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A54688 Ligeancia lugens, or, Loyaltie lamenting the many great mischiefs and inconveniences which will fatally and inevitably follow the taking away of the royal pourveyances and tenures in capite and by knight-service, which being ancient and long before the conquest were not then, or are now, any slavery, publick or general grievence with some expedients humbly offered for the prevention thereof / by Fabian Philipps. Philipps, Fabian, 1601-1690. 1661 (1661) Wing P2010; ESTC R7943 37,109 71

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LIGEANCIA LUGENS OR LOYALTIE LAMENTING The many great Mischiefs and Inconveniencies which will fatally and inevitably follow the taking away of the Royal Pourveyances and Tenures in Capite and by Knight-Service which being ancient and long before the CONQUEST were not then or are now any Slavery Publick or General Grievance With some Expedients humbly offered for the prevention thereof By Fabian Philipps LONDON Printed by J. M. for Andrew Crook and are to be sold at his Shop at the Green-Dragon in St Paul's Church-yard 1661. Ligeancia Lugens OR Loyaltie Lamenting The many great mischiefs and Inconveniences which will fatally and inevitably follow the taking away of Tenures in Capite and by Knight-Service which being Antient and long before the Conquest were not then or are now any Slavery Publique or General Grievance THe King will upon occasion of Warr want the obligations and service of his Nobility and Gentry which hold in Capite Their Homage which is the Seminary and Root of the Oath of Allegiance The Education of the Heirs of persons disaffected which hold in Capite when they shall be in ward or minority His Tenants will be the more enabled to alienate their Lands to his Enemies or such as are disaffected which common persons in their Leases one to another do usually prevent and prohibit Provision for maintenance education and portions for younger Children care of payment of Debts preservation of the Wards estate Woods and Evidences will be neglected Finding of Offices after the death of the Ancestors extents of Mannors and Lands a light to Titles and Discents of Lands and recovery and making out of Deeds and Evidences laid aside Genealogies and Pedigrees darkened and Descents not at all to be proved Contention concerning the rights of Guardianship encreased and multiplyed The Mothers of Fatherless Children in their minority made the Guardians permitted to sacrifice the children of the first husband to the spoil and interest of a Father in Law and his second Children Or make them to be a prey to the kindred of the Mothers side who will neither be so kinde or carefull as those of the Fathers Or to Trustees Executors or Administrators who are too many of them dayly experimented to be false to their Trusts and may be as bad in their Guardianships There will not be so good a means as formerly for the preservation of the Wards Estate from false or forged Wills fraudulent Conveyances and other Incumbrances Nor for preventing of the Heires of Tenants in Capite to be disinherited by Heirs by second Ven●ers forged Conveyances or Wills frewardness of an aged Father or cunning of a Stepmother In Socage and that ignoble or Plow-Tenure there will not be that ready defence for the Kingdom as in Capite and by Knight-Service All the Antient Baronies which are annexed to antient Earldomes and Baronies and the newly created Baronies being by Law and the signification of the words a Complexum of honorary possessions belonging to Earls and Barons aswell as of the honour and title residing in their persons cannot now be properly called Baronies and he that was a Baron before will in a strict interpretation of the Feudal Laws from whence they had their beginning be no more nor no better then a Soke-man Alter and disparage the fundamental and ancient constitution of Peerage by making them to hold in Socage which no Baronies in the Christian World ever did or can be found to do The antient Earls and Barons who hold as Tenants in Capite and per Baroniam as the Earl of Arundell who holdeth by the Service of Eighty four Knights Fees and the Earl of Oxford by thirty many others may be greatly prejudiced The Nobility and Gentry of England will by the taking away of their mesne Tenures by Knight-Service be disabled to serve their Prince as formerly or bring any men into the Field The Subjection and Rights of the Bishop of the Isle of Man who holdeth immediately of the Earl of Derby will be taken away The profits of the Kings Annum Diem Vastum will be lost or greatly disturbed and his and the Nobilities and Gentries Escheates which as to a third part of that which is holden in Capite or Knight Service could not before have been conveyed away will be in no better condition Our Original Magna Charta which is holden in Capite and all the Confirmations of the English Liberties Franchises of the City of London and many other Cities and Boroughs which before 9 H. 3. did use to send Burgesses to Parliament will be enervated Destroy or weaken the antient Charters of the City of London for what except their Court of Wards or Orphans concerns their Customs and Husting Courts Put into fresh disputes the question of Precedency betwixt England and Spain which belongeth to England in regard it holdeth of none but God and hath Scotland Ireland and the Isle of Man holding in Capite of it Not well agree with the honour of England and the Monarchy and Superiority thereof to have the Isles of Garnesey and Jersey which are a part of Normandie to hold of the King by Feif roturier or the Principality of Wales and the Isles of Wight and Man to hold in Socage Damnifie all the Nobility and Gentry in their mesne Tenures in which they have a propriety which our Magna Charta and a greater then that twice written by the finger of God himself do without a crime forfeiting it or a just consideration or recompence for it which a relaxation of their own Tenures and Services will not amount unto forbid to be taken away Prejudice the Families of Cornwall Hilton and Venables who are called Barons as holding per Baroniam though not sitting in Parliament Bring a dis-repute upon the Esquires and Gentry of England whose original was from Tenures by Knight-Service Take away a great part of the root and foundation of the Equestris Ordo which was derived out of Tenures in Capite Blast and enervate the degree of Baronets Take away the cause of the eminent degree of Banneretts Make our heretofore famous Nation in Feats of Arms and Chivalrie to be but as an Agreste genus hominum or a race of Rusticks like the Arcadians Take away or weaken all the Mannors and Court Barons in England which were derived or had their original from Tenures in Capite Turn Tenures in Capite which from the Duty of Homage and acknowledgment of Soveraignty were so called into a Tenure which by only acknowledging a Fealty for particular Lands which they hold is but à Latere and no more then what one man holding by a Lease for years is by Law bound to do to another Release the aid of the Maritime Counties and Ports in case of Warr and Invasion Extinguish the Duties which every Hundred upon the Sea Coasts do owe in that which which was called the Petty Watches Discharge the Mises or Payments which in Wales and Cheshire are due to the Kings
of England at their Coronations Indamage the King in his other R●galities as in the Cinque Ports finding fifty ships upon occasion of Warr and many reservations of Honor and profit upon Tenures in Capite Knight Service and Socage in Capite which if revived and well looked after would almost raise an Army and furnish a great part of the Provisions thereof The King upon occasion of Warr shall never be able to erect his Standard but will be left to hire and provide an Army out of the Rascal●ity faithless unobliged rude deboisht necessitous and common sort of people If a Warr should break forth before a Rent-day or Excise money can be gathered will never want misfortunes and distresses and the King thereby failing of an Assistance at Land may loose also the help of his Navy at Sea May have his Money and his Rents seised as his late Majesties Magazines and Rents were in the beginning of the late Warrs Can have no manner of assurance in a Sedition or Commotion of the people that men will for a small pay adventure their lives and limbs for many times no better a reward then the lamentable comforts of an Hospital and the small charities and allowance usually bestowed upon maimed Souldie●s Destroy the hopes of the Bishops ever sitting again in the House of Peers as a third Estate or if restored to those their just rights so weaken the ground and foundation of that most antient Constitution as they may again be in danger to be divested of them which the inconveniences of prescriptions interrupted and Customs altered may perswade us to take heed of Disable the King and his Successors from recovering Forreign Rights succouring Allyes and making an Offensive or diversive Warr. Shake or dislocate if not take away that great Fundamental Law and Ancient Constitution of the Baronage and Peerage of England and their Rights of Sitting in the House of Peers in Parliament who sit there as Tenants in Capite and per Baroniam and are summoned thither in fide homagio in the faith and homage by which they are obliged which Proviso's not always arriving to their ends or intentions or a Saving of the Rights of Peerage of Sitting in the House of Peers in Parliament will not be able to insure or give them a certainty to be left in as good a condition as they were before Disfranchise the Counties Palatine of Lancaster Chester Durham and the Isle of Ely which relate unto Palaces of Kings not Plows and are no where in the Christian world to be found holden by any other Tenure then in Capite Make our Nobility and Gentry to hold their lands by no better Tenures then the Roturiers or Paysants of France do theirs and in Socage which as Sir Henry Spelman saith Ignobilibus rusticis competit nullo feudali privilegio ornatum feudi nomen sub recenti seculo perperam abusu rerum auspicatum belongs only to rusticks and ignoble men and being not intituled to any feudal priviledge hath of late times improperly and by abuse gained the name of Fee Loosen the foundation of such ancient Earldoms and Baronies as have been said to consist of a certain number of Knights Fees holden of them Hazard the avitas consuetudines ancient Rights and Customs belonging to Tenants in Capite and by Knight-Service Take away or lessen as to the future the fame and honour of the Nobility and Gentry of the English Nation which in feats of Chivalrie not Socagerie extended as far as the Roman Eagles ever flew and had no other bounds then the utmost parts of the earth Render them in Tenure and that which at first made them by their virtue and imployment Superiors in degree aswell as in their Lands and Revenues to the common sort of people to be in that particular but as their equals Will not be consistent with the honour of England to have Tenures in Capite and by Knight-Service retained in Ireland and Scotland and not in England and to lessen the honour and strength of the English Nobility and Gentry in England by reducing their mesne Tenures into free and common Socage whilst the better and more Noble Tenures in Capite and by Knight-Service shall be enjoyed in those inferior and dependent Kingdoms Or if taken away in Ireland and reduced into free and common Socage will in all probability meet with as many inconveniences as the like may do in England and lose the Kings of England that Service which by reason of the Tenures in Capite was always in a readiness and made use of by their Progenitors upon all occasions of War and necessity as well in England as Ireland And if the like shall be done in Scotland where the people too much accustomed to infidelity and a Rhodomontading where they are not resisted are best if not only to be Governed by their dependencies upon their Superiors and Benefactors and holding their Lands by Military and Knight-Service as that Kingdome it self doth in Capite of England as it was stoutly asserted by our King EDWARD the First and His Baronage of England there will happen such a dissolution or distemper of that body politique as will exceed all or any imagination before hand and the inferior sort of people will by such an alteration of their Tenures be like hunger bitten Bears let loose to as bad if not a worse kind of levelling then our Phanaticks would not long ago have cut out for the three Kingdoms of England Scotland and Ireland now happily conjoyned under their rightful King and Soveraign Will greatly derogate from the honour of the English Nation and make them who excelled in their Laws and Constitutions all or most of the Nations and Kingdoms of the Christian world and had more of right reason in them to be as a reproach to other Nations and seperated from the use of those ancient and Regal Rights Customs Powers and Regalities which all Monarchies in Christendom do use and will be as inconsistent with the honour of England as it would be to have their Kings in a complaisance of a troublesome and unquiet part of the people not to be Crowned nor Annointed not to use a Scepter or have a sword born before Them not to make Knights or not to do it in the ancient and usual manner which the Kings of other Nations and Kingdoms have ever done and enjoyed or to have the Earls of England as if they were only Comites Parochiales Governors of Villages mentioned by Goldastus or Dijck Graven or men of small honour in Holland appointed to look to their Sea-banks not to wear their Circulos Aureos Coronets of Gold Will not accord well with the Rules of Justice to take away Knights Fees or Tenures by Knight-Service from the mesne Lords without a fitting Recompence But break the Publique Faith and Contracts of those that hold of the King or them The recompence of 150000 l. per Annum will not be adequate to the loss
can certainly have no pretence of Grievance in them for they are only pretences and causeless clamours that have of late cast them into an odium or ill will of the common sort of people or such as do not rightly understand them but may be made to be more pleasing unto them by this or the like Expedient IF the Marriage of the Wards and Rents of their lands during all the time of their minorities computed together shall be reduced to be never above one years improved value which will be but the half of that which is now accounted to be a reasonable Fine and frequently paid by many Copy-hold Tenants whose Fines are certain and would be most joyously paid by those which are by Law to pay Fines incertain at the will of their Lords That the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury and those other few mesne Lords who by antient exemption and priviledge are to have the Wardships of Tenants holding of them by Knight-Service in their minorities though they hold other Lands in Capite and by Knight-Service of the King may be ordained to do the like favors That all that hold in Capite and by Knight-Service be freed from all Assesments touching Warr of their demesne Lands holden in Capite and by Knight-Service as in all reason they ought being a Libertie or Priviledge amongst others granted to them by the Charter of King Henry the First the Original of a great part of our Magna Charta in these words Militibus qui per Loricas terras suas defendunt terras dominicarum carucarum suarum quietas ab omnibus geldis ab omni opere proprio dono meo concedo ut sicut tam magno gravamine alleviati sunt in Equis Armis se bene instruant ut apti parati sint ad servitium meum ad defensionem Regni mei that the Knights which hold by Knight-Service and defend their own Lands by that Tenure shall be acquitted of all geldes and taxes of their Demesn Lands and from all other works upon condition that as they being freed from so great a burden they be at all times ready with Horses and Arms for the service of the King and defence of the Kingdom Which being long after found out produced and read by Stephen Langton to the Earls and Barons of England and Abbots and others of the Clergy assembled in St Pauls Church in London in the great Contest which was betwixt King JOHN and His Barons about their Liberties Gavisi sunt gaudio magno valde saith Matthew Paris juraverunt omnes in presentia dicti Archi-Episcopi quod viso tempore congruo pro hiis libertatibus si necesse fuerit decertabunt usque ad mortem They greatly rejoyced and did in the presence of the said Arch-Bishop swear that if need were they would contend even to death for those Liberties And is at this day so little misliked in France as an ancient Counsellor of Estate of that Kingdom in the Reigns of the Great Henry the Fourth of France and his son Lewis the Thirteenth in his discourse of the means of establishing preserving and aggrandising a Kingdom is of opinion that those Fieffs Nobles and Tenures by Knight Service ought to have an exemption as they there have of all manner of Taxes and Impositions for that they are to hazard their lives pour la defence de l'Estat for the defence of the Kingdom If where Lands are holden in Socage of the King or any other Person and there be a Wardship by reason of the said lands holden of the King in Capite or pour cause de garde of some other that holds in Capite and is in minority the lands which are found to be holden of the King or any other mesne Lord in Socage being taken into consideration only as to the Fine for the marriage may not be put under any Rent or Lease to be made by that Court but be freed as they were frequently and anciently by Writs sent to the Escheators now extant and appearing upon Record That Primer seisins be taken away and no more paid That the King shall in recompence thereof have and receive of every Duke or Earl that dieth seised of any Lands or Hereditaments in Capite and by Knight-Service the sum of two hundred pounds of every Baron two hundred marks of every one else that holdeth by a Knights Fee proportionably according to the quantity of the Fee which he holdeth twenty pound for a Reliefe That incroachments upon wast grounds and high ways which are holden in Capite shall be no cause of Wardship or paying any other duties incident to that Tenure if it shall upon the first proof and notice be relinquished That in case of neglecting to petition within a moneth after the death of the Tenant in Capite or otherwise concealing any Wardships or not suing out of Livery if upon information brought issue joyned and witnesses examined or at any time before Hearing or Tryal of the Cause the Party offending or concerned shall pay the prosecutor his double costs and satisfie the King the Mesne rates he shall be admitted to compound That only Escuage and service of Warr except in the aforesaid cases of the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury and some few others and all other incidents except Wardships due by their Tenants which hold of them by Knight-Service be reserved to Mesne Lords that the Reliefs of five pounds for a whole Knights Fee or proportionably according to the quantity of Lands of that kinde of Fee holden shall be after the death of every such Tenant Twenty pounds and proportionably as aforesaid That to lessen the charges of Escheators and Juries for every single Office or Inquisition to be found or taken after the death of every Tenant in Capite by Knight-Service the time of petitioning within a moneth after the death of the Ancestor may be enlarged to three moneths and the Shire Town City or principal place of every County be appointed with certain days or times for the finding of Offices to the end that one and the same Meeting and one and the same Jury with one and the same charge or by a contribution of all parties concerned may give a dispatch thereunto That the unnecessary Bonds formerly taken in the Court of Wards at 2 s. 6 d. or 3 s. charge upon suing out of every Diem clausis extremum or Writ to finde an Office obliging the prosecution thereof may be no more taken when as the time limited for petitioning to compound for Wardships and the danger of not doing of it will be ingagement sufficient That Grants Leases and Decrees of the Court may not to the great charge of the people be unnecessarily as they have been at length Inrolled with the Auditors of that Court when as the same was done before by other Officers in other Records of that Court to which the Auditors may have a free access and at any time take extracts out of
of the Tenures in Capite and by Knight-Service which nothing but the Kingdome of England it self can balance and which the King of France or the King of Spain in their several Dominions would not for an yearly Revenue of many hundred thousand pounds part with but would think it no bad bargain to be re purchased after the same or a greater rate It will be as unsafe as unusual to turn into a Rent that which was intended for the defence of the Kingdome And to charge all mens Lands with recompence to be made for it will be against Justice Equity and Reason and make nineteen parts in twenty of the people to bear the burden of the twentieth Or if by Excise upon Ale Beer will do the like lay the burden of the rich upon the poor extend it to Children Servants Day-labourers Coblers Apple-women and all manner of the lowest ranks of people which are as unlikely to be Tenants in Capite as all the Colledges in the Universities and Hospitals of England are whose expences will be also enlarged by it Will be a seminary and complication of Grievances May be afterward legally taken away by Petitions to Parliaments or illegally which God forbid by an Insurrection or Mutiny of the common people as in Naples France c. Will not be an honourable Revenue nor ever be well setled without the help of Garrisons Troops of Horse and Companies of Foot The people will be double charged by the Brewers and Ale-men and inforced to pay 250000 l. per Annum for 150000 l. per Annum And whether Excise or not Excise the King when the Tenures shall be taken away and Ship-money shall be denied him because as Mr. St John argued in the case of Ship money he had the Tenures in Capite allowed for the defence of the Kingdome Or the miseries of an actuall War shall overwhelm or oppress Him shall be told as His Royal Father was by that part of the Parliament which sate at VVestminster in 1642. That He ought not to put in execution His Commissions of Array because His Tenures in Capite were for the defence of the Kingdome And that by several Statutes and Acts of Parliament in the Raign of King E. 3. it shall be said that he is restrained not to Imprest Hoblers which were as our Dragoons or Archers or Foot-men who are thereby not to go out of their Counties but in case of necessity and coming in of Forreign enemies Or shall have need to succour His Allies make a diversive War or embroyl an Enemy shall be answered That they are quit of all Services but the holding their Lands of Him by doing of fealty which they will be apt to interpret according to their Interest the humor of their faction or party or as their designs or better hopes in a change shall direct them Must be enforced for the safety of His people if the Tenures shall be taken away to raise and maintain a standing Army And a standing Army and standing Assesments to maintain it will be certainly more prejudicial and chargeable to all the people in general then that which without any ground or reason the Tenures in Capite have lately been supposed to be to any in particular It will derogate from the honour of the King who is Pater Patriae not to be trusted with the protection of Orphans so much as the Dutch who have a Court of Orphans Or as the City of London who by ancient Custom have an absolute Court of Wards called a Court of Orphans which may by overthrowing the Kings Court of Wards come under the like fortune Be a means to defraud Creditors and Purchasers who cannot for want of Offices or Inquisitions found after the death of Tenants in Capite and by Knight-Service so well as formerly know how the Debtors Lands are setled or what is in fee simple to charge the Heir Be against the peoples Oaths of Supremacy to desire the diminishing or taking away the Kings Rights or Jurisdiction Take away His Power and Means of protecting and defending them and to perform his Coronation Oath and when the assistance and help of Tenures in Capite have like Sea walls and banks proved not strong enough to withstand and keep out the Floods of Sedition it cannot now surely be for the good and safety of the people either to weaken as much as may be the strength which was before in them or to have none at all Draw a Curse upon the Posterities of those that hold under those Tenures and shall endeavor contrary to the faith and promise of their Ancestors to subvert them Make the common people insolent and teach them hereafter to find fault with every thing that fits not their Interest or humor and by such a largeness of liberty having before surfeited upon lesser to be like the waves of the Sea and its deep tossed and beating one against another by the winds of those inticements or factions which for their own wicked ends shall blow upon them And by such an easiness of granting away so great a part of the just and legal power of the King Nobility and better part of the people over the most rude and not easie without it to be either governed or perswaded invite them to take up their not long ago designs and projects of taking away Copy-holds which they lately as foolishly as falsly called Norman slaveries and of enforcing their Lords to take two years purchase for them and that Landlords might be st●nted and ordered to take what the factiously well-affected Tenants should call reasonable in the leasing and renting of their Lands Carry along with it and abolish the Royal Pourveyances which being in use amongst the people of Israel were never in that glorious and ever commended Raign of King Solomon nor in that long after pious order and Government of the good Nehemiah found to be a grievance nor taken to be so amongst the Greeks Poles Romans ancient Brittains Franks and Germans those great Assertors of Liberties or the most of the Nations of Europe not cast unhappily into Common-wealths where they only dream of freedom but cannot find it but were used in the West-Indies long before the Spanish curtesies and care of their conversion had ingrossed their gold destroyed the most of their Natives and made the relidue their slaves And in China and most parts of the habitable World And being a Jus Gentium and a part of right Reason so universally allowed and practised were as Oblations or recompences for tolls or pre-emption or for some other confiderations chearfully paid to our Kings of England so butted and bounded with good Laws and so easie as the Tenants did neither care to provide against it in their Leases or reckon to their Landlords those little and seldome payments and charges which were occasioned by them And by throwing the Purveyance into the same Bill or intended Act of Parliament for taking away the Tenures
in Capite and by Knight-Service hath since caused the King to pay three times or more then formerly he did as 12d per pound for Butter where it was before but three pence twelve shillings a hundred for Eggs where it was before but three shillings and eighteen pence a mile for a Cart to carry his goods or provision when it was before but two pence a mile in Summer and six pence in winter twelve pounds for a Beef or an Oxe which before was willingly and without any oppression of the Counties served in at fifty shillings Render the One hundred and fifty thousand pounds per Annum of Excise money for the intended recompence for the profit and honour of his Tenures Court of Wards and Pourveyance to be no more if it could clearly come up to that summ then Thirty seven thousand and five hundred pounds but if with allowances and charges in the collecting and arrears and bad payments or otherwise it should amount as it is likely to no more then One hundred thousand pounds per Annum the clear of that to the King three parts in four of his prizes enhaunced being deducted is like to be but Twenty and five thousand pounds per Annum Which when the Excise wherein the King himself shall now pay a Taxe or Excise for his Beer and Ale and other Assessments shall every day more and more make dear the Markets and that the people shall to make themselves more then savers stretch the price of their Commodities and make an addition to the former years rates and demands for all sorts of victuals and provision of livelihood or that the King or His Pourveyors shall over and above that be for want of ready money enforced to pay a treble or more interest for buying upon Time or days of payment will also within the compass of seven years vanish into a Cypher And if the Excise for the burden and grievance thereof should also be taken away the King having no provision made in the Act for taking away his Tenures in Capite and by Knight-Service and of his Pourveyance ●or the intended recompence of that part of the Excise therein mentioned to resort back again in such a case to the former profit of his Tenures and ease of Pourveyance Will then not only have given away those two great Flowers of His Crown for nothing but be as much a looser in what he shall over and above pay for his houshold provision Cart taking and other necessaries as hee shall pay a greater rate then his former pourveyances came unto which in 200000 l. per ann which may well be conjectured to be the least which will be expended in that kinde will considering three parts in four of the prizes enhanced amount to no less a detriment then one hundred seventy five thousand pounds per Annum besides what must be added to that loss for what shall be paid more then formerly for Timber and materials for the Navy and repair of the Kings Houses Castles and Forts and by the peoples every year more and more raising their priaees upon him And then the bargain or exchange betwixt the King and the people for the Tenures in Capite and by Knight-Service and his Pourveyances besides the giving away so great a part of his Prerogative and Soveraignty will arrive to no more then this The King shall remit the yearly revenue of Eighty eight thousand seventy pounds per Annum defalcations for exhibitions and allowances for Fees Dyet and other necessaries and charges first deducted which was made by the Court of Wards in the year 1640 besides Thirteen thousand two hundred eighty eight pounds profit for those kinde of Tenures which in that year was collected and brought into the Exchequer which will make a Total of One hundred one thousand three hundred fifty eight pounds per Annum Or if but Eighty one thousand two hundred eighty eight pounds all charges cleared and deducted as it came unto in Anno 1637. which was 13º Car. primi both which was easily paid by the Nobility Gentry and richest and most able part of the people for or in respect of their Lands holden in Capite which were never purchased but frankly given for their Service Homage and incidents thereunto apperteining And release the ease and benefit of his Pourveyances which did not in all the Fifty two Counties of England and Wales by the estimate of what was allowed towards it in Kent being thereby charged only with Twelve hundred pounds per Annum or thereabouts put the people of England to above Forty thousand pounds per Annum charges which totalled and summed up together with the profits of the Tenures in Capite in An. 1640. being 16º Car. will make One hundred forty one thousand three hundred pounds or One hundred and twenty thousand two hundred eighty eight pounds all necessary charges satisfied as it was in 13º Car. primi Shall give away that One hundred forty one thousand three hundred pounds or One hundred and twenty thousand two hundred and eighty pounds per Annum and loose One hundred and fifty thousand pounds per Annum in the buying of his Houshold provisions besides what more shall be put upon him by a further enhaunce of prizes for to gaine One hundred thousand pounds for that moyety of the Excise of Ale and Beer to be paid out of the sighes dayly complaints and lamentations of the poorest sort of the subjects and the discontents and mournings of nineteen parts in twenty of all the people who by the payment of that Excise will be made to bear the burdens of others to acquit less then a twentieth part of them of those no ruining payments not often happening to be charged upon them by reason of those kinde of Tenures or for nothing if that Excise should be taken away Prejudice the King in his Honor which Saul when he entreated Samuel not to dishonor him before the people understood to be of some concernment and his Estate in not affording his Pourveyors a pre-emption in the buying provision for his Royal Family Tables and Attendants which all the Acts of Parliament made concerning the Regulating of Pourveyances never denyed The Princes of Germany are allowed in their smaller Dominions the Caterers of every Nobleman frequenting the Markets the servants of every Lord of a Mannor in England do enjoy and the common civilities of mankinde and but ordinary respect of inferiors to their superiors do easily perswade Will not agree or keep company with that honor and reverence which by the Laws of God and Nature Nations and right reason will be due and ought to be paid to a King and Father of his Country nor with the gratitude of those who often enough come with their Buckets to the Well or Fountains or his mercy or are not seldom craving and obtaining favors of him to refuse him those small Retorns or Acknowledgments for his bounties nor prudence to shew him the way to be