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A41303 The free-holders grand inquest touching our Sovereign Lord the King and his Parliament to which are added observations upon forms of government : together with directions for obedience to governours in dangerous and doubtful times / by the learned Sir Robert Filmer, Knight. Filmer, Robert, Sir, d. 1653. 1679 (1679) Wing F914; ESTC R36445 191,118 384

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Barons made an Ordinance touching the Exemption of the Abby of Bury from the Bishops of Norwich In the tenth year of the Conquerour Episcopi Comites Barones regni regia potestate ad universalem Synodum pro causis audiendis tractandis convocati saith the Book of Westminster In the 2 year of William 2. there was a Parliament de cunctis regni Principibus another which had quosque regni proceres All the Peers of the Kingdom In the seventh year was a Parliament at Rockingham-Castle in Northampton-shire Episcopis Abbatibus cunctique regni Principibus una coeuntibus A year or two after the same King de statu regni acturus c. called thither by the Command of his Writ the Bishops Abbots and all the Peers of the Kingdom At the Coronation of Hen. 1. All the People of the Kingdom of England were called and Laws were then made but it was Per Commune Concilium Baronum meorum by the Common Councel of my Barons In his third year the Peers of the Kingdom were called without any mention of the Commons and another a while after consensu Comitum Baronum by the consent of Earls and Barons Florentius Wigoriensis saith these are Statutes which Anselme and all the other Bishops in the Presence of King Henry by the assent of his Barons ordained and in his tenth year of Earls and Peers and in his 23. of Earls and Barons In the year following the same King held a Parliament or great Councel with His Barons Spiritual and Temporal King Hen. 2. in his tenth year had a great Councel or Parliament at Clarendon which was an Assembly of Prelates and Peers 22. Hen. 2. saith Hovenden was a great Councel at Nottingham and by the Common Councel of the Archbishops Bishops Earls and Barons the Kingdom was divided into six parts And again Hovende●… saith that the same King at Windsor apud Wind●… shores Communi Concilio of Bishops Earls and Barons divided England into four Parts And in hi●… 21 year a Parliament at Windsor of Bishops Earl●… and Barons And another of like Persons at Northampton King Richard 1. had a Parliament at Nottingham in his fifth year of Bishops Earls and Barons Thi●… Parliament lasted but four days yet much was don●… in it the first day the King disseiseth Gerard de Canvil of the Sherifwick of Lincoln and Hugh Bardol●… of the Castle and Sherifwick of York The second day he required judgment against his Brother Iohn who was afterwards King and Hugh de Nova●… Bishop of Coventry The third day was granted to th●… King of every plow-Plow-land in England 2 s. He required also the third part of the Service of every Knights F●… for his Attendance into Normandy and all the Woo●… that year of the Monks Cisteaux which for that 〈◊〉 was grievous and unsupportable they fine for Mo●…ny The last day was for Hearing of Grievances●… and so the Parliament brake up And the same yea●… held another at Northampton of the Nobles of th●… Realm King Iohn in his fifth year He and his Great m●…met Rex Magnates convenerunt and th●… Roll of that year hath Commune Concilium B●…ronum Meorum the Common Councel of my Baron●… at Winchester In the sixth year of King Henry 3. the Noble●… granted to the King of every Knights Fee two Mark●… in Silver In the seventh year he had a Parliament at London an Assembly of Barons In his thirteenth year an Assembly of the Lords at Westminster In his fifteenth year of Nobles both Spiritual and Temporal M. Par. saith that 20. H. 3. Congregati sunt Magnates ad colloquium de negotiis regni tractaturi the Great men were called to confer and treat of the Business of the Kingdom And at Merton Our Lord the King granted by the Consent of his Great men That hereafter Usury should not run against a Ward from the Death of his Ancestor 21. Hen. 3. The King sent his Royal Writs commanding all belonging to His Kingdom that is to say Arch-bishops Bishops Abbots and Priors installed Earls and Barons that they should all meet at London to treat of the Kings Business touching the whole Kingdom and at the day prefixed the whole multitude of the Nobles of the Kingdom met at London saith Mat. Westminster In his 21 year At the Request and by the Councel of the Lords the Charters were confirmed 22. Hen. 3. At Winchester the King sent his Royal Writs to Arch-bishops Bishops Priors Earls and Barons to treat of Business concerning the whole Kingdome 32. Hen. 3. The King commanded all the Nobility of the whole Kingdom to be called to treat of the State of His Kingdom Mat. Westm ' 49. Hen. 3. The King had a Treaty at Oxford with the Peers of the Kingdom M. Westminster At a Parliament at Marlborow 55. Hen. 3. Statutes were made by the Assent of Earls and Barons Here the Place of Bracton Chief Justice in thi●… Kings time is worth the observing and the rathe●… for that it is much insisted on of late to make fo●… Parliaments being above the King The words i●… Bracton are The King hath a Superiour God also th●… Law by which he is made King also his Court viz the Earls and Barons The Court that was said i●… those days to be above the King was a Court of Earls and Barons not a Word of the Commons or th●… representative Body of the Kingdom being any pa●… of the Superiour Court Now for the true Sen●… of Bractons words how the Law and the Court 〈◊〉 Earls and Barons are the Kings Superiours the●… must of Necessity be understood to be Superiours 〈◊〉 far only as to advise and direct the King out of hi●… own Grace and Good Will only which appea●… plainly by the Words of Bracton himself wher●… speaking of the King he resolves thus Nec potest 〈◊〉 necessitatem aliquis imponere quod injuriam suam corrig●… emendat cum superiorem non habeat nisi Deum 〈◊〉 satis ei erit ad poenam quod Dominum expectat ultore●… Nor can any man put a necessity upon Him to corre●… and amend his Injury unless he will himself sin●… he hath no Superiour but God it will be sufficie●… Punishment for him to expect the Lord an avenge●… Here the same man who speaking according to som●…mens Opinion saith the Law and Court of Earls a●… Barons are superiour to the King in this place tel●… us himself the King hath no Superiour but God th●… Difference is easily reconciled according to the D●…stinction of the School-men the King is free from t●… Coactive Power of Laws or Councellors but may be su●…ject to their Directive Power according to his ow●… Will that is God can only compell but th●… Law and his Courts may advise Him Rot. Parliament 1 Hen. 4. nu 79. the Commons expresly affirm Iudgment in Parliament belongs to the King and Lords These Precedents shew that from the Conquest untill a great
Augustissimi CAROLI Secundi Dei Gratia ANGLIAE SCOTIAE FRANCIAE ET HIBERNIAE REX Bona agere mala pati Regium est Page 1 THE Free-holders GRAND INQUEST Touching Our Sovereign Lord the KING And His PARLIAMENT To which are added OBSERVATIONS UPON FORMS OF GOVERNMENT Together with Directions for Obedience to Governours in Dangerous and Doubtful Times By the Learned Sir ROBERT FILMER Knight Claudian de laudibus Stiliconis Fallitur egregio quisquis sub Principe credit Servitium Nunquam Libertas gratior extat Quàm sub Rege pio LONDON Printed in the Year MDCLXXIX The Author's PREFACE THere is a general Belief that the Parliament of England was at first an Imitation of the Assembly of the Three Estates in France therefore in order to prepare the Understanding in the Recerche we have in hand it is proper to give a brief Accompt of the mode of France in those Assemblies Scotland and Ireland being also under the Dominion of the King of England a touch of the manner of their Parliaments shall be by way of Preface 1. In France the Kings Writ goeth to the Bailiffs Seneschals or Stewards of Liberties who issue out Warrants to all such as have Fees and Lands within their Liberties and to all Towns requiring all such as have any Complaints to meet in the Principal City there to choose two or three Delegates in the name of that Province to be present at the General Assembly At the day appointed they meet at the Principal City of the Bailiwick The King 's Writ is read and every man called by name and sworn to choose honest men for the Good of the King and Commonwealth to be present at the General Assembly as Delegates faithfully to deliver their Grievances and Demands of the Province Then they choose their Delegates and swear them Next they consult what is necessary to be complained of or what is to be desired of the King and of these things they make a Catalogue or Index And because every man should freely propound his Complaint or Demands there is a Chest placed in the Town-Hall into which every man may cast his Writing After the Catalogue is made and Signed it is delivered to the Delegates to carry to the General Assembly All the Bailiwicks are divided into twelve Classes To avoid confusion and to the end there may not be too great Delay in the Assembly by the Gathering of all the Votes every Classis compiles a Catalogue or Book of the Grievances and Demands of all the Bailiwicks within that Classis then these Classes at the Aslembly compose one Book of the Grievances and Demands of the whole Kingdom This being the order of the Proceedings of the third Estate the like order is observed by the Clergy and Nobility When the three Books for the three Estates are perfected then they present them to the King by their Presidents First the President for the Clergy begins his Oration on his knees and the King commanding he stands up bare-headed and proceeds And so the next President for the Nobility doth the like But the President for the Commons begins and ends his Oration on his knees Whilst the President for the Clergy speaks the rest of that Order rise up and stand bare till they are bid by the King to sit down and be covered and so the like for the Nobility But whilst the President of the Commons speaks the rest are neither bidden to sit or be covered Thus the Grievances and Demands being delivered and left to the King and His Counsel the General Assembly of the three Estates endeth Atque ita totus actus concluditur Thus it appears the General Assembly was but an orderly way of presenting the Publick Grievances and Demands of the whole Kingdom to the consideration of the King Not much unlike the antient Usage of this Kingdom for a long time when all Laws were nothing else but the King's Answers to the Petitions presented to Him in Parliament as is apparent by very many Statutes Parliament-Rolls and the Confession of Sir Edw. Coke 2. In Scotland about twenty dayes before the Parliament begins Proclamation is made throughout the Kingdom to deliver in to the King's Clerk or Master of the Rolls all Bills to be exhibited that Sessions before a certain day then are they brought to the King and perused by Him and onely such as he allows are put into the Chancellour's hand to be propounded in Parliament and none others And if any man in Parliament speak of another matter than is allowed by the King the Chancellour tells him there is no such Bill allowed by the King When they have passed them for Laws they are presented to the King who with his Scepter put into His hand by the Chancellor ratifies them and if there be any thing the King dislikes they raze it out before 3. In Ireland the Parliament as appears by a Statute made in the Tenth year of Hen. 7. c. 4. is to be after this manner No Parliament is to be holden but at such Season as the King's Lieutenant and Councel there do first certifie the King under the Great Seal of that Land the Causes and Considerations and all such Acts as they think fit should pass in the said Parliament And such Causes and Considerations and Acts affirmed by the King and his Councel to be good and expedient for that Land And His Licence thereupon as well in affirmation of the said Causes and Acts as to summon the Parliament under His Great Seal of England had and obtained That done a Parliament to be had and holden after the Form and Effect afore rehearsed and if any Parliament be holden in that Land contrary to the Form and Provision aforesaid it is deemed void and of none Effect in Law It is provided that all such Bills as shall be offered to the Parliament there shall first be transmitted hither under the Great Seal of that Kingdom and having received Allowane and Approbation here shall be put under the Great Seal of this Kingdom and so returned thither to be preferred to the Parliament By a Statute of 3 and 4 of Philip and Mary for the expounding of Poynings Act it is ordered for the King 's Passing of the said Acts in such Form and Tenor as they should be sent into England or else for the Change of them or any part of them After this shorter Narrative of the Usage of Parliaments in our Neighbour and Fellow Kingdoms it is time the inquisitio magna of our own be offered to the Verdict or Iudgment of a moderate and intelligent Reader REFLECTIONS Concerning the ORIGINAL OF GOVERNMENT Upon I. Aristotle's Politiques II. Mr. Hobs's Leviathan III. Mr. Milton against Salmasius IV. H. Grotius De Iure Belli V. Mr. Hunton's Treatise of Monarchy VI. Another Treatise of Monarchy by a nameless Author Arist. Pol. Lib. 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 LONDON Printed in the Year MDCLXXIX THE ANARCHY OF A LIMITED OR MIXED Monarchy OR A
part of Henry the Third's Reign in whose dayes it is thought the Writ for Election of Knights was framed which is about two hundred years and above a third part of the time since the Conquest to our dayes the Barons made the Parliament or Common Councel of the Kingdom under the name of Barons not only the Earls but the Bishops also were Comprehended for the Conquerour made the Bishops Barons Therefore it is no such great Wonder that in the Writ we find the Lords only to be the Counsellours and the Commons Called only to perform and consent to the Ordinances Those there be who seem to believe that under the word Barons anciently the Lords of Court-Ba●…ons were Comprehended and that they were Called to Parliament as Barons But if this could be proved to have been at any time true yet those Lords of Court-Barons were not the representative Body of the Commons of England except it can be also proved that the Commons or Free-holders of the Kingdome chose such Lords of Court-Barons to ●…e present in Parliament The Lords of Manors ●…ame not at first by Election of the People as Sir Edw. Coke treating of the institution of Court-Ba●…ons resolves us in these words By the Laws and Ordinances of ancient Kings and especially of King Al●…red it appeareth that the first Kings of this Realm ●…ad all the Lands of England in Demean and les grand Manors and Royalties they reserved to themselves and of the remnant they for the Defence of the Real●… enfeoffed the Barons of the Realm with such Iurisdiction as the Court-Baron now hath Coke's Institute●… First part Fol. 58. Here by the way I cannot but note that if th●… first Kings had all the Lands of England in Demean 〈◊〉 Sir Edward Coke saith they had And if the fir●… Kings were chosen by the People as many thin●… they were then surely our Forefathers were a ver●… bountiful if not a prodigal People to give all th●… Lands of the whole Kingdom to their Kings wit●… Liberty for them to keep what they pleased and t●… give the Remainder to their Subjects clogg'd an●… cumbred with a Condition to defend the Realm●… This is but an ill sign of a limited Monarchy by original Constitution or Contract But to conclude th●… former Point Sir Edward Coke's Opinion is th●… in the ancient Laws under the name of Barons were comprised all the Nobility This Doctrine of the Barons being the Comm●… Councel doth displease many and is denied a●…tending to the Disparagement of the Commons an●… to the Discredit and Confutation of their Opinio●… who teach that the Commons are assigned Councello●… to the King by the People therefore I will call in M●… Pryn to help us with his Testimony He in his Boo●… of Treachery and Disloyalty c. proves that before th●… Conquest by the Laws of Edward the Confesso●… cap. 17. The King by his Oaths was to do Iustice 〈◊〉 the Councel of the Nobles of his Realm He also resolves that the Earls and Barons in Parliament a●… above the King and ought to bridle him when he exor●…tates from the Laws He further tells us the Peers an●… Prelates have oft translated the Crown from the right He●… 1. Electing and Crowning Edward who was illegitimate and putting by Ethelred the right Heir after Edgars decease 2. Electing and Crowning Canutus a meer Foreigner in opposition to Edmund the right Heir to King Ethelred 3. Harold and Hardiknute both elected Kings successively without title Edmund and Alfred the right Heirs being dispossessed 4. The English Nobility upon the Death of Harold enacted that none of the Danish bloud should any more reign over them 5. Edgar Etheling who had best Title was rejected and Harold elected and crowned King 6. In the second and third year of Edw. 2. the Peers and Nobles of the Land seeing themselves contemned entreated the King to manage the Affairs of the Kingdome by the Councel of his Barons He gave his Assent and sware to ratifie what the Nobles ordained and one of their Articles was that he would thenceforward order all the Affairs of the Kingdom by the Councel of his Clergy and Lords 7. William Rufus finding the greatest part of the Nobles against him sware to Lanfranke that if they would choose him for King he would abrogate their over-hard Laws 8. The Beginning saith Mr. Pryn of the Charter of Hen. 1. is observable Henry by the Grace of God of England c. Know ye That by the Mercy of God and Common Councel of the Barons of the Kingdom I am Crowned King 9. Maud the Empress the right Heir was put by the Crown by the Prelates and Barons and Stephen Earl of Mortain who had no good Title assembling the Bishops and Peers promising the amendment of the Law●… according to all their Pleasures and Liking was by th●… all proclaimed King 10. Lewis of France Crowned King by the Barons in stead of King John All these Testimonies from Mr. Pryn may satisfie that anciently the Barons were the Common Councel or Parliament of England And if Mr. Pryn could have found so much Antiquity and Proof for th●… Knights Citizens and Burgesses being of the Common Councel I make no doubt but we should have heard from him in Capital Characters but alas he meets not with so much as these Names in those elder Ages He dares not say the Barons were assigned by the People Councellors to the King for he tells us every Baron in Parliament doth represent hi●… own Person and speaketh in behalf of himself alone but in the Knights Citizens and Burgesses are represented the Commons of the whole Realm therefore every one of the Commons hath a greater voice in Parliament than the greatest Earl in England Nevertheless Maste●… Pryn will be very well content if we will admi●… and swallow these Parliaments of Barons for the representative Body of the Kingdom and to that Purpose he cites them or to no Purpose at all But to prove the Treachery and Disloyalty of Popish Parliaments Prelates and Peers to their Kings which i●… the main Point that Master Pryn by the Title of hi●… Book is to make good and to prove As to the second Point which is That untill the time of Hen. 1. the Commons were not called to Parliament besides the general Silence of Antiquity which never makes mention of the Commons Coming to Parliament untill that time our Histories say before his time only certain of the Nobility were called to Consultation about the most important affairs of the State He caused the Commons also to be assembled by Knights Citizens and Burgesses of their own Appointment much to the same Purpose writes Sir Walter Raleigh saying it is held that the Kings of England had no formal Parliaments till about the 18th year of King Hen. 1. For in his Third year for the Marriage of his Daughter the King raised a Tax upon every Hide of Land by the Advice of His Privy Councel alone And
their favourable and courteous Offer of Conference and to signifie that the Commons cannot in those Cases of Benevolence or Contribution joyn in conference with their Lordships without prejudice to the Liberties and Privileges of the House and to request their Lordships to hold the Members of this House excused in their not-assenting to their Lordships said Motion for Conference for that so to have Assented without a Bill had been contrary to the Liberties and Privileges of this House and also contrary to the former Precedents of the same House in like cases had This Answer delivered to the Lords by the Chancellor of the Exchequer their Lordships said they well hoped to have had a Conference according to their former Request and desir'd to see those Precedents by which the Commons seem to refuse the said Conference But in conclusion it was agreed unto upon the Motion of Sir Walter Raleigh who moved that without naming a Subsidy it might be propounded in general words to have a Conference touching the Dangers of the Realm and the necessary Supply of Treasure to be provided speedily for the same according to the Proportion of the Necessity In the 43 Eliz. Serjeant Heal said in Parliament he marvail'd the House stood either a●… the granting of a Subsidy or time of Payment whe●… all we have is her Majesties and She may lawfull at her Pleasure take it from us and that she had ●… much right to all our Lands and Goods as to an●… Revenue of the Crown and he said he could pro●… it by Precedents in the time of H. 3. K. John and K. Stephen The ground upon which this Serjeant at Law went may be thought the same Sir Edw. Coke delivers in his Institutes where he saith the first Kings of this Realm had all the Lands of England in Demesne and the great Manors Royalists they reserved to themselves of the remnant for the defence of the Kingdom enfeoffed the Barons from whence it appears that no man holds any Lands but under a condition to defend the Realm and upon the self-same Ground also the Kings Prerogative is raised as being a Preheminence in cases of Necessity above before the Law of Property or Inheritance Certain it is before the Commons were ever chosen to come to Parliament Taxes or Subsidies were raised and paid without their gift The great and long continued Subsidy of Dane-gelt was without any Gift of the Commons or of any Parliament at all that can be proved In the 8 H. 3. a Subsidy of 2 Marks in Silver upon every Knights fee was granted to the King by the Nobles without any Commons At the passing of a Bill of Subsidies the words of the King are the King thanks his loyal Subjects accepts their good Will also will have ●…so le Roy remercie ses loyaux Subjects accept leur ●…enevolence ausi ainsi le veult which last words of ainsi le veult the King wills it to be so ●…re the only words that makes the Acts of Sub●…idy a Law to bind every man to the Pay●…ent of it In the 39 Eliz. The Commons by their Speaker complaining of Monopolies the Queen spake in private to the L. Keeper who then made answer touching Monopolies that Her Majesty hoped her dutiful and loving Subjects would not take away Her Prerogative which is the chiefest Flower in her Garland and the principal and head Pearl in Her Crown and Diadem but that they will rather leave that to Her Disposition The second Point is that the Free-holders or Counties do not nor cannot give Privilege to the Commons in Parliament They that are under the Law cannot protect against it they have no such Privilege themselves as to be free from Arrests and Actions for if they had then it had been no Privilege but it would be the Common Law And what they have not they cannot give Nemo dat quod non habet neither do the Free-holders pretend to give any such Privilege either at their Election or by any subsequent Act there is no mention of any such thing in the return of the Writ nor in the Indentures between the Sheriff and the Free-holders The third Point remains That Privilege of Parliament is granted by the King It is a known Rule that which gives the Form gives the Consequences of the Form the King by his Writ gives the very Essence and Form to the Parliament therefore Privileges which are but Consequences of the Form must necessarily flow from Kings All other Privileges and Protections are the Acts of the King and by the Kings Writ Sir Edw. Coke saith that the Protection of mens Persons Servants and Goods is done by a Writ of Grace from the King At the presentment of the Speaker of the House of Commons to the King upon the first day of Parliament The Speaker in the Name and Behoof of the Commons humbly craveth that his Majesty would be graciously pleased to grant them their accustomed Liberties and Privileges which Petition of theirs is a fair Recognition of the Primitive Grace and Favour of Kings in bestowing of Privilege and it is a shrewd Argument against any other Title For our Ancestors were not so ceremonious nor so full of Complement as to beg that by Grace which they might claim by Right And the Renewing of this Petition every Parliament argues the Grant to be but temporary during only the present Parliament and that they have been accustomed when they have been accustomably sued or petitioned for I will close this Point with the Judgment of King Iames who in his Declaration touching his Proceedings in Parliament 1621. resolves that most Privileges of Parliament grew from Precedents which rather shew a Toleration than an Inheritance therefore he could not allow of the Style calling i●… their ancient and undoubted Right and Inheritance but could rather have wished that they had said their Privileges were derived from the Grace and Permission of his Ancestors and Him and thereupon he concludes He cannot with Patience endure his Subjects to use su●… Antimonarchicall words concerning their Liberties except they had subjoyned that they were granted unto them by the Grace and Favour●… of his Predecessors yet he promiseth to be careful of whatsoever Privileges they enjoy by long Custom and uncontrolled and lawful Precedents OBSERVATIONS UPON Aristotle's Politiques TOUCHING Forms of Government Together with DIRECTIONS FOR Obedience to Governours in Dangerous and Doubtful Times THE PREFACE IN every Alteration of Government there is something new which none can either Divine or Iudge of till time hath tried it we read of many several wayes of Government but they have all or most of them been of particular Cities with none or very small Territories at first belonging to them At this present the Government of the Low-Countries and of Swisserland are not appropriated either of them to any one City for they are compounded of several petty Principalities which have special and different Laws and
shall be respited untill our Lord the King shall be informed It is commanded to the Constable of the Tower safely to keep the said John untill he hath other commandement from our Lord the King In the case of Hen. Spencer Bishop of Norwich 7 Ric. 2. who was accused for complying with the French and other Failings the Bishop complained what was done against him did not pass by the Assent and Knowledge of the Peers whereupon it was said in Parliament that The cognisance and Punishment of his Offence did of common Right and antient Custom of the Realm of England solely and wholly belong to Our Lord the King and no other Le cognisance punissement de commune droit auntienne custome de Royalme de Engleterre seul per tout apperteine au Roy nostre Seignieur a nul autre In the case of the Lord de la Ware the Judgment of the Lords was that he should have place next after the Lord Willoughby of Erisbe by consent of all except the Lord Windsor and the Lord Keeper was required to acquaint Her Majesty with the Determination of the Peers and to know her Pleasure concerning the same The Inference from these Precedents is that the Decisive or Iudicial Power exercised in the Chamber of Peers is merely derivative and subservient to the Supreme Power which resides in the King and is grounded solely upon his grace and favour for howsoever the House of Commons do alledge their Power to be founded on the Principles of Nature in that they are the Representative Body of the Kingdom as they say and so being the whole may take care and have power by Nature to preserve themselves yet the House of Peers do not nor cannot make any such the least Pretence since there is no reason in Nature why amongst a company of men who are all equal some few should be picked out to be exalted above their Fellows and have power to Govern those who by Nature are their companions The difference between a Peer and a Commoner is not by Nature but by the grace of the Prince who creates Honours and makes those Honours to be hereditary whereas he might have given them for life onely or during pleasure or good behaviour and also annexeth to those Honours the Power of having Votes in Parliament as hereditary Counsellours furnished with ampler Privileges than the Commons All these Graces conferred upon the Peers are so far from being derived from the Law of Nature that they are contradictory and destructive of that natural equality and freedom of mankind which many conceive to be the foundation of the Privileges and Liberties of the House of Commons there is so strong an opposition between the liberties of Grace and Nature that it had never been possible for the two Houses of Parliament to have stood together without mortal Enmity and eternal jarring had they been raised upon such opposite foundations But the truth is the Liberties and Privileges of both Houses have but one and the self same foundation which is nothing else but the meer and sole Grace of Kings Thus much may serve to shew the Nature and Original of the deliberative and decisive Power of the Peers of the Kingdom The matter about which the deliberative power is conversant is generally the Consulting and Advising upon any urgent Business which concerns the King or Defence of the Kingdom and more especially sometimes in preparing new Laws and this Power is grounded upon the Writ The décisive Power is exercised in giving Judgment in some difficult Cases but for this Power of the Peers I find no Warrant in their Writ Whereas the Parliament is styled the Supreme Court it must be understood properly of the King sitting in the House of Peers in Person and but improperly of the Lords without him Every Supreme Court must have the Supreme Power and the Supreme Power is alwayes Arbitrary for that is Arbitrary which hath no Superiour on Earth to control●… it The last Appeal in all Government must still b●… to an Arbitrary Power or else Appeals will b●… in Infinitum never at an end The Legislative Power is an Arbitrary Power for they are termini convertibiles The main Question in these our dayes is Where this Power Legislative remains or is placed upon conference of the Writs of Summons for both Houses with the Bodies and Titles of our Ancient Acts of Parliament we shall find the Power of making Laws rests solely in the King Some affirm that a part of the Legislative Power is in either of the Houses but besides invincible reason from the Nature of Monarchy it self which must have the Supreme Power Alone the constant Antient Declaration of this Kingdom is against it For howsoever of later years in the Titles and Bodies of our Acts of Parliament it be not so particularly expressed who is the Author and Maker of our Laws yet in almost all our elder Statutes it is precisely expressed that they are made by the King Himself The general words used of later times that Laws are made by Authority of Parliament are particularly explained in former Statutes to mean That the King Ordains the Lords Advise the Commons Consent as by comparing the Writs with the Statutes that expound the Writs will evidently appear Magna Charta begins thus Henry by the grace of God Know ye that WE of Our Meer and Free Will have given these Liberties In the self-same style runs Charta de Foresta and tells us the Author of it The Statute de Scaccario 41 H. 3. begins in these words The King Commandeth that all Bailiffs Sheriffs and other Officers c. And concerning the Justices of Chester the King Willeth c. and again He Commandeth the Treasurer and Barons of the Exchequer upon their Allegiance The Stat. of Marlborough 52 Hen. 3. goeth thus The King hath Made these Acts Ordinances and Statutes which He Willeth to be Observed of all his Subjects high and low 3 Edw. 1. The Title of this Statute is These are the ACTS of King EDWARD and after it follows The KING hath Ordained these ACTS and in the first Chapter The King Forbiddeth and Commandeth That none do hurt damage or grievance ●…o any Religious Man or Person of the Church and in the thirteenth Chapter The King prohibiteth that none do Ravish or take away by force any Maid within age 6 Edw. 1. It is said Our Sovereign Lord the King hath established these Acts commanding they be ●…bserved within this Realm and in the fourteenth Chap. the words are The King of his special Grace granteth that the Citizens of London shall recover in an Assise Damage with the Land The Stat. of West 2. saith Our Lord the King hath ordained that the Will of the Giver be observed and in the 3. Chap. Our Lord the King hath ordained that a woman after the Death of her Husband shal recover by a Writ of Entry The Stat. of Quo Warranto saith Our Lord