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A34178 The Compleat statesman demonstrated in the life, actions, and politicks of that great minister of state, Anthony, Earl of Shaftesbury : containing an account of his descent, his administration of affairs in the time of Oliver Cromwell, his unwearied endeavours to restore His Most Sacred Majesty, his zeal in prosecuting the horrid Popish Plot, several of his learned speeches during his being Ld. Chancellor, his two commitments to the Tower, the most material passages at his tryal, with many more considerable instances unto His Lordships going for Holland. Dunton, John, 1659-1733. 1683 (1683) Wing C5658; ESTC R35656 48,139 160

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the Earl of Arlington and the Lord Clifford were promoted To his happy Councils do both King and Kingdom owe for the happy Conduct of things for divers years so that now he seemed to be incorporate into the heart of his Prince the Events of his Advices were commonly agreeable to what he at first proposed so that it may be said of him as was spoken of Polibius that as Scipio so the King seldom miscarried in any thing that was carried on by his Advice so that at length he seemed to be the Royal Oracle In fine such was the Opinion which his wise Administration had gained that as he sate in one of the highest places in his Masters favour so he was preferred to the highest Trust of Honour in the Kingdom he was made Chancellor of the Exchequer and afterwards Lord High Chancellor of England about the beginning of the Year 1672. Now was the Kings Conscience as it were entrusted to his care and management this was the highest Orb a Subject was capable to move in but with what Sagacity Honour and Integrity he acquitted himself in that great Employment the Transactions of the Court of Chancery at that time can best witness Justice ran in an equal channel the cause of the Rich did not swallow up the Rights of the Poor he that was oppressed found Relief and the Oppressor a Rebuke suitable to his crime the usual delays of that Court were much abated and all the Transactions thereof were managed with the greatest Judgment and Equity As an Instance of his constant adhering to the Interest of his Master and the commune Bonum or Weal of the publick you may take a copy of his Thoughts from that excellent Speech made by him in favour of the Subject in the Exchequer Jan. 24. 1673. at Baron Thurland's taking the Oath a copy whereof follows Mr. Serj. Thurland The King of his Grace and Favour hath made choice of you to be one of the Barons of the Exchequer he designed to place you in a Court of more profit though not of more Dignity but your own Modesty and Virtue hath chosen this Court where you thought you could serve the K. best And I could not omit to mention it here to your Honour it being the greatest Instance of a good man that he had rather be found serviceable than rich His Majesty hath had large proof of your former services besides he takes you upon the credit of that Recommendation that hath justly the best place with him I mean his Royal Brothers Some few things it is fit I should here mention to you and leave with you as Admonitions or rather Remembrances In the first place you are to maintain the Kings Prerogative and let not the Kings Prerogative and the Law be two things with you For the Kings Prerogative is Law and the principal part of it and therefore in maintaining that you maintain the Law The Government of England is so excellently interwoven that every part of the Prerogative hath a broad mixture of the Interest of the Subject the ease and safety of the people being inseparable from the greatness and security of the Crown In the next place let me advise you that you acquaint your self with the Revenue as also with the ancient Records Precedents and Practices of this Court for want of which knowledge I have seen this Court a most excellent Common Pleas when at the same time I could not say so much for it as an Exchequer In the third place let me recommend to you so to manage the Kings Justice and Revenue as the King may have most profit and the Subject least vexation Raking for old Debts the number of Informations Projects upon Concealments I could not find in the 11 years Experience I have had in this Court ever to advantage the Crown but such proceedings have for the most part delivered up the Kings good Subjects into the hands of the worst of Men. There is another thing I have observed in this Court which I shall mind you of which is when the Court hearkens too much to the Clerks and Officers of it and are too apt to send out process when the Money may be raised by other ways more easie to the people I do not say that the Kings Duty should be lost or that the strictest course should not be taken rather than that be but when you consider how much the Officers of this Court and the Undersheriffs get by process upon small summs more than the Kings Duty comes to and upon what sort of people this falls to wit the Farmer Husbandman and Clothier in the Country that is generally the Collector Constable and Tythingman and so disturbs the industrious part of the Nation you will think it fit to make that the last way when no other will serve Give me leave also to mind you of one thing more which is in your Oath That the Kings needs ye shall speed before all other that is the business of the Revennue of the Crown you are to dispatch before all other and not turn your Court into a Court of Common Pleas and let that justle out what you were constituted for In the last place let me conclude with what concerns all my Lords the Judges as well as you let me recommend to you the Port and way of Living suitable to the Dignity of your place and what the King allows you There is not any thing that gains more Reputation and Respect to the Government than that doth and let me tell you Magistrates as well as Merchants are supported by Reputation His particular Application to prevent any misunderstanding between the King and his Parliament is very obvious to any that shall but look into his Speeches to the Parliament during his Chancellorship and with how great concern he still vindicated his Masters Actions He acquitted himself in all the great Emergencies of this High Employment with that universal Applause and satisfaction as seldom happens to men in such an envied station The vilest of his Detractors not being able to fasten any Imputation upon his conduct in those great and weighty Trusts he was advanced to So little of self appeared in his Actions that it may be modestly affirmed of him he made his own Interest strike sail to the publick and his care for others seemed more than for himself and at the time of his highest Elevation he would not neglect the meanest Suitors that applied themselves to him Thus having gradually traced the Advancement of this great Minister to the highest pitch of Honor where he appeared sicut Luna inter Stellas minores I shall now take notice of his Relinquishment of that High Employment and what other contingencies have happened to him since About November 1673. His Majesty was pleased to send for the Lord Chancellor to White-Hall where he resigned the Great Seal of England to His Majesty and was dismist from being Under-Treasurer of the Exchequor which place was conferred on
Si●… John Duncomb In the Afternoon of the same day the Earl of Shaftesbury was visited by Prince Rupert with divers other great Lords at Exeter House where they gave his Lordship Thanks for his Faithful and Honourable Discharge of that great Employment Thus this mighty Minister who had to the universal satisfaction of all good Men been raised to that degree of Interest in his Masters favour without a murmur laid all his Honours at his Masters Feet and was observed not to abate of the chearfulness of his Temper upon the loss of his honorary Employment I shall conclude this part with a touch of this Earl's Character which saith His choice Sagacity Strait solv'd the Knot that subtle Lawyers tied And through all Foggs discern'd th' oppressed side Banish'd delays so this noble Peer Became a Star of Honor in our Sphere A needful Atlas of our State c. The 16th of Feb. 1676. The Honourable Earl of Shaftesbury was sent a Prisoner to the Tower by Order of the House of Lords There were at the same time committed the E. of Salisbury and the L. Wharton The Form of the Warrant for their Commitment was as followeth Ordered by the Lords Spiritual and Temporal in Parliament Assembled That the Constable of His Majesties Tower of London His Deputy or Deputies shall receive the Bodies of James Earl of Salisbury Anthony Earl of Shaftesbury and Philip Lord Wharton Members of this House and keep them in safe Custody within the said Tower during His Majesties pleasure and the pleasure of this House for their High Contempts Committed against this House And this shall be sufficient Warrant on that behalf To the Constable of the Tower J. Browne Cler. Par. The 27th and 29th of Jan. 1677. The E. of Shaftesbury was brought to the King's-Bench-Bar upon the Return of an Alias Habeas Corpus directed to the Constable of the Tower where the Council for the Earl prayed that the Return might be filed and the Friday following appointed for Debating the sufficiency of the Return and my Lord was remanded until that day On Friday the Earl was brought into Court again and his Council argued the Insufficiency of the Return After Mr. Williams Mr. Wallop Mr. Smith had shewed divers weighty Reasons in behalf of the Earl that that Court might relieve him they were opposed by the Solicitor General and the Attorney General who brought divers Instances why that Court could not discharge a person Committed by Parliament whereupon the Earl of Shaftesbury is said to have spoke to this purpose My Lords I did not intend to have spoken one word in this business but something hath been objected and laid to my Charge by the King's Council Mr. Attorney and Mr. Solicitor that enforceth me to say something for your better satisfaction They have told you that my Council in their Arguments said That this Court was greater than the House of Peers which I dare to Appeal to your Lordships and the whole Court that it was never spoken by them I am sure it was not by any direction of mine What is done by my Council and by me is that this is the most proper Court to resort unto where the Liberty of the Subject is concerned The Lord's House is the Supream House of Judicature in the Kingdom but yet there is a Jurisdiction that the Lord's House does not meddle with The King's Council hath mentioned as a wonder that a Member of the Lord's House should come hither to diminish the Jurisdiction of the Lords I acknowledge them to be Superiour to this or any other Court to whom all Appeals and Writs of Errour are brought and yet there are Jurisdictions that they do not Challenge and which are not natural to them or proper for them They claim not to meddle in Original Causes and so I might mention in other things and I do not think it a kindness to any Power or Body of Men to give them some Power that is not natural or proper to their Constitutions I do not think it a kindness to the Lords to make them Absolute and above the Law for so I humbly conceive this must do if it be adjudged that they by a General Warrant or without any particular Cause Assigned do Commit me or any other man to a perpetual and indefinite Imprisonment And my Lords I am not so inconsiderable a person but what you do in my Case must be Law for every man in England Mr. Attorney is pleased to say I am a Member of the Lord's House and to lay weight on the word Member It is true I am one of them and no man hath a greater Reverence or Esteem for the Lords than my self but my Lords I hope my being a Peer or a Member of either House shall not lose my Priviledge of being an English man or make me to have less Title to Magna Charta or the other Laws of English Liberty My Opinion is not with one of my Council who argued very learnedly that the Passing an Act by the King 's Royal Assent can make a Session because the usual promise was not in it It was without any Instruction of mine to mention that point The King's Council tells your Lordships of the Laws and Customs of Parliament and if this were so I should submit but this Case of mine is primae Impressionis and is a new way such as neither Mr. Attorney nor Mr. Solicitor can shew any President of and I have no other Remedy or place to Apply to than the way I take Mr. Attorney confesseth that the King's pleasure may Release me without the Lords If so this Court is Coram Rege this Court is the proper place to determine the King's pleasure This Court will and ought to Judge of an Act of Parliament void if it be against Magna Charta much more may Judge an Order of the House that is put in Execution to deprive any Subject of his Liberty And if this Order or Commitment be a Judgment as the King's Council affirms then it is out of the Lords hands and properly before your Lordships as much as the Acts which were lately Passed which I presume you will not refuse to Judge of notwithstanding that the King's Atorney General saith this Parliament is still in being I take it something ill that Mr. Attorney tells me I might have Applied elsewhere My Lord I have not omitted what became my Duty toward the King for besides the Oath of Allegiance I took as a Peer or an English man there is something in my Breast that will never suffer me to depart from the Duty and Respect that I owe him but I am here before him he is alwaies supposed to be here present and he alloweth his Subjects the Law My Lord They speak much of the Custom of Parliament but I do affirm there is no Custom of Parliament that ever their Members were put out of their own Power and the Inconveniencies of it will be endless Mr.