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A54693 Regale necessarium, or, The legality, reason, and necessity of the rights and priviledges justly claimed by the Kings servants and which ought to be allowed unto them / by Fabian Philipps. Philipps, Fabian, 1601-1690. 1671 (1671) Wing P2016; ESTC R26879 366,514 672

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Castri praedicti in the Kings Service in fortifying the Castle of Oye in Picardy under the command of John Lardner Captain of the Castle aforesaid was Utlawed by Process out of the Court of Common Pleas at the Suit of John Paxman in an Action of Debt for Forty pounds when as die promulgationis Vtlagarie diu antea postea fuit in obsequio Domini Regis at the time of his being Utlawed and long before and after he was in the Kings Service as aforesaid and brought his Writ of Error in the Kings Bench to reverse it prayed a Writ to the Captain aforesaid to certifie whether he was then in obsequio Regis in the Kings Service per quod mandatum fuit praedicto Capitaneo whereupon it was commanded to the aforesaid Captain to certifie quo die anno what year and day the said Roger was imployed as aforesaid per quantum tempus ibidem remansit in obsequio Regis in Comitiva sua continue quo die anno recessit and how long he there served without intermission and what day and year he departed whereupon he giving Bayl by four Sureties to appear ad praefatum terminum sic de die in diem quousque c. at the term or time appointed and so from day to day untill he should be discharged And the Captain certifying the day when the said Roger came into the Kings Service and when he departed the said Roger prayed a Writ of Scire facias to warn or summon the said John Paxman to appear and hear the Error alledged and the Sheriff not having executed the first Scire facias and a second being awarded executed and retorned and the said John Paxman not appearing the said Roger assigned for Error that he was in obsequio Regis in the Kings Service as aforesaid and prayed that the Utlary might be reversed for the Error aforesaid quod Curia ad examinationem recordi processus ex officio procedat and that the Court would as they ought proceed to examine the Record and Process aforesaid which being considered and examined the Court ob Errorem illum alios in recordo processu compertos for that and other Errors appearing in the Record and Process aforesaid did reverse and annull the said Utlary And in the 9th year of the Reign of the said King a man being Utlawed for Felony which is of a worse nature and consequence then in an Action of Debt did reverse that Utlary upon a Certificate that he was in the Kings Service at Burdeaux in France at the time of the Utlary pronounced and in the second year of the Reign of King Edward the 4th a man taken upon a Capias Vtlagatum for Felony pleaded that at the time of the Utlary pronounced he was in the Kings Service at Calais under the Governour or Captain thereof which being certified was allowed when in all cases of Vtlary the Judges of Courts and the Kings Serjeants or Councel at Law were alwayes not a little watchfull to preserve all the Kings Rights and advantages For if upon a command of the King by his Letters Patents to do any of his commands or affairs which kind of Authority certainly the Kings Servants in ordinary neither need or ever demanded or the party impleaded alleaging that he served at Calais under such a Captain shall be sufficient Pleas to avoid Vtlaries the one as was adjudged and holden for Law in the 11th year of the Reign of King Henry the 7th in the Kings Bench being to be tryed by the Certificate of the Captain and the other by the Kings Letters Patents And the party Vtlawed shall have a Writ of Scire facias without shewing the Kings Letters Patents unless the Plaintiff do traverse it as well as in the other Case he shall be discharged of the Vtlary by the Certificate of the Captain the Certificate certainly in the Case of an Houshold Servant of the Kings of the Lord Chamberlain or other Great Officer of the Houshold to whom it appertaineth may deserve to be as available And yet in all the aforesaid Cases of Protection or Priviledge they that were abiding within the Realm might ever since the making of the Statute in the 20th year of the Reign of King Henry the third and of the Statute made in the 13th year of the Reign of King Edward the first and such as departed the Realm by the Kings license by an Act of Parliament or Statute made in the 7th year of the Reign of King Richard the second make their Attorneys to answer for them in any Actions to be brought against them And if in case of less consequence or upon a smaller ground of Law or Reason the Law hath so much favoured a privare person as to permit him to reverse an Vtlary because he was itae languidus tempore promulgationis Vtlagarie so sick at the time of the pronouncing or adjudging him to be Vtlawed that he could not propter periculum mortis appear without danger of death when as he might have made or sent his Attorney as it was adjudged and admitted in the 4th year of the Reign of King Henry the 5th the Kings Servants should in matters so very much concerning his Person and the Weal publick not be debarred of their plea of a greater impediment by their necessary attendance upon the person of their Soveraign All which may certainly give us to understand and perswade every one that wilfully gives not way to his fancies and misapprehensions to over-run and trample upon his reason that the Priviledge of the Kings Servants in ordinary had its beginning and continuance as well from the necessity of their attendance upon his person and affairs as from the respect and honour which was and should be alwayes due unto the King their Master And that therefore if the Laws and reasonable Customs of England do as they have ever done and by a right interpretation of them are alwayes to be understood will not permit that the Kings Servants in ordinary may be arrested in any Civil Action without the leave or license of the King or the great Officers of his most honourable Houshold under whose jurisdiction they do officiate first obtained nor suffer any Member of the House of Commons in Parliament in the time of Parliament whilst he is in the service of their King and Country to be outlawed because he cannot be Utlawed without Process of three Capiasses of Writs to arrest an Exigent Proclamation first awarded returned against him such Writs or Process could not be awarded during the against him continuance or adjournment of Parliament It may justly rationally and legally be concluded that they cannot be Utlawed Until there can be an Utlary without a Capias or Process of Arrest a Capias without leave or licence first obtained of the great Officer of the Kings most honourable Houshold to whom it appertaineth and
or more protected and secured from the trouble of Law-Suits or disgracefull Arrests whilst they are busied about the King or in his ordinary service then those which are not his Servants in ordinary but as Envoyes Messengers or otherwise shall be imployed upon seldom or emergent affairs When Nehemiah's Commission to rebuild Jerusalem and the Royal Protection of King Artaxerxes by his Letters Patents under his Great Seal whilst he was busied therein cannot conclude that in those Eastern Countries where Artaxerxes had such an Imperium despoticum a large and absolute authority and a people so reverential and obedient that Nehemiah did not before his Journey or after his return enjoy the priviledge and freedom of one of the Kings Cup-bearers and a daily and constant attendant upon his person for it would be as illogical and unconcludent as to argue or believe that a Kings Servant known to be one of his Servants in ordinary without a Pass or Protection is not to enjoy as much priviledge as when he hath a Pass or Protection which can signifie no more then that he is a Servant or imployed as a Servant upon the Kings affairs especially when the only ground and reason of his Protection and upon which it is built or founded was the Kings service and it is not so much because it concerns the Weal-publick which the words in the Kings Protection do not bear or intimate but only in relation to the King and his service and that the protected party is imployed or sent per praeceptum Regis or in obsequio Regis by the Kings command or upon his business for otherwise the subordinate business of the Offices of a Sheriff or a Clerk to a Justice of Peace being something appurtenant to the common good might which they never yet did claim or demand a cessation from Law-Suits or a respite as the Protections for men imployed in the Kings Service have done there being as great a distance betwixt the reason and cause of the priviledge of the Kings Servants in ordinary and their attendance upon his person and affairs relating thereunto and that which is not immediately but remote as betwixt immediate and mediate proximate and remote nor can it be either truth or reason that if the Abbot of Burton upon Trent in the County of Stafford had been imployed by the King beyond the Seas and being as he was none of the Kings Houshold Servants such a Protection granted unto him whilst he was in the Kings service could have bereaved him of the priviledge which King Edward the 4th did grant unto him his Covent and Tenants which were many to be free ab omni vexatione Vicecomitis Staffordiae sive eorum Satellitum in perpetuum from all vexation and trouble of the Sheriff of the County of Stafford or his Bayliffs or Catchpoles or that if the Abbot of Tavestoke in the County of Devon had been sent as many Abbots in those times used to be upon any of the Kings affairs into Foreign parts and obtained the Kings Protection under the Great Seal of England that he and his Servants or Tenants should not be molested or troubled during his absence such an exemption for that small part of time ought to have abridged him of that priviledge which King Henry the second granted to his Predecessors Abbots of Tavestoke and his Successors that he or any of his Monks should not be impleaded or sued at Law nisi coram Domino Rege nisi Dominus Rex nominatim praeceperit but before the King himself unless the King should otherwise especially command or appoint it or should not at his return have enjoyed the priviledge of a Baron if he had held his Land by Barony to have been only summoned and liable to the Process at Law usually granted against Barons or that if the Prior of Spalding in the County of Lincoln had been commanded to go into Scotland or Wales upon any of the Kings necessary occasions and had been allowed a Protection under the Great Seal of England to respite any Actions or Suits at Law in the mean time to be commenced or brought against himself his Servants or Tenants that could after that business ended have debarred him of the priviledge of a Baron or of one holding his Land per Baroniam by Barony to have been only summoned and distrained according to the Process of the Law usually granted against Barons or of that priviledge which K. Richard the first and K. John granted unto the Abbot of Spalding and his Successors that none should implead them their Servants or Tenants de aliquo Tenemento suo for any of their Lands or Tenements nisi coram Rege vel coram Capitali Justiciario suo vel per speciale mandatum Domini Regis unless it should be before the King or his Chief Justice who then resided in the Kings Court or by the Kings special mandate and amounted to no less then the priviledge as aforesaid claimed by the Kings Servants in ordinary not to be arrested without license or leave first given by the King or those Officers of his Houshold to whom it belongeth Nor can it be any thing but a paradox and a very great enemy to reason that obsequium praeceptum Regis the Kings affairs and command imploying Strangers and none of his Houshold Servants as questionless the Abbot of Miravall was not who as appears by the Register of Writs had a Protection granted unto him whilst he was imployed in the Kings service in the parts beyond the Seas should be allowed for a ground and foundation of a Protection and available in the case of one that was not at all busied in a continual attendance upon his Person or Houshold affairs and be denyed his Servants in ordinary who were a latere alwayes imployed about him or his more necessary constant or durable affairs and that it should be a causa causati cause of the effect or thing caused in the protection of a Stranger imployed for some few dayes or weeks in the Kings affairs and not for those which were more near unto him and daily conversant in his immediate and Domestick affairs in whose care and fidelity his Sacred Person and the light and welfare of our Israel is entrusted and that those that were not his Servants should be in a better condition when they are imployed by him and his menial and ordinary Servants in a worse and the same cause not operate at all in the case of his Servants in ordinary who have more need of it and be so vigorous and effective for those that are Strangers and have less need of it as to their persons who being beyond the Seas were out of the reach of any arrest or imprisonment and as to their Lands and other Estates might if they had not had the Kings Protection under the Great Seal of England have defended any Actions by their Attorneys or have been Essoined or reversed any Utlary quia
Anno 1630. Herbert Croft Batchelor of Divinity now Bishop of Hereford and did not refuse divers of the Sons of the Nobility who sought to partake of the honour of access unto his Majesty and the more select rooms of State in his Court which in that of the Kings of Spain is not thought fit to be communicated but to some of their especial Attendants to be sworn Gentlemen Extraordinary of his Privy-Chamber as in the year 1631. the Lord Matravers eldest Son to Thomas Earl of Arundel and Surrey and Sir William Howard Knight of the Bath now Viscount Stafford his Brother and in the year 1638. the Earl of Kildare the first Earl of Ireland who could not be blamed for their inclinations or tendency to the center of Honour when as long before the Conquest or fatal period of our Saxon Ancestors King Alfred had many of the Sons of the Nobility educated and brought up in his Court and that noble and well becoming custom received and met with in many ages after so great an encouragement as the young Lords or Nobility had a constant Table or dyet in the Court untill in the Reign of King Edward the 6th the perswasions of a needless and unhappy parsimony did put an end to that part of the Royal munificence which King Henry the 3d. in some hundred years before would not in his greatest wants of daily necessaries occasioned by some of his unruly Barons when he took such relief as some Abbeys would afford him quit that part of the honour of his Court or Houshold nor did our late King of blessed memory deny the like honour of his Privy-Chamber to divers Gentlemen of note or great esteem in their Countries as Sir Arthur Capel Knight a●terwards Lord Capel that heroick and loyal Martyr for his King and the Fifth Commandment of his Heavenly King charged upon all Mankind in the Decalogue Sir Thomas Richardson Knight Son of Sir Thomas Richardson Knight Lord Chief Justice of the Court of Kings-Bench or Sir Thomas Roe Knight a learned and well experienced Embassador to the Mogor or Mogull that great Prince in the East-Indies and to several States and Kingdoms in Christendom Sir Fulk Hunkes Knight and Sir Ferdinando Knightley Knight two well experienced Commanders in the English Regiments in the Netherlands or United Provinces Sir Edward Dearing Knight one of the Members of the House of Commons in Parliament in the year 1641. and unto Sir William Waller Knight who afterwards bitterly repented the vain-glory of being a Conqueror of some of his Soveraigns Forces endeavouring to defend him and their Laws and Liberties in the late Rebellion and to some others who could afterwards stain their formerly more loyal Families in that horrid Rebellion and imploy their time and Estates against their King which had ●o much honoured them or to admit into his service as a Servant Extraordinary Edmond Cooper a Drummer John Houghton a Chirurgeon or some excellent Picture-drawer as the famous Sir Anthony van Dike or some Foreign curious Engineer Gunsmith or other excelling Artificers who without some such encouragements would not have benefited our Nation with their skill and residence and was in that Prince of blessed memory and will be in our gracious Soveraign no less allowable than i● was in King David to take into his Family as an Extraordinary when his affection and gratitude prompted him unto it Chimham the son of the good old Barzillai when many of the Yeomanry of England have besides their Servants in ordinary some that are as extraordinary and work a great part of the year with them And the Nobility and Gentry of England sinc● their restraint of giving Liveries by several Acts of Parliament to prevent the too freequent use of that in making of parties and factions in one of which viz. that of the first and second year of the Reign of King Henry the 4th cap. 21. it is provided as hath been mentioned That the King may give his Honourable Livery to his menial Knights and Esquires and also to his Knights and Esquires of his retinue who are not to use it in their Counties but in the Kings presence and the Prince and the Nobility coming unto the Court and returning from thence were specially excepted are not at this day debarred the moderate use of Liveries or some as extraordinary Servants to be imployed upon several occasions to retain unto them as the Lord Mayor of London is not without the attendance of Livery-men of the Companies or Fraternities of Trade or such as he shall select out of them in some grand Solemnities as the meeting or welcoming of the King to his City or Chamber of London at his return from a Progress or from Scotland to conduct into the City a Russian or Persian Embassador and it hath been ever accounted to be a Royal or honourable way of Espargne to have some to be extraordinary Servants without the charge of Bouche of Court or annual salaries to be alwayes in readiness at grand festivals or occasions and those Citizens of London and men of the Mysteries of gain and Trade who have aggrandized their Credits and Estates by the Sun-shine and warmth of the residence of the King and his Courts of Justice can when a little before they could busie themselves in needless murmurs and complaints against the Priviledges of the Kings Servants in ordinary and extraordinary think themselves to be no mean men in their Parishes and Companies if they can procure the favour to be admitted the Kings Servants extraordinary as he shall have occasion to be cozened in such Manufactures or Wares as their Trades afford in so much as it is become the preferment and ambition of one of every Trade great or little some few only excepted in the City of London to be entituled to be the Kings Servant as the Kings Grocer Brewer Apothecary Mercer Draper Silk-man Taylor Printer Stationer Bookseller Girdler a Trade now altogether disused Shoomaker Spurrier c. and are well contented to enjoy all the Priviledges appertaining to the Kings Servants as not to bear Offices in their Parishes or Custard-cram'd Companies and not to be arrested without licence And their Wives swelling into a tympany of Pride will be apt enough to think their former place and reputation too far beneath them and not let their Husbands purse have any rest or quiet untill they can be fine enough to go to the Court and see the Lords and Ladies their Husbands fellow Servants And they which cannot attain to that honour to be such a Servant of the Kings extraordinary for they cannot be truly said to be any thing more than the Kings Servants extraordinary when as he as to many of them hath no daily or but a seldom and occasional use of them and where he hath most it is not constantly or often do think it to be worth the utmost of their endeavours to obtain the honour and priviledge of being the Queens
have been permitted or are to Ride or come into the Castle Gate with his Hat on or covered Those vast Empires of the Ottoman or Turk Persians Mogor and King or Emperour of Japan are not without thos● or the like Reverences not only by their profound silences and observations more then ordinary in their Apartments and Retirements but by other Demonstrations of Honour and acknowledgements of Respect to their Soveraign Princes Houses or Palaces Nor are such or the like Reverences or Respects due to the Houses or Courts of kings unknown or disused even amongst the more Heathen and Barbarians who although they are too much conversant with Ignorance Rudeness and Incivilities are notwithstanding by the Principles Law and light of Nature guided and directed unto it In the City and Countrey which was the Queen of Sheba's the people do use such Reverence to the Kings Houses or Palaces as although the Gates do stand open no man dares presume to enter or to touch them Before any do come to the Court or Tent of Prete John Emperour or King of Ethiopia or the Abassines they do alight of their Horses and begin to do their accustomed Reverences stooping down with their right hand unto the ground and betwixt the Prete or Kings Tent and the Tent of the Judges no man passeth on Horse-back in Reverence to the King and his Justice but all do alight and go on foot When any do come to the first Hall of the King of the Maldives Palace who is King of thirteen Provinces and One thousand Isles where His guard are No Lord or Plebeian man woman or child dare go further except the Domestical Officers of the King and Queens and their Slaves and Servitors At the King of Achens Court in the East Indies before any man can come into the Kings Presence he must put of his Hose and Shooes hold the Palms of his hands together lift them above his head and bow with his body Amongst the rude and fierce Tartars he that hath been present with one that died was not to come into the house of the Mangu Chan within a year after The Barons and people who do come unto his Court do within half a Mile where the great Chan Resides make and continue a great silence a sign or token in the Eastern Countries of great Reverence every Baron carrying a little fair vessel to Spit in and after Covers it none daring to spit in the Hall into which before they do enter they put off their Buskins and put on Furre Buskins of white Leather giving the other to their Servants In the City of Nanquim is a Table of Gold wherein is written the Kings name in Memory of his Residence there which stands in the Palace Covered and being to be seen upon some of their Festival days covered all the Nobility of the City do go to do it Reverence In China and at Pequin they which are to pass by the Kings Palaces do descend and alight from their Horses and go on foot until they be passed Yea although the King doth not there reside and they do at other times make their Reverences unto the Kings Empty Throne And so much by the light of nature and the dusky and obscure glimmerings of it were the Palaces and Residences of their Kings and Princes Reverenced by the Mexicans a Populous Nation in the West Indies as all that were to come or appear before Montezuma their King or Emperour were except some Princes his kinsmen to come bare-foot Such therefore and so great Honours being so deservedly due to the Houses and Habitations of Kings and Princes the Affairs or business of the Soveraign Acted either within or without it are not certainly like Esau to be deprived of it's Blessing or what is appropriate or belonging to it but it ought as a very great truth to be subscribed unto by every one that will not abjure his own Reason the Laws and Reasonable Customes of England Prudence and Practice of all other Nations of Christendom and where ever the Light of Reason and Divine Wisdom have imparted their Glories that the business and affairs of the Kings-Servants in Ordinary are to be preferred and Take Place of the Affairs of any Subject or Private Person SECT II. That the Business and Affair● of the King about which any of His Servants or Subjects are Imployed are more considerable and to be Regarded then the Business and Affairs of any of His People WHen the General and Universal consisting of all the parts of a Body Politick and the Safety Care and Concernment of the whole must needs surmount any one or two or any Particulars or some Private mens necessities or occasions The brawls and controversies betwixt the Herdsmen of Lot and the Righteous Abraham for Pasture for their Flocks and Cattel were understood in that Particular to be no less then their Masters own Concernments And the Servants of every Master and consequently their business are by God himself and his never Erring Wisdom justly reckoned in the Tenth Commandment or Decalogue as a part of the Masters goods and Estate The Civil Law allows us to conclude that Servi rerum appellatione comprehenduntur Servants are accounted to be a part of the Masters Estate familiae significatione Servi includuntur and in a family Servants are included Familia continentur liberi homines bona fide servientes in a family are contained and intended Freemen aswel as Villains or Bond-men which serve therein Et familia unum quoddam Corpus constituit inde patimur Injuriam etiam per liberos uxorem servos etiam mercenarios nostros for a Family makes and constitutes a certain body and thereupon the Master of it may be said to be wronged in his Wife Children and Servants and sometimes in those which are hirelings And it was neither forbidden or disallowed by the Civil Law in Ancient times before better and more convenient Securities by Pactions and Obligations were found out Servos Ancillas tanquam bona Catalla oppignorare to Pawn or Deliver in Pledge their men Servants or maid Servants Our Saxon Laws intended no less when they did Ordain that every Lord or Master should be obliged to bring his Servant to Justice Our liber Censualis or Doomesday Book made about the 16 th year of the Raign of William the Conquerour as an Inquisition or extent of every mans Estate in the Kingdom both Real and Personal doth therein Reckon Servos Ancillas villanos as well Men-servants and Maid-servants as Villains or Bond-men And our Laws do allow an Action in the Masters name for the beating or wounding of a Servant per quod servitium servientis sui amisit whereby he lost the use or service of his Servant By the Laws of the Old Almains uniusquisque pacem habere debet ad ducem veniendo de illo revertendo Et nullus praesumat hominem de
Westminster did in his valedictory oration or speech made to the Society of Grays-Inne whereof he was a member at his departure from thence when he was made a Serjeant at Law mention it to have been a custome in that House at his first coming thereinto to admit none but such as were Gentlemen born And Sir John Ferne was so far from allowing the degree or title of Barrester to make one ignobly born to be thereby ipso facto in truth a Gentleman as he was of opinion that if such a Barrester were not before a Gentleman born it only gave him as it did to Doctors of Law Divinity Physick Prothonotaries and other Learned men a capacity to demand or have a Coat of Armes given him and to be then stiled a Gentleman otherwise he might only write himself A. B. Gentleman of Lincolns or Grayes-Inne but not A. B. of Lincolns or Grayes-Inne Gentleman and was no longer such a reputed Gentleman than he continued in that Society into which he was admitted and wished that Supreme Authority would renew the first institution of those Assemblies and that by Visitation all such might be weeded out that cannot shew the badge of a Gentleman For notwithstanding that the famous Lawyer Vlpian was sometimes stiled Nobilis and at other times Clarissimus yet if he were not born a Gentleman it was propter Sapientiam vel Nobilitatem animi in regard of his Wisdom and Nobility of mind improprie dictum and improperly so called For the title of Gentleman well understood hath more of a Worshipfull signification than the name or title of Esquire which in its primitive use or acception was but a Scutifer or Armiger a Shield or Armour-bearer as was that of Jonathans Servant to a Horseman or Gentleman for such were they most commonly called or allowed to be who held their Lands of the King in Capite or by Knight-service and at the old Rome it was a credit or mark of esteem to be said and believed to be a Gentleman de gente Julia Octaviana vel Claudia of such or such a Kinred Off-spring or Race as the Children of Israel were long before known and distinguished by their Tribes or Genealogies And that eminently learned Antiquary Sir Henry Spelman inveighing against such an abuse of the title of Esquire wonders that the Benchers of the Innes of Court would suffer it and saith that not long before this present Century or age wherein we now live Nominatissimus in patria Jurisconsultus aetate provectior etiam munere gaudens publico praediis amplissimis generosi titulo bene se habuit the worthiest antient Lawyer and most eminent in his Countrey of great Estate and in a publick Office did well content himself with the title of a Gentleman sic alii nuper viri splendidi sic quidem hodie celeberrimus Serviens ad Legem so other eminent men and so a famous Serjeant at Law forte guod togatae genti magis tunc conveniret Civilis illa Appellatio quam Castrensis altera probably because that Civil Appellation or Title did more agree with the Gown or men of the Long Robe than that of Esquire which was derived from War or antiently used but as an attendant upon it And in that did not much dissent from the learned Sir Robert Cotton who believed that the bearing of Armes was not before the time of Bartolus that great Civil Lawyer who lived about the year of our Lord 1356. in the Reign of Charles the 4th Emperor permitted to Gown-men Lawyers or Advocates or as the French do term them Men of the Long Robe and under that name saith he are Learned men Clergy and Scholars comprehended or else why should that great Lawyer Bartolus argue the matter whether it were convenient that he should take or bear the Armes which that Emperor offered to give him being a peculiar Reward and Honour in Military Service in antient time or whether he should refuse it at the Emperors hands for if it had been then usual for the Long Robe to have enjoyed the honour of bearing of Armes Bartolus would never have doubted thereof But since it was not then accustomed he made it a question whether he should take those Armes or no but in the end concluded that the Fact of his Prince was neither to be disputed or rejected and therefore was willing to assume the Armes which the Emperor had given him And in England without the Authority of their King Soveraign amongst other the affairs and businesses of Genealogies bearing allowing or granting of Coats of Armes usage of titles and distinctions of Degrees delegated to the principal Heralds and Kings of Armes in their several Provinces will as little become those which are not of Gentle extraction in their unduly assumed title of Esquire as it would do an High Sheriff Justice of Peace or Escheator being no Esquires and sometimes no Gentlemen to imagine themselves to be Esquires or any more than quasi Esquires or Esquires improperly so called because they themselves gave the Clerk or writer of their Patents or Commission a direction so to stile them or the Clerk or writers pen following the mode of the like mistakings did with as little authority as reason so create them which supercilious self-conceited Errors the Kings Great Seal of England and the great Honour and Authority which doth legally and justly appertain unto it cannot support or make to be no Errors when as it is male recitando although the Kings giving by an actual Ceremony the Honour of Knighthood to one that is not a Gentleman born doth ipso facto in the opinion of our learned Selden make such a Knight to be a Gentleman and will be as much without the reach of a Non-obstante or dispensation as where Lands are said to be one mans when they are anothers a Town named a City when it is not a Church said t● be in one Diocess or County when it is in another or when a man disenabled or ungentleman'd by reason of his Fathers attainder of Treason and corruption of blood shall without restoration or reversal of that Attainder be mentioned or recited in the Kings Letters Patents as an Esquire or Gentleman Or that an High Constables Wife should swell her self into an opinion that her Husband is as much an Esquire as the best because the Sheriff Under-Sheriff or Under-Sheriffs Deputy or Clerk of the County where he dwelleth when he was retorned to be a Jury-man foolishly and carelesly stiled him in his Pannel by the name and title of Esquire But would be as great an affront to truth and contradiction to reason as some Citizens of London late invented piece of proud non-sense or ungrounded phansie to stile a wealthy Citizen an Alderman or dream that he is one when he is none at all and paid a great Fine that he might be none and is not so much as entitled to wear an Aldermans Gown
but is no more than a Gownless mis-called Alderman and can have no more of truth or reason in it than for a Chambermaid to a Lady dressed up in her Ladies old Clothes to believe her self to be a Lady because some overcomplementing small piece of wit hath mistakenly called her so or for a man of 20 l. per annum Free Land to believe himself to be a Knight and his Wife a Lady because when according to the Statute made in the first year of the Reign of King Edward the Second he was summoned to take the Order of Knighthood upon him he compounded and paid a Fine to escape that dignity which was too big for his quality or estate and as great a madness and ridiculous as that of Don Quixot or our late Countryman Parsons the Taylor fancying himself to be the Romance Knight of the Sun or for a Bum Bayliff or Countrey Catchpole to imagine himself to be a Knight or his Wife a Lady because in imitation or observance of some antient courses or usages in our Laws he was upon a Writ of View in a Writ of Right or Entry Dower or Formedon retorned by the Sheriff to have been present at the View by the title or addition of a Knight and as little consonant to reason and truth as for a Sheriff or Justice of Peace to think himself to be an Esquire because the King by his Commission for that particular time or purpose was pleased to stile him so or if it did conferre such a Title or Dignity yet it ought not to remain either to a Sheriff or Justice of Peace when they are exuti dignitate out of those temporary Offices by the Office of Sheriff being determined or the turning the Justice of Peace out of Commission which our reason as well as the Civil Law will not permit when by the summoning of a Great man of England to assist in the House of Peers in Parliament or to attend therein he is not thereby to be accompted a Baron by Writ or to have Fee therein to him and his Heirs unless he have been thrice summoned and obeyed those Writs And the Civil Law will tell us that Si ratione alicujus officii debeantur aliqua signa seu insignia if any Armes be given the like being to be said of Titles by reason of any place or office they are but durante officio finito illo transeunt ad successores officiarios during the continuance of that Office which being determined it goeth unto those which do succeed in that Office And that and the Law of Nations will give us the reason of a greater respect to be given unto the Kings Servants rather than unto any other mens Servants when the Emperors of the West and East were so carefull that their Domestick Servants and Guards should have a more than ordinary regard wheresoever they came or had any occasion of business though in any part of their large Dominions far or remote from their Imperial Courts as in a Rescript of the Emperors Valentinianus Theodosius and Arcadius order was taken and a command given ut Domestici ac Protectores osculandi cum salutaverint Vicarium Praefecti Praetorii habeant potestatem poena enim Sacrilegii similis erit si his honorificentia non deferatur qui contingere purpuram Imperatoris digni sint aestimati that the Domesticks or Houshold Servants of note of the Emperors and the Guards attending the Court who were thought worthy to be about their persons when they came to salute the Deputy or Lieutenant of the Major Domo Lord Steward of the Emperors Houshold and General or Chief Captain of the Guards or the Governours of some Provinces or part of the Empire in the later Emperors times should be allowed to kiss him which the very learned Salmuthius in his Comment upon Guido Pancirollo interprets to be commonly a kissing of the hand as well as the sometimes receiving of a salute or kiss of the mouth which summi honoris loco tribuitur saith Cuiacius was esteemed to be the greatest honour for they deserved as much as the punishment usually inflicted upon those who committed Sacriledge which gave not due honour or respect unto those which were thought worthy to be near their persons And were so unwilling that any of their Servants which were imployed in any eminent places about their persons or affairs should when they had quitted their Offices or places be reckoned amongst the Vulgar as the Emperors Valentinianus and Theodosius did by their Rescript ordain that qui suae quodammodo adsidere Majestati videntur which had the honour to be near their persons should post depositum officium ab omni Indictionis onere seu Civilium seu Militarium judicum prorsus immunes after they had left their places be altogether free from all Taxes Civil or Military for si quis lateri Principis ipsius permissu adhaereat nobilis efficitur such of the Kings Servants as are attendant and near unto his person are reputed Noble and Honourable and their Virtue conjoyned with Riches and their imployment about the Fountain of Honour may well deserve a preheminence above other mens Servants when as the Service of such as received their honour from the Prince was as the younger Pliny said in his time pronum ad honoris iter a ready way to honour and gentleness or the bearing of Armes saith Sir John Ferne may be obtained by the service of the Soveraign according to the Rule of the Civil Law with which that learned Civil as well as Common Lawyer was not meanly or little acquainted adhaerentes lateri Principis eidem in officio quocunque minimo ministrantes nobilitantur those which are in the Service of the King and near unto his Person or imployed by him in the meanest Service are in some sort so enobled as to claim the bearing of Armes or Badges of Gentility and Ideo Coquum Principis in dignitatem haberi nobilem esse oportet omnes famulantes Principi sunt in dignitate therefore a Kings Cook ought to be so much respected as not to be denyed the like Priviledge and all the Kings Servants have a certain Dignity to them appertaining and some of our English Nobility have granted as an Earl of Stafford did to Mackworth one of his Servants Insignia Nobilium Coats of Armes to their Servants and Followers And the French Burgundians and Millanois as well as many of our antient English Nobility have heretofore permitted their Clients and such as held their Lands of them to take and use some part or resemblance of the Armes of their Lords or Seignors Wherefore the excellently learned Cassanaeus having travelled through the vast Volumes of the Civil and Caesarean Laws and wrote his Book entituled Catalogus gloriae mundi in the beginning of the Reign of our King Henry the 8th did not certainly stray or wander out of the paths of right
ultra mare because they were then beyond the Seas or that if the King had sent beyond the Seas any of his Privy-Chamber or Bed-Chamber as hath been not seldom done by-divers of our Kings and Princes to some Foreign Prince or Potentate for the greater credit of their Messages as Balak King of Moab did long before the World was gray or hoary headed when after he had sent Messengers unto the Prophet Balaam and he refused to come unto him he sent yet again Princes more Honourable then they not thinking it fit or honourable to imploy any below stairs or the inferior sort of their Houshold Servants or their Barber as Lewis the 11th of France did in his unfortunate Espargne or saving of charges when he sent him as an Agent or Envoy to the great Inheretrix of Burgundy and the 17. Netherland Provinces which brought him a reproach and loss of those grand expectations which he might otherwise probably have compassed and saved millions of money some hundred thousand mens lives and the trouble and disquiet of the greatest part of Christendom in the since seeking in vain to obtain those rich Countries by Conquest which that Marriage and a more solemn Embassy might have more easily gained such Bed-Chamber man or Gentleman of the Kings Privy-Chamber should have the immunity or freedom not to be arrested or molested by reason of any Actions or Suits at Law whilst he was thus imployed because it was per praeceptum Regis by the Kings command fuit in obsequio Regis and was in his service and yet when he was come and returned to his place and attendance in the Kings Bed-Chamber or Privy-Chamber where he did before daily officiate and was in obsequio Regis per praeceptum Regis in the Kings service unless it could be then understood to be any either reason or sence to believe that he was not in the service of the King or by his appointment when if truth and reason might as they ought to do consort together it was evident he was must be arrested or imprisoned without the Kings leave or license as if he were not of the Kings Bed-Chamber or Privy-Chamber or any of the Kings Servants or if the granting of a Protection by the King to an Earl or any other of the Nobility whilst he was imployed in his Wars or affairs as many have been in Foreign parts should at his return into England be debarred of his priviledge not to be Utlawed or Arrested by Process or Writ of Capias or that Ambassadors sent from hence unto Foreign Kings or Princes without any Writ of Protection which hath ever been though● needless to be granted unto them should not when they come home enjoy those Immunities and Priviledges were before their going or after their return appropriate and justly due unto them Or that the King may not with as great or greater reason or cause of kindness unto himself and his Servants as well grant his Writs of Protection unto his Servants in ordinary as he hath done unto some Strangers or Foreign Merchants or unto the Prior of an Hospital or some other person with a nolumus or command not to molest or permit to be troubled their persons lands goods or possessions and a suscepimus in protectionem defensionem taking them into his defence or protection or that the service or attendance of his Domesticks or Servants in ordinary either in relation to his person or his affairs subservient thereunto which do concern him and in him the Publick safety and welfare should not claim a greater regard then other more remote And should heretofore be a Supersedeas to some of his Servants elected to serve for the people of their Country in Parliament which with the House of Peers and presence and authority of the King makes it to be the Highest Court of Justice in the Kingdom and next unto the King who is the head life and being of it their greatest and most darling concernment far exceeding any or the most part of Imployments in the Kings extraordinary occasions either at home or abroad which hath been the usual subject matters of the King● Protections under the Great Seal of England and not now be able or allowed to receive a just and fitting respect and priviledge in his more subordinate and ordinary Courts of Justice When as in the 7th year of the Reign of King Richard the second James Barners being elected a Member of Parliament was discharged by the Kings Writ and a new Writ caused to be made for another election quia est de retinentia Regis familiaris unus Militum Camerae Regis because he was of the Kings Retinue one of his Houshold Servants and one of the Knights of his Chamber attending in or near unto it and in the same year Thomas Morvile was discharged of his election into the House of Commons in Parliament which was superseded quia est de retinentia charissimae Dominae Matris nostrae Johannae Principissae Walliae for that he was in the service or retinue of his Mother the Princess of Wales But that and all which hath been said and evidenced will it seems not yet be enough to remove the pride of heart of such as take a delight to arrest and imprison the Kings Servants and Attendants without license or leave first granted for Debts or other Actions to which they are entituled or perswade them to abandon that unmannerliness and an Objection which they have lately found out as they think to support it That if the number of the Kings Servants were less there would not be so many to demand their Priviledges or cause their Creditors to complain against them and that if any of the Kings Servants in ordinary be so without leave or license arrested or imprisoned whereby the King should or might lose their service he was to provide others in their places And that any of the Kings Servants in ordinary waiting upon him by turns or courses for some of them do not may without leave or license be arrested in the intervals of their waiting or attendance which undutifull and uncivilized opinions too near of kin to the Principles of Wat Tyler and Jack Cade and their Clownish Associates might have been laid upon the Levelling Dunghill and ought to be buried with their illiterate and ungodly Levelling Principles which hath so long afflicted this Nation and so greatly helped to ruine and undo the peace and happiness of it the Adjutants or Authors whereof may upon a more sober and modest enquiry easily find CHAP. X. That our Kings some of which had more then his Majesty now hath have or had no greater number of Servants in ordinary then is or hath been necessary for their occasions safety well-being state honour magnificence and Majesty and that their Servants waiting in their turns or courses are not without leave or license as aforesaid to be arrested in the intervals of their