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A30679 Advice to the Commons within all His Majesties realms and dominions written by Jacob Bury, Esq. ... ; containing the perfect harmony, consent and agreement between divinity and law, in defence of the government established by law in church and state, and that kingly government is by divine right. Bury, Jacob. 1685 (1685) Wing B6212; ESTC R6090 62,727 80

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pretended Birthright and Inheritance floweth only from the Kings Primitive Grace and Favour and that they would not pray that de Gratiâ of Grace if they had any Colour to claim the same de Jure of Right And the renewing of this Petition every Parliament proves the Grant to be but Temporary But the late Usurpers pretended they had Priviledge granted to them to sit by the Mentioned Act of Continuance c. And therefore all fair Offers from his said Majesty for Publick Good and for the Preservation of the Government in Church and State were afterwards interpreted a Breach of Priviledge Though the soundest Lawyers of that time were of Opinion that the said Act of Continuance was Void in it self in regard that what Grants or Concessions soever the King makes the Law presupposeth they are always with this Provisoe Salvo jure regio salvo jure Coronae In the 20th of Rich. the Second it may be seen in Mr. Howe 's Chronicle that a Parliament holden at Westminster was Ordained to endure Forty eight days but it was Abridged for the King would not tarry there more than Five days wherein he declared the things pertaining to the Realm especially such Matters as touched himself c. One property of every good Law of Man is that the Maker exceed not his Authority which certainly they did that framed that Bill for the Act of Continuance c. And Coke 10th rep 57. b. it is agreed that Parliamentum testamentum arbitramentum are to be construed according to the intention of the Makers the said King certainly intended not thereby to Exclude himself because by the Laws of our Land it cannot properly be said a Parliament unless it be consisting of King Lords and Commons And if Kingly Government be constituted by Divine Right then St. Jermyn tells us that Customs and Statutes are void that are against the Law of God and so that Act was null in its own Nature at the very first and the proposal of it was Treason in a high degree Parliamentary Priviledges are but Temporary and are not in them till asked by their Speaker Precario and granted by their Sovereign But Mr. Plowden Fol. 322. b. saith that every Prerogative of the King containeth in it self a Prescription for it resteth in usage And Fol. 319. b. and 322. a. he saith that the Prerogative of the King may not be said to be torcius that is consonant to reason and hath been used from time to time in the time of one King after another for the Law is not known if not by usage and usage proveth that it is Law And Fol. 322. a. and 323. he saith all the Prerogatives mentioned in the Statute of Prerogativa Regis made in 17o. Ed. 2 di were in the King by the Common Law before the said Statute and many others and Fol. 318. a. he saith It is a commendable thing for the King to abstain from the extremity of his Prerogative of his special grace in benefit of his Subjects but withall saith that the Law doth not force him so to do And Sir Ed. Coke in the First part of his Institutes Fol. 90. b. saith that Praerogativa is derived of prae id est ante and rogare that is to ask or Demand before hand whereof cometh Prerogativa and is denominated of the most excellent part because though an Act hath passed both the Houses of the Lords and Commons in Parliament yet before it be a Law the Royal Assent must be asked or Demanded and Obtained Bracton li. jo calleth it libertatem in another place privilegium Regis Britton Fol. 27. calleth it droit le Roy the Right of the King the Register of the Writs calleth it jus regium Coronae the Royal or Regal Right of the Crown And Mr. Stanford in Praerog Fol. 5. a. b. saith Praerogativa is as much to say as a Priviledge or Preeminence that one person hath before another which as it is tolerable in some so it is most to be permitted and allowed in a Prince or Soveraign Governour of a Realm for besides that he is the most worthyest or excellent Part or Member of the body of the Commonwealth so is he also through his good Governance the preserver nourisher and defender of all the People being the rest of the same body for which cause the Laws do attribute unto him all Honour Dignity Prerogative and Preeminence It is said Coke 7. 10. b. and 11. a. That the King is an absolute Prince before his Coronation which is but a Royal Ceremony Ornament and Solemnization of the Royal Descent but no part of the Title and that Rex non est Rex quia Coronatur sed Coronatur quia est Rex The King is not a King hecause he is Crowned but he is Crowned because he is a King And Coke 11.72 a. The King is said to be sponsus Regni and per annulum by a Ring is said to be espoused to the Realm at his Coronation which is a great Mark of Soveraignty and Power in the King over his People for admit the King to be sponsus the Bridegroom or new Married Man and the Realm to be sponsa the Bride or new Married Woman at this Solemnity of his Coronation every Woman is sub potestate viri sui under the Power of ber Husband ipse dominabitur ejus and he shall Rule or Reign over her by Gods Law Gen. 3.16 and our Law doth not estrange the Husband of any Interest Prerogative or thing that the Wife hath at the time of the intermarri●ge or after But as in all Rebellions so in the late time of Rebellion the Woman wore the Breeches as is easily proved by the Money Coined in those times Also in Coke 7. 10. b. The King is said to be pater patriae the Father of his Country which is another Mark of his Soveraignty and Supream Power for at the beginning of Kingdoms when all the World consisted of a few Housholds the Elder or Father of the Family exercised Authority over his Meyney and did distribute reward or punishment amongst them after his own discretion all which aforesaid is agreeing with what the Poet saith Jura dant singuli natis uxoribus every single individual Person gives Laws to his Wife and Children This was patria potestas Fatherly power the fountain of Regia potestas Kingly power and so Regia potestas is lege Naturae non arbitrio populi and so Kingly Authority is by the Law of Nature not by the Will Power or Arbitrement of the People leges Naturae perfectissimae sunt immutabil●s and the Laws of Nature are the most perfect and not to be Altered or Changed No sooner was there a Houshold but there was a Soveraign All regal Authority was then included in the Office of Father And therefore God Almighty in giving the Fifth Commandment called the Crown Commandment Honour thy Father and thy Mother intended the Duty belonging to all Magistrates Afterwards
their ill Fortunes comes it blinds their Eyes that they cannot discern it and binds their Hands that they cannot help it making them Instruments against themselves in the Execution of their mishaps His said Majesty King Charles the First was brought into great Streights he meaned well was much pleased in his Parliament and thinking to have preserved the Love of his Subjects thereby he was not so Tenatious as he ought to have been but cared not to lessen himself in the greatest points of his wonted Prerogative thinking he might have been no looser but that he might have gained a Recompence in his Subjects Affections he never bare any touch of Conscience ●ith greater regret than that Matter related to the Death of that Noble Learned and Loyal Earl of Strafford he passed the Bill for the Triennial Parliaments and withal settled that Parliament during the pleasure of the Two Houses then Mr. Lowry one of the Burgesses for the Town of Cambridge writ word to his Wife for Newse that the King had Passed an Act for a Triennial Parliament every year the Fishmonger spake truer than he was aware of for such construction was made thereof by those who intended Ingratefully and Wickedly to take Advantage of his large Concessions that the one with the other amounted to as much as to the Perpetuating that Parliament Whereas he hoped by this Act of high Confidence to have shut out and locked the Door upon all present Jealousies and future Mistakes they intended no less than to shut their King out of Doors and by Colour thereof to Rob and Denude him of all his Royal Power both in Church and State Then the Press and the Pulpit joyned to make the King Odious and all Artifices were used to raise Money for the Raising and Maintenance of their Armies After a Royal Subsedy of 400000 l. they next had Poll Money then after they hedged in an incredible Sum by way of free Loanes and Contributions upon the Publick Faith then the Irish Adventures for the Sale of Lands and the general Collection for the relief of the Distressed Protestants in Iroland brought in vast Sums of Money whereof the Tweentieth part was not imployed to the right use then they had an Imposition upon a Weekly Meal and a Loane from the City after the rate of five Subsedies besides the Five and twentieth part then there was an Assessment for bringing in the Scots besides several Weekly Assessments for their several Armies then they had the benefit of Kings Queens and Princes Revenues Sequestrations and Plunder by Committees and Compositions with Delinquents as they were pleased to call them did arise to such Sums as passed all understanding besides the Excise Fortification Money and vast Sums made by Sale of Bishops Deans and Chapters Lands to be short they Assumed to themselves all the Regalias of the Crown they Seized upon Sword Great Seal and Soveraignty upon the Customs the Militia and all the marks of Majesty nay they did Arrogate to themselves the Legislative and Supreme Power and they wanted not Commissioners of the Great Seal Judges Justices Publicans and all Officers for all Offices whatsoever That for the greatest part of them forsook their good Old Master as Demas is said to have forsaken St. Paul to embrace this present World They wanted not other mighty Advantages for they had all the Tenable places and Towns of Strength both by Sea and Land they had all the Navy Royal they had the Tower of London with all the Ammunition and Arms of the Crown and one Advantage they had exceeded all the rest they had the City of London which may be called the great Magazine of Men and Money where there is a ready supply of all things that may Cloath and make Men Gay and Gallant to put them in Heart and Resolution We with the said King had only this Advantage that we had the Word of God and the Laws of the Land for our Justification together with the great Tye and Bond of our Allegiance all which required our Obedience to the said Kings just Commands but to none other without him or against him in the Point of raising Arms Virgilii Aeneid jamque faces saxa volant furor Arma ministrat CHAP. IV. Sheweth how the King the Loyal Party and the Law suffered Violence GRievous were the various Effects and sad Events of the late Civil War Force was repelled with Force and the Publick Polemical Sword aggregate and made up of all the Ammunition and Arms and Military Strength of the Three Kingdoms the just Indubitable and Inalienable Right of King Charles the First in all his Dominions by vertue of his Royal Seigniory was put into the Hands of the People for the Protection and Security of those then at Westminster from the Law who against Law Ruled not but rather Overruled their fellow Subjects at and after their own Wills and Pleasures and did cut large Thongs out of others Hides to alter the Government in Church and State for no other reason but that they themselves could not be safe under the same they could not be Happy unless King Charles the First were Miserable they could not enjoy their Lives Peace and Liberties but they must first destroy his Friends and afterwards in cold Blood Barbarously Murder him Imparallel'd and unheard of Cruelty Monstrous Impudence and Impiety Killed their King nay their Good and Godly King It went not against their Consciences because he made a Conscience to Deny them what according to good Conscience he could not Grant them I remember in time before the late War above Forty years since in an old Obsolete Author I met with this passage Certant haec duo plerumque invicem inter se Rex populus quorum si vicerit unus personam induit tyranni si vincitur tot millia tyrannorum quot capitum nascuntur Crudelior autem semper est tyrannis multorum quam unius which Englished is That these Two that is to say the King and People do oftentimes Struggle are in Conflict and Strife between themselves of whom if one that is to say the King do overcome then he becomes a Tyrant but if he be overcome thence proceed rise up or take beginning to be so many Thousand Tyrants as there be Heads of Rebels or of single Individual Persons engaged in the Rebellion and concludes that more Cruel is the Tyranny of many than of one The whole truth of the Conclusion was lately seen in the Tyranny of a company of Men sitting at Westminster called Lords and Commons who Arbitrarily Reigned and Ruled over their fellow Subjects according to their Wills and Pleasures as if the Issue of the Fightings of their Armies had been centured only in the making of the People of the Kingdom Slaves Then followed the contempt and Oppression of the Clergy and sacrilegious Invasions were made upon the Rights of the Church and Men of the Church injurious Diminutions and Persecutions of the Loyal
King And as in Bracton cited by Stanf. 99. b. Since nihil aliud potest Rex in terris cum sit Dei Minister Vicarius quam quod de jure potest ita quod potestas juris sua est non injuriae c because the King as he is Gods Minister and Vicegerent can do nothing upon the Earth but what he may do by Law so that the Power of Equity and Justice not of injury and Injustice is properly said to be his Power Therefore his late Sacred Majesty not being minded to Calm the Stormes of some discontented Spirits by stirring up a Tempest in his own Bosom was pleased at the opening of the late Parliament at Westminster to signifie to the Two Houses that he desired them to preserve the Succession of the Crown in the right Line and withall intimated to them that he would give his Royal Assent to any Laws they should devise or make for the Security of the Protestant Religion as it is now Established by Law in the Church of England or to that Effect but we are living in faece seculi in the very Dregs and the very last and worst of Days we are Jealous again of our own shadows nay we mistrust Gods Providence and Protection and the Kingdom again is like to be ruined by secret Plots and Machinations We have for many years by the wonderful Providence of God been delivered from the Slavery and Superstition of Popery And yet nothing is now more feared than the Introduction and Publick exercise of Popery again in these Kingdoms Although as King James the First the Royal Grandfather of our gracious Soveraign Lord King James the Second in his first Speech to his first Parliament next after his Advent to the Crowns of England and Ireland did declare that it was then our happiness that our Head meaning himself was of the same Religion that the Body was of and that as he was no stranger to us in Blood no more was he a stranger to us in Faith or in the matters concerning the House of God so likewise his Sacred Majesty whom God long preserve in his first Speech to his Privy Counsel next after his first Advent to the Crowns of Great Brittain and Ireland hath been Graciously Pleased to Declare that he will do his utmost endeavours to Preserve and Defend the Government in Church and State as it is now Established by Law in his several Realms and Dominions And besides divers other undeniable Arguments might demonstrate that his late Sacred Majesty or his dear Royal Brother now King James the Second never intended in their Imaginations the least thought to make any alteration of the Protestant Religion as it is Established by Law in the Church of England that further happy alliance of Marriage contracted and Consummated between the Eldest Daughter of his Royal Majesty and the most Illustrious Prince of Orange And a later Marriage contracted also and Consummated between his Younger Daughter and the most Illustrious Prince George of Denmark most clearly confirms the reality of their intentions herein by which Nuptial engagements it appears further that their joint endeavours have been not only to defend uphold and maintain a bare profession thereof in these his Majesties Dominions but also to enlarge and corroborate it abroad as much as lyeth in their Power Do we not know that when a Protestant Prince is to intermarry with a Forreign Princess of the Catholick Religion what great care and provision is made by the Parents or Friends on either side by Articles made and confirmed by some Ministers of State equally chosen and impowered for the purpose of her having a set number of Priests and other Ministers and Servants of her Judgment and Profession for the due Administration and Execution only of such Rites and Ceremonies as are proper for her having and enjoying that Freedom and Liberty that is agreeable to the Rule of her Conscience in that Religion wherein she hath been born and educated And I pray in the time of his late Sacred Majesty by whom the true Protestant Religion was professed that by Law is Established why might not some wholesome Law or Laws have been made by the great Council the Parliament for the prevention of the extirpation of the Protestant Religion and the setting aside those Idle and Aiery Jealousies of the Massacre of the true professors thereof after his Demise or Death But alas I fear I am mistaken in or do not put the question right there are divers Sects and not Religions such as are called Presbyterians Anabaptists Independents Quakers and I know not how many sorts of Novelists amongst us that had not only their Birth and Production but also their full growth in the late times of Usurpation and Rebellion who though they differ in judgment amongst themselves yet in this as formerly they are all still agreeing that if they had but the opportunity they would all shake hands and join together in being against the Kings Supremacy in Church and State as much if not more than the Papists For these several sorts of Sects do not so much differ from us in points of Religion as in their confused form of Policy and Parity being ever discontented with the present Government and are impatient to suffer any Superiority which maketh these Sects unable to be suffered in any well governed State or Kingdom But if we take into serious consideration that it is above Forty years since the late times of Rebellion and that every Individual person now living and that hath since attained to the Age of Fifty years or thereabouts were then Children and had not the discretion to discern or put a difference between good and evil if we consider the great changes and mighty revolutions the Metamorphosis and Transposition of all things in point of Government then and afterwards in time till his late sacred Majesties most happy Restauration then all these Sects or most of them I hope will be ready to conclude with me that they did not nor could know better because that in their Youth in stead of better and more wholsome nutriment they sucked in were nursed and educated in those bad times upon Venomous and Rebellious Principles Quo semel est imbuta recens fervabit odorem Horace Testa diu c. Accordingly what Children have been instructed or Grammard in in their Youth it is hard for them to leave in their Old or Elder years some of these several Sects do still retain their first drunken in Liquor upon a certain shamefacedness to be thought curious or changeable others of them that are more Willful and Obstinate will not be reformed because contrary to St. Pauls advice Rom. 12.16 they are wise in their own conceit and will not be informed CHAP. XI Sheweth that Ignorance of the Law will excuse none and that therefore all Dissenters to the Government in Church and State are advised to Conformity IT is horrible that St. Paul saith they that
their own Wills and Pleasures There is no Government more resembling Heaven or more durable on Earth or that hath any certain principles but Monarchy and such a Monarchy that hath an actual visible military strength to support it self not only to protect the Good and Loyal but also to awe the Bad and Rebellious People The King represents God the Houses of Parliament the People And as in some sort is expressed before the King by his Writ gives the very essence and form to his Parliament being the production of his breath therefore Priviledges which are the consequences of the Form must necessarily flow from him Now would you know how to Elect Men Fearing God Honouring the King and such as will not meddle with those that are given to change Know a●d take notice that true Religion is the well tempered Mortar that buildeth up all Estates that there can be no true Religion where the word of God is wanting or not duly observed I have proved from and made it plain to you that the word of God condemneth and prohibiteth all mutinous Rebellious Actions whatsoever against the Magistrate either Supream or Subordinate And because there can be no surer sign of the ruine of a Kingdom than the contempt of Religion My Advice is to all that they would Conform but as to such that will not Conform nor be Reformed nor advised to joyn with us in the way Established by Law for the Service and Worship of God because they are either stubborn obstinate or wise in their own conceits and will not be informed such as these that are Dissenters from us in the better half of the Government that is to say in the Government of the Church I pray that as they absent themselves from us in the Divine Service and Worship of God so they would be pleased to absent and separate themselves from the publick meetings in their several Counties for the Choosing and Electing of Members to sit in Parliament for the future for as the Vessel savoureth of the same Liquor wherewith it was first seasoned so it is to be feared the mind of these Dissenters still retaineth those very qualities in their Elder Age wherein it was trained up in Youth However by their absence their misguided Consciences will be clear and the more Loyal and conformable Subjects by their so doing will be less offended and disturbed in their choise and Election of such as themselves that may better Comply than heretofore they did with his late Sacred Majesty in making and constituting such wholesome Laws and Provisions as may make for the security and preservation of our Protestant Religion which is confirmed by Scripture and History of Ancient Fathers in the Primitive Church to be agreeing in Doctrine and Discipline with the truly Ancient Catholick and Apostolick Christian Religion and Profession as it is now Established by Law in the Church of England CHAP. XIX Sheweth that the King of England is and always hath been Supream Head of the Church not the Pope FOR we are to know and understand that the King of England is in all Causes as well Ecclesiastical as Temporal within these his Majesties Realms and Dominions Supream Head and Governour By the Ancient Law of the Realm the King hath power to visit reform and correct all Abuses and Enormities in the Church and by the Statutes made in the time of King Henry the Eighth the Crown was but remitted and restored to its Ancient jurisdiction which was Usurped by the Bishop of Rome Reges sacro oleo uncti spiritualis jurisdictionis sunt capaces Kings Anointed with Holy Oyl are capable of Spiritual Jurisdiction And 10. H. 7. 18. Rex est persona mixta cum sacerdote the King is said to be a Person mixt or participating with the Priest in the Priesthood Also the King shall have Tythes by the Common Law of which no Lay Person can be capable And the King by himself or by his Commissioners shall visit his free Chappels and Hospitals And by the Cannon Law Omnes Reges dicuntur Clerici and another Text thereof saith quod causa Spiritualis committi potest Principi laico All Kings are said to be Clarks and that however a Spiritual Cause may be determined by a Lay Prince as may be seen in Davyes rep 4. a. And although the proceedings in the Ecclesiastical Courts be in the Name of the Bishop yet they are the Courts and Law of the King as the Leet though it be holden in the Name of the Lord of the Manour yet it is the Court of the King C. 5. 1. part 39. b. The Canonists ascribe to the Pope Prerogative as to the Interpretation of Laws and granting of Dispensations but the jurisdiction that the Pope by Colour thereof claimed in England was a meer Usurpation to which the Kings of England as I shall presently shew you from time to time made opposition even to the time of King Henry the Eighth And the King of England not the Pope before the making the Statute of Faculties might de jure of right dispence with the Ecclesiastical Law for though that many of our Ecclesiastical were first devised in the Court of Rome yet being established and confirmed in this Realm by acceptance and usage they are now become English Laws and are no more to be reputed Romish Cannons and they are to be observed as the Laws of the Kingdom of England and not to be esteemed or reputed as Rules of the Pope Davyes rep 71 72. And the King is Supream Patron as King and not as in respect of the Supream Jurisdiction that the Realm by the Statute hath acknowledged in him Therefore a Resignation to the King of a Deanry is as good as if it had been made to the Bishop because that by the Common Law he is the Supream Head of the Church of England and the Deanry is void by it And the King shall be made privy and shall give his consent to every Appropriation where the Church is of the Patronage of another as well as where it is of his own Patronage Plowd 498 499. And it appeareth by Doctor and Student 124 125. That the Law hath appointed Six Months unto the Patron to present his Clark unto the Bishop but if the Patron do not present his Clark unto the Bishop within Six Months next after the Church shall become void then shall the Lapse incur to the Bishop and he shall present for the default of the Patron a Clark of his own choosing and his presentation is called Collation and if the Bishop or Ordinary surcease his time and shall not Collate within the Six Months then shall the Metropolitan the Archbishop of the Province Collate his Clark and if he do not Collate within other Six Months then shall the Kings Majesty not the Pope as Supream Ordinary of all the Benefices in England present his Clark to the Church And all the Archbishopricks and Bishopricks within the Realm of England are
to restrain and be a curb to such as will not Conform and be Obedient to those Rules the Law prescribeth requiring their Obedience to the Magistrates Superior Middle and Inferior and as all are to know the Superior is not nor can be subject to the controul of the Inferior In pares est nullum imperium multo minus in eos qui majus imperium habent therefore all Magistrates Subordinate be they either of the Superior Middle or Inferior Rank and à fortiori all other Subjects whatsoever are to be Obedient to their Soveraign Lord the King as Supream qui majus imo maximum imperium habet that hath the greater yea the greatest Command Power and Supream Soveraignty over all his Subjects in these his Majesties Realms and Dominions But as to this matter of the Kings Supremacy in Church and State Here I shall say no more but shall leave all to be further informed as to their bounden Duties therein in this ensuing Treatise wherein is more fully and at large discoursed thereof I remember in this ensuing Discourse also is said citing Sir Edward Coke in 7th Report 7. b. in Calvins Case that every Subject is bound to go with the King in his Wars infra extra Regnum but he is there pleased to add that the Subject is not compellable to go out of the Kingdom without Wages and citeth many Statutes as 8th Ed. the 3d. ca. 7th c. in defence of his opinion I do not presume to contradict him but am satisfied that he sheweth good warrant for what he there Writeth Moreover no considerable Foreign War upon any occasion whatsoever is ever so rashly undertaken but first the King useth to Summon his great Council the Parliament and therein is the Honour Interest and safety of the King and Kingdom considered and Parliamentary Supplies are granted for the defraying carrying on and answering the necessary charges of the War however Sir Ed. Coke denieth not but infra regnum within the Kingdom all are compellable and bound by duty of their Allegiance with or without Wages to serve the Lord the King in his Wars for then if ever that saying is true ad regem potestas omnium pertinet ad singulos proprietas the Power of all Men and all Things they have enjoy or possess belongeth to the King and yet every Mans single property remains and is continued but as may be seen in St. Jermin in his Doct. and Stud. 64. b. The Law doth assign divers conditions upon the Property and that to alter the Property without consent of the Owner if the conditions are not contrary to the Law of God or Reason And nothing is more agreeing with the Law of God nay our Obedience to the King as Supream is commanded in and by the Word of God and nothing can be more agreeable to Reason unless we will simply and contrary to all Reason admit of the Children to give Laws to their Father or Infants Males or Females to give Suck to their Mothers And it is a thing obvious and well known to every Man that knoweth any thing in our Law that every Mans Property and Estates whatsoever by Act in Law are Forfeit to the King for Treason or Fellony for Treason which all and every Rebellion is to the King for ever of what mean Lord soever they are holden for Fellony to the King for a Year Day and Wast and afterwards to the Lord of the Mannor of whom they are holden for ever In my ensuing Discourse to shew what care was made for the preservation of the Royal Rights Priviledges Jurisdictions and Prerogatives and Person of the King I make mention of the Stat. made in the 12. Car. 2di chap. 1. though in the first clause thereof by me mentioned is said That if any during the Life of the Kings Majesty c. I let this stand unaltered though the death of the Natural Body of the late King happened since because that clause thereof was made but in affirmance of the Common Law and the Stat. of 25. Ed. 3. ca. 2. as to the security of the Kings Person and the Government as appears in Mr. Stanford's Pleas of the Crown the first chap. as to the Second and Third clauses thereof the offenders against the Second clause are not only made uncapable of any imployment in Church or State but are also made lyable to such punishments as by the Laws and Statutes of this Realm are to be inflicted in such Cases As to the Third clause thereof every Person offending against the same shall incur the danger and penalty of Premunire mentioned in the Stat. of 16. Rich. 2. ca. 5. It appeareth by Bracton Libro 3tio Tract 2do cap. 15o. Fol. 134o. that Canutus the Danish King having settled himself in this Kingdom in Peace kept notwitstanding for the better continuance thereof great Armies within this Realm The Peers and Nobles distasting the Government by Arms and Armies odimus accipitrem quia semper vivit in armis Wisely and Politickly perswaded the King that they would provide for the safety of him and his People and yet his Armies carrying with them many inconveniencies should be withdrawn hereupon Canutus presently withdrew his Armies and within a while after lost his Crown and the same was restored to the right Owner I mention this matter and have it from Sir Ed. Coke who citeth Bracton for his voucher in his 7. rep 16. b. and withall I desire all to take notice that the Excise by Act of Parliament made in the first Parliament after his late Majesties most happy Restauration was continued to be paid to the late King during his Life Hearth Money was settled upon the late King his Heirs and Successors and was in recompence to the Crown for the dissolution of the Court of Wards and Liveries Customs upon Merchandizes imported and exported this little Book will tell you were all originally payable to the King his Heirs and Successors and that Subsedies granted by Parliament are but an improvement in the improvement of time and trade of the Ancient Customs payable to the Crown and were granted to the late King for his Life as they were from the time of King Henry the 7th granted to all his Royal Ancestors Kings and Queens of this Realm except his Sacred Majesties Royal Father King Charles the First Now mark what Sir Edward Coke more saith in his 7th rep 10th b. Haereditas Principis est successio in universum jus quod defunctus Antecessor suus habuit The Inheritance of the Prince is his Succession unto every Right that his deceased Ancestor had And suppose the Right Heir of the Crown had been attainted of Treason yet shall the Crown descend to him and eo instante without any reversal the attainder is utterly avoided as it fell out in the case of King Henry the 7th as may be seen in 1 H. 7th Fol. 4o. I have laid down before you these matters to let you know that
Illustrious Prince James Duke of York now our Soveraign Lord King James the Second p. 31. CHAP. XI Sheweth that Ignorance of the Law will excuse none and that therefore all Dissenters to the Government in Church and State are advised to Conformity p. 36. CHAP. XII Sheweth that all Subjects owe true Ligeance to their Soveraign though they never were or ever shall be Sworn to the same and is shewed the diversity between Enemies and Rebels then all are advised from Rebellion and is shewed that the King hath no Peer and therefore cannot be judged by his Subjects for his Actions p. 38. CHAP. XIII Sheweth that no Action lyeth against the King but in place thereof Petition must be made unto him and that due circumstances observed the Subject shall have his remedy against the King by way of Petition as readily as one Subject may recover against another Subject by way of Action in any of the Kings Courts for that all his Majesties Subordinate Officers are Sworn to do Justice between the King and his Subjects which if they do not they are Answerable for the injury not the King p. 41. CHAP. XIV Sheweth what inconveniencies happen in the Realm of France through Regal Government alone with the Commodities that proceed of the joynt Government Politick and Regal in the Realm of England And all the Community are herein disswaded by mutinous and Rebellious practises to Disinfranchise themselves p. 43. CHAP. XV. Sheweth how tender this Government Politick and Regal conjoyned is of the safety of the Kings Person and of all his Royal Rights and Prerogatives And that our Law doth not reject Women or Infants in the high point of the Descent of the Crown and that our King holdeth immediately of God to himself and acknowledgeth no Prince on Earth his Superior p. 46. CHAP. XVI Sheweth that all Vnlawful Assemblies or Meetings for the Plotting of harm to the King or the Alteration of the Government are Vnlawful and further sheweth what Misprision of Treason is and that it is the Duty of every good Subject presently to discover Treason p. 49. CHAP. XVII Sheweth that all Writs Process Executions and Commandments are and ought to be in the Kings Name only p. 51. CHAP. XVIII All Freeholders are advised as to what manner of Persons they are or ought to Choose for future Parliaments p. 52. CHAP. XIX Sheweth that the King of England is and always hath been Supream Head of the Church not the Pope p. 55. CHAP. XX. As to the Kings Supremacy is shewed the difference between the Primitive and more modern times herein the Author adviseth all to be at Vnity within themselves and since we are restored to our Ancient Government to give to our Soveraign Lord the King his Dues and desires all to joyn with him in the conclusive Prayer for the Morning Service in our Church Liturgy for the King p. 58. ADVICE TO THE Commons of England c. CHAP. I. Sheweth how things stood at the latter end of King James the First and something is said of the High Court of Parliament AS Noah rendred in the Word of God Gen. 6. and 9. ver to be a just and perfect Man and one that walked with God and that with his Family after the great deluge survived the whole World is fictitiously said to have had two Faces the one looking backward the other forward the one looking upon the World before the Flood the other on the World after the Flood so an old indigent Officer of the Kings Majesties Army King Charles the First of ever Blessed Memory may not improperly be said to have two Faces the one looking backward the other forward the one looking on this Kingdom of England before the late Civil War the other on the same since the said War Taking leave to look backward and to examine how and in what state of Affairs things stood in the latter end of the Reign of King James the First and how the said King Charles the First found things upon the demise of the Kingdom to him upon the death of the natural Body of His said Royal Ancestor I collect out of what I have read long since that about the Ninteenth year of the Reign of the said King James the First in a Speech to his House of Peers he expressed himself that he intended not to derogate from or Infringe any of the Liberties or Priveledges of their House but rather to fortifie and strengthen them for never any King had done so much for the Nobility of England as he had done and ever would be ready to do and whatever he should say or deliver to them as his thought yet when he had said what he thought he would afterwards freely leave the judgment thereof wholly to their House he knew they would do nothing but what the like had been done before and prayed them not to be jealous that he would abridg them of any thing that had been used for whatsoever Presidents in good times of Government could warrant he would allow acknowledging them to be the Supreme Court of Justice wherein he was ever present by Representation But his said Sacred Majesty then inferred that the Priviledges of the Commons which they claimed to be their natural Birthrights were but the favours of former Kings Against which the Commons then protested That the Liberties c. o● Parliament are the Ancient and undoubted Birthright and Inheritance of the Subjects of England that the urgent Affairs concerning the Kings State and defence of the Realm and the Church of England and the Maintenance and making of Laws and redress of Mischiefs within the Realm are proper matter for Debate in Parliament and that this Debate ought to be free c. And no Member to be Imprisoned other than by censure of the House it self for debating Parliament business and if any Member is complained of for any thing done or said in Parliament the same is to be shewed the King by assent of the Commons before the King is to give credence to any private Information In Counsel afterwards this King expressed that he never meant to deny the House of Commons any Lawful Priviledge they had enjoyed by any Law or Statute by Custom or uncontrolled and lawful President In the Protestation some words viz. arduis Regni are cunningly mentioned but the word quibusdam which restraineth the generality to such particular Cases as his Majesty pleaseth to consult with them upon was purposely omitted Now as to what he is pleased to consult with them upon it is Customary for the King at the first opening of every Parliament in a short Speech to declare to the Three Estates the certain Occasions urged him to convene them on which or the particular Heads thereof the Lord Chancellor or Lord Keeper of the Great Seal of England for the time being more Copiously enlargeth observing those measures the King his Master prescribeth him thô in fewer words for non-observance whereof and for
understood that such personages never do lack the Counsel of such Grave and Discreet Men as be able to supply all other defects Now we are to understand that our Nation hath not used any other general Authority neither Aristocratical nor Democratical but only the Imperial Monarchy or the Royal and Kingly Majesty which Anciently and at the very First as in the time of the Heptarchy was divided to many and sundry Kings each absolutely Reigning in his Country none under Subjection of other till observe by Fighting one with the other the Overcomed always falling to the Augmentation of the Vanquisher and Overcomer at last the Realm of England grew into one Monarchy neither one of these Kings neither he who first or at the last had all took any investiture at the Hands of the Emperor of Rome or of any other Superior or Forreign Prince but as may be seen in the Statute of 16th Rich. the Second chap. 5th held immediately of God to himself acknowledging no Prince on Earth his Superior and so we are to take notice it is kept and holden at this day and we may see that by a Statute made in the 13th Car. 2 di ca. 1. That if any during the Life of the King Majesty shall within the Realm or without Compass or Intend the Death or Bodily Harm Imprisonment or Restraint of the Person of the King or to Depose him from the Kingly Name of the Imperial Crowns of his Realms or Levy Wars against him or stir up any Forreigner to a Forcible Invasion and such compassings shall express by Printing Writing Preaching or Malitious and Advised Speeches and be Convicted thereof upon the Oath of Two credible Witnesses every Person so Offending shall be Adjudged to be Traitors and shall lose and forfeit as in Case of High Treason And by the same Act it is provided amongst other things That if any shall affirm the King to be an Heretick or a Papist or that he intends to introduce Popery or shall Maliciously and Advisedly by Writing Printing Preaching or other Speeches Publish or Declare any word or other thing or things to stir up the People to hatred or dislike of the Person of his Majesty or Government every such Person thereof convicted are thereby made uncapable of any Office or Imployment in Church and State and are made lyable to such Further punishments as by the Laws and Statutes of this Realm are to be inflicted in such Cases take notice this Act was made presently after his late Majesties most happy Restauration when again the Major part if not all then Living of the Secluded Members in the late pretended Parliament without King or House of Lords were again chosen by the Freeholders of their several Counties to come to this long expected and much wished for Free Parliament It would then have made a true English-man smile to see Old Esq Prynne trudge through Westminster-hall to the House of Commons with his Basket not Silver Hilt Sword by his Side time was then come that his Eyes were opened and as a principal Member of that Parliament he was one of the Framers of that Bill for the forementioned Act wherein it is further-provided that if any Person or Persons shall Maliciously and Advisedly by Writing Printing Preaching or Speaking Declare or Affirm that the Parliament began at Westminster November 3. 1640. is not Dissolved nor Determined or that it ought to be in being Or that there lies any Obligation upon him or any other Person from the Oath Covenant or Engagement to endeavour a change of Government or that both or either Houses of Parliament have a Legislative Power without the King or words to the same effect Every Person so Offending shall incur the danger and penalty of Praemunire whereof mention is made in the before mentioned Statute of 16th Rich. the Second I have made mention of this latter clause in the said Act the more especially because thereby all Interregna Kings de facto wicked and injurious Usurpers are Excluded and the Body Natural and Politick of our Lawful King are so conjoined and closed together that I hope in God for the future it shall not lye in the Power of the People by Rising in Rebellion against their Rightful Soveraign Lord to make any Separation of the Soveraignty from the Person of our Lord the King or to abstract the Person of our King from his Office to the Ruin Alteration or Subvertion again of his Majesties Realms and Dominions And I have mentioned the former Clauses to give you to understand what care hath been made for the Security and Preservation of his Majesties Royal Person and Government ask it is freed and secured thereby from all Restraint Bodily Harm or violence whatsoever by wicked Words or Deeds CHAP. XVI Sheweth that all Vnlawful Assemblies or Meetings for the Plotting of harm to the King or the Alteration of the Government are Vnlawful and further sheweth what Misprision of Treason is and that it is the Duty of every good Subject presently to discover Treason NOW we are to know how that we are forbid also by sundry Laws in force to Congregate and Associate our selves to Unlawful Assemblies or Meetings in Coffee-houses or elsewhere where any discontented seduced wicked Persons shall Assemble themselves together to Plot or Contrive Bodily harm to the King or the Alteration of the Government If it shall be the hard mishap of any Loyal and well affected Christian Person to chance to be in such evil Company let him learn of Mordecai the Jew his Duty therein as we may see in the second chap. of the Book of Esther the 21 22 23. verses while Mordecai sat in the Kings Gate Two of the Kings Chamberlaines Bigthana and Teresh of those which kept the Door were wroth and sought to lay hands on the King Ahasuerus and the thing was known to Mordecai who told it unto Esther the Queen and Esther certified the King thereof in Mordecai's Name and when inquisition was made of the matter it was found out therefore they were both Hanged on a Tree and it was Written in the Book of the Chronicles before the King And Ahasuerus afterwards reading in the Chronicles of the good service done by Mordechai took care for his reward as may be seen in the sixth chap. of the said Book of Esther And we may see in Stanf. 37. b. when one knoweth that another hath done Treason or Fellony and he will not him discover to the King or his Counsel or to some Magistrate but concealeth his Offence that is Misprision which Offence Bracton placeth amongst the Offences of Treason because he was of opinion that concealment beyond a certain time shall make it amount rather to Treason than to Misprision for that purpose he saith Statim sine aliquo intervallo c. that presently and without any stop pause or giving over for a time he ought to go to the King himself if he may or otherwise to some of his
resist shall receive to themselves Damnation Rom. 13.2 I pitty them therefore and wish charitably their convertion I do not Condemn yet can do no less than shew them their Peril Ignorance of the Law excuseth not but it be invincible that is to say they have done that in them is to know the truth as to counsel with Learned Men and to ask them what the Law is in that behalf and if they answer them that they may do this or that Lawfully however they may thereby be excused in Conscience yet in Mans Law saith St. Jermin Dr. and Stud. 46. a. they are not thereby discharged but they that have taken upon them to have knowledg of the Law be not excuse by ignorance of the Law nay no more are they that have a Willful Ignorance and that would rather be Ignorant than to know the Truth and therefore will not dispose themselves to be informed or to ask any Counsel in it and if it be a thing that is against the Law of God or the Law of reason as the matter of Obedience to the Magistrate Supream and Subordinate is no Man shall be excused by Ignorance And the same Author Fol. 146 148. saith that Ignorance in the Law though it be invincible doth not excuse as to the Law for every Man is bound at his Peril to take knowledg what the Law of the Realm is as well the Law made by Statute as by the Common Law giving for reason that there is no Statute made in this Realm but by the Assent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and of all the Commons that is to say by the Knights of the Shire Citizens and Burgesses that be choson by Assent of Commons and every Statute there made is of as strong Effect in the Law as if all the Commons were there present personally at the making thereof and so since all were makers of the Statute the Law presumeth that all have knowledg of that that they make and are bound at their Perils to take knowledge of the Statute that they make and so be all that come after them And Mr. Plowden Fol. 343. a. saith that Ignorance of the Law is not to be presumed to be in a Subject and that therefore Ignorance of the Law shall excuse none Therefore let all of the Sects aforesaid who through Curiosity affectation of Novelties want of better Education in their Youths or that they will not yet suffer themselves to be weaned from the good Old Cause as it was called in the late times of Rebellion let them all make hast to come over and joyn with us in the same way and Worship of God and let them be more careful how they are for the future Factious stirrers of Sedition and disturbers of the Publick Peace All of all sorts have had ample proof of his late Sacred Majesties gracious Favour Mercy and Amnesty since his coming yet some good Old Cause Men none will deny but Walcot and Rumbald were such and others of Wicked and Traiterous principles lately contrived and Plotted Barbarously to Murder his late Gracious Majesty and his dear Royal Brother since our Lord the King and then the most Illustrious P. J. D. of York and instead of the best Government in the whole Christian World to have introduced a Hexarchy or a Government by Six whether joyntly or separately is not much material to enquire All persons in general within the Three Kingdoms are infinitely bound to praise God for the preservation of the Lives of his late Sacred Majesty and his dear Royal Brother our Soveraign Lord and for the timely discovery of their Wicked and Hellish designs and Machinations that threatned not only the alteration of the Government in Church and State but also then was by designed and forethought malice purposed and intended the expence of the Royal and all Loyal Blood And God give us all Grace to be thankful some only that were to have been the Malitious Authors and instigators of its Effusion have therefore suffered according to Law and their Wicked and Willful Obstinacy hath been corrected by the Magistrate and by Gods great Goodness and infinite Mercy his late Sacred Majesty his dear Royal Brother now King James the Second and the publick Peace of all the Three Kingdoms are preserved in peace and safety and under his Sacred Majesty as under a goodly Cedar Tree of full growth irremovable not to be otherwise or other where set planted or supplanted all his Subjects sit secure and are protected CHAP. XII Sheweth that all Subjects owe true Ligeance to their Soveraign though they never were or ever shall be Sworn to the same and is shewed the diversity between Enemies and Rebels then all are advised from Rebellion and is shewed that the King hath no Peer and therefore cannot be judged by his Subjects for his Actions ILlaesa sit Majestas Regis let the Majesty of our King hereafter be free from all hurt and injury either in our thoughts words or deeds And since you have heard not only cui sed quomodo debetur Ligeantia not only to whom but also in what manner your Ligeance is due unto the Natural Body of our Lord the King which is always at all times and in all places accompanied with the Body Politick and cannot be disjoyned or separated from the same you are likewise to understand that this Ligeance doth not begin by the Oath in the Leet or elsewhere and that the Swearing in the Leet or elsewhere maketh no denization For all Subjects owe true Ligeance to their Soveraign though they never yet were nor ever shall be Sworn in the Leet only that the King may have an account of his Peoples Frank pledg for their due Obedience and Subjection within the Precinct of every Leet the Municipal Laws of this Realm have prescribed the Order and Form of this Oath of Allegiance to be administred at or in the Leet All Subjects are Born under this Natural Ligeance Aliens and Strangers only are properly said to be amici or inimici to be in League with us or to be Enemies to us Hostes sunt qui nobis vel quibus nos bella decernimus ceteri proditores praedones c. They are Enemies against whom our King Proclaimeth War or who Proclaim War against our King all others are Traitors Rebells Thieves and Robbers A Rebel is to be Indicted but an Enemy is to be put to death by Marshal-Law Now as outward Peace is a great Blessing yet is it as far inferior to Peace within as Civil Wars are more cruel and unnatural than Wars abroad for avoidance whereof let all in general refuse so much as to harbour in their thoughts that detestable and long since exploded opinion that levying of War against the Command of the King though his person be present is no levying of War against the King but the levying of War against his Politick Person and Laws that is the only levying War against the King Admit