable uses and the Lords consent was very necessary stand may and prayed his dear leefe Lord that he do not suffer that any man his Testament do turn aside Nor to the County of Hertford or places adjacent when Leofranus Abbot of St. Albans gave in Edward the Confessors reign unto Turnot Waldef and Thurman three Knights the Mannor of Flamsteed in the County of Hertford to be holden by the service ut regionem vicinam contra latrones defend●rent to the end that they should defend the neighbour-hood against Thieves And no hurt to the Common-wealth when as the Nobility and great men of England imitating the bounty and munificence of their Kings and Princes for the enabling themselves to serve their King Country did bountifully give much of their own Estates Demes●s to divers of their friends followers to hold of them by Knight service or some honourable seldom services about their Persons or Estates As the Earls of Oxford Arundel Norfolk Hereford Essex Hertford Gloucester Leicester Chester Lancaster Northumberland other antient Earls did when they severally gave to those who had so litle wrong done them by their kindness as they have for many ages and doe yet continue men of worship and great estates in their Counties as many as 100 Knights fees many times more and seldome less to be holden of them by Knight service which at the now value of Lands reckoning every Knights fee as Sr. Edward Cooke doth if at 100 l. per annum which is the lowest value would be 10000 l. per annum at 200 l. per an which is the most probable medium rate will amount unto no less than 20000 l. per annum That Harden Castle in Cheshire with the lands thereunto belonging of a great yearly value in the County of Chester was given by an Earl of Chester to be holden of the Earl and his heirs per senescalciam comitum Cestriae by the service of being Stewards to the Earls of Chester Or that the Castle and Mannor of Tunbridge and the Mannors of Vielston Horsmund Melyton and Pettis in the County of Kent were holden by Richard de Clare Earl of Gloucester and Hertford of
injury and gratitude and due acknowledgement for Subsistance Lively-hood and Liberty be made a cause of complaint every thing that gives the people not a Liberty to undoe cheat and ruine one another be called though it never deserved it a grievance it must and may well remain a wonder never to be satisfied how Tenures in Capite and by Knight service which until these distempered times had no complaint made of them nor could ever be proved to be any publique or general mischief or inconveniences for seldom or as to some particulars there may be in the best of Institutions or the most eminent or excellent of sublunary things● or actions something of trouble or molestation should after so long an approbation of so many ages past without any reason given other then by a bargain for increase or making a constant Revenue to lessen the Majesty and just power of our Kings which the Parliament will certainly endeavour all they can to uphold be now so unlucky as to be put and inclosed in the Skin of a Bear baited under the notion of a grievance and cryed down by a few and not many of the people as many other legal and beneficial constitutions have lately been by the vote and humour only of the common-people or a ruining Reformation which as to that particular was first occasioned by CHAP. IV. How the design of altering Tenures in Capite and Knight Service into Socage Tenures and dissolving the Court of Wards and Liveries and the Incidents and Revenue belonging thereunto came out of the Forges of some private mens imaginations to be afterwards agitated in Parliament OLD Sir Henry Vane the Father of young Sir Henry Vane who helped to steal away the Palladium of our happinesse and under the colour of sacrificing to Minerva or a needlesse Reformation was instrumental in bringing the Trojan Horse into our Senate like the crafty Sinon taught the people weary of their own happiness how to unlock him and to murder one another and massacre our Religion Laws and Liberties And Sir John Savil whose Son the Lord Savil afterwards Earl of Sussex was too busie and active in the hatching of our late Wars and troubles and some other men of design and invention perceiving about the first or second year of the reign of King Iames that his Revenue and Treasure by his over bounty to his people of Scotland and their necessitous importunities and cravings which is too much appropriate to that Nation were greatly exhausted did to s●rue themselves into some profitable actions and imployments upon a pretence of raising the King a constant Revenue of two hundred thousand pounds per annum propose the Dissolving of the Court of Wards and Liveries and the changing of Tenures in Capite and by Knight service into free and common Socage the only attempt and businesse whereof bringing some of them out of their Countries and colder stations into the warmth of several after Court preferments which like the opening of Pandoras Box proved afterwards to be very unhappy fatal to the most of all the kingdom but themselves and those that afterwards traded in the miseries and ruine of it It was in that Parliament after a large debate resolved saith Justice Iones in his argument of the Ship-money by the whole Parliament that such an Act to take away the Prerogative of Tenures in Capite would be void because it is inherent in the Crown it being again in the seventh year the eighteenth year of the reign of that King earnestly afterwards moved desired to be purchased of him and the King ready to grant it recomending it to the Parliament it was then found upon advice consultation with all the Judges of England to be of prejudicial consequence to the Subject as well as impossible in regard that all Lands as well as persons in the Kingdom being to acknowledge a Superiority if the old Tenures should be put down a new of a like nature might be again created and the recompence given for it still continue in the Crown as may be instanced in the Dane-gelt which continued here in England till the reign of King H. 1. long after this Nation was freed from the Danes and the Alcavalas or Cruzadas in Spain being a kind of Taxes there used and if new Tenures should not be created the old perhaps might be again assumed And with good reason was then denyed when King James was heard to tell his Son the late King Charles That such an yearly Revenue as was offered in lieu of those Tenures might make him a rich Prince but never a great and when so many Troops and Brigades of evils do march in the Rear or Company of that design which was so per se and non par●il as the necessity of Robert Duke of Normandies raising of money for want whereof he pawned that Dutchy for ten thousand pounds sterling to enable him in his voyage to Jerusalem to recover the holy Land the imprisonment troubles of K. Richard 1. in his return from thence and his ransom of one hundred thousand marks of silver raised by twenty shillings upon every Knights Fee the fourth part of the Revenues of the Clergy as well as the Laity with the tenth of their goods and the Chalices and Treasure which may tell us how litle money and more honesty England was then able to furnish of all the Churches taken as well here as in the Territories beyond the Seas to make up the sum those necessities which King John had upon him the great want of mony which his Son King H. 3. endured in the Barons wars when he was forced after sale of Lands and Jewels to pawn Gascoigne after that his Imperial Crown and Jewels to supply his wants having neither credit to borrow nor any more things to pawn could not deny his wants the gaging of the Jewels and Ornaments of St. Edwards Shrine and in the end as Sir Robert Cotton if he were the Author of the short view of the long life and reign of that King observeth not having means to defray the Dyet of his Court was constrained to break up House and as Mathew Paris saith with his Queen and Children cum Abbatibus Prioribus satis humiliter hospitia prandia quaerere to demand entertainment and Dyet at some Abbies and Priories and confessed to the Abbot of Peterburgh when he came to borrow money of him majorem El●emosinam f●re sibi juvamen pecuniare quam alicui ostiatim mendicanti that it would be a greater act of Charity to lend or give him money then to one that begs from door to door Could never perswade them to any such remedies worse then their diseases nor did the unruly Barons of King H. 3. when they had him or his Father K. John at the most disadvantages ever demand it of them or any English man untill the beginning of the reign of King James
to charge the Heir An Heir may now be disinherited by the frowardness of an aged Father Instigated by the cunning and practise of a Step-mother whereas a third part could not have before been conveyed or given from him In Socage Tenures there will be nothing for the defence and safety of his Majesties Kingdome Person and People when every man shall be holding his Plow or be supposed to hold by it but the moyety of the Excise of Ale and Beer to the value of one hundred thousand pounds per annum The Kingdom will upon occasion of war or invasion lose the ready defence and personal service of the Nobility who held per Baroniam or as Tenants in Capite and of many worthy and able men Knights Esquires Gentry and other sufficient Freeholders and men of good Estate and Reputation well educated and fitted for war and compleatly armed on Horse-back not like to be Run-aways or treacherous which hold the remainder and yet to be discovered Knights Fees or any part thereof in an ordinary course of defence for forty days service which in those times and after the manner and way of war and the Militia then used was time enough to determine all or a great part of the unhappy controversies of War by and out of so many several Estates than at twenty pounds per annum since improved to two or three hundred pounds per annum with not a few of their Tenants Friends Servants and Attendants going along with them and may call or summon them to go with· him out of the Kingdom in case of a diversive War or otherwise which by the Statutes of 1 E. 3.8 E. 3.25 E. 3. 4 H. 4. 17 Car. he cannot do to Hoblers Archers Footmen or the Train Bands but in case of necessity and suddain comming of Foreign Enemies into the Realm and would have been sure of a gallant Army of Horse which being the more active and ready part of an Army fittest for charge or retreat forage or traversing a Country is by the French whose Nobless in War are presently on Horse-back and make it their Ioy and subsistence to appear in the defence of their King and Country found to be a great part of the Successe in war as well as the Persians have done who hath many times overcome the Turk by the strength of Horse as the Hungarians and Poles have often done And the Germans and Italians did heretofore make great use of their Nobility in Wars and made their Armies to consist most of Horse for that they presumed quod in Equestri militia praevalerent nobiles that the Nobility would do best and prevail when they served on Horseback for as the great Estates of England were held by Knight Service so it was most performed on horseback and such as found or furnished out Horses in War were to be men of Gentility and value and did in person go with their Prince or their Lieutenant and until H. 5. Time Gentlemen which every high Constable and Mechanique now thinks it to be too little to usurp the Title of were not distinguished by any Title of addition but by their forinsecum servitium which was Knight Service and in Kent where they claimed Gavelkind were never put under that kind of partition It must needs be very prejudicial to the King who is to protect his people and to his people who are to be protected by him when as the King that hath none or very few Inland Castles Citadels or places of strength as Holland Flanders France Italy Germany most Nations have to retard the March of an Enemy landed untill he can summon or call together his Subjects and Forces and cannot at once or upon a suddain be able to raise so many men as may be able to incounter or vanquish him in the Field Shall have no Legions or standing parts of an Army as Oliver and his Son Richard had paid at the charge of the publique to rally and unite at pleasure redresse Rebellions Repel and Oppose an Enemy and if need be visit him at home and make his Country rather than his own Sedem Belli the Stage of War to indure the Spoyles Plundrings Insolencies and free quartering of Souldiers But shall when the Floods shall rore and lift up their voice his Enemies compasse him in on every side and there be none to help him be as a Prince disarmed and left to intreat and expect the good will of his people or the care which they will be pleased to take for themselves in the first place for him at leasure hoping that they will not devide into parties of factions call or summon a Parliament which will take up forty days or six weeks and give the Enemy all that while the mastery of the field and time enough to make up all his advantages and in the mean time must not so much as require aid of them who have had their lands freely given them or of those who hold Offices or Annuities under him for the performance of their Homages Oaths Fealties Contracts Promises and grateful acknowledgments and when the Parliament are met must tarry until the majority of opinions shall agree how and in what manner he shall be helped which will not if it should be agreed upon the second or third day but useth not to be in so many weeks be speedily furnished when the mony must be first raised which in the late necessity of disbanding and paying of Souldiers could not be finished in two or three months and the men after leavied armed and cloathed which where the Enemy shall in the mean time have gained some Forts Passages or Counties will not be so ready a way or help at hand as the use of Tenures in Capite which like so many Garrisons invisibly dispersed but no way oppressing their several Neighbourhoods are upon the score of gratitude as well as loyalty quickly called out and imbodied which made the Kingdom have the lesse use of Forts Castles to be able in the Raign of King Stephen by agreement betwixt him and Henry the second to demolish at once 1150 Castles Will loose also his Homage of his Tenants in Capite and by Knight service being the Seminary and root of the Oath of Allegiance and the Genus or original of Fealty which saith Sir Edward Coke is a part of Homage and is so much saith Sir Henry Spelman a part of Homage as a release of Fealty is a discharge of Homage which the Oaths of Allegiance and Fealty the duty of them being now by the delusions of Satan too much disused and strangely Metamorphosed into factions will though the Oaths of Allegiance and Fealty should faile remain fixed and radicated in the Tenures of Lands in Capite and by Knight Service and when they concurre do altogether if rightly observed make a threefold Cord which will not easyly be broken and were therefore by as careful as wise Antiquity
them that is Freeholders and such as hold by Knight Service So in the great Court of all the Kingdome none were antiently personally called to give Judgement and adv●se therein but such as were near to the King and bound and obliged to him by a greater Bond and Tye of Faith and Homage that is to say his immediate vassals Barones nempe cujuscunque generis qui de ipsi tenuere in Capite ut videndum est in breve de summonitione wherein they are summoned in fide homagio quibus tenentur in the Faith and Homage by which they held partim in charta libertatum Regis Johannis and Barons of any kind whatsoever which held of him in Capite as may appear by the Writs of Summons to Parliament the Charter of King John Hence the Barons of England are in our laws said to be Nati Consiliarij born Counsellors of State and Baro signifying Capitalem Vassallum majorem qui tenetur Principi Homagij vinculo seu potius Baronagij hoc est de agendo vel essendo Baronem suum quod hominem seu clientem praestantiorem significat A Baron who is a chief or Capital Vassal is bound to his Prince by the Bond of Homage or rather Baronage which is to be his Baron or man or more considerable Clyent and makes a threefold dvision of Barons who by Bracton are called Potentes sub Rege great or mighty men under the King Barones hoc est robur belli and Barons which is as much to say as the strength of War into feudal or by prescription 1. Qui a priscis feodalibus Baronibus oriundi suam prescriptione tuentur dignitatem which being discended from Antient feudal Barons do continue their dignity by prescription 2. Rescriptitios qui brevi Regio evocantur ad Parliamentum which are called to Parliament by the Kings Writs 3. Diplomaticos which are by Letters Patents and Creation and that Barones isti Feodales nomen dignitatem suam ratione fundi obtinuerunt those Feudal Barons doe hold their dignity by reason of their Lands and Tenures and that Episcopi suas sortiuntur Baronias sola fundorum investitura Bishops are Barons only by investiture of their Baronies Lands and Temporalties And the most excellently Learned Mr. Selden who was well known to be no stranger to the old and most choice Records and Antiquities of the Kingdome doth not doubt but that the Bishops and Abbots did sit in Parliament and were summoned thither only as Barons by their Tenures per Baroniam and in his Epistle to Mr. Augustine Vincent concerning his Corrections of Yorkes Catalogue of Nobility doth most learnedly prove it by many Instances besides that in ●he Case of Thomas Becket Arch-bishop of Canterbury in 11 H. 2. and the claime made and allowed in Parliament in 11 R. 2. by all the Bishop Abbots and Priors of the Province of Canterbury which used to sit in Parliament that de Jure et consuetu●ine Regni Angliae all Bishops Abbots Priors and other Prelates whatsoever per Baroniam Domini Regis tenentes holding of the King by Barony were Peers of the Parliament which agreeth with the opinion of Stamford that the B●shops ne ont lieu en Parlement eins in resp●ct de lour possessions annexes a lour dignities have no pla●e in Parliament but in respect of their Possessions annexed to their Dignities and that Mr. Camden saith that divers Abbots and other spiritual men formerly summonned by writ to Parliament were afterwards omitted because they held not by Barony and that it was mentioned and allowed to be good Law in a Parliament of King E. 3. que toutes les religieuses que teignent per Barony soient tenus de vener au Parlement that all the religious which hold by Barony are to be summoned to Parliament And as to the temporal Barons doth besides what he alleageth of the Thanes or Barons of England in the Saxon times that they held by personal service of the King and that their honorary possessions were called Taine-Lands and in the Norman times after denoted by Baronies and the eminent and noted Case of the Earls of Arundel claiming and allowed to be Earls of Arundel by reason of their holding or Tenure of Arundel Castle and Sir John Talbots being Lord Lisle ratione Dominij et Manerij de Kingston Lisle doth by 22 E. 3 fo 18.48 E. 3. fo 30. other good Authorityes conclude that the Tenure of a Barony is the main principal Cause of the Dignity that 130 temporal Barons by Tenure were called by several writs to assist the King cum equis Armis with horse and Armes and the spiritual being about 50 were called ad habendum servicium suum and that the greatest number of Barons during all that time were by Tenure that the most part of the Barons by Tenure and Writ untill the middle of the Raign of King R. 2. and those that were called by Writ were such as had Baronyes in Possession that the honorary possessions of Earls were called Honors and reckoned as part of their Earldoms which were holden in Capite the chief Castle or seat of the Earls or Barons were called Caput Comitatus seu Baroniae the head or chief of the Earldom or Barony and that in this sence Comitatus integer is used for a whole Earldom in the grand Charter and Bracton and Servicium quarte partis Comitatus for the fourth part of an Earldom that Hugh de Vere Earl of Oxford Magnavile Earl of Essex and divers other antient Earles were Cingulo Comitatus Gladio Comitatus cincti girt with the Girdle or sword of their Earldoms which he conceiveth to be an Investiture All which may by the Records of this Kingdom be plentyfully illustrated by very many instances and by the Rolls of the Constables and Marshals of England in which upon the March of the Army of King E. 1. towards Scotland in the 28 year of that King Humfridus de Bohun Comes Hereford Essex Constabularius Angliae recognovit per os Nicho●ai de Segrave Baneretti sui locum suum tenentis se acquietari per servitium suum per Corpus suum in Exercitu presenti Scotiae pro Constabularia in Comitatu Hereford Humfry de Bohun Earl of Hereford and Essex Constable of England declared by Sir Nicholas Segrave his Baneret and Lieutenant that he was to be acquitted for the Constabulary in the County of Hereford where it seems some Manors or Lands in that County were annexed to the said Office or held by grand Serjeanty by the Service of himself in the Army for Scotland I tem idem Comes recognovit per eundem Nicholaum Servitium trium feodorum Militum faciendum in dicto Exercitu pro Comitatu Essex per Dominos Iohannem de Ferrariis Henricum de Bohun et Gilbe●tum de Lindsey milites Also the said Earl acknowledgeth by the said Sir Segrave●●e ●●e Service of
Coppy-holder of that Mannor and those Patent Lords doe by their Patents hold their Honor and Dignities in Capite though it be not expressed in their Pa●ents and should pay as great a Releif as the other Earls and Barons doe by Tenure for no man can sit there but as a Tenant in Capite and acknowledging his Soveraign unless a Coordination should be supposed and that dangerous Doctrine again incouraged nor can these by Creation sit if the House should be dissolved by the change of the others Tenures for that they were but Adjuncts and Associates of them Which was so well understood by Sir Edw. Coke to be a shaking if not an over-turning of the foundation of that high and most honourable Court or Judicatorie as in the Parliament of the 18 ●h year of King James in the proposition which was then on foot to change the Tenures in Capite and by Knight service into free and common Socage he and some of the old Parliament men advised a Proviso to be inserted in that intended Act of Parliament that the Bishops notwithstanding that their Baronies should be holden in Socage should continue Lords of Parliament and in our late times in that great inundation of mistaken Liberty when the outrage of the vulgar and common people greedily pursued the dictates of their ignorance and fancie and that after the House of Lords had been shut up and voted to be uselesse and dangerous the persons of the Barons of England which the Law and the reasonable and antient as well as modern Customes of England did never allow to be arrested were arrested and haled to Prison In the seeking a remedy wherof some of the Baronage pleading their Priviledge it was in Easter Term 1650. in the Kings or upper Bench in the argument of the Countess of Rivers Case argued and urged that all Tenures as well as the House of Lords were taken away so that the Court holding that the Priviledge was not allowable for that she never had reference to the Parliament or to do any publique service the Cause was adjourned Wherefore seeing that the custom of a Court is the Law of a Court and the interrupton of a Custom Prescription or Franchise very dangerous and Cessante causa tollitur effectus the cause or foundation taken away the effect or building faileth that a Lord of a Mannor is not able to create a Mannor or make a Lease-holder or Tenant of one Mannor to enjoy the same priviledges which he did formerly be incorporate a Tenant in another Mannor a House with a Common Appendent or which was before belonging unto it once pulled down though built up again looseth its Common and Prescription or if a Coppy-hold estate come to the Lord by Forfeiture Escheat or otherwise if he make a Lease or otherwise it is no more grantable by Copy of Court Roll or make a Feoffment upon condition and after enter for the Condition broken it shall not be regranted by Copy And if a man hath libertyes by Prescription take letters Patents of them the matter of the Record drowns or takes away the prescription as was held in 33 H. 8. tit precription Br. 102. c. Or if as in the Acts of Parliament for the dissolution of the Monasteries the King shall be before the Tenures be ordained to be in free and common Soccage made or derived to be in the actual Se●sin and Possession of all the Lands There will be cause and reason enough to make a stand or a pause and inquire further into it For if the subversion of Tenures in Capite and by Knight Service will not totally or at once ruine and dissolve the House of Peers in Parliament or put upon it a new constitution it will not be good certainly to leave that House and most high and Honourable Court and all its just Rights and Privileges which hath already so much suffered by the Assaults and Batteries of Faction and vulgar Frenzies to an after question of moote point whether or no it be not dissolved or put upon a new Foundation And must needs be very dangerous when as one of the three Estates under the King which is Supream and not Coordinate viz. the Bishops and Lords Spiritual being lopt off the second which is the Lords Temporal shall be but either suspected or doubted to have a being and the third which is the House of Commons shall up●● the next advantage or distemper of that pa●●y which lately gained so much by ● supposing it to be the Soveraign b●●ancied ●o be above both it and the King who as the head is above them both and too much gratifie that late illegal and unwa●rentable opinion and practice of the Soveraignty of the House of Commons in Parliament or that they alone are the Parliament of England Destroy the hopes and rights of the Bishops being the third Estate in Parliament of ever being restored or admitted again into it from which after a force and a protesta●ion solemnly made against it twelve of them imprisoned for making of it they were by an Act of Parliament in an 17. Car. Regis primi prohibiting them as well as all other Clergy men to intermeddle in any temporal affairs or proceedings excluded the House had all their Estates afterwards by an Ordinance of the Lords and Commons without being cited or heard and without the Kings consent and after his going from the Parliament and in the midst of a War and Hostilities betwixt them confiscated and taken from them by the taking away of Tenures per Baroniam being the only cause and reason of their sitting there and constituting them a third Estate will now after his Majesties happy restoration when the waves and rage of the people are so calmed and ceased as the Halcyon is preparing to build her nest be more then ever made to be altogether impossible Hinder and restrain our Princes from recovery of Foreign Rights a necessary inlarging their Dominions making an offensive War or pursuing a flying or like to be recruited Enemy which in keeping a Kingdom in peace and plenty or maintaining the Commerce thereof will be according to the rules of policy and good Government as necessary as that of Davids revenging upon the Ammonites the affronts done to his Embassadors the Wars of our Edward the third or H. 5. in France of the great Gustavus King of Sweden in Germany or the now King of Denmarks and Marquesse of Brandenburghes Wars upon Charles late King of Sweden And when any of those occasions or necessities shall offer themselves or inforce a forinsecum serviciu● or service in foreign wars shall have none but Auxiliaries Hirelings to go along with them when as several Acts of Parliament do prohibit the enforcing Hoblers which were a kind of light horsemen Archers Trained Bands and common Souldiers to go out of their Countries unlesse it be in cases of necessity which the common people know not
sint semper prompti parati ad servicium suum integrum explendum peragendum cum semper opus adfuerit secundum quod debent de ●eodis tenementis suis de jure facere Appointed and commanded that all Earls Barons Knights and their Servants should be ready with their Horse and Arms as they ought to do their Service which they owed and were to do for their Fees and Lands when need should require and was beneficial to the Vassal or Tenant CAP. II. The holding of Lands in Capite and by Knight Service is no Slavery or Bondage to the Tenant or Vassal FOr his lands were a sufficient recompence for the service which he performed for them and his Lord besides the lands which he gave the Tenant gave him also a protection and help in lieu of the service which he received from him For though as Bodin observeth vassallus dat fidem nec tamen accipit The Tenant makes fealty to his Lord but receiveth none from him there is betwixt them mutua fides et tuendae salutis et dignitatis utriusque obligatio contracta a mutual and reciprocal obligation to defend one another And when the Donee had lands freely conferred upon him and his Heires upon that consideration omnia feoda as well in Capite and Knights service tenure as Copy-hold and more inferior Tenures being at first ad arbitrium Domini no man can rightly suppose that he would refuse the reservation of Tenure and incidents unto it or imagine it to be a servitude or any thing else but an Act of extraordinary favour arising from the Donor which by the Civil Law and Customes of Nations chalenged such an hereditary gratitude and return of thankfulnesse as amongst many other priviledges thereupon accrued to the Donor if any of the Heires of the Lord of the Fee happened to fall into distresse the Heires of the Tenant though never so many ages and descents after were to releive them Domini utilitatem proferre et incommoda Propellere et si cum poterit non liberaverit eum a morte feudo sive beneficio suo privabitur such a Donee or Tenant was to advance the good of his Lord or Benefactor and hinder any damage might happen unto him and forfeit and be deprived of those lands if he did not when he could rescue him from death for Feudum ut habeat et Dominum non juvet rationis non est it is no reason that he should enjoy that land or benefit and not help or assist him which gave it and by our Law if such a Tenant ceased to do his service if not hindred by any legal impediment by the space of two years upon a Cessavit per Biennium brought by the Lord the land if no sufficient distresse was to be had was forfeited if he appeared not upon the distresse and paid the arreares And such Tenure carrying along with it an end and purpose in its original institution not only of preservation and defence of the Donor but of the Kingdome and protection also of the Tenant and the land which was bestowed upon him And being a voluntary and beneficial paction submitted unto by the Tennant insomuch as Feudum whether derived from the German word Feec or warre or a fide prestanda or a faedere inter utrosque contracto is not seldom in the Civil Law called beneficium may with reason enough be conceived to be cheerfully after undergone and approved of by the Tennants and their Heirs receiving many Privileges thereby as not payign any other aydes or Tallages besides the service which their Tenures enjoyned them w ch by a desuetude or necessity of the times is not now allowed them not to be excommunicated by the Pope or Clergy which H. 2. amongst other Laws and Customes observed in the time of his Grandfather H. 1. in the Parliament at Clarindon claimed as a special priviledge belonging to him and those which held of him in capite which in those days was worthily accounted amongst the greatest of exemptions and of creating like Tenures to be holden of themselves with services of War Wardship Marriage and other incidents to have their heirs in minority not only protected in their persons and estates which in tumultuous and unpeaceable Times was no small benefit but to be gently and vertuously educated in Bellicis artibus feats and actions of arms taught to ride the great horse and manage him and himself compleatly armed with Shield and Launce married without disparagement in his own or a better rank and quality his equitatura or Horse and Arms could not be taken in execution unless he dishonourably absented himself when his service was required and then all that he had was subject to execution saving one horse which was to be left him propter dignitatem militiae and have no usury which in those dayes especially until the reign of E. 1. By Jews and a sort of foreiners called Caursini was very oppressive and intollerable run upon them for their fathers Debts whilst they were in wardship Besides many other great priviledges belonging to Knights Gentry the original of many of whom was antiently by Arms and military service allowed them by our Laws of England as wel as by the Civil Law and Law of Nations as to bear Arms make Images and Statues of their Ancestors and by the Civil Law a preheminence that more credence should be given by a Judge to the oath of two Gentlemen produced as Witnesses then to a multitude of ungentle persons ought to be preferred to Offices before the ignoble in ●u●io enim pres●mitur pro nobili●ate ad efficia regenda and honoured in the attire and apparrel of their bodies as to wear Silks and purple colours and ex cons●e●udine non suspenduntur sed decapitantur are not when they are to suffer death for offences criminal used to be hanged but beheaded with many other priviledges not here enumerated which our common people of England in their abundance of freedom have too much forgotten Were so much respected here in the raign of H. 2. saith the eminently learned Mr. Selden as one was fined one hundred pounds which in those days of more honesty and less mony was a great sum of mony for striking a Knight and another forty Marks because he was present when he was compelled to swear that he would not complain of the injury done unto him the grand Assize in a writ of right which is one of the highest Trials by Jury and Oath in the Law of England is to be chosen by Knights and out of Knights a Baron in a Jury for or against him may challenge the Pannel if one Knight at the least were not returned of the Jury if a Ribaud or Russian stroke a Knight without cause he was to loose the hand that struck him Kings have Knighted their eldest Sons and somtimes sent them to neighbour Kings to receive that Honour and Barons and Earls
have taken it for an addition of Honour and not any lessening to be knighted And had no cause at all to dislike such military Tenures which were not called vassalage as Common People may now mistake the word but from vassus or Cliens qui pro beneficio accepto fidem suam autori benificii obligat or from Gesell a German word which signifieth Socius or Commilito a fellow Souldier the name and profession reason and cause of it being so honourable and worthy Or to deem them to be burthens which were at the first intended and taken to be as gifts and favours which none of the sons of men who are Masters of any sense or reason do use to find fault with but may well allow them to be very far distant from Slavery when as Servitude is properly quum quod acquiritur servo acquiritur Domino when that which is gained or acquired by the servant is justly and properly the Lords and a freeman is contra-distinguished by quod acquirit sibi acquirit in that which he gaineth is his own or hath a property in it and that among the Southern Nations a more gentle and merciful bondage being paternd by that of Abraham and his successors the Patriarchs and allowed by the rules and government of God dura erat servitus Dominorum imperia gravia service or the condition of Servants was hard and the severity of Masters great who had potestatem vitae necis power of life and death over their Servants who having nothing which they could call their own but their misery were put to maintain their Masters out of their labours and enduring vilissima et miserrima ministeria all manner of Slaveries ab omni Militia arcebantur were not suffered to know or have the use of Arms apud Boreales tamen gentes justior suit semper servitus et clementior but amongst the Northern Nations there was a more just and gentle usage of their Servants for that they did devide their Lands Conquests amongst their Souldiers and Servants pactionibus interpositis inter Dominum et servientem de mutua Tutela upon certain agreements betwixt them for mutual defence Which made our English as well as other Nations abundantly contented with it as may appear by the acquiescence of them and the Normans under the Norman and next succeeding Kings and of Edward the Confessors Laws and other English customes retaining them the reckoning of it amongst their liberties fighting for them and adventuring their lives and all that they had at the making of Magna Charta and in the Barons wars wherein those great spirits as Mr. Robert Hill saith so impatient of tyranny did never so much as call in question that great and antient prerogative of their Kings or except against Tenures escuage releifs and other moderate and due incidents thereof The care taken in the Parliament of 52 H. 3. to prevent the deceiving of the Lords of their wardships by fraudulent conveyances or Leases of 18 E. 10. in the making of the statute of Quia emptores terrarum that the Feoffees or Purchasers of Lands holden of mesne Lords should hold by such services and Customes as rhe Feoffor did hold the Registring and Survey of Knights Fees by H. 2. H. 3. E. 1. E. 3. and H. 6. Escuage Aydes and Assessements in Parliament and the Marshals Rolls in time of War and necessity The esteem antiently held of the benefits and liberties accrewed by them insomuch as many have by leave of their Lords changed their Socage Tenures into Knights service and thought themselves enfranchised thereby The value put upon them by the Commons of England in the Parliament of 6. H. 4. when they petitioned the King in that Parliament that all Feoffements of Lands and Tenements holden by Knight service and done by Collusion expressed in the Statute of Marlbridge might upon proof thereof be utterly void The opinion of Chief Justice Fortescue in the raign of H. 6. in his Book de laudibus legum Angliae commending them as most necessary as well for the Common-wealth as for those and their Heirs who held their Land by such Tenures The retaining of it by the Germans who did as most of the Northern Nations saith Bodin libertatem spirare only busie themselves to gain and keep their liberty and from the time of their greatest freedom to rhis present and now also could never tell how to find any fault with them Their Princes Electors of the Empire and the Emperial Cities or Hanse townes who take thrmselves to be as free as their name of freedom or liberty doth import not at this day disdaining or repining at them the Switzers in their greatest thoughts of freedom taking their holding of the Empire in Capite to be no abatement of it The use of them by the antient Earles and Governours of Holland Zealand and West-freezland who having been very successful in their Wars without the use of Tenures in Capite or knights service but finding that ipsa virtus amara alioqui per se atque aspera praemiis excitanda videretur simul uti fisco ac Reipublicae consuler●tur saith Neostadius that the hardship of vertue needed to be sweetened with some rewards that the old custom of the Longobards in creating and reserving Tenures in Capite and by knights service would be not only a saving of Charges to their Treasury but a good and benefit to their Provinces or Common-wealth did create and erect such or the like Tenures And to this day by the Scotish Nation in a time and at the instant of their late obtaining if they could be thankful for them of all manner of liberties and freedom do sufficiently evince them to be as far from Slavery as they are always necessary Wherein if the primitive purpose and institution of Tenures in capite knight service and Socage be rightly considered every man may without any violence or Argument used to his reason or Judgment if self-conceitedness and obstinacy doe not choke or disturb his Int●l●●ctuals Easily conclude whether if it were now 〈…〉 Choice he would not rather take Land by a Service or Condition only to go to warr with the King or his mesne Lord when Wars shall happen which in a Common course of accidents may happen but once or not at all in his life time then not tarry with him above forty days or less according to his proportion of Fee or Land holden to have escuage of his own Tenants if they shall refuse to go also in person with him and to have his heir if he chanced to die which in times of less Luxury happened not so often but once perhaps in three or four descents to be left in his minority to be better educated than he could have been in his life time married without disparagement and himself as well as his own Childrens estates protected Or accept of a Mannor freely granted him
Officers of the Bench made in the second year of the King Nor was there so much as an Apprehension of any evil in them in the Parliament of 4 H. 4. where the Commons pray that The Act of Parliament of the 1 of E. 3. that none shall be distrained to go out of their Counties but only for the Cause of necessity of suddain coming of strange Enemies into the Realm and the Statute made in the 18 th year of the Reign of the said King That men of Armes Hoblers and Archers chosen to go in the Kings Service out of England shall be at the Kings wages from the day that they do depart out of the Counties where they were chosen and also that the Statute made in the 25 th year of the Raign of the said King that none be compelled to find Men of Arms Hoblers nor Archers other than those which hold by such services unlesse it be by common assent and grant made in Parliament be firmly holden and kept in all points it was upon the granting of their desires and an Act of Parliament made for that purpos● as the Declaration of the Lords and Commons in Parliament against the Kings Commission of Array in an 1642 mentioneth especially provided that by force or colour of the said supplication nor of any Statute thereupon to be made the Lords nor any other that have Lands or Possessions in the Counties of Wales or in the Marches thereof shall in no wise be excused of their Services and Devoires due of their said Lands and Possessions nor of any other Devoier or things whereunto they or any of them be especially bound to the King though that the same Lords and others have other Lands and Possessions within the Realm of England nor that the Lords or other of what Estate or Condition soever they be that hold by Es●uage or other Services due to the King any Lands and Possessions within the said Realm be no way excused to do their Services and Devoirs due of the said Lands and Possessions nor that the Lords Knights Esquires nor other Persons of what Estate or Condition they be which hold and have of the Grant or Confirmation of the King Lands Possessions Fees Annuities Pensions or other yearly profits be not excused to do their Services to the King in such manner as they are bound because of the Lands Possessions Fees Annuities Pensions or Profits af●resaid And might challenge their quietus est or Proclamation of acquittall when there were no complaints made against them in the former ages when there were so many Taxes laid upon Knights Fees as 20 shillings then a great sum of money as much almost as 20 markes is now upon every Knights Fee imposed by King R. 1. toward his ransome 26 s. 8 d. upon every Knights Fee by King Iohn and another also of the same sum towards his expedition into Wales 20 s. upon every Knights Fee towards his Charges in Normandy an Escuage of 20 s. upon every Knights Fee to be paid the one half at Easter and the other at Michaelmas besides the Escuage which he had upon the marriage of his Sister Isabel to the Emperor Frederick two Escuages imposed by H. 3. and an Escuage upon the marriage of his Daughter the Lady Margaret to Alexander King of Scots 20 s. of every Knights Fee by H. 4. the many services in person done by those which held in capite and Knights Service in forinseco servitio in all the expeditions and Wars in France from the time of the Norman Conquest to the end of the Raign of E. 4. and at home in the Wars betwixt England and Wales and betwixt England and the Scots where very many Inhabitants of the Counties of Cumberland Westme●land and Northumberland that held by Cornage a kind of Knight Service to blow a horn upon the invasion or incursion of the Scots and to help to repell them and had their Lands sometimes at the Will of the Lords conferred and given to the younger and more lusty Sons who were able to undergo that service could before King James his accession to the Crown of England the pacification of the English and Scottish hostilities placing them under one obedience scarce rest in their beds by reason of the Scots sudain or nightly alarmes and depredations driving or stealing their Cattell and spoiling all that they had And in all the troubles of England before and since the Barons Wars upon any Rebellions and inquietudes of the people when those that held by Knight service were frequently and hastily summoned to come to the King cum Equis Armis and the great charges trouble hazard and expences which the Lords M●sne were put unto by Assessements of Escuage and otherwise And that immediately upon the death of the Kings Tenants in capite by Knight Service the Escheators did usually seise not only the Lands of the greatest of the Nobility Gentry and meaner men But the Stock and Cattell upon their grounds and the Goods in their Houses insomuch as their Executors were many times constrained to Petition and obtain the Kings Writs and Allowance to have the Stock and personal Estate delivered unto them And yet no complaints made at all against those Tenures or necessary defences of the Kingdome nor against Tenures by grand or Petit Serjeanty in the thirty confirmations of our Magna Charta upon as often Breaches to be supposed of it Never complained off in the making of thirty six Acts of Parliament concerning Wardships and Tenures in the several times and Ages from 8 H. 3. to this present nor at the making of the Act of Parliament in 32 H. 8. for the erection of the Court of Wards Nor in so many thousand Petitions which have been in 186. several Parliaments for almost four hundred years last past or before 9 H. 3. or ever since this nation could remember any thing either in our Parliaments Micel-gemots Wittena-gemots conventus sapientum or Magna Concilia where all the Grievances and Complaints of the people not to be remedied else where came as to the Pool of Bethesda for help and relief and wherein if any in some one or more Parliaments should so much neglect their duty and the more than ordinary business and concernments of their Kings themselves and Countries with which they were intrusted and to which their Oaths of Allegiance if nothing else must needs be their Monitors it cannot without a supposition and belief which will never be able to find entertainment in any rational mans understanding be imagined that the whole Nation for so many Ages past and in so many Assemblies of those that should be the Sons of Wisdome should be bound up under such a fate of Stupidity or Ignorance as to represent those that were sick and not know of it or that all or any of them should propter imbecillitatem vel pernegligentiam by a to be pitied weakness or negligence not either seek or
War shall burn And the Ignoble to the worst side turn Must be left to hire his Souldiers or Assistance out of the Rascallity Debauched and Ruder sort of People and such as know neither how to fight or be faithful if his Treasory or yearly Income upon such an increased Revenue can do it when as without the necessity of his Subjects preserving their own Lands and Estates by performing the duties and service of their Tenures the money which the late King could have procured could never have brought any considerable number of men to his Standard of whose fidelity being Hirelings and such of the Vulgar and ignoble part of the people as had neither courage virtue or Estate or such as for a litle more pay would either have deserted or betrayed him nor could he be so certain and assured as he was in the aid and assistance of that of the Nobility and Gentry and better part of the people virtuously educated and descended from worthy Ancestors furnished out and ready to attend him with the haz●r● of all their Esta●●s and Fo●●u●es and whose great Sou●s ●ct●d by a nobler principle made them scorn to stoop to any unworthy Actions basen●sse or villany which caused our brave King H. 5. after the Batte● at Agencourt in a Muster or Leavy which he was to make of Souldiers to passe with him into France publiquely to Proclaim that none should presume to go with him for then they needed no other impressing but the obligation of their Tenures and glory and honour of serving their Prince and Country but such as were Gentlemen and had Tunicas armo●um did bear Arms except such as had served him at the Battel of Agencourt though they had none For if a War which will be sure to loose no opportunities but pick cull its advantages should break out before the rent day or the monyes can be gathered he cannot likely want distresses or misfortunes either for himself or his people when they shall not have wherewith to hire an Army And failing of a necessary defence and assistance at Land for want of his Tenures in Capite and Knight service shall also loose the help of his Ships and Navy at Sea And if the King or any of his Successors should be so happy as to have money in their Treasury which as the course and charge of War is now must be no small sums to hire provide and continue an Army it may be seized on as his Revenues and all the money in the Exchequer and much of his Plate and Houshold stuffe were in the late Wars and if he could be so well before hand as to have any Magazines may have that as easily taken from him as his Magazines at Hull and the Tower of London were when his Tenures per Baroniam and in Capite and by Knight service were not Can have no manner of assurance that when any sedition or commotion of the people shall be bred or increased by the practise of some great men or inticements of any of the Clergy and a Bellum flagrans or a War as suddain and unexpected as it shall be dangerous shall breake out not only in one but several parts of the Nation that the people or most vulgar and common sort of Hirelings will especially in a frenzy or humour of sedition be hired or drawn to fight for him by a small and inconsiderable pay and the support of an Hospital when their wounds shall bring them into it or a small allowance which the statute allows wounded Souldiers until they be cured or maimed Souldiers which are incurable shall be so very disproportionate to their danger and hazards When the hireing also of common Souldiers upon a suddain and in case of necessity will if he could get them be more chargeable and difficult then when he was to be served and defended in his Wars by men of worth and quality under the ingagement of their Lands and Tenures which made our former Kings besides those aids and safeguards by Tenures of Lands to stipend and pension certain of their Nobility and Gentry whom they found most proper and fit to serve them by Indenture with so many men at Armes or Souldiers as for instance Thomas Beauchamp Earl of Warwick retained in 46 E. 3. by Indenture to serve the King in his Wars beyond Seas for one whole year with 100 men at Arms of which number himself to be one 160 Archers 2 Bannerets 30 Knights and 77 Esquires a tryal or proof whereof would easily have manifested the difference betwixt the one way the other if when the late King in his march or expedition against the Covenanting Scots in An. 1639. had such a gallant Army as he had of his English Nobility Gentry had disbanded them taken as well as he could in their rooms only milites Gregarij or Tirones common and mercenary Souldiers And may expose him in any distresse when his mony or hirelings shall fail him to that disloyal and rebellious late opinion too much entertained and taken in by Newtrals double dealing or time serving people that where the King cannot protect them their Oaths and Consciences gives them a liberty to make the best bergain they can for themselves Take away also the foundation of the House of Peers in Parliament whom the Laws and Records of the Kingdom do prove to sit there only as Tenants in Capite and per Baroniam which well might be the grand foundation of so noble a Senate when as amongst the Romans their Senators were Lecti in senatum ex equestri ordine chosen into the Senate out of the degree of Knighthood and even by Brutus in his Consulship and great endeavours to restore that people to their Liberty was so approved as that many ages after Perseus Macedoniae Rex apud Livium lib 42. Equites Romanos appellat principes juventutis seminarium Senatus calleth in Livy the Roman Knights the Princes or Flower of the youth and the Nursery of the Senate and saith that inde lectos in patrum numerum they where thence chosen to be Senators and ex veteri instituto the Custom was as Isiodore saith that when the Senators Sons came to be of Age they were not to be admitted into the Senate until they were Knighted And Alexander Severus the Emperor would not assumere libertos in equestrem ordinem ordain or make Yeomen or such as were n●wly 〈◊〉 to be Knights or give 〈◊〉 as he did Lands to hold by Knight 〈◊〉 dicens quod seminarium 〈◊〉 Equestrem ●sse locum that it was the seminary for the Senate amongst the Germans who were as jealous to keep their Honor as they were their Liberties Nobiles vocati Ritter id est Servator Noblemen were termed Ritters which signifieth a Saviour or Defender quod virtute fortitudine servent patriam because by their vertue and manhood they defended their Country amongst whom the degree of Knighthood is
how to judge of and the little Parliament so called in the beginning of the year 1640. upon the invasion of an Army of ●acti●us Scots and a letter produced by the King that they had written for aid to the French K●ng did not rightly apprehend for it is not to be doubted but that the cheerful and ready aids upon all occasions given to the Kings of England by the Tenants in Capit● and Knight Service and the Nobility and Gentry and their Tenants Friend● and Followers taking Arms and fo●lowing the Royal Standard was a great cause ●f their Conquests in France and Warlike atchivement in that and other parts of the World often beating back the incursions of the Scotch and Welch and de●ending the borders The taking away of th● Knights Fees or Tenures by Knight Service from the Nobility and Gentry without any Recompence if they would be content to part with them or to accept it Will be an Act of great Injustice Regula quippe feudalis et firma est quod Dominus nec in totum nec pro parte minuere adimereve Jus vassallo quesitum possit sine culpa eoque non convicto for it is a fixed and constant Rule in the Feudal Law That the Lord cannot neither in the whole nor in part without a forfeiture or conviction of his Tenant diminish or take away the Vassals Right and it would be against Right Reason and Equity not to give a Recompence in Ca●se of pulling down or fireing a House in a Necessity of War to prevent an Enemy but much more against it and our Magna Charta in Case of no Necessity to Sacrifice without a just Recompence given for it the Estates and Rights of some to pacifie the Fears of others and disturb and incumber the Estates of all or a great many to free the Estates of a few which would be a● unjust as for the Lords of Mannors to make By-laws forbidding the Services of their Tenants and without any forfeitures or convictions grant or sell away their Lands or Copy-hold Inheritances to Strangers or dedicate the Profits thereof to the publick wherein the owners or Proprietors shall get none or very little share in it or such as will be impreceptible and appeared to be so much against Law and Reason as when in the dissolution of the Abbyes and Monasteryes the Nobility and great men who had been Founders of many of them or given a great part of the Lands thereof were to be the losers of that which should have reverted or come unto them if they could not consist with the first Intentions King H. 8. did take a care to gratifie many of them with great quantityes and Portions thereof and to some granted intire Priories and Nunneries of their Ancestors founding as to John Earl of Oxford the Priory of Colne and Nunery of Hedingham in Essex and the like to many others which might be here remembred The Publique Faith which was wont to have so much care taken of it when she borrowed money to make our unhappy warres and Contentions of so much of the Nation as hold by the Tenures in Capite and Knight Service and of all the other parts of the people who by Oaths of Supremacy Protestations and Covenant were not to prejudice the King nor by their Covenant any other in their Rights and Liberties will now be broken which when Livy a Heathen Writer and one that very well understood affairs of State upon the making of a Law at Rome to pacify a mutiny that the Prisoners for Debt should not be bound or fettered as the manner then was could say that Ingens vinculum fidei a great Obligation or Bond of Faith amongst men was that day broken he would have without doubt said more were he now a●ive as to our breach of Faith amongst men but a great deal more if he had been Christian as to God Almighty Take away not only the Honor but the publick Benefits of those Tenures and feudal Rights which are so highly and justly esteemed in all other Kingdoms and Principalityes which are so happy as to live under Monarchy the best of Governments as they can give them no other Character then that Jura Regnorum Ducatuum Marchionatuum adeoque totius Imperij Leges Fundamental●s ac nervi quibus Monarchiae Romanae cum ipso senescente mundo languescentis lutei pedes colligantur in●iis continentur Therein are contained the Laws and Rights of Kingdoms Dukedoms Ma●quisates the Fundamental Laws of the Empire and the Nerves and Sinews by which the Empire languishing in the old age of the world hath been sustained And that Feuda Feudorumque Jura ●●delitatem ●idem publica●● pacem incolumnatem Communis Patriae firmant ●irmissimum Militiae contra Communes Reipublicae hostes ne●vum ac praesidium su●ministrat adeoque fulc●a Germanico Romani Imperi● 〈◊〉 desiderant Feuds and the Rights th●●●of do six and consolidate the Fidelity publique Faith Peace and wellfare of the Common-wealth and administreth the greatest help and strength in war against the Common Enemy and is worthy to be called the Prop of the German and Roman Empire Make our Nobility and Gentry who have by their Chivalry and high Attempts by Sea and Land rendred them second to none and published the Fame and Glory of their Actions as far and farther than ever the Roman Eagles flew to be like the Roturiers or Paysants o● France and a reproach or hissing to all Natioas or like Davids Embassadors when the Children of Ammon had misused them and shaved the one half of their Beards and cut off their Garments in the middle even to their Buttocks and to be put behind all but the Dutch and Switzers the former of which do Trade under Taxes Excise the latter are but the Mercenaries and Hirelings of the French and Spanish Kings in their Wars and Hostilities and ran●king us with them and those little and despicable Commonwealths of Luca and Geneva cast us into the Giddy and at last woeful Presidents and Consequences of the unquiet headed Argentinians Lindorians Citizens of Siena Genoa and Florence who by ruining and rooting up the Nobility and Gentry and making three rancks and degrees of their Citizens some great some mean and the rest of the vulgar the two last putting out the first cast themselves into a Circle of blood and misery out of which nothing but their former Government was able to refcue them Occasion the losse and ruine of purchasers and Mony-lenders enlarge their complaints of double treble Feoffments Mortgages which by the disuse of the Court of Wards and finding of Offices after the death of Tenants in Capite and by Knight Service have been more than formerly and wherein some of our late Reformers were known more to have exercised their wits than their Consciences conceal'd Dormant and fraudulent Assurances carried in the Pockets of some to pick the Pockets of others which by reason of the
find Men Horses and Arms for the defence of the Kingdom which hath hitherto been a costly Knight Service and so far exceeding forty days Service at their own charges as they have besides the outrages free quarterings and plunder of Souldiers and losse of their debts by the ruine and death of their Debtors born the trouble of forty Six moneths continual Assessements far exceeding the Escuage and all the Taxes in 600 years before laid upon our Fore-Fathers and the question will then be of no great difficulty whether will be the better the old way or the new And when the King shall be as he ought to be the Judge of dangers or necessities and want the Assistance of his Subjects and it cannot when the Tenures in Capite and by Knight Service shall be taken away be pretended as it was in the Case of the Ship-money that his Tenures and Wardships were to defend him and the Kingdom in cases of danger and invasion untill a Parliamens could be Assembled Or shall as his late Royal Father was in the later end of the year 1642. when the long shut up Janus Temple had by the Salij or Priests of Mars been against his will broken open and the miseries or troubles of War overwhelmed him and his loyal people and the Plowers made Furrowes upon his back being hindred from putting his Commissions of Array in Execution be told by the Parliaments Declaration that his Tenures in Capite and their incidents and not his Commission of Array were the allowed and ordinary means for his defence until more could be obtained from the Parliament and shall have no military Tenures but only 100000 l. per annum or if that should fa●l him Or he shall need to transport an Army into an Enemies Country to keep off or hinder an Invasion succour or back his Allies whilst they imbroil or weaken his common enemies shall be told that he may not impresse any men or Souldiers to go out of their Countries unlesse he can do it by order of Parliament or perswade them that there is a great necessity Whether he will not when the people shall cry unto him as the woman that had in the siege of Samaria boyled her Child eat of it Help my Lord O King shall not be able to doe any more then answer as he did Whence shall I help thee 2 Reg 6.26 27. And finds himself as his noble Progenitor King Ed. the 3. publiquely declared in a Writ of Error wherein Blanch the Wife of Thomas Wake of Lidal was Complainant that he was Ratione dignitatis in exhibitione justitiae quibuscunque de regno debitor ad statut● Progenitorum facta observanda vinculo juramenti astrictus by reason of his Kingly dignity a Debtor to every one of his Kingdom in the doing of Justice and bound by his oath to observe the Laws of his Progenitors in the care of himself and his people whom he is by his Coronation Oath bound to defend and protect and of the Salus Populi ne quid detrimenti Respublica capiat for the safety of his People and to the end that the Commonwealth may receive no damage be inforced as it were to raise and keep a standing Army always in readinesse with Garrisons to protect both himself and his people And then it may be easily experimented whether is the better to have some that ought to bear the charges and burdens of their Tenures if they will enjoy their Lands or to have the whole Nation groan and lament under the burden of maintaining a standing Army and Garrisons by publique Assessements or to have the Nobility and Gentry of England and five or ten thousand men and all those that hold of them to attend them and be always in readinesse by the obligation of their Tenures without any charge to the publique or thirty thousand unruly Souldiers to be yearly or for ever maintained at the charge of the People An instance whereof we need not go further to look for then in Holland and Zeland whenas the Emperour Charles the fifth liveing out of the Country and Governing them by Regents or Deputies fearing least that Nation in re militari longo usu bellorum exercita being by long experience become Warlike and holding their Lands by Knight service simul ingenio soli quod natura depressum ac uliginosum tum incilibus passim Fossis lac●busque ac paludibus intercissum haud san● faciles invasuro aditus confisa ad turbas ac seditionum praemia converteret together with the nature of the soyl which was flat and moorish and cut into many Ditches Lakes and litle Islands would not easily give him entrance if he should be put to invade them or send Forces to suppress any rebellion or that they confiding in such their strengths might prove seditious and abuse the benefits and intention of their Tenures did in a policy perhaps such as Cyrus is said to make use against the Lydians by giving way to their Vices and Luxury release if Cornelius Neostadius be not mistaken to them some of their military services for to this day the Emperors of Germany as their Countryman the learned Grotius confesseth doe claim the benefit of those antient feudal rights ea tamen lege ut fundi Clientelares publicis sunctionibus quibus hactenus immunes fuissent in posterum non secus atque patrimoniales obnoxij existerent upon condition that those Lands so holden should not as hitherto be free from publique charges and taxes but hereafter should doe as others did Which hath done both sides no good for those Dutch afterwards falling into discontents with some of their feirce and over rigid Governours did by necessity and for want of their Tenures and antient domestick military Aydes betake themselves to foreign Forces as they could hire them and have by force and continual warrs in that Country which hath for more then sixty years been a Cockpit for all Christendome and the hireling Souldiers of it not only brought great miseries and neighbour warrs upon themselves and all Christendome but so tired the Kings of Spain his Successors and wasted the wealth and profit of his West-Indies as he hath been enforced to make a peace with them and allow them to be a free State as they call it and a Republique Are themselves become of a very Active and Warlike Nation so Lourdish and unwarlike as they are only found to be men of Trade Fishing and Navigation filling their Country with many strong fortified walled Cities Towns Citadels and Garrisons and living under the shelter of a constant well paid and disciplined Army doe by the cunning of an universal Trade and Commerce with almost all the World and out doing all Nations herein carry the E●cise on their backs and make the States Richer part but not the multitude or poorer the better for it and yet sometimes doe find the want of their former Tenures and the readiness of their aydes
themselves or their Emperour with it make thereby themselves their posterity Slaves to the enemy of Christendome then put it to the right use of defending their Prince themselves and Posterities And will all resolve in this a defence of the King his people will be eternally necessary an ordinary a speedy a ready a willing and the most ingageing obliging way will be better then that which shall be extra-ordinary a far off and to seek or be enforced And the most ready means for a defence and at hand must needs be the most proper and beneficial for upon that ground Kings have their Treasuries Armories and Arsenals which Republicques are content to imitate Our Constables and Justices of Peace in England being as standing Officers and Guardians of the Peace are more for the safety of the people when they are made before hand to be ready upon any breach of peace then if they were to seek or to be made afterwards and i● would be no dimunition of the strength or defence of the Kingdome to have the Nobility and Gentry of England by the Tenure of their Lands as it were listed and undertaking upon all occasions to serve their Prince and defend their Country for the smallest understandings can find the way to determine that it will be better and more easie for the Subject to have the King and their Country served by a Knight service in acknowledgment of great Estates only given them for that purpose than to have 10 or 12000 men provided by the Subjects by a constant Pole money and Assessement upon them and their Heirs for a ready Guard and Assistance for the defence and safeguard of the Country as well as of the King which the Danes after their late so great misfortunes and miseries by the incursions furious attempts of the Swedes have learnt to be wisdome have therefore lately bound themselves and their posterities to maintain a guard of 10 or 12000 men to be paid by a Pole or Assessement And unless the divine light of reason and that which hitherto hath been called wisdome have altered their courses and resolved that which is retrograde and quite contrary to be the better the most safe and natural way will be as it ever hath been to have our men at Arms to be Natives rather than Forreigners such as are of the better sort and bred and educated in Feats of armes rather then such as have neither skill nor courage and such as have Lands and Estates of their own to make a concernment rather than such as have none Better to have the Nobility and Gentry who are bred and trained up in War and understand the necessity and causes of a War to be ingaged in the defence of the Kingdom than the vulgus who are often called and too often experimented and best know how they came to deserve it mobile imperitum vulgus a Beast of many heads and without a Superiour or Governours are ●it only to attempt again the building of Babel wherein if they were all of one language they would for want of agreement or wit either totally miscarry in the building or make it to be an unimitablepeice of deformity For it was certainly no fault in Abraham that he had 318 Servants born in his own house to Arm in a case of necessity to rescue his Brother Lot Nor in David that he had Servants to passe before him to War Or when he well understood that the Children of Israel when they had no King and every one followed his own Imaginations were often delivered into the hands of the Midianites Philistims many of the Nations round about them and that Deborah Baruch having undertaken to releive them were enforced to pronounce a Curse against thos● that came not to help the Lord against the mighty when Reuben had great devisions did abide amongst the Sheep-folds Dan remained in Ships and Ashur continued by the Sea-Shore And that he had tasted of the fickleness infidelity of the men of Judah Israel in the Rebellion of Absalom did though they were afterwards so kind unto him as to wrangle with the men of Judah for bringing him home to his Kingdom and not giving them a share in the honor of it not think it to be repugnant to the good and safety of the people to settle a strong well formed Militia and to have a Life-guard of 24000 valiant men to attend by months and courses the safety of his person and his peaceable Government which must needs be better than to be left to the humor of the people to go or not to goe with their Prince to war as the wind of their Interest or faction shall blow them which may make such kind of aids in the greatest of necessities to be hardly compassed And the Delectus of the Roman Souldiers in their growing greatnesse and most virtuous condition of that State or Commonwealth before their course and custom of Patronage Clyentelage had taken root and gained approbation and their often Mutinies and refuseing nomina dare to list or Inroll themselves unless usury might be lessoned and Lawes cut out to their Fancies hath told us how like Egiptian Reeds such a away of raising men to defend the King themselves and the Kingdome will be to those that shall most trust or leane upon it So that then the Gorgons head and the Bugg-beare of the Tenures in Capite and Knight Service being only the marriages and puting the Wards Estates under a rent whilst they shall be in minority if rationally considered with allowance of the seldome happening of it or but once in three or four descents and two yeares value being allowed upon the death of every Tenant in Socage or Coppy-hold Estates at the admission of every one of their Heirs will with their reliefs and herriots possibly make the accompt of the mony and charge of the wardship to be something equal if not a great deal lesse Which howsoever may be removed or made to be more familiar and better understood or born if the Tenants in Capite and by Knight Service shall be exempted from all other Taxes or Assessements for War but what belongs to their Service as by Law they antiently were and ought to be the Wards nor their Estate during that time being never heretofore charged with any such Assessements as our late Tax-Masters have laid upon the People when as the fifth and many times the third part of the Wards yearly Rents besides a fifth part of the value of their real estate and a twentieth of the personal and revenew enforced taken from them to maintain Iniquity would have saved more mony than the Wardships cost Or if that will not still the causelesse out-cry that the Licence of Alienation which as well as in Capite by Knight Service are by the Custom of many Manors to be paid in Socage and the Homages Grand and Petit Serjeanties Reliefs Primer
that in a Parliament holden in the 14 th year of the raign of King Richard the 2 d. the Lords and Commons did pray the King that the Prerogative of Him and his Crown may be kept and that all things done or attempted to the contrary may be redressed and that the King might be as free as any of his Progenitors were which the King granting gave to it the force and power of an Act of Parlaiment And consider that the innovation of Laws or change of Customs are dangerous and as St Augustine saith non tam utilitate if there were any profit in them prosunt quam Novit●●e perturbant do more hurt than good by their Novelty that it will be unsafe to take away or dig up foundations that where the inconveniences in the old Laws are not apparant and the conveniences to come by the new not infallible or not likely to deceive our expectation of them it will be perilous to change our Laws more perilous when they be many and most of all when they be fundamental That the more Power and Might is in the King to defend us the better will be the Ends which by the Means is intended and that therefore in the Parliament of 7 E. 1. the Prelates Earls Barons and the Commonaltie of the Realm did acknowledge that to the King it belonged of his Royal Signory streightly to defend force of Armour and all other force against the Peace and to punish them which shall do contrary according to the Laws and usages of the Realm and thereunto were bound to ayd their Soveraign Lord at all Seasons when need shall be that to make a Captain of a Cripple or a Constable which should keep the Peace in a Parish and be ready to repell any violence which should be offered to the Inhabitan●s to be blind or Bed-rid would not answer the End or b● for the Safety of those that expect it from him And that his Majesties opinion expressed in his Message or Declaration from Breda before his return into England is and ever will be a maxime composed of very great reason and truth that his Majesties just rights are the best preserver of the peoples Liberties And may believe before it be too late that to take away Tenures in Capite and introduce the inconveniences before mentioned will be but as a Prologue or usher to Levelling and the gate or entrance to the Agrarian Devices and the supposed Saints taking possession of the Estates of those which they call the wicked And that the laying by of Tenures in Capite and their services and making use of Mercenary and Mechanick Souldiers may help us to as many miseries and follies as we have pertaked of in our late troubles from our Servants make them to become our Masters and by inureing them to insolencies against others teach them how to domineer over the people which shall be their pay-Masters after that over Parliaments garbling and purging the House pulling out and putting in whom they please turn Legislators and Remonstrance makers from their head quarters make themselves not the Repairers of Breaches but the makers and causers of them ingrosse all the places and imployments of the Kingdom throw down Laws and Government create out of themselves and their own Party Mayors Generals to tyranize awe the people and abuse their Laws and Liberties and play the fools at Coffee-Houses with disputing and discoursing of Rotas and Balloting Boxes and which of their Whimsies and ignorant contrivances would best make a Government Committ Perjuries in abundance and make their oaths more changeable and lesse to be trusted then the Wind or Weather or a Lillies Almanack and make it their only businesse to enslave and insult over the people and Metamorphose them into as many shapes of baseness perjuries Hipocrisies dissembling and wickednesse as poverty hope of gain or to get or preserve estates though it be but to have Poliphemus his curtesie to be last of all ruined fear or flattery or an accursed ambition to raise an estate out of other mens miseries could perswade or draw them unto That the taking away of Tenures in Capite by Knight service is not desired by any universal or general Petition at all of the People that not one in every 20 of those that are concerned hold by those Tenures nor one in every 100 of those that hold by other Tenures and are not concerned do desire it That the injudicial and inconsiderate desires of a very few of the common people who doe sometimes as they have many times done in our late troubles and too late repented it out-do Children in asking Stones instead of Bread and Serpents for Fishes are not to be hearkened unto that the Surfets upon Liberty are many times very dangerous may prove as fatal unhappy though granted or asked with the best of intentions as that of giving great Sums of money to the Scots in the begining of our unhappy Wars calling their invasion a brotherly assistance or that of giving Liberty to the long Parliament not to dissolve without their consent That if Augustus Caesar when by his great Prudence he had put the broken peices of the Roman Republick which was Civilibus Discordiis lacerata wofully torn with civil Discords into a well composed Monarchy and blest the Empire a great part of the World with an universal Peace could find no better a way to fix and make it lasting then to put many of the Souldiers under a Gratitude and Concernment to love and cherish it by giving them Lands for Life or Inheritance to engage them to their former Duties when occasion should happen which saved the Charge and Trouble on all sides as well to the conquered as the conquering in maintaining Roman Legions made up of a Medley or Gallimausry of all manner of Nations It cannot now be good when the long lasting Monarchy of England hath been lately and lamentably torn into peeces to make up a Common-wealth could never be agreed upon to alter or take away a Course of constant and ordinary defence which hath been for so many Ages past the happy Support of this Antient Monarchy And that it could not have been any bad or likely to be unsuccessefull Policy but a means of an Establishment of our late Souldiers and Controullers had in the Allowance of their cheap purchases been tyed to Tenures by Knight Service for the Defence of the Kingdom as the late King of Sweden was to hold of the Empire by the Treaty of Munster And if that Bracton who was a Lord Chief Justice in the Reign of King H. 3. was of opinion that by a pa●tition of Earldoms and Baronies deficeret Regnum quod ex Comitatibus Baronijs dicitur esse constitutum would ruine the Kingdom which is constituted of Earldoms and Baronies he would now certainly foresee greater Mischiefs and Inconveniencies in the taking away of Tenures in Capite and by Knight Service or changeing