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A91263 A seasonable, legall, and historicall vindication and chronologicall collection of the good, old, fundamentall, liberties, franchises, rights, laws of all English freemen (their best inheritance, birthright, security, against arbitrary, tyrannicall, and Egyptian burdens) and of their strenuous defence in all former ages; of late years most dangerously undermined, and almost totally subverted, under the specious disguise of their defence and future establishment, upon a sure basis, their pretended, greatest propugners. Wherein is irrefragably evinced by Parliamentary records, proofs, presidents, that we have such fundamentall liberties, ... that to attempt or effect the subversion of all or any of them, ... is high treason: ... / By William Prynne of Swainswick, Esquire.; Seasonable, legall, and historicall vindication and chronologicall collection of the good, old, fundamentall, liberties, franchises, rights, laws of all English freemen. Part 1 Prynne, William, 1600-1669. 1654 (1654) Wing P4062; Thomason E812_10; ESTC R207634 45,225 63

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alledged by him against the Shipmony Judges Page 12. It is a Warre against the King Let our Military Officers and souldiers consider it when intended The alteration of the laws or Government in any part of them This is a levying Warre against the King and so Treason within the Statute of 25 E 3. 1. Because the King doth maintain and protect the laws in every part of them 2. Because they are the Kings laws He is the Fountain from whence in their severall Channells they are derived to the Subject Whence all our indictments run thus Trespasses laid to be done Contra pacem Domini Regis c. against the Kings Peace for exorbitant offences though not intended against the Kings Person against the King his Crown and dignity ' Page 64. In this I shall not labour at all to prove That the endevouring by words Counsels and actions To subvert the Fundamentall Laws and Government of the Kingdome is Treason at the Common Law If there be any Common Law Treasons at all left NOTHING TREASON IF THIS NOT TO MAKE A KINGDGME NO KINGDOME Take the Polity and Government away England's but a piece of earth wherein so many men have their commerce and abode without rank or distinction of men without property in any thing further than in possession no Law to punish the murdering or robbing one another ' ' Page 70 71 72. The horridnesse of the offence in endeavouring to overthrow the Lawes and present Government hath been fully opened before The Parliament is the representation of the whole Kingdome wherein The King as Head your Lordships as the more Noble and the Commons the other Members are knit together in one body Politick This dissolved the Arteries and Ligaments that hold the body together THE LAWES He that takes away the Laws takes not away the Allegiance of one Subject onely but of the whole Kingdome It was made Treason by the Statute of 13 Eliz. for her time to affirm That the Lawes of the Realme doe not bind the descent of the Crown No Law no descent at all NO LAWES NO PEERAGE no ranks nor degrees of men the same condition to all It s Treason to kill a Judge upon the Bench this kills not Judicem sed JVDICIVM There be twelve men but no Law never a Judge amongst them It s felony to embezel any one of the Judiciall Records of the Kingdome THIS AT ONCE SWEEPS THEM ALL AWAY and FROM ALL. It s Treason to countefeit a twenty shilling piece here 's a counter feiting of the Law we can call neither the counterfeit nor the true coin our own It s Treason to counterfeit the Great Seal for an Acre of Land No property is left hereby to any Land at all Nothing Treason now against King or Kingdome No Law to punish it My Lords if the Question were asked in Westminster Hall whether this were a Crime punishable in Star chamber or in THE KINGS BENCH by Fine or imprisonment They would say It were higher If whether Felony They would say That is an offence onely against the life or goods of some one or few persons It would I believe be answered by the Judges as it was by the Chief Justice Thirning in 21 R 2. That though he could not judge the Case TREASON there before him yet if he were a Peer in Parliament HE WOVLD SO ADJVDGE IT And so the Peeres did here in Straffords and not long after in Canterburies Case who both lost their Heads on Tower Hill ' I have transcribed these Passages of Mr. Oliver St. John at large for five Reasons 1. Because they were the voice and sense of the whole House of Commons by his mouth who afterwards owned and ratified them by their speciall Order for their publication in print for information and satisfaction of the whole Nation and terrour of all others who should after that either secretly or openly by fraud or force directly or indirectly attempt the subversion of all or any of our Fundamentall Laws or Liberties or the alteration of our Fandamentall Government or setting up any arbitrary or Tyrannicall power Taxes Impositions or new kinds of arbitrary Judicato●ies and imprisonments against these our Laws and Liberties 2. To mind an inform all such who have not only equalled but transcended Strafford and Canterbury in these their High Treasons even since these Publications Speeches and their exemplary executions of the hainousnesse in excusablenesse wilfulnesse maliciousnesse Capitalnesse of their crimes which not onely the whole Parliament in generality but many of themselves in particular so severely prosecuted condemned and inexorably punished of late years in them that so they may bewail repent of and reform them with all speed and diligence as much as in them lies And withall I shall exhort them seriously to consider that Gospel terrifying Passage Rom. 2. 1 2 3. Therefore thou art inexcusable O man whosoever thou art that judgest for wherein thou judgest another tbou CONDEMNEST THY SELF FOR THOU THAT JUDGEST DOEST THE SAME THINGS But we are sure that the judgement of God is according to truth against them which commit such things And thinkest thou this O man that judgest them which do such things and doest the same that thou shalt escape the Judgement of God 3. To excite all Lawyers especially such who of late times have taken upon them the stile and power of Judges to examine their consciences actions how far all or any of them have been guilty of these crimes and Treasons so highly aggravated and exemplarily punish●d of former and later times in corrupt cowardly time-serving degenerate Lawyers and Judasses rather than Judges to the disgrace of their Profession and prejudice of the Fundamentall Lawes Liberties Rights Priviledges of our Nation Peers Parliaments subversion of the Fundamentall Government of this famous Kingdome whereof they are Members 4. To instruct those Jesuited Anabaptists Levellers and their Factors especially John Canne and the rest of the Compilers Publishers Abetters of the Pamphlet intituled Lieutenant Colonel Lilburn tried and cast and other forementioned publications who professedly set themselves by words writing Counsels and overt Acts to subvert both our old Fundamentall and all other Laws Liberties Customes Parliaments and Government what transcendent Malefactor● traytors and Enemies they are to the publick and what Capitall punishments they may thereby incurre as well as demerit should they be legally prosecuted for the same and thereupon to advise them timely to repent of and desist from such high Treasonable Attempts 5. To clear both my self and this my seasonable Defence of our Fundamentall Lawes Liberties Government from the least suspition or sh●dow of Faction Sedition Treason and Enmi●y to the publick peace weal settlement of the Nation which those and those onely who are most Factious and seditious and the greatest Enemies Traytors to the publick tranquility weal and establishment of our Kingdome as the premises evidence will be ready maliciously to asperse both me and it with as they
entituled The Government of the Commonwealth of England c. I remit to their most serious con●●derations to determine if ever they resolve to be English Freemen again or to imitate the wisdom prudence zeal courage and laudable examples of their worthy Ancestors from which they cannot now degenerate without the greatest Infamy and enslaving of themselves with their Posterities for ever to the arbitrary wills of pres●nt or future Usurpers on their Fundamental Rights and Libe●ties in an higher degree then ever in any precedent ●ges under the Greatest Conquerors or Kings after all their late costly bloudy Wars for their Defence against the Behe●ded King The fifth is A learned and necessary Argument made in the Commons House of Parliament Anno 7. Jacobi to prove That each Subject hath a Propriety in his Goods shewing also the extent of the Kings Prerogative in Impositions upon the Goods of Merchants exported or imported c. By a late learned Judg of this Kingdom printed at London by Richard Bishop 1641. and Ordered to be pub●ished in Print at a Committee appointed by the Honourable House of Commons for examination and Licensing of B●oks 20. Maii 1641. In which Parliamentary Argument p. 8 11 16. I finde these direct Passages That the New Im●ositions contained in the Boo● of Rates imposed on Merchandizes imported and exported by the K●ngs Prerogative and Letters Patents without consent in Parliament is against THE NATURAL FRAME AND CONSTITUTION OF THE POLICY OF THIS KINGDOME which is Jus Publicum Regn● AND SO SUBVERTETH THE FUNDAMENTAL LAW OF THE REALM and introduceth a new form of State and Government Can any man give me a reason why the King can only in Parliament make Lawes No man ever read any Law whereby it was so ordained and yet no man ever read that any King practised the contrary therefore IT IS THE ORIGINAL RIGHT OF THE KINGDOM Nota. AND THE VERY NATURAL CONSTITUTION OF OUR STATE AND POLICY being one of the highest Rights of Soveraign Power If the King alone out of Parliament may impose * And do not those do so 〈◊〉 as ●lay mont●ly 〈…〉 Customs and N●w-Impost on us daily out of Parliament and that for many moneths and years yet to come against the Letter of their own Instrument and Oath too HE ALTERETH THE LAW OF ENGLAND IN ONE OF THESE TWO MAIN FUNDAMENTAL POINTS He must either take the Subjects Goods from them without assent of the Party which is against the Law or else he must give his own Letters Patents the force of a Law to alter the property of the Subjects Goods which is also against the Law In this and sundry other Arguments touching the Right of Impositions in the Commons House of Parliament by the Members of it arguing against them it was frequently averred and at last voted and resolved by the House 7. Jacobi That such Impositions without consent in Parliament were AGAINST THE ORIGINAL FUNDAMENTAL LAWS AND PROPERTY OF THE SUBJECT and Original Right Frame and Constitution of the Kingdom as the Notes and Journals of that Parliament evidence An express Parliamentary resolution in point for what I here assert The sixth is 6. A Conference desired by the Lords and had by a Committee of both Houses concerning the Rights and Priviledges of the Subject 3. Aprilis 4. Caroli 1628. entred in the Parliament Journal of 4. Caroli and since printed at London 1642. In the Introduction to which Conference Sir Dudley Diggs by the Commons House Order used these expressions My good Lords whilest we the Commons out of our good affections were seeking for money we found I cannot say a Book of the Law but many A FUNDAMENTAL POINT THEREOF NEGLECTED AND BROKEN which hath occasioned our desire of this Conference Wherein I am first commanded to shew unto your Lordships in general That the Laws of England are grounded on Reason more antient then Books consisting much in unwritten Customs yet so full of Justice and true Equity that your most Honorable Predecessors and Ancestors propugned them with a NOLUMUS MUTARI and so ancient that from the Saxons daies notwithstanding the injuries and ruines of time they have continued in most parts the same c. Be pleased then to know THAT IT IS AN UNDOUBTED AND FUNDAMENTAL POINT OF THIS SO ANCIENT COMMON LAW OF ENGLAND THAT THE SUBJECT HATH A TRUE PROPERTY IN HIS GOODS AND POSSESSIONS which doth preserve as sacred that Meum and Tuum that is the Nurse of Industry and the Mother of Courage and without which there can be no Justice of which Meum and Tuum is the proper object Bu● the UNDOUBTED RIGHT OF FREE SUBJECTS hath lately not a little been invaded and prejudiced by Pressures the more grievous because they have been pursued by imprisonment contrary to the Franchises of this Land c. which the Commons House proved by many Statutes and Records in all Ages in that Conference to the full satisfaction of the Lords House since published in print The seventh is 7. The Vote of the a See Canterburies Doom p. 19. Diurnal Occurrences p. 13. whole House of Commons 16. December 1640. Nullo contradicente entred in their Journal and printed in Diurnal Occurrences p. 13. That the Canons made in the Convocation Anno 1640. ARE AGAINST THE FUNDAMENTAL LAWS OF THE REALM the Property and Liberty of the Subject the Right of Parliament and contained divers things tending to Faction and Sedition The eighth Authority is 8. b Exact Collection c. p. 112 113. The Votes of both Houses of Parliament concerning the security of Kingdom of England and Dominion of Wales 15. Martii 1641. Ordered by the Lords and Commons in Parliament to be forthwith printed and published as they were then by themselves and afterwards with other Votes and Orders Resolved upon the Question nemine contradicente That in case of extream danger and of his Majesties refusal the Ordinance agreed on by both Houses for the Militia doth oblige the people See Chap. 2. Proposition 3 7 and ought to be obeyed by THE FUNDAMENTAL LAWS OF THIS KINGDOM A very vain false absurd and delusory Vote if there be no such Law● as some now affirm The ninth punctual Authority is 9. a Exact Collection p. 850 854 887 888. A second Declaration of the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament concerning the Commission of Array printed by their special Order of 12. Januarii 1642. Wherein are these observeable passages The main drift of the answer is to maintain That the King by the Common Law may grant such a Commission of Array as this is upon this ground because it 's for the defence of the Kingdom And that the power which he hath to grant it by the Common Law is not taken away by the Petition of Right or any former Statute but the King notwithstanding any of them may charge the Subjects for Defence of the Kingdom so as the charge imposed come not to
the death of the Dukes of Glocester Lancaster and other Peers who maintained the Commission confirmed by act of Parliament X. R. 2. and assembling people in a warlike manner in the County of Chester for the effecting of it in destruction of the Estates of the Realm and OF THE LAWES OF THE KINGDOME 4. In the 29. year of King Henry the sixth Jack Cade under a pretence to REFORM alter and abrogate some Laws Purveyances and extortions importable to the Commons wherupon he was called JOHN AMEND ALL drew a great multitude of Kentish people to Black Heath in a warlike manner to effect it in the Parliament of 29. H. 6. c. 1. this was adjudged High Treason in him and his Complices by act of Parliament and the Parliament of 31. H. 6. c. 1. made this memorable Act against him and his Imitators insucceeding ages worth serious perusall and consideration by all who tread in his footsteps and over-act him in his Treasons Whereas the most abominable Tyrant horrible odious and errant FALSE TRAITOR John Cade calling himself sometimes Mortimer sometime Captain of Kent which Name Fame Acts and Feats to be removed out of the speech and mind of every faithfull Christian man perpetually falsly and trayterously purposing and imagining the perpetual destruction of the KINGS PERSON and FINALL SVBVERSION OF THIS REALM taking upon him * And have not others of late assumed to themselves more Royal power than he resolved to be Treason by 21. E. 3. Rot. Parl. n. 15. ROYALL POWER and gathering to him the Kings people in great number BY FALSE SUBTIL IMAGINED LANGUAGE and seditiously made a stirring Rebellion and insurrection VNDER COLOVR OF JVSTICE FOR REFORMATION OF THE LAWS OF THE SAID KING robbing slaying spoiling a great part of his faithfull people Our said Soveraign Lord the King considering the premises with many other which were more odious to remember by advice and assent of the Lords spirituall and Temporall and at THE REQUEST OF THE COMMONS and by authority aforesaid hath ordained and established that the said John Cade shall be had named and declared A FALSE TRAYTOR to our said Soveraign Lord the King Nota. and that all His Tyranny Acts Facts false Opinions shall be voyded abated adnulled destroyed and put out of remembrance for ever And that all indictments in time coming in like case under power of Tyranny Rebellion and stirring had shall be of no regard nor effect but void in Law and all the Petitions * To wit by Cade and his confederates for the alteration of the Laws c. delivered to the said King in his last Parliament holden at Westminster the sixth day of November the 29. of his Reign against his mind by him not agreed shall be taken and put in oblivion out of remembrance undone voided adnulled and destroyed for ever as a thing purposed against God and his Conscience and against his Royall estate and preheminence and also DISHONOVRABLE andVNREASONABLE 5. In the a See Mr. St. Iohns Argument against Strafford p. 178. Halls Chronicle and Hollinshed 8 year of King Henry the 8. William Bell and Thomas Lacy in the County of Kent conspired with Thomas Cheyney the Hermite of the Queen of Fairies TO OVERTHROW THE LAWS AND CVSTOMES OF THE REALM for effecting whereof they with 200. more met together and concluded upon a cause or raising greater forces in Kent and the adjacent Shires this was adjudged high Treason and some of them executed as Traytors Moreover it b Cooks 3. institutes p. 9. 10. was resolved by all the Judges of in the reign of Henry 8. that an Insurrection against the Statute of Labourers or for the inhansing of Salaries and wages was TREASON a levying war against the King BECAUSE IT WAS GENERALLY AGAINST THE KINGS LAW and the offendors took upon them THe REFORMATION THEREOF which Subjects by gathering of power ought not to do a Cooks 4. Institutes ch 8. p. 89. to 96. 6. On December 1. in the 21. year of King Henry the 8. Sir Thomas Moore Lord Chancellour of England with 14. more Lords of the Privy Councel John Fitz-James Chief Justice of England and Sir Anthony Fitzherhert one of the Judges of the Common Pleas exhibited sundry Articles of impeachment to King Henry the 8. against Cardinall Wolsy That he had by divers and many sundry wayes and fashions committed High treason and NOTABLE GRIEVOUS OFFENCES misusing Altering and subverting the order of his Graces Lawes and otherwise contrary to his high Honour Prerogative Crown Estate and Dignity Royall to the inestimable great hinderance diminution and decay of the uniuersall Wealth of this his Graces Realm The Articles are 43. in number The 20 21 26 30 35 37 42 43. contain his illegall arbitrary practices and proceedings to the subversion of the due course and order of his Graces Lawes to the undoing of a great number of his loving people Whereupon they pray Please therefore your most excellent Majesty of your excellent goodnesse towards the Weal of this your Realm and Subjects of the same to see such order and direction upon the said Lord Cardinall As may be to terrible example of other to beware to offend your Grace and your Lawes hereafter And that he be so provided for that he never have any Power Jurisdiction or Authority hereafter to trouble vex or impoverish the Common wealth of this your Realm as he hoth done heretofore to the great hurt and dammage of every man almost High and low * See Speed Holished Grafton Stow Antiquitates Ecclesiae Brit. p. 378. 379. and Goodwin in his life time His poysoning himself prevented his judgement for these his Practises b M. St. Iohns Argument against Strafford 7. The Statute of 1. Marie c. 12. Enacts that if 12. or more shall endeavour By force to alter any of the Laws or Statutes of the Kingdome the offender shall from the time therein limited be adjudged ONELY AS A FELON whereas it was Treason before but this Act continuing but till the next Parliament and then expiring the offence remains Treason as before a Cook 3 Inst c. 1. 9 10. and M. St. Iohns Argument at Law against Strafford p. 15 16. 8. In the 39. of Queen Elisabeth divers in the County of Oxford consulted together to go from House to House in that County and from thence to London and other parts to excite them to take arms for the throwing down of inclosures throughout the Realm nothing more was prosecuted nor Assemblies made yet in Easter Term 39. Elisabeth it was resolved by all the judges of England who met about the case That this was High Treason and a levying Warre against the Queen because it was to throw down all inclosures throughout the Kingdome to which they could pretend no right and that the end of it was to OVERTHROW THE LAWS AND STATUTES for Inclosures Whereupon BRADSHAW and BURTON two of the principall offenders were condemned and executed
are Destructive to the Fundamental Laws of the Realm the subjects Right of Propriety and contrary to former Resolutions in Parliament and the Petition of Right as the words of their several Impeachments run Sr. John Finch fled the Realm to preserve his head on his Shoulders some others of them d●ed through fear to prevent the danger soon after their Impeachments and the rest put to Fines who were lesse peccant 12. Mr. John Pim in his Declaration upon the whole matter of the Charge of High Treason against Thomas Earle of Strafford April 12. 1641. before a Committee of both Houses of Parliament in Westminster Hall printed and published by Order of the House of Commons proves his endeavour to subvert the Fundamentall Law of England and to introduce an Arbitrary Power to be High Treason and an offence very hainous in the nature and mischievous in the effects thereof which saith he will best appear if it be examined by that universall and supream Law Salus Populi the element of all laws out of which they are derived the end of all Laws to which they are designed and in which they are perfected 1. ' It is an offence comprehending all other offences Here you shall finde several Treasons Murthers Rapins Oppressions Perjuries There is in this Crime a Seminary of all evills hurtfull to a State and if you consider the Reasons of it it must needs be so The Law is that which puts a difference betwixt Good and Evill betwixt just and unjust Nota. If you take away the Law all things will fall into Confusion every man will become a law to himself which in the depraved condition of humane nature must needs produce man great enormities * And are they not so now Lust will become a Law and Envy will become a Law Covetousnesse and Ambition will become Laws and what Dictates what decisions such laws will produce may easily be discerned in the late Governm●nt of Ireland and England too since this The Law hath a power to prevent to restrain to repair evils without this all kind of mischiefs and distempers will break in upon a State It is the Law that doth the King to the Allegiance and Service of his people it intitles the People to the Protection and Justice of the King c. The Law is the Boundary the measure betwixt the Kings Prerogative and the peoples Liberty whiles these move in their own O●b they are a support and security to one another but if these Bounds be so removed that they enter into contestation and conflict one of these mischiefs must needs ensue If the Prerogative of the King overwhelm the Liberty of the people it will be turned into Tyranny If Liberty undermine the Prerogative it will turn into Anarchy The Law is the safeguard the custody of all private interests your honours your lives your liberties and estates are all in the keeping of the Law without this every man hath a like Right to any thing and this is the condition into which the Irish were brought by the Earl of Strafford and the English by others who condemned him And the reason which he gave for it hath more mischief than the thing it self THEY ARE A CONQUERED NATION Let those who now say the same of England as well as Scotland and Ireland consider and observe what follows There cannot be a word more pregnant and fruitfull IN TREASON then that word is There are few Nations in the world that have not been conquered and no doubt but the Conquerour may give what Laws he please to those that are conquered But if the succeeding Acts and agreements do not limit and restrain that Right what people can be secure England hath been conquered and Wales hath been conquered and by this reason will be in little better case than Ireland If the King by the Right of a Conquerour give Lawes to his people shall not the people by the same reason be restored to the Right of the conquered To recover their Liberty if they can What can be more hurtfull more pernicious than such Propositions as these 2. It is dangerous to the Kings person and dangerous to his Crown It is apt to cherish Ambition usurpation and Oppression in great men and to beget Sedition Discontent in the people and both these have been and in reason must ever be causes of great Trouble and Alterations to Prince and State If the Histories of those Eastern Countries be perused where Princes order their Affairs according to the mischievous Principles of the Earl of Strafford LOOSE and ABSOLVED FROM ALL RULES OF GOVERNMENT they will be found to be frequent in combustions full of Massacres and of the tragicall end of Princes If any man shall look into our own Stories in the times Nota. when the Laws were most neglected he shall find them full of Commotions of Civil Distempers whereby the Kings that then raigned were alwayes kept in want and distresse the people consumed with CIVIL WARRES and by such wicked Counsels as these some of our Princes have been brought to such miserable ends As * Note this all whole commons-house Opinion then no honest heart can remember without horrour and earnest Prayer that it may never be so again 3. As it is dangerous to the Kings person and Crown so it is in other respects very prejudiciall to his Majesty in honour profit and greatnesse which he there proves at large as you may there read at leasure and yet these are the Guildings and Paintings that are put upon such Counsels These are for your Honour for your Service 4. It is inconsistent with the Peace the Wealth the Prosperity of a Nation It is destructive to Justice the mother of Peace to Industry the Spring of Wealth to Valour which is the active vertue whereby the prosperity of a Nation can onely be procured confirmed and enlarged It is not onely apt to take a way Peace and so intangle the Nation with warres but doth corrupt Peace and powrs such a malignity into it as produceth the effects of War both to the * Is not this an experimentall truth now NOBILITY and others having as little security of THEIR PERSONS OR ESTATES in this peaceable time as if the Kingdome had been under the fury and rage of warre And as for Industry and Valour who will take pain● for that which when he hath gotten is not his own or who fights for that wherein he hath no other interest but such as is subject to the will of another c. Shall it be Treason to embase the Kings Coin though but a piece of twelve pence or six pence and must it not needs be the effect of GREATER TREASON to * And were they ever so base cowardly slavish as now embase the Spirits of his Subjects and to set a stamp and Character of Servitude upon them whereby they shall be disabled to do any thing for the Service of the King or Common-wealth 5.
and in new illegall Military or other Arbitrary Judicatories Committees or Courts of High Justice unknown to our Ancestors 3. That no Freeman of England unlesse it be by Speciall Grant and Act of Parliament may or ought to be compelled enforced pressed or arrayed to go forth of his own Countrey much lesse out of the Realm into forreign parts against his will in times of Warre or Peace or except he be specially obliged thereto by ancient Tenures and Charters save onely upon the sudden coming of strange enemies into the Realm and then he is to array himself onely in such sort as he is bound to do by the ancient Laws and Customes of the Kingdome still in force 4. That no Freeman of England may or ought to be disinherited disseised dispossessed or deprived of any inheritance Freehold Liberty Custome Franchise Chattle Goods whatsoever without his own Gift Grant or free Consent unlesse it be by lawfull Processe Triall and Judgement of his Peers or special Grant by act of Parliament 5. That the old received Government Lawes Statutes Customes Priviledges Courts of Justice legal Processe of the Kingdome and Crown ought not to be altered repealed suppressed nor any new form of Government Law Statute Ordinance Court of Judicature Writs or legal Proceedings instituted or imposed on all or any of the Free-men of England by any Person or Persons but onely in and by the Kingdomes free and full consent in a lawfull Parliament wherein the Legislative Power solely resides 6. That Parliaments ought to be duly summoned and held for the good and safety of the Kingdome every year or every three years at least or so often as there is just occasion That the Election of all Knights Citizens and Burgesses to sit and serve in Parliament and so of all oother Elective Officers ought to be free That all Members of Parliament hereditary or Elective ought to be present and there freely to speak and vote according to their judgements and Consciences without any over-awing Guards to terrifie them and none to be forced or secluded thence And that all Parliaments not thus duly summoned elected whilst held but unduly packed and all Acts of Parliament fraudulently and forcibly procured by indirect means ought to be nulled repealed as void and of dangerous president 7. That neither the Kings nor any Subjects of the Kingdome of England may or ought to be summoned before any Forreign Powers or Jurisdictions whatsoever out of the Realm or within the same for any manner of Right Inheritance Thing belonging to them or Offence done by them within the Realm 8. That all Subjects of the Realm are obliged by Allegiance and duty to defend their Lawfull Kings Persons Crowns the Laws Rights and Priviledges of the Realm and of Parliament against all Usurpers Traytors violence and Conspiracies And that no Subject of this Realm who according to his duty and Allegiance shall serve his King in his Warres for the just defence of him and the Land against Forreign enemies or Rebels shall lose or forfeit any thing for doing his true duty service and Allegiance to him therein but utterly discharged of all vexation trouble or losse 9. That no publick Warre by Land or Sea ought to be made or levied with or against any Forreign Nation or Publick Truce or League entred into with Forreign Realms or States to bind the Nation without their Common advice and consent in Parliament 10. That the ancient Honours Manors Lands Rents Revenues Inheritances Right and perquisites of the Crown of England originally settled thereon for the Ease Exemption of the people from all kind of Taxes payments whatsoever unlesse in cases of extraordinary necessity and for defraying all the constant ordinary expences of the Kingdome as the expences of the Kings houshold Court Officers Judges Embassadors Garisons Navy and the like ought not to be sold alienated given away or granted from it to the prejudice of the Crown and burdening of the people And that all Sales Alienations Gifts or Grants thereof to the empairing of the publick Revenue or prejudice of the Crown and people are void in Law and ought to be resumed and repealed by our Parliaments and Kings as they have frequently been in all former ages For the Readers fuller satisfaction in each of these propositions some of which I must shew here but briefly touch for brevity sake having elsewhere fully debated them in print I shall specially recommend unto him the perusall of such Tractates and Arguments formerly published wherein each of them hath been fully discussed which he may peruse at his best leasure The first of these Fundamentalls which I ●ntend principally to infist on is fully asserted debated confirmed by 13. H. 4. f. 14. By Fortescue Lord Chief Justice and Chancellour of England de laudibus Legum Angliae dedicated by him to King Henry the 6. f. 25. c. 36. f. 84. By a learned and necessary Argument against impositions in Parliament of 7. Jacobi by a late Reverend Judge printed at London 1641. By Mr. William Hakewell in his Liberty of the Subject against Impositions maintained in an Argument in the Parliament of 7. Jacobi printed at London 1641. By Judge Crooks and Judge Huttons Arguments concerning Shipmony both printed at London 1641. By the Case of Shipmony briefly discussed London 1640. by Mr. St. Johns Argument and Speech against Shipmony printed at London 1641. By Sir Edward Cook in his 1. Institutes p. 46. and 57. to 64. and 528. to 537. By the 1. and 2. Remonstrance of the Lords and Commons in Parliament against the Commission of Array Exact Collection p. 386. to 398. and 850. to 890. and by my own Humble Remonstrance against Shipmony London 1643. The fourth part of the Soveraign power of Parliaments and Kingdomes p. 14. to 26. and my Legall Vindications of the Liberties of England against Illegall Taxes c. London 1649. and by the Records and Statutes cited in the ensuing Chapter referring for the most part to the first Proposition The second third and fourth of them are largely debated and confirmed by a Conference desired by the Lords and had by a Committee of both Houses concerning the Rights and Priviledges of the Subject 3. Aprilis 4. Caroli printed at London 1642. By Sir Edward Cook in his Institutes on Magna Charta c. 29. p. 45. to 57. By the 1. and 2. Remonstrance of the Lords and Commons against the Commission of Array Exact Collection p. 386. c. 850. to 890. By Judge Crooks and Judge Huttons Arguments against Shipmony By Sir Robert Cotton his Posthuma p. 222. to 269. By my Breviate of the Prelates encroachments on the Kings Prerogative and Subjects Liberties p. 138. c. My new discovery of the Prelates tyranny p. 137. to 183. and some of the ensuing Statutes and Records The fifth and sixth of them are fully cleared and vindicated in and by the Prologues of all our Councils Statutes Laws before and since the Conquest By Sir Edward Cooks 4. Institutes ch 1. Mr. Cromptons Jurisdiction of Courts Title High Court of Parliament My Soveraign power of Parliaments and Kingdomes p. 1 2 3 4. My Legal Vindication against illegal Taxes and pretended Acts of Parliament London 1649 Prynne the Member reconciled to Prynne the Barrester printed the same year My Historicall Collection of the ancient great Councils of the Parliaments of England London 1649. My Truth triumphing over Falshood Antiquity over Novelty London 1645. and some of the Records hereafter transcribed In this I shall be more sparing because so fully confirmed in these and other Treatises The seventh is ratified by Sir Edward Cooks 1. Institutes p. 97 98. 4. Institutes p. 89. and 5. Report Cawdries Case of the Kings Ecclesiasticall Lawes and Rastals Abridgement of Statutes Tit. Provisors Praemunire and Rome 11. H. 7. c. 1. and other Records and Statutes in the ensuing Chapter The eighth and ninth are fully debated in my Soveraign Power of Parliaments and Kingdomes Part. 2. p. 3. to 34. Part fourth p. 162. to 170. and touched in Sir Robert Cottons Posthuma p. 174. 179. How all and every of these Fundamentall Liberties Rights Franchises Lawes have been unparalelledly violated subverted in all and every particular of late years beyond all Presidents in the worst of former ages even by their greatest pretended Propugners their own printed Edicts Instruments Ordinances Papers together with their illegall oppressions Taxes Excises Imposts Rapines violences Proceedings of all kinds whereof I shall give a brief accompt in its due place will sufficiently evidence if compared with the premised propositions Which abundantly confirm the truth of our Saviours words John 10. 1. 10. and this rule of Johannis Angelius Wenderhagen Politicae Synopticae lib. 3. c. 9. sect 11. p. 310. Hinc Regulae loco notandum Quod omne Regnum Vi Armata acquisitum in Effectu Subditis Semper in durioris Servitutis conditiones arripiat licet à principio Ducedinem prurientibus spirare videatur Ideo cunctis hoc cavendum Nè temerè se duci patiantur FINIS
In times of sudden danger by the Invasion of an enemy it will disable his Majesty to preserve himself and his Subjects from that danger When war threatens a Kingdome by the coming of a forreign enemy it is no time then to discontent the people to make them weary of the PRESENT GOVERNMENT and more inclinable to a change The Supplies which are to come in this way will be unready uncertain there can be no assurance of them no dependence upon them either for time or proportion And if some money be gotten in such a way the Distractions the Divisions Distempers which this cause is apt to produce will be more prejudiciall to the publick safety than the Supply can be advantageous to it 6. This crime is contrary to the Pact and Covenant between the King and his people by mutuall agreement and stipulation confirmed by OATH on both sides 7. It is an Offence that is contrary to the ends of Government 1. To prevent Oppressions to * Was ever their power violence so unlimited unbounded in all Kinds as now limit and restrain the excessive power and violence of great Men to open passages of Justice with indifference towards all 2. To preserve men in their Estates to secure them in their Lives and Liberties 3. That vertue should be cherished and vice suppressed but where Laws are subverted and arbitrary and unlimited power set up a way is open not onely for the security but for the Advancement and Incouragement of evil Such men as are * Is it not most true of late and still aptest for the execution and maintenance of this power are onely capable of Preferment and others will not he Instruments of any unjust Commands who make conscience to do any thing against the Law of the Kingdome Nota. and Liberties of the Subject are not only not passable for imployment but SUBJECT TO MUCh JEALOUSIE and DANGER Is not this their Condition of late and present times expertus loquor 4. That all Accidents and events all Counsels and Designs should be improved to the publick good But this arbitrary power is apt to dispose all to the maintenance of it self And is it not so now 8. The Treasons of Subersions of the Lawes violation of Liberties can never be good or justifiable by any circumstance or occasion being evil in their own nature how specious or good soever they be pretended He alledgeth it was a time of GREAT NECESSITY and DANGER Nota. when such Counsels were necessary FOR THE PRESERVATION OF THE STATE the Plea since and now used by others who condemned him If there were any NECESSITY IT WAS OF HIS OWN MAKING He by his evil Counsel had brought the King as others the Kingdome since into a necessity and by no Rules of Justice can be allowed to gain this advantage to his Justification which is A GREAT PART OF HIS OFFENCE 9. As this is Treason in the nature of it so it doth exceed all other Treasons in this that in the Design and endevour of the Authour it was to be A CONSTANT and PERMANENT TREASON a standing perpetual Treason which would have been in continuall Act not determined within one time or age but transmitted to Posterity even from Generation to Generation And are not others Treasons of late times such proclaimed such in and by their own Printed Papers and therein exceeding Straffords 10. As it is a crime Odious in the nature of it so it is odious in the Judgement and estimation of the Law TO ALTER THE SETLED FRAME AND CONSTITUTION OF GOVERNMENT IN ANY STATE Let those consider it who are guilty of it in the highest Degree beyond Strafford Canterbury or the Shipmony Judges in our own State The Lawes whereby all parts of a Kingdome are preserved should be very vain and defective if they had not a Power to secure and preserve themselves The Forfeitures inflicted for Treason by our Law are of Life Honour and Estate even all that can be forfeited and this Prisoner although he should * And others as well as he of farre inseriour place and Estate pay all these Forfeitures will still be a Debtor to the Common wealth Nothing can be more equall then that he should perish by the Justice of the Law which he would have subverted Neither will this be a New way of blood There are marks enough to trace this Law to the very Originall of this Kingdome And if it hath not been put in execution as he alledgeth this 240 years it was not for want of Law but that all that time had not bread a man * But have not our times bred men much bolder then he since this Sp●ech was made and he executed bold enough to commit such crimes as these which is a circumstance much aggravating his Offence and making him no lesse liable to punishment because he is THE * Since he hath many followe●s ONELY MAN that in so long a time hath ventured UPON SUCH A TREASON AS THIS ' Thus far M. John Pym in the Name and by the Order and Authority of the whole Commons House in Parliament which I wish all those who by their Words Actions Counsels and printed Publications too have trayterously endevoured to subvert the Fundamentall Lawes Liberties of England and Ireland and to introduce an arbitrary and Tyrannicall Government against Law as much as ever Strafford did and out stripped him therein even since his execution in all particulars for which he was beheaded would now seriously lay to heart and speedily reform lest they equall or exceed him in conclusion in Capitall punishments for the same or endlesse Hellish Torments The next Authority I shall produce in point is The speech and Declaration of Mr. Oliver St. John at a Conference of both Houses of Parliament concerning Shipmony upon Judge Finches Impeachment of High Treason January 14. 1640. printed by the Commons Order London 1641. wherein he declares the sense of the Commons p. 12. c. ' That by the Judges Opinions forecited concerning Shipmony THE FUNDAMENTAL LAWS OF THE REALM CONCERNING OUR PROPERTY and OUR PERSONS ARE SHAKEN Whose Treasonable Offence herein he thus aggravates p. 20. c. The Judges as is declared in the Parliament of 11. R. 2. are the Executors of the Statutes and of the Judgements and Ordinances of Parliament They have here made themselves the * Have none done so since them EXECVTIONERS OF THEM they have endevoured THE DESTRVCTION OF THE FVNDAMENTALS OF OVR LAWS and LIBERTIES Holland in the Low-Countries lies under the Sea the Superficies of the Land is lower than the Superficies of the Sea It is Capitall therefore for any man to cut the Banks because they defend the Country Besides our own See chap. 2. even Forreign Authours as Comines observes Proposition 1. That the Statute DE TALLAGIO and the other old Laws are the Sea walls and Banks which keep the Commons from the innundation of the Prerogative These