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A43532 Scrinia reserata a memorial offer'd to the great deservings of John Williams, D. D., who some time held the places of Ld Keeper of the Great Seal of England, Ld Bishop of Lincoln, and Ld Archbishop of York : containing a series of the most remarkable occurences and transactions of his life, in relation both to church and state / written by John Hacket ... Hacket, John, 1592-1670. 1693 (1693) Wing H171; ESTC R9469 790,009 465

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to worry him who had as much relation to the place as himself where these good Deeds were done But there is a Writer and not one year scapes him but that he publisheth somewhat to bespatter the Bishop of Lincoln's good Name Odimus accipitrem quia semper vivit in armis Ovid. Art Amand. he it is that would cover all the Monuments of his Bounty with one Blot if he could find Readers such as he wish't that would take all that he vents without examination Mr. Fuller in his Church History of Britain after he had given some unhandsome Scratches to this Bishop parts with him thus Envy it self could not deny but that whit hersoever he went he might be traced by the foot-steps of his Benefaction That he expended much in the repair of the Abby-Church of Westminster and that the Library was the effect of his Bounty This is truth and praise-worthy in the Historian and yet I say not the Bishop is beholding to him for it because it is truth That 's Politian's judgment in an Epistle to Baptista p. 197. Pro v●ris laudibus hoc est pro suis nemo cuiquam debet Quis enim pro suo debeat But what says one of the Swallows to it that built under the roof of the Abby Just like a Swallow carried all the filth he could pick up to his Nest But worse then a miry Swallow he resembles those obscene Birds that use to flutter about the Sepulchres of the Dead and insults extreamly over the Grave of the Deceased in his Animadversions upon the Church History p. 273. That Lincoln received so much out of the Rents of the Colledge in the time when he was Lord Keeper four years and more that the Surplusage of all that he paid out in several sums respectively amounted to more then he laid out upon the Church and Library 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 says Demost orat 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 about the end The very Enemies of the dead cease to hate them when they are dead But as Anabaptists and Quakers say they are above Ordinances so it seems the Conscience of some Divines is above moral Niceties As to the Calumny squeeze it and in round Russian Language you shall wring out a great lye First before the Dean was Lord Keeper or dreamt of that honour that is before the Chapter had committed the Rents to his management he had repaired the great Ruins of the south side of the Church abutting upon the stately Chappel of Henry the Seventh If the Animadverter knew this why did he not separate it from that which was expended in those four years wherein he lays his Challenge● If he did not know it for it was done ten years before he was hatcht into a Prebend then when blind men throw stones whose head is not like to be broken For that which was laid out by the Lord Keeper to strengthen and beautifie the north side of the Abby to the end that the right Pay-master may be known and the mouth of all Detraction stopt the Chapter shall testifie in their Act as followeth Whereas there hath lately been divulged as we have heard an unjust report that the Right Honourable and Right Reverend Father in God the Lord-Bishop of Lincoln our Dean should have repair'd and new-built our Church on the north side of the same and south side of the Chappels belonging to it out of the Diet and Bellies of the Prebendaries and Revenues of our said Church and not out of his own Revenues We therefore the Prebendaries of the same with one consent do affirm That we verily believe the same to be a false and injurious Report And for our selves we do testifie every man under his own Protestation that we are neither the Authors nor Abettors of any such injurious Report untruly uttered by any mean man with intention to reflect upon his Lordship And this we do voluntarily record and witness by our Chapter Act dated this present Chapter Decemb. 8. 1628. Theo. Price Sub-Deacon Christopher Sutton George Darrel Gabriel Grant Jo. King Rob. Newell John H●lt Gr. Williams Whether will we believe eight men in their right minds or one in his rage To slight the Bishops erecting such a beautiful Pile the Library of St. John's Colledge and put that of Westminster with it he is as froward as a Child that hath worms in his Stomach and tells us that it possibly cost him more Wit than Money many Books being daily sent unto him Vis dicam tibi veriora veris Martial It was not only possible but very true For what Library no not the Bodleian the choicest of England but grew up and doth grow by contributory Oblations as Athenaeus says Lib. 8. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Symbols or Portions that many Friends bring in to furnish a publick work have good influence into it but the Founder is the Lord of the Ascendant A great deal of the like the Author hath crowded into a few Leaves I do not accuse it for want of Salt it is a whole Hogshead of Brine Wisely and mildly Melanchthou was wont to say Answer not Slanders but let them vanish Et si quid adhuc in hujus saeculi levitate quasi innat at brevi interiturum est cum autorum nominibus Camer p. 79. The worthy Works of the Bishop's excessive cost at Westminster and in both Universities will stand when Pamphlets shall be consum'd with moths The liberal deviseth liberal things and by liberal things he shall stand Isai 32.8 A fair walnut-Walnut-tree the more it bears the more it is beaten as it complains in the Greek Epigram 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But such as yield the fruits of good works in this world shall become Trees of Life hereafter as I have read it from some good Pen He is well that is the better for others but he shall be happy for whom others are the better 91. Method hath digested the troubles about the Deanry altogether which is the reason why this Paragraph recoils five years back that is to 1630 to make a transition into the next disturbance A Commission was directed this year to very honourable and knowing persons the Lord Privy Seal Earl of Arundel Vicount Wimbleton Lord Wentworth Sir Hugh Middleton Sir W. Slingsby Sir Hen. Spelman Ed. Ascough Th. Brett Th. Bridgman to question the oppression of exacted Fees in all Courts and Offices Civil and Ecclesiastical throughout all England A noble Examination and full of Justice if due and convenient Fees thereupon had been straitned and appointed which was frustrated two ways First by indigent and craving Courtiers who enquired after such as were suspected for Delinquency and of great Wealth with whom they compounded to get them Indempnity though not a Doit of a Fee were abated Secondly By vexatious Prosecutions of abundance that were Innocent before Sub-committees where Promoters got a great livelyhood to themselves to redeem them from chargeable Attendance which deserves such a Complaint as Budaeus
this Common-wealth is no more in being it sufficeth it hath been once and that planted by God himself who would never have appointed persons in Holy Orders to intermeddle with things they ought not to intermeddle withal I will go on with my Chronology of persons in Holy Orders and only put you in mind of Ely and Samuel among the Judges of Sadock's Employment under K. David of Jehojada's under his Nephew King Joash and would sain know what Hurt these men in Holy Orders did by intermedling in Secular Affairs of that time Now we are returned from the Captivity of Babylon I desire you to look upon the whole Race of the Maccab●s eve● to Antigonus the last of them all taken Prisoner by Pompey and 〈◊〉 afterwards by M Antony and shew me any of those Princes a Woman or two excepted that was not a Priest and a Magistrate 161. We are now come to Christ's time when methinks I hear St. Paul 23. of the Acts excuse himself for reviling of the High-Priest I wist not Brethren that he was the High-●iest for it is written Thoushalt not speak evil of the Ruler of thy People Where observe that the word Ruler in the Greek is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the very same word that is used by St. Paul Rom. 13.3 where this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is translated by Beza Magistrates Then you must be pleased to imagine the Church asleep or almost dead under Persecution for almost 300 years until the happy days of the Emperor Constantine and not expect to find many Magistrates among the Christians Yet you shall find St. Paul 1 Cor. 6.5 offend against this Bill and intermeddle Knuckle-deep with Secular Affairs by inhibiting the Corinthians very sharply for their Chicanery their Pettisoggery and common Barretry in going to Law one with another Besides that as all learned men agree both the Apostles and Apostolical men that lived presently after them had a miraculous power of punishing exorbitant Crimes which supplied the power of the ordinary Magistrate as appears in Ananias and Sapphira the incestuous Corinthian and many others But then from Constantine's Age till the Reformation began by Luther Churchmen were so usually employed in managing of Secular Affairs that I shall confess ingenuously it was too much there lying an Appeal from the Courts of the Empire to the Bishops Judicatory as you shall find it every where in the Code of Justinian So it was under Carolus Magnus and all the Carolovingian Line of our neighbour Kingdom of France So and somewhat more it was with us in the Saxon Heptarchy the Bishop and the Sheriff sitting together check by jowl in their Turns and Courts But these exorbitant and vast Employment in Secular Affairs I stand not up to desend and therefore I will hasten to the Reformation Where Mr. Calvin in the fourth Book of his Institutions and eleventh Distinction doth confess that the holy men heretofore did refer their Controversies to the Bishop to avoid Troubles in Law You shall find that from Luther to this present day in all the flux of Time in all Nations in all manner of Reformations persons in Holy Orders were thought fit to intermeddle in Secular Affairs Brentius was a Privy-Councillor to his Duke and Prince Functius was a Privy-Councillor to the great Duke of Boruss●a as it is but too notoriously known to those that are versed in Histories Calvin and Beza while they lived carried all the Council of the State of Geneva under their own Gowns Bancroft in his Survey c. 26. observeth that they were of the Council of State there which consisteth of Threescore And I have my self known Abraham Scultetus a Privy-Councillor to the Prince Palatine Reverend Monsieur Du Moulin for many years together a Councillor to the Princess of Sedan his Brother-in-law Monsieur Rivet a great learned Personage now in England of the Privy-Council of the Prince of Orange You all hear and I know much good by his former Writings of a learned man called Mr. Henderson and most of your Lordships understand better than I what Employment he hath at this time in this Kingdom And truly I do believe that there is no Reformed Church in the World settled and constituted by the State wherein it is held for a point in Divinity that persons in Holy Orders ought not to intermeddle with Secular Affairs Which is all I shall say of this Duty of Ministers in point of Divinity 162. Now I come to the second Duty of men in Holy Orders in point of Conveniency or Policy and am clearly of opinion that even in this Regard and Re●ection they ought not to be debarred from modestly intermeddling in Secular Affairs for i● there be any such Inconvenience it must needs arise from this That to exercise some Secular Jurisdiction must be evil in it self or evil to a person in Holy Orders Which is neither so nor so for the whole Office of a subordinate civil Magistrate is most exactly described in Rom. 13. v. 3 4. and no man can add or detract from the same The Civil Power is a Divine Ordinance set up to be a Terror to the Evil and an Encouragement to Good Works This is the whole compass of the Civil Power And theresore I do here demand with the most learned Bishop Davenant that within a few days did sit by my side in the Eleventh Question of his Determinations What is there of Impiety what of Unlawfulness what unbecoming either the Holiness or Calling of a Priest in terrifying the bad or comforting the good Subject in repressing of Sin or punishing of Sinners For this is the whole and entire act of Civil Jurisdiction It is in its own nature repugnant to no Person to no Function to no fort or condition of Men let them hold themselves never so holy never so seraphical it becomes them very well to repress Sin and punish Sinners that is to say to exercise in a moderate manner Civil Jurisdiction if the Soveraign shall require it And you shall find that this Doctrine of debarring persons in Holy Orders from Secular Employments is no Doctrine of the Reformed but the Popish Church and first brought into this Kingdom by the Popes of Rome and Lambeth Lanfrank Anselm Stephen Langton and the rest together with Otho and Ottobon and to this only end that the man of Rome might withdraw all the Clergy of this Kingdom from their obligation to the King and Nobility who were most of them great Princes in those times and thereby might establish and create as in great part he did Regnum in Regno a Kingdom of Shavelings in the midst of this Kingdom of England And hence came those Canons of mighty consequence able to shoot up a Priest at one shot into Heaven as that he must not meddle with matters of Blood that he must not exercise Civil Jurisdiction that he must not be a Steward to a Noble-man in his House and all the rest of this Palea and
For read him what he was indeed out of the Description which Tacitus gives lib. 16. Annal. circa finem to P. Egnatius Client to Soranus the famous Senator Cliens hic Sorani autoritatem Stoicae sectae praeferebat habitu ore ad exprimendam imaginem honesti exercitus caeterùm animo perfidiosus subdolus Yet this Stoical Gravity did not long conceal him but that his needless Vexations of harmless People his cutting Fees his Briberies and other Muck of the same Dunghil made an out-cry and put the King 's good People to seek a Remedy by preferring Articles against him at the Assizes where he was charg'd home with an Alphabet of Misdemeanors He pleaded to the general that he was so much despited because he had look'd more narrowly into the Disobedience of the Paritans then formerly had been used My Opinion is that such Physicians of no value Job 13.4 may cast the Water of such sick Distempers but will never heal them Infamous Judges may correct them they will never rectifie them For he that is fallen into a Moral Turpitude is soon convinc'd in his own Mind but he that is misguided by darkness of Understanding thinks that he doth right to his own Conscience by going wrong and is never so well reclaim'd as when he is mildly rebuk'd by them whose open Integrity and Pity justifie them that they walk as Children of the Light But for the Particulars which laid down so many Oppressions at the Official's door they were not Dust which would be brush'd away with the Fox Tail but Dirt that stuck to him till the Dean his Mediator obtain'd from the Judges a Reference to himself and some others for further Examination By which sly Diversion some of his Charges were laid aside by Composition all of them by delay and delusion After this what should be the End of it I know not without it were to make him look big and superciliously upon his Prosecutors the Dean engaged his Friends at Cambridge my self was one that was solicited from him to sublimate the Official with the Degree of a Doctor wherein he had one Repulse in the Regent-House such an ill relish his Name had but he was carried out in a second day's Scrutiny But for all his Doctorship he was not out of the Brakes he was but Tapisht as Hunters call it The stirring Spirits of the the subtle Air of Northamptonshire prefer'd their Articles afresh against him to the House of Commons assembled in Parliament an 1620. Wedges enough to cleave a bigger Log then Dr. Lamb and yet he was no little one but Saginati corporis bellua as Curtius says of Dioxippus the Pugil Well nay indeed ill his Friend that was too sure to such a branded Man now become the Dean of a College near to the Parliament finds the Articles in the hand of the Chair-man of the Committee appointed to sift the Complaints it was Sir Edward Sackvil afterward the brave-spoken Earl of Dorset with whom he wrought to abortive the Bill before it came to the Birth and so he set Dagon upon his Feet again who was fallen with his face upon the ground 1 Sam. 5.4 but the palms of his Hands were never cut off for so long as he lived he could take a Bribe I blush to remember that the Dean did not only set him up again as well as ever he stood before but raised him higher For he wrote to a great Lord in Court the Letter is among my Papers to procure him the Honour of Knighthood which was obtained And when his Enemies laboured to cut his Comb he got the Spurs 'T was pleasantly spoken by Sir Ed. Montagu since that Pious and Loyal Lord Montagu of Boughton when a cluster came about him to ask Counsel and Assistance for a third Petition against Sir John Lamb says Sir Edward If we tamper the third time his great Friend that hath already made him a Doctor and a Knight I fear will make him a Baron I have thus much to say for the Dean his friend whose very Entrails I knew that he was strongly espoused to love where he had loved and 't was hard to remove his Affections when good Pretences had gained them Chiefly he was of a most compassionate Tenderness and could not endure to see any Man's Ruine if he could help it And though Offences were as legible as a Dominical Letter he would excuse any thing that was capable of an Excuse as far as Wit and Mercy could contrive it But if a little Confession were wrung out it cut down many Faults to make him see as it were a Glade of Repentance in a Grove of Sins and did ever hope for better Fruits upon easie and formal Promises Let Quintilian help me out a little more in his sixth Declam Si angustus saltem detur accessus per quem intrare humanit as possit vera clementia occasione contenta est Yet David's Rule is better then all this Be not merciful to them that offend of malicious wickedness Psal 59.5 And our God is so merciful that whosoever adds a dram beyond his Pattern it must be reckoned for foolish and hurtful Lenity Certainly God was not pleased that the Dean would save a Man whom He meant to destroy 1 King 20.42 And though it slept Unpunished about 12 Years yet in the end the Lord awaken'd it with a Mischief through the treachery of that Man whom himself had protected 45. That which I have hitherto pass'd over was but his low and shrubbish Fortune compared with that Access which the Providence of God in short time after did cast upon him Which Providence is Religiously appeal'd to in all things yet without any check to Reason and Experience to trace it in its Manifestations The Omni-regency of Divine Providence is the Tree of Life in the midst of the Garden of the World the Strings of whose Root are secretly interwoven with all Works and Motions But the Sons of Adam are not content unless they taste of the Tree of Knowledge and have a Lust as far as Curiosity can pry to learn how God doth put the Issue of his Wisdom into outward and Instrumental Causes I am ready therefore to shew what Men will seek the Occasions which were in the way and who was Lord of the Ascendant when God did raise up this his Servant that he might set him with Princes even with the Princes of his People Psal 113.8 His Abilities were worthy of a great Place none so Emulous or so Envious that denied it Neither was there any Church-man in his time so likely to purchase a great Place with those Abilities He that will will read Budaeus his Epistle to his Notations upon the Pandects shall find this Character of Mons Peganay Chancellor of France Cujus ea vis fuisse ingenii at que animi cernitur ut quocunque loco natus esset in quodcunque tempus incidisset fortunam ipse sibi facturus videretur A Word as fit
of Anger in a Person of Honour chiesly if they be fierce will seem to be compounded with Pride and Haughtiness the Answer without struggling shall be with yielding and distinguishing It is granted that Anger and Pride are seldom parted Eccles 7.10 The patient in Spirit is better than the Proud in Spirit which infers that there is some Pride where there is not patience there is a Connexion between Evil Works every Offence against God is a Lump of Spawn a Row that will yield a Fry of Sins especially by the incubation of Custom and Impenitency In this knot and coherence of Sins a severe Casuist will tell you that there is no Sin committed without Pride in the Stomach of the Disobedient Questionless it putrifies somewhat in every Man's Heart by Original fomentation But there are Mountains of Pride and there are Hillocks no Fragment of so great a Sin is so little as a Mole Hill There is a proud Man who is a great Oppressor who would cast down all that are in his way and Trample upon them to ascend higher and higher upon their Subjection Pacatus says neatly in his Panegyric to Theod sius that the people could find no worse Name for Tarquinius the Tyrant than Tarquinius the Proud And upon Davids prayer to God to deliver him from the Horns of the Unicorn it is St. Austin's Note In Unicornibus superbi intelliguntur qui soli cupiunt eminere He is the single Horn of the Unicorn that in singularity of Pride would excell in Power and push all others down from whom let us all say with David Good Lord deliver us Herein he that I write of is nothing concern'd that Crime hath no similitude with his Mercy and Modesty There is a proud Man that Values his own Worth or rather no Worth in an high Estimation and above the common Level of Men like Julian the Renouncer of Christ that put scorn upon all Worthies Heathenish as well as Christian and this Great Idolater Worship'd nothing but himself This Arrow shoots wide from our present Mark Gods Grace be Thanked this Pride which hath the true Taste of Lucifer is rather begotten by Melancholy than by Anger It was not possible that one should be more liberal than Dean Williams was in Attributing due and down-Weight to every Man's Gifts his Candor made him praise every one promiscuously perhaps beside his Judgment and I have heard him prefer divers and very seriously before himself who came short a Mile and a way-bit This as it ought let it stand for a Flower of Humility for his erected Spirit so free from baseness would never stoop to Hypocrisie In fine there is a Pride when we Love our own Desires our own Delight and Satisfaction not only our Will but our Starts and Fancies so much in every thing that without open Offence taken we wil be cross'd in nothing It spurns at every Rub in the way it frets against Beasts nay against things insensible Now he that is disturb'd if he be not humor'd at every Turn must take this Rebuke with Patience that he is a proud Man This frailty was his blemish This last kind of Pride and Anger compounded together Yet I believe he might have been Tempted to be prouder in another kind if he had not been familiar with this infirmity But his insight into this defect begat in him a loathing of himself and a lowly mind Neither was he ignorant that some went beyond him in the cunning of getting Affections with a formal patience who were not his Paragons in Innocency and Cordial Humility Now let an Upright Moralist be the Judge of this Great Judge it is not for the satisfaction of a wrangling Mome for what can be expected from Crabs but Verjuice 70. The Abilities of the designed Lord Keeper were such and be it deliver'd impartially greater than are set forth as in time he made it good But when it came to be divulged that this preferment hovered over him it was much and dividedly spoken of as a Paradox of Honour Some could not believe it some said it was no New way but an Old one Renewed and God give him Joy of it Some did stomach it I must not say Envy it for Envy is so low and base a Sin that every Man though the most guilty of it will scorn to confess it The best Professors of our Laws took it sadly without doubt that one who did never Run in their Race had got their Garland Many others there were and ever will be that like Joseph's Brethren hate the very Dream of a Sheaf to which they must do Obeysance Therefore it requir'd the Art of a Wise Man to set up the Frame with that skill that it might be no Eye-sore to the Judicious beholder which was thus Effected Though the Grant of the Place was fixed upon this Man without any likelihood of Revocation yet he besought the King and obtain'd that Ten Weeks should run out before the Seal should be remanded from the Commissioners and put into his Custody A Benefit of sundry Advantages The least was that popular Discourse inclining much to descant upon this matter would spend it self away in two or three Months and as it were boyl from a Pint to a Spoonful It was further look'd into that he might have respite to study the Weight and Trust of the Office whereby to supply it with that skill as might in Candor be expected from a Beginner which he improved as far as could be done in so short a time having the assistance of Sir Harry Finch a most profound Lawyer whom he kept in his Lodgings from May to October following for all sorts of Advice The best Heifer he could have Plowed with to find out Riddles Jud. 14.18 What could not his quick capacity draw from such a Master Or what could not Industry reach to with that Capacity being of all Men perhaps above all men most Laborious and far from the sheepishness of Sloth the greatest blemish in our English Nation He had day enough also to look about him to enquire for able and honest Servants to be prefer'd into the Chief places of Fidelity under him which succeeded with that praise of Judgment and Blessing of Success that certainly God was at his Right hand in it some of his Followers were as Learned Gentlemen as our Kingdom had No man that knew them will deny that to be due to Sir William Boswel and Mr. Edward Palmer All of them were of Vertuous Conversation Grave Deportment greatly experienced in the World Sober Civil Uncorrupt in a Word it was a Ship of Argonautes so that I have heard of our Honourable Peerage and of the worthy Judges then Living not a sew affirm that an Houshold so Excellently model'd was one of the most evident things that discover'd the great Wisdom of the Master Other things likewise in the Interlunium as I may call it of that Great Office were spread abroad by Fame and very justly
not in God's Harvest The antient Christians that desaced Idols of Silver and Gold would Purse none of the Metal for fear of giving Scandal to the Heathen Stilico demolished some such Images and he and his Wife were found to wear the Ornaments that had belonged to them for which they were cry'd out upon says Baronius An. 389. c. 57. Quia apud antiquae probitatis Christianos nefas erat in Idola grassari ut in usum privatum aliquid verteretur ut appareat pietate nos ista destruere non avaritiâ A very wise and a pious Course for an avaricious Zeal is a poysoned Cordial And few will captivate their Understanding to edifie by a Sacrilegious Reformer I hope Loosers may have Leave to breath out their Sorrows especially for Sion's sake However I beseech God to preserve his Ark among us though the Pot of Manna be lost to bless the pure Doctrine and the Sacraments of the Gospel to all to whom they belong that the Infant be not rob'd of the one nor such as are of grown Age of the other Then as the Earth is the Lords in all its Fulness so the true Church is Christ's in all its Penury and Emptiness And this is enough to let the Reader see what was intended to be made good before that a most Church-loving was a most happy Parliament 195. Yet no feast was ever so bountiful but some went away unsatisfied and no Court was ever so Righteous upon Earth but some Appellants thought they were prejudiced If any man had Cause to complain of the Justice of this Parliament it was the Lord Treasurer Cranfield About whose Tryal if I should ask as the Pharises did about Divorces Is it lawful to censure a principal Officer for eve-Cause I must say as Christ answered them From the Beginning it was not so A Parliament is a Judge among Gods a Terror to Magistrates that are a Terror to any but to them that deserve Evil the only or the best Inquisitor into the Ways of them that Rule in high Places that he that stands may take heed least he fall But if it grow common if every Session make it their Work or their Recreation to hunt such Game down and root up Cedars that might have stood without Offence Moderation will be desired and the Prudent will think it is not fit many a Week should be lost anent the providing of good Laws when a Month or two pass over in bringing a white Staff or some such Grandee to the Stake to be baited by Informers The Lord Treasurer had some Petitions preferred against him in March which at first he laugh'd at and thought to scorn them down with Unguiltiness For who regards the first Grudgings of a Sickness Yet none perish sooner than they that are not provident against the first beginning of an Evil. The Petitioners were countenanced because he whose Harm they sought was one that was not beloved 'T is true he was surly and of hard Access But be it remembred he sate in his great Places not to be popular and get Affections but to be Just and to Husband the Revenue of the Crown with Prudence But subtle Knavery is like to be longer unquestioned than rough-cast Innocency He was charged with Corruption and sordid Bribery all the while many Sages contended that the Proofs came not home to a full Discovery One press'd it close that he gave him Five hundred Pound to break well through a long Suit in the Court of Wards To which the Treasurer answered That the Money was paid him for a Place in the Custom-House for which the Complainant had often moved him which his Secretaries and other Witnesses made good and that upon the Payment of that Sum one of the Six and thirty Portions in the Custom-House was reserved for him Albeit the weight of this suspected Bribe not a Bur hanging upon his Gown beside press'd him down in the Conclusion This was not to turn Foxes into Fleas a Bed as H. Grotius doth in his Notes upon the Canticles but it is to turn Fleas into Foxes or rather Flea-bites into the mortal Spots of the Pestilence Whether the Treasurer had great Faults it is uncertain and waits Report but 't is sure he had great Adversaries The Duke of Buckingham and all his Party appeared against him Whereupon Sir A. Wel. the most virulent Defamer of the Lord Treasurer writes That a small Accusation as his was would serve to turn him out of his Honor whom the Duke did then oppose But why did his Grace heave at his Cousin by Marriage 't is very dark It seems the Courtiers had no Mind to let us know it For as Lampridius Notes in Vit. Alex. Sev. Secreta omnia in aulâ esse cupiunt ut soli aliquid scire videantur It is perhaps that the Treasurer would have brought a Darling Mr. Arthur Bret his Countess's Brother into the King's Favour in the great Lord's Absence Or that he grudg'd that the Treasury was exhausted in vast Issues by the late Journey into Spain and denied some Supplies Or that he dealt too plainly at the Council-Table in giving no kind Ear to his Cousin's Relations of his Doings at Madrid having not the Art to catch his Affections in the Springes of Flattery But down the Duke cast him as me-seems being not aware how every man hath so many Relations that he that destroys one Enemy makes himself ten more Or as I heard another say long ago much better upon it that my Lord of Buckingham did never undo any of his Enemies but he ruin'd many of his Friends And in this Lord 's Overthrown the Prince abetted him was Privy to the Undertakings of his Adversaries and accompassed Suffrages to Condemn him The bitter Welden P. 168. could not res●ain to Comment upon it That the Prince discerned so much Juggling in the Parliament in Cranfield's Case that it was not much to be wondred at being come to be King that he did not affect them King James being all that time of this Storm not at Newmarket as our late Mistakers say but at Greenwich was so sad that a trusty Servant and an able should be thus handled forced from him and quipt every day with ignominious Taunts that the kind Correspondencies between him and the Parliament began to have a Cloud over them He courted many to take side with his Treasurer and prevailed little because the most did love to warm themselves in the Light of the Rising Sun He tutored his Son the Prince that he should not take part with a Faction in either House but so reserve himself that both Sides might seek him and chiefly to take heed how he bandied to pluck down a Peer of the Realm by the Arm of the Lower House for the Lords were the Hedge between himself and the People and a Breach made in that Hedge might in time perhaps lay himself open But the Duke had thrust on the Prince so far that he could not retreat
to decline that Extremity the most of the Lords who endeavour'd to do all the Favour that they durst shew concluded upon a Fine of 10000 l. Imprisonment in the Tower during Pleasure which had been but short as they were assured before if the King had been but left to his own gracious Gentleness and to be suspended during Pleasure in the High-Commission-Court from all his Jurisdiction Which Suspension pass'd in that Commission July 23. And it would not be pass'd over that Sir Ed. Littleton then L. Chief-Justice of the Common-Pleas Anno 1640. in the Month of July brought Lincoln to Lambeth face to face with the L. of Canterbury when Lincoln told his Grace That the Commission under the Great Seal had not a word in it to enable him to suspend either Bishop or Priest by direction from a Sentence of Star-chamber but only for Offences specified in the Commission and that the Fact which His Grace had done had brought him and the Commissioners into a Praemunire To which the Archbishop answered That he had never read the Commission A learned Satisfaction Was it not when he had censur'd so many by the Power of that Commission which he confest he had never read But consider now as Isocrates pleaded it well ad Plat. p. 456. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Whether it be right to inflict such unjust and grievous Penalties upon such petty pretended Misdemeanors Or did not the Latin Orator provide better against it Cic. 1. de Off. Cavendum ne major poena quàm culpa sit ne iisdem de causis alii plectantur alii ne appellentur quidem And let those who meet with this Narration be acquainted that albeit the Compact was in the Inner Chamber that the Lords should speak all the same in their Judgment yet a little Vanity slipt from some few to ease their Stomach The L. Finch said That if it had liked others he would have laid some Ignominy on the Bishop's person Promptum ad asperura ingenium Tac. An. lib. 1. So this Lord look'd on the Bishop's Cause not only with a blear'd but with a blood-shotten Eye for it was conceived he meant the cutting off his Ears who had never sate a Judge in all likelihood if this Bishop being then L. Keeper had not prevented him from leaving his Calling and travelling beyond Seas from which courses he kept him by fair Promises to provide for him and he made them good I will name the time and place Aug. 1621 and the Earl of Exeter's House in St. John's Close Mr. Secretary Winnebanke said It was his desire if it might have seemed good to others to have the Bishop degraded Hold Sir Francis and learn the Canons of the Church it is not in the Power of Laymen to degrade Bishops at their discretion and as little can a Knight depose a Peer of the upper House of Parliament for he that can thrust a Bishop out of that House why not as well an Earl or a Duke But Sir Francis shewed his Good will as the Athenians did to Philip the Son of Demetrius in Livy Additum est decreto ut si quid postea quod ad noxam ignominiamque Philippi pertineret adderetur id omne populum Atheniensium jussurum Dec. 4. lib. 1. Then comes in the Archbishop with a Trick to hoise up the Bishop with some Praise that it might push him in pieces with a greater Censure That when he thought upon this Delinquent's Learning Wisdom Agility in Dispatch Memory and Experience that accompanied him with all these Endowments he wondred at his Follies and Sins in this Cause O Sins by all means for by dioptrical Glasses some find Blemishes in the Sun Telescopia fabri facimus ut in sole maculas quaeramus says Alex. More in his Preface to Strangius's learned Book So upon this matter his Grace took up no less than a full Hour to declaim against the horrid Sin of Perjury and in this Cause he might as well have spoken against the horrid Sin of Piracy So he lays all his Censure upon that Charge Spirat inexhaustum flagranti pectore sulphur as Claudian of Enceladus The Auditors thought he would never have made an end till at last he pleaded for more Right to be done Sir J. Mounson The Lords let me say it freely and truly had overshot themselves to fine the Bishop to pay Sir John a Thousand Marks for saying that his Charge against Pregion was a Pocket-Order It is confess'd the Bishop said so and said the Truth But beside the Bishop pleaded that he heard it of T. Lund Lund stands to it that he told it the Bishop yet the Bishop is censur'd and Lund that took it upon himself is not question'd But the L. of Canterbury who did ever mount highest in all Censures said He was sorry the Fine was not a Thousand pounds 120. This is the shutting up of the Censure grievous to the Bishop's Purse and Liberty but not a whit to his Honour and Good Name which was so esteem'd by almost all that heard the actings of that day and shook their Heads at them As Cicero says in pro Plancio Opimii calamitas turpitudo Po. Ro. non judicium putandum est I that write this was chosen to bring the relation of this Censure to the Bishop then hard at his Study which he received with no change at all of his Countenance or Voice but only said Now the Work is over my Heart is at rest so is not many of theirs that have censured me And here began the way to Episcopal Disgrace and Declension It was his turn now it was Canterbury's not long after Howl fir-Fir-tree for the Cedar is fallen Zech. 11.3 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Salmasius of the Elephant and Dragon in Solinum p. 307. The Vanquish'd was cast down and the Conqueror fell likewise When such a Pillar of the Church was demolish'd with Prosecutions so uncover'd to every Eye so transparent that you might see the Blush of Injustice quite through them how ominous was it to the higher and lower Dignities of the Clergy As Mr. Morice says in his Coena 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 354. Perhaps it may be with them as with Staddels in a Wood which scarce ever prosper when their fellows are cut down and themselves left naked And what became in three years or little more of that Honourable Court of Star-chamber of which the L. Coke says That in the right institution and the ancient Orders of it being observ'd it keeps all England in quiet But in some late Causes it grew distasteful even to wonder as in that of the Soap-boilers and that of London Derry that of Mr. Osbolston nay in that of Prynn Bastwick and Burton men not to be favour'd in the matter of their seditious Writings but for their Qualities and Places sake to be pitied for the Indignity done to their Persons which I receive from a wise Hand Bodin de Rep. l. 6. c. 6. Legibus