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A59082 An historical and political discourse of the laws & government of England from the first times to the end of the reign of Queen Elizabeth : with a vindication of the ancient way of parliaments in England : collected from some manuscript notes of John Selden, Esq. / by Nathaniel Bacon ..., Esquire. Bacon, Nathaniel, 1593-1660.; Selden, John, 1584-1654. 1689 (1689) Wing S2428; ESTC R16514 502,501 422

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more the conceit of Fame than there was cause These concurring with unnatural troubles from most unthankful Sons made that spirit of his to fail that formerly knew no peer as it is often seen that the most generous spirits are sooner quelled with shame and grief than with fear of any danger whatsoever Towards his Lay-Subjects he was more regardant for the setling of Laws and executing of Justice so as some have thought him the first source of our English Laws others more truly the first Mecaenas since the Conquest that brought on the spring-time of a setled Common-wealth and therefore left this fair testimony by his putting forth that Primrose of English Laws under the name of Glanvil letting all men know that thenceforth England would no more veil itself in an unknown Law but explain itself unto the World to be a regular Government Such was the King's Idea yet was he touched with so much of the common infirmity of Kings as shewed him to be a man especially in his old age being loaden with Military Affairs wherein he had been long exercised he had contracted some shifting courses of a Souldier in gathering Money and Souldiers somewhat out of the road-way of an English King and led an ill example to future Ages nor had he other salve for this wound but that it was for the honour of Christian faith and for the sake of Jerusalem Next comes in Richard the first Henry the Second's Son both in birth and courage yet was his behaviour to his Father such that his meritorious Holy War could never wipe it out of the Calendar of story His entrance was upon an Election made in his Fathers life-time and the same confirmed by receiving of Homage from the Peers The sad troubles that this Election amongst other things occasioned to his Father in his old age shew plainly that Richard trusted not to the Title of Inheritance nor the French King that took his part unto the English custom for the possession of the Crown but all must be done in the Life of the Father that must secure the Government to the Son when the Father is dead And thus is he entred upon the Throne not as Heir but as Successor to his Father yea rather as Survivor taking possession of what was by special compact conveyed to him by the means of his Father in his life-time though sore against his will if Writers speak true As his entrance was it promised a better Government than followed for though it was for the most part hidden in the Womb as himself did subsist in another World yet by a secret providence he was given over to the election of ill Deputies and therefore he was not well beloved however dear he was to this Nation A third part of his Government was spent in a calm with Pope Clergy Commons and all Nations that were not Infidels upon conscience it seems that he ought not to be troubled who adventured his person so bravely in the Holy War. But above all he was the Clergies darling not only for his adventure in the Holy Land but now much more in his return by his imprisonment in Germany and therefore they sluck close to him in his absence not only in maintenance of his right to the C●own whereto some made claim and his own Brother John did more but emptied themselves to the utmost for his delivery which they effected to the envy of the French and such as longed for his downfal here in England The King comes like the Sun-rising scattering his Brothers designs by his very view then returns his thoughts for France where he spent the rest of a restless life and as his entry upon the Throne was unnatural for he made his way upon his Fathers Herse so was his Reign full of troubles and his end not unlike for it was violent and by the hand of his own subject and so ended his Reign that scarce had any begining Next comes in King John to act his part according to his entry hand over head whether called by a people scared with the noise of Succession by inheritance or such as thought it not convenient nor safe in a stirring time to have a Child to be their King or lastly led by an interest that John the youngest Son of Henry the second had by woful experience obtained amongst the Lords or some or all concurring it is clear they crossed the way of inheritance waved Arthur's Title who was Heir to Richard the first and by him also appointed to succeed being then but a Child and they chose John a man of War trained up in the Government of Ireland which made way for his active spirit and well seen in the Government of England which might have made him wise and under these conceits they were willing to forget his oppression in Ireland his Treachery against his Lord and King in England set the Crown upon his head and in conclusion acted the Tragedy of Abimelech in English wherein the Cedar was rooted up and the Bramble trodden down The general temper of his Government sheweth that though the King must be thought sober yet the man was mad for he hawked at all manner of game France Scotland England Laity Clergy spared not the Pope himself scorned to stoop to occasion all which he did by the strength of the name of a King till at length being well cuft and plumed he was fain to yoke his lawless will under the grand Charter depose his Crown at the Popes foot and instead of a King became little better than a chief Lord in England Thus although Richard the First forgot this mans disloyalty yet God remembred it for the King having gotten the Pope upon the hip and put him to his last shift to stir up the French to set his curse on work was by a hidden providence conquered in the middest of a Royal Army without view of Enemy or other weapon than a meer noise his Nobility either suspecting all would be gone to Rome or expecting that the King would not deny them their own seeing he had been so profuse in giving away that which was not his demand that their Liberties might be confirmed but he being loath to be mated by his Nobles though he was overmatched by the Pope arms himself with the Popes curse and the Lords themselves with the Frenchmens power thus the Tables are turned and the French playing an after-game to gain to themselves the Crown of England after they saw the death of a Warlike King discovered their design before it was ripe and in the conclusion were beaten out of the Kingdom by a Child It is not worth inquiry what the King allowed or disallowed for it was his course to repent of any thing done contrary to his present sense and made it his chief principle in policy to have no principle but desire wherein he triumphed too long by reason of the contentions between the Clergie and the Laity which
right and so the Lord became both Judge and Party which was soon felt and prevented as shall appear hereafter Another priviledge of the Lords power was over the Tenants Heir after the Tenants death in the disposing of the Body during the minority and marriage of the same As touching the disposing of the Body the Lord either retained the same in his own power or committed the same to others and this was done either pleno jure or rendring an account As concerning the marriage of the Females that are Heirs or so apparent the Parents in their life-time cannot marry them without the Lords consent nor may they marry themselves after their Parents death without the same and the Lords are bound to give their consent unless they can shew cause to the contrary The like also of the Tenants Widows that have any Dowry in the Lands of such Tenure And by such-like means as these the power of the Barons grew to that height that in the lump it was too massie both for Prince and Commons Of the power of the last Will. It is a received opinion that at the common-Law no man could devise his Lands by his last Will. If thereby it be conceived to be against common reason I shall not touch that but if against custom of the ancient times I must suspend my concurrence therewith until those ancient times be defined for as yet I find no testimony sufficient to assert that opinion but rather that the times hitherto had a sacred opinion of the last Will as of the most serious sincere and advised declaration of the most inward desires of a man which was the main thing looked unto in all Conveyances Voluntas donatoris de caetero observetur And therefore nothing was more ordinary than for Kings in these times as much as in them did lie to dispose of their Crowns by their last Will. Thus King John appointed Henry the Third his Successour and Richard the first devised the Crown to King John and Henry the first gave all his Lands to his Daughter and William the Conqueror by his last Will gave Normandy to Robert England to William and to Henry his Mothers Lands If then these things of greatest moment under Heaven were ordinarily disposed by the last Will was it then probable that the smaller Free-holds should be of too high esteem to be credited to such Conveyances I would not be mistaken as if I thought that Crowns and Empires were at the disposal of the last Will of the possessor nor do I think that either they were thus in this Kingdom or that there is any reason that can patronize that opinion yet it will be apparent that Kings had no sleight conceit of the last Will and knew no such infirmity in that manner of conveyance as is pretended or else would they never have spent that little breath left them in vain I have observed the words of Glanvil concerning this point and I cannot find that he positively denyeth all conveyance of Land by Will but only in case of disherison the ground whereof is because it is contrary to the conveyance of the Law and yet in that case also alloweth of a disposing power by consent of the Heir which could never make good conveyance if the Will in that case were absolutely void and therefore his Authority lies not in the way Nor doth the particular customs of places discountenance but rather advance this opinion for if devises of Lands were incident to the Tenure in Gavel-kind and that so general in old time as also to the burgage Tenures which were the rules of Corporations and Cities Vbi Leges Angliae deperiri non possunt nec defraudari nec violari how can it be said contrary to the common Law And therefore those Conveyances of Lands by last Will that were in and after these times holden in use seem to me rather remnants of the more general custom wasted by positive Laws than particular customs growing up against the common rule It is true that the Clergy put a power into the Pope to alter the Law as touching themselves in some cases for Roger Arch-bishop of York procured a faculty from the Pope to ordain that no Ecclesiastical persons Will should be good unless made in health and not lying in extremity and that in such cases the Arch-bishop should possess himself of all such parties goods but as it lasted not long so was himself made a president in the case for being overtaken with death e're he was provided he made his Will in his sickness and Henry the Second possessed himself of his Estate And it is as true that Feme coverts in these days could make no Will of their reasonable part because by the Saxon Law it belonged joyntly to the Children Nor could Vsurers continuing in that course at the time of their death make their Will because their personal Estate belonged to the King after their death and their Lands to their Lords by escheat although before death they lie open to no censure of Law but this was by an especial Law made since the Conquerour's time for by the Saxon-Law they were reputed as Out-Laws Nevertheless all these do but strengthen the general rule viz. That regularly the last Will was holden in the general a good conveyance in Law. If the Will were only intended and not perfected or no Will was made then the Lands passed by descent and the goods held course according to the Saxon Law viz. the next Kinsmen and Friends of the intestate did administer and as administrators they might sue by Writ out of the Kings Court although the Clergy had now obtained so much power as for the recovery of a Legacy or for the determining of the validity of the Will in its general nature it was transmitted to the Ecclesiastical Court. CHAP. LXIII Of the Militia of this Kingdom during the Reign of these Kings I Undertake not the debate of right but as touching matter of fact shortly thus much that from the Norman times the power of the Militia rested upon two principles the one the Allegiance for the common defence of the King's person and honour and Kingdom and in this case the King had the power to levy the force of the Kingdom nevertheless the cause was still under the cognizance of the great Council so far as to agree or disavow the War if they saw cause as appeared in the defections of the Barons in the quarrel between King Steven and the Empress and between King John and his Barons The other principle was the service due to the Lord from the Tenant and by vertue hereof especially whenas the liberty of the Commons was in question the Militia was swayed by the Lords and they drew the people in Arms either one way or the other as the case appeared to them the experience whereof the Kings from time to time felt to their extream prejudice and the Kingdoms
and Kent are saved out of this Law by the Statute the first whereof saves the Land to the Heir from the Lord and the second saves the same to the Heirs Males or for want of such to the Heirs Females and to the Wife her moity until she be espoused to another man unless she shall forfeit the same by fornication during her Widow-hood And by the same Law also the King had all Escheats of the Tenants of Archbishops and Bishops during the vacancy as a perquisite But Escheats of Land and Tenement in Cities or Burroughs the King had them in jure coronae of whomsoever they were holden All Wears shall be destroyed but such as are by the Sea-coast The Lieutenant of the Tower of London as it seemed claimed a Lordship in the Thames and by vertue thereof had all the Wears to his own use as appeareth by a Charter made to the City of London recited in the second Institutes upon this Law and this was to the detriment of the Free-men especially of the City of London in regard that all Free-men were to have right of free passage through Rivers as well as through Highways and purprestures in either were equally noxious to the common liberty And therefore that which is set down under the example or instance of the Rivers of Thames and Medway contained all the Rivers in England albeit that other parts of the Kingdom had not the like present regard as the City of London had The Writ of precipe in capite shall not be granted of any Freehold whereby a man may be in danger of losing his Court thereby It seemeth that it was one of the oppressions in those times that if a Suit were commenced in the inferiour or Lords Court concerning a Freehold a Writ of precipe in capite might be had upon a Surmise that the Freehold was holden in capite which might prove an absolute destruction to the inferiour Court and was the spoil of the Demandants case and therefore I think the Charter of King John instead of the word Court hath the word Cause There shall be but one known Weight and Measure and one breadth of Cloaths throughout the Realm of England This Law of Weights and Measures was anciently established amongst the Saxons as formerly hath been shewed and continued in the Normans times and confirmed by Richard the first and King John. And as touching the measure of the breadth of Cloaths although it might seem to abridge the liberty of particular persons yet because it was prejudicial to the common Trade of the Kingdom it was setled in this manner to avoid deceit and to establish a known price of Cloaths And it seemeth that Wine was ordinarily made in England as well as Ale otherwise the Measures of Wine could not have been established by a Law in England if they had been altogether made in other Countries Inquisition of Life and Member shall be readily granted without Fees. This was a Law of latter original made to take away a Norman oppression for by the Saxon Law as hath been already noted No man was imprisoned for Crime not bailable beyond the next County-court or Sheriff's Torn but when those rural Courts began to lose their power and the Kings Courts to devour Tryals of that nature especially by the means of the Justices itinerant which were but rare and for divers years many times intermitted during all which time supposed Offenders must lie in Prison which was quite contrary to the liberty of the Free men amongst the Saxons This occasioned a new device to save the common liberty by special Writs sued out by the party imprisoned or under bail supposing himself circumvented by hatred and malice and by the same directed to the Sheriff and others an Inquisition was taken and Tryal made of the Offence whether he deserved loss of Life or Member and if it were found for the supposed Offender he was bailed till the next coming of the Justices and for this the Writ was called the Writ of inquisition of Life or Member and sometimes the Writ de odio atia But these Inquests were soon become degenerate and subject to much corruption and therefore as soon met with a countercheck from the Law Or first rather a regulation for it was ordained that the Inquest should be chosen upon Oath and that two of the Inquest at least should be Knights and those not interessed in the Cause But yet this could not rectifie the matter for it seemed so impossible to do Justice and shew Mercy this way that the Writ is at length taken away and men left to their lot till the coming of Justices itinerant But this could not be endured above seven years for though the King be a brave Souldier and prosperous yet the people overcome him and recover their Writs de odio atia again Lords shall have the Wardships of their Tenants Heirs although they hold also of the King in Petit Serjeanty Socage Burgage or Fee-farm Inferiour Lords had the same right of Wardships with the King for their Tenures in Knight-service although their Tenants did hold also of the King unless they held of him in Knight-service which was a service done by the Tenant's own person or by the person of his Esquire or other deputy in his stead But as touching such service as was wont to be done to him by render or serving him with Arms or other utensils this was no Knight-service though such utensils concerned War but was called Petit Serjeanty as in the Law-books doth appear Nevertheless Henry the Third had usurped Wardships in such cases also and the same amongst others occasioned the Barons Wars No Judge shall compel a Free-man to confess matter against himself upon Oath without complaint first made against him Nor shall receive any complaint without present proof This Law in the Original is set down in another kind of phrase in the first part thereof which is obscure by reason thereof in express words it is thus No Judge shall compel any man ad legem manifestam which implieth that the matter was otherwise obscure if the party that was complained of or suspected did not manifest the same by his own declaring of the truth or matter enquired after and therefore they used in such cases to put him to Oath and if he denied the matter or acquitted himself the Judge would sometimes discharge him or otherwise put him to his Compurgators and this was called lex manifesta or lex apparens And it was a trick first brought in by the Clergie and the Temporal Judges imitated them therein and this became a snare and sore burthen to the Subjects To avoid which they complain of this new kind of Trial and for remedy of this usurpation this Law reviveth and establisheth the onely and old way of Trial for Glanvil saith Ob infamiam non solet juxta legem terrae aliquis per
but as heavy dull Debates and inconvenient both for speed and secrecy which indeed are advantages for weak and unwarrantable councils but such as are well-grounded upon truth and strength of reason of State are not afraid to behold the clearest noon-day and prevail neither by speed nor secrecy but by the power of uncontrolled Reason fetcht from truth it self The Grand Council of Lords also are now no less burthensome For though they were not able to prevail against the private designes of an arbitrary Supremacy yet do they hinder the progress tell tales to the people and blot the names of those that are of that aspiring humour which once done like that of Sisyphus they have no other end of their labour than their toil Thus perished that ancient and rightly honourable Grand Council of Lords having first laid aside the publick then lost unity and lastly themselves besides the extream danger of the whole body For the sence of State once contracted into a Privy-Council is soon contracted into a Cabinet-Council and last of all into a Favourite or two which many times brings damage to the publick and both themselves and Kings into extream praecipices partly for want of maturity but principally through the providence of God over-ruling irregular courses to the hurt of such as walk in them Nor were the Clergie idle in this bustle of affairs although not very well employed for it is not to be imagined but that these private prizes plaid between the Lords Commons and King laid each other open to the aim of a forrein pretension whilst they lay at their close guard one against another And this made an Ecclesiastical power to grow upon the Civil like the Ivy upon the Oak from being Servants to Friends and thence Lords of Lords and Kings of Kings By the first putting forth it might seem to be a Spiritual Kingdom but in the blossom which now is come to some lustre it is evident to be nothing but a Temporal Monarchy over the Consciences of men and so like Cuckows laying their Eggs in nests that are none of their own they have their brood brought up at the publick charge Nevertheless this their Monarchy was as yet beyond their reach it was Prelacy that they laboured for pretending to the Pope's use but in order to themselves The Cripple espyed their halting and made them soon tread after his pace he is content they should be Prelates without measure within their several Diocesses and Provinces so as he may be the sole Praelatissimo beyond all comparison And undoubtedly thus had been before these times destroyed the very principles of the Church-Government of this Kingdom but that two things prejudiced the work The one that the Papalty was a forrein power and the other that as yet the Pope was entangled with the power of Councils if he did not stoop thereunto The first of these two was the most deadly Herb in the Pottage and made it so unsavoury that it could never be digested in this Kingdom For Kings looking upon this as an intrenchment upon their Prerogative and the People also as an intrenchment upon their Liberties both or one of them were ever upon the guard to keep out that which was without and would be ruled neither by Law nor Counsel And therefore though both Kings and People yielded much unto the importunity of these men and gave them many priviledges whereby they became great yet was their greatness dependant upon the Law of the Land and Vote of Parliament and though they had the more power they nevertheless were not one jot the more absolute but still the Law kept above their top I deny not but they in their practice exceeded the rule often and lifted themselves above their rank yet it is as well to be granted that they could never make Law to bind the Church-men much less the Laity but by conjunction of the Grand Councils both for Church and Commonwealth-affairs nor could they execute any Law in case that concerned the Liberty or Propriety of either but in a Synodical way or as deputed by the Parliament in that manner And therefore I must conclude that in these times whereof we treat the principles of Church-Government so far as warranted by Law were in their nature Presbyterial that is both in making Laws and executing them Bishops and Arch-bishops were never trusted with the sole administration of them but in and by consent of Synods in which the Clergy and Laity ought to have their joynt vote And all power more or contrary hereto was at the best an usurpation coloured by practice which was easily attained where there was a perpetual Moderatorship resting in the Bishop and over all the Pope the King Lords and Commons in the mean while being buried in pursuit of several interests elsewhere To make all semblable the Free-men met with the sad influence of these distempers as well from the King and Lords as the Clergy Kings to save their own stake from the Pope remitted of that protection which they owed to their Subjects and let in upon them a floud of oppressions and extortions from the Romish and English Clergy and so like a little ship cast out a Barrel for the Whale to pursue till it gets away But this changed no right The Lords by their parties shattered them asunder and dismembred their body by intestine broils The Clergy more craftily making some of them free Denizons of the Roman See and taking them into their protection whilst others of the Free-men at a distance were exposed as a prey to the continual assaults of those devouring times All these conspired together to deface and destroy that ancient and goodly bond of Brotherhood the Law of Decenners by which the Free-men formerly holden together like Cement in a strong Wall are now left like a heap of loose stones or so many single men scarcely escaping with their skin of Liberties and those invaded by many projects and shifts in Government of State-affairs So must I leave them until some happy hand shall work their repair both for time and manner as it shall please that great and wise Master-builder of the World. FINIS THE CONTINUATION OF THE Historical Political DISCOURSE OF THE LAWS GOVERNMENT OF ENGLAND Until the end of the REIGN of Queen Elizabeth WITH A VINDICATION Of the ancient way of PARLIAMENTS In ENGLAND LONDON Printed for John Starkey at the Miter in Fleet-street neer Temple-Bar M.DC.LXXXII THE CONTENTS OF THE Several CHAPTERS of this BOOK I. THe sum of the several Reigns of Edward the Third and Richard the Second fol. 2 II. The state of the King and Parliament in relation of him to it and of it to him fol. 9. III. Of the Privy Council and the condition of the Lords fol. 16 IV. Of the Chancery fol. 21 V. Of the Admirals Court. fol. 24 VI. Of the Church-mens interest fol. 27 VII Concerning Trade fol. 38 VIII Of Treason and Legiance with some Considerations
And thus the Free-men yielded up their liberty of Election to the Free-holders possibly not knowing what they did nevertheless the Parliament well knew what they did this change was no less good than great For first These times were no times for any great measure of Civility The Preface of the Statute shews That the meanest held himself as good a man as the greatest in the Country and this tended to Parties Tumults and Bloudshed Secondly Where the Multitude prevail the meaner sort are upon the upper hand and these generally ignorant cannot judge of persons nor times but being for the most part led by Faction or Affection rather than by right Understanding make their Elections and thereby the general Council of this Nation less generous and noble Thirdly There is no less equity in the change than policy For what can be more reasonable than that those men onely should have their Votes in Election of the Common-Council of the Kindom whose Estates are chargeable with the publick Taxes and Assessments and with the Wages of those persons that are chosen for the publick Service But above all the rest this advancing of the Free-holders in this manner of Election was beneficial to the Free-men of England although perchance they considered not thereof and this will more clearly appear in the consideration of these three particulars First It abated the power of the Lords and great Men who held the inferiour sort at their Devotion and much of what they had by their Vote Secondly It rendred the Body of the People more brave for the advancing of the Free-holder above the Free-man raiseth the spirit of the meaner sort to publick regards and under a kind of Ambition to aspire unto the degree of a Free-holder that they may be somewhat in the Commonwealth And thus leaving the meanest rank sifted to the very bran they become less considerable and more subject to the Coercive power whilst in the mean time the Free-holder now advanced unto the degree of a Yeoman becomes no less careful to maintain correspondency with the Laws than he was industrious in the attaining of his degree Thirdly But this means now the Law makes a separation of the inferiour Clergie and Cloistered people from this service wherein they might serve particular ends much but Rome much more For nothing appeareth but that these dead persons in Law were nevertheless Free-men in Fact and lost not the liberty of their Birth-right by entring into Religion to become thereby either Bond or no Free Members of the people of England Lastly As a binding Plaister above the rest First a Negative Law is made that the persons elected in the County must not be of the degree of a Yeoman but of the most noted Knights Esquires or Gentlemen of the County which tacitly implies that it was too common to advance those of the meaner sort Whether by reason of the former wasting times Knights and Esquires were grown scant in number or by reason of their rudeness in account or it may be the Yeomanry grew now to feel their strength and meant not to be further Underlings to the great Men than they are to their Feathers to wear them no longer than they will make them brave Secondly the person thus agreed upon his Entertainment must be accordingly and therefore the manner of taxing in full County and levying the rate of Wages for their maintenance is reformed and settled And Lastly their persons are put under the protection of the Law in an especial manner for as their work is full of reflection so formerly they had met with many sad influences for their labour And therefore a penal Law is made against force to be made upon the persons of those Workmen of State either in their going to that Service or attending thereupon making such Delinquents liable to Fine and Imprisonment and double damages And thus however the times were full of Confusions yet a foundation was laid of a more uniform Government in future times than England hitherto had seen CHAP. XV. Of the Custos or Protector Regni KIngs though they have vast Dimensions yet are not infinite nor greater than the bounds of one Kingdom wherein if present they are in all places present if otherwise they are like the Sun gone down and must rule by reflexion as the Moon in the night In a mixt Commonwealth they are integral Members and therefore regularly must act Per deputatum when their persons are absent in another Legialty and cannot act Per se Partly because their Lustre is somewhat eclipsed by another Horizon and partly by common intendment they cannot take notice of things done in their absence It hath therefore been the ancient course of Kings of this Nation to constitute Vice-gerents in their absence giving them several Titles and several Powers according as the necessity of Affairs required Sometimes they are called Lord Warden or Lord Keeper of the Kingdom and have therewith the gegeral power of a King as it was with John Warren Earl of Surrey appointed thereunto by Edward the First who had not onely power to command but to grant and this power extended both to England and Scotland And Peter Gaveston though a Foreigner had the like power given him by Edward the Second over England to the reproach of the English Nobility which also they revenged afterward Sometimes these Vice-gerents are called Lieutenants which seemeth to confer onely the King's power in the Militia as a Lieutenant general in an Army And thus Richard the Second made Edmund Duke of York his Lieutenant of the Kingdom of England to oppose the entry of the Duke of Hertford afterwards called Henry the Fourth into England during the King's absence in Ireland And in the mean while the other part of the Royalty which concerned the Revenues of the Crown was betrusted to the Earl of Wiltshire Sir John Bush Sir James Baggot and Sir Henry Green unto whom men say The King put his Kingdom to farm But more ordinarily the Kings power was delegated unto one under both the Titles of Lord Guardian of the Kingdom and Lieutenant within the same such was the Title of Henry Lacy Earl of Lincoln and of Gilbert de Clare Earl of Gloucester and of Audomar de Valentia Earl of Pembrooke all of them at several times so constituted by Edward the Second as by the Patent-Rolls appeareth So likewise did Edward the Third make his Brother John of Eltham twice and the Black Prince thrice and Lionel Duke of Clarence and his Brother Thomas each of them once in the several passages of Edward the Third beyond the Sea in the third fifth twelfth fourteenth sixteenth nineteenth and thirty third years of his Reign concerning which see the Patent-Rolls of those years And Henry the Fifth gave likewise the same Title and Authority to the Duke of Bedford upon the King's Voyage into France and afterward that Duke being sent over to second the King
damage Nor did the former principle oversway the latter although it might seem more considerable but only in the times of civil peace when the Lords were quiet and the people well-conceited of the Kings aims in reference to the publick which happiness it was Henry the Second's lot to enjoy for he being a Prince eminent amongst Princes both for endowments of mind and of outward estate not only gained honour abroad but much more amongst his own people at home who saw plainly that he was for Forraign employment of honour to the Kingdom and not only contented with what he had in England but imbarqued together with the Laity against the growing power of the Clergy for the defence and honour of the priviledges of the Crown wherein also the Liberties of the people were included They therefore were secure in the Kings way and suffered themselves to be engaged unto the Crown further than they or their Ancestors formerly had been out of pretence of sudden extreme occasions of the Kingdom that would not be matched with the ordinary course of defence For the King finding by former experience that the way of Tenures was too lame a supply for his acquests abroad and that it had proved little better than a broken reed to the Crown in case of dispute with the people aimed at a further reach than the Lords or Commons foresaw and having learned a trick in France brought it over although it was neither the first nor last trick that England learned to their cost from France which was a new way of levying of Men and Arms for the War by assessing upon every Knights Fee and upon every Free-man of the value of sixteen Marks yearly their certain Arms and upon every Free man of ten Marks yearly value their certain Arms and upon every Burgess and Free-man of an inferiour value their certain Arms. 2. That these should be ready prepared against a certain day 3. That they should be kept and maintained from time to time in the Kings Service and at his command 4. That they should not be lent pledged sold or given away 5. That in case of death they should descend to the Heir who if under age should find a man to serve in his stead 6. That in case the owner were able he should be ready at a certain day with his Arms for the service of the King ad fidem Domini Regis Regni sui 7. That unto this every man should be Sworn I call this a new way of levying of Arms and Men not but that formerly other Free-men and Burgesses found Arms albeit they held not by Knight service for it was so ordained by the Conquerors Laws formerly used but now the King thrust in two clauses besides the altering of the Arms the one concerning the Oath whereby all men became bound the other concerning the raising and ordering of Men and Arms which here seems to be referred to the King only and in his service and this I grant may imply much in common capacity viz. that all the power of the Militia is in Henry the Second But this trick catched not the people according to the Kings meaning for the words ad fidem Regis Regni still left a muse for the people to escape if they were called out against their duty to the Kingdom and taught the doctrine which is not yet repealed viz. That what is not according to their Faith to the Kingdom is not according to their Faith to the King. And therefore they could find in their hearts sometimes to sit still at home when they were called forth to War as may appear in one passage in the days of King John who had gathered together an Army for the opposing of foraign Power at such time as the Pope had done his worst against him and the whole Kingdom which Army was of such considerable strength as I believe none since the Conquest to this day exceeded or parallell'd it But the King 's mean submission to the Pope's Legat so distasted the Nobles and People as they left him to his own shifts and that in such manner as although afterwards he had advantage of them and liberty enough to have raised an Army to have strengthned himself against the Nobles yet the Lords coming from London brought on the sudden such a party as the King was not able to withstand and so he came off with that conclusion made at Renny mead which though in it self was honourable yet lost the King so much the more because it was rather gained from him than made by him CHAP. LXIV Of the Government of Henry the third Edward the first and Edward the second Kings of England And first a general view of the disposition of their Government ONe hundred and ten years more I have together taken up to add a period to this first part of discourse concerning English Government principally because one spirit of arbitrary rule from King John seemeth to breath throughout the whole and therewith did expire The first that presents himself is Henry the third begotten by King John when he was in the very first enterprize of oppression that occasioned the first Barons bloudy Wars and which this King was so miserable as to continue for the greatest part of his Life and Reign and yet so happy as to see it ended about four years before he died Although the soul be not ingendred from the parent yet the temperature of the body of the Child doth sometimes so attemper the motion of the soul that there is in the Child the very image of the Father's mind and this Henry the third lively expressed being so like unto his Father John in his worst course as if his Father 's own spirit had entred into him and animated him in all his ways He brought in with him the first president of Conscience in point of Succession by inheritance in the English Throne for the stream of probabilities was against him He was a Child and the times required a compleat man and a man for War. He was the Child of King John whose demerits of the State were now fresh in the minds of all men He was also designed to the Throne by his Father's last Will which was a dangerous president for them to admit who had but even now withstood King John's depositing of the Crown in the Pope's hands as not being in the power of a King of England to dispose of his Crown according to his own will. Yet leaping over all these considerations and looking on Henry the third as the Child of a King that by good nouriture might prove a wise and just King they closed about this spark in hope it might bring forth a flame whereby to warm themselves in stormy times Nor did their hopes soon perish for during his minority the King was wise to follow good Counsel and by it purged out all the ill humours that the Kingdom had contracted in the rash distempers of his
Horse nor defended without a Sword. As touching other alterations it might be done upon good advice as not being deemed méet that such as were no Knights but in Estate should be armed in every respect like as the Knights were And thus we have an ancient custom of maintaining Arms by every Free man for the defence of the Kingdom first made uncertain by the avarice of Kings and negligence of the Free-men and brought into an arbitrary charge at length reduced to a certainty upon all sorts of Inhabitants by a Statute-Law if so it then were unto which every man had yielded himself bound by his own consent But to what end is all this I said it was for the defence of the Kingdom and so it was in the original and yet also for the safety of the King in order thereunto and for the safety and maintenance of the peace of every member of the whole body This in one lump thus will not down with some who will have this assessment onely to be for keeping of the peace against Routs and Riots but not sufficient nor intended to be supply for War when Edward the First calls for it because Edward the First shall not have his power confined within the compass of a Statute but to be at liberty of array as he should think meet and it is not to be denied but the words of this Law run thus viz. That the intent thereof is for preserving of the peace but those general words will not bear the power of a restrictive sence for certainly the peace is as well preserved by providing against War as against Riots and against Forrein War as Intestine Mutinies And that the Statute intended the one as well as the other will appear because it was made in relation to former precedents of Henry the Third and they speak plainly that their intent was to strengthen the Kingdom against dangers from abroad The words of the Historian are clear that Henry the Third charged all that had 15 libratas terrae and upwards should undertake the Arms of a Knight ut Anglia sicut Italia militia roboraretur And because he had threats from beyond Sea by the defection of the Gascoigns therefore he caused Writs to issue forth throughout the Kingdom that secundum pristinam consuetudinem assessment of Arms should be secundum facultates and in one of the Writs published by the Historian the express assessment of H. 3. formerly mentioned is particularly set down Nor are these Arms thus assessed so slight as men would pretend for the Arms of the first Rank were the compleat Arms of a Knight and their Estates equal thereunto for those 15 libratae terrae amounted to 780 Acres of Land as the late publisher of Paris his History hath it and is very nigh the reckoning of Henry Huntington who as hath been mentioned layeth a Helmet and Coat of Mail unto eight Hides of Land which according to Gervase of Tilburie's account cometh to 800 Acres every Hide containing one hundred Acres These therefore were better than Hoblers And the succeeding Ranks found Arms also proportionable to their Estates as considerable as the times could find for such as were of constant use and might be supplied with other Weapons as occasion served and as they might be of most benefit for the service Furthermore whereas it 's said that the wisdom of the Parliament might be questioned if they intended no better provision against an Enemy than against a Thief or Rogue I should desire the consideration of those men whether are those Thieves and Rogues in Troops or bodies and well armed or are they a sort of scattered Out-laws lightly armed to fly away when they have gotten the prey If they were in the former posture I pray what difference in point of difficulty of suppressing between them and so many Enemies and if it was discretion in the Parliament to make this provision against the one certainly these with the Knight-hood of the Kingdom with as much discretion will be sufficient provision against the other But if these be looked upon in the later sence I fear the discretion of the Parliament would have been much more questioned in arming all men that have any ability to suppress Thieves and Rogues against which the ordinary Watch and Ward of the Kingdom was an ancient and approved remedy and sufficient safe-guard And I would fain know of these men whether it be for the safety of Edward the First or any other King to arm the whole body of the people especially in times of jealousie for suppressing of Thieves and Robbers whenas it may be done by a guard of known men in every County with much more ease and less charge to the people Lastly whereas it is endeavoured to make this Statute but a temporary provision and taken up for the present condition of affairs when Thieves and Robbers went with great strength and in multitudes This might be I grant of some efficacy if it had been introductio novi juris but it being grounded upon a former Custom the ground of that custom which was defence of the Kingdom must be the warrant of the Law otherwise the present inconvenience might be remedied by a present Order and needed not the help of a Law that should rest upon former Custom or provide for future generations Nevertheless if all be granted viz. that this Statute is but a present Order that the Arms therein are too slight to resist an Enemy and the end thereof was onely to enable the Kingdom against Thieves and Robbers yet could not Edward the first pretend to have any power to assess Arms at pleasure upon occasion of War for the defence of the Kingdom nor is there any precedent in story that countenanceth it seeing Henry the Third and Henry the Second in their course used the rule secundum facultates as had been formerly observed and the rule foregoing tended onely to Free-men and their Lands Nor did King John disclaim the same but pursued it and yet if there be any precedent of Prerogative in story which King John had not that King will be looked upon as a King of wonderment I say King John pursued it when he was in the strength of his distemper threatned by the Pope provoked by the French King now ready in the field vexed by his people and himself scarce himself summons to defend himself themselves and the Kingdom of England all men that ought to have Arms or may have Arms and such as have no Arms and yet arma habere possint let them also come ad capiendum solidatas nostras and accordingly there came a vast number not onely of the armed men but of the unarmed multitude who afterward were sent to their own home when victuals failed Hitherto therefore King John not above three years before his death held himself to the assessment to Arms onely of such as had Lands and at this time of exigency others unarmed were summoned
Advertisement THis Book at its first Publishing which was shortly after the Death of King Charles the First had the ill fortune to be coldly received in the world by reason of the Circumstances of those times but after K. Charles the Second was possest of the Crown and endeavoured to advance the Prerogative beyond its just bounds the Book began to be much enquired after and lookt into by many Learned Men who were not willing to part easily with their Birth-Rights so that in a short time it became very scarce and was sold at a great rate this occasion'd the private Reprinting of it in the year 1672 which as soon as the Government perceived they Prosecuted both the Publisher and the Book so violently that many hundreds of the Books were seized and burnt that and the great want of the Book since occasioned the Reprinting of it without any Alterations or Omissions in the year 1682 when the Press was at liberty by reason of the ceasing of the Act for Printing but Prerogative then getting above the Law it met with a new Persecution and the Publisher was Indicted for the Reprinting of it the passages in it upon which the Indictment was found were these Part II. Page 76. beginning Line the 24th thus I do easily grant that Kings have many occasions and opportunities to beguile their people yet can they do nothing as Kings but what of Right they ought to do They may call Parliaments but neither as often or seldom as they please if the Statute Laws of this Realm might take place And Part II. Page 148. Line 32. And though Kings may be Chief Commanders yet they are not the Chief Rulers The Prosecution went on so rigorously that the Publisher tho' beyond the Seas yet willing to try the Cause appeared according to the constant practice of the Court of King's-Bench by his Attorney but for not being personally present in the Court which was then impossible he was by the Arbitrary Power of the then Lord Chief Justice Jefferys Out-Law'd for a Misdemeanour and so remain'd till this wonderful Revolution by the wise Conduct of his Highness the Prince of Orange The Books have been ever since with care and charge preserved for the benefit of all that are willing to know and maintain their Antient Laws and Birth-Rights It was well known to and owned by the late Lord Chief Justice Vaughan who was one of the Executors of the Great and Learned Mr. Selden that the Ground-work was his upon which Mr. Bacon raised this Superstructure which hath been and is so well esteem'd that it is now again made publick by January the 10th 1688-9 John Starkey AN Historical and Political DISCOURSE OF THE Laws Government OF ENGLAND FROM The FIRST TIMES to the End of the Reign of QUEEN ELIZABETH WITH A VINDICATION of the ANCIENT WAY of Parliaments in England Collected from some Manuscript Notes of John Selden Esq by Nathaniel Bacon of Grays Inn Esquire LONDON Printed for John Starkey And are to be Sold by J. Robinson at the Golden Lyon in St. Pauls Church-Yard R. Bentley in Russel-Street in Covent-Garden Jacob Tonson at the Judges Head in Chancery-Lane T. Goodwin at the Maiden Head in Fleetstreet and T. Fox at the Angel in Westminster-Hall 1689. AN HISTORICAL and POLITICAL DISCOURSE OF THE Laws Government OF ENGLAND The FIRST PART From the FIRST TIMES till the REIGN OF EDWARD III. LONDON Printed for John Starkey at the Miter in Fleet-street neer Temple-Bar M.DC.LXXXII Advertisement A Private Debate concerning the right of an English King to Arbitrary rule over English Subjects as Successor to the Norman Conquerour so called first occasioned this Discourse Herein I have necessarily fall'n upon the Antiquity and Vniformity of the Government of this Nation It being cleared may also serve as an Idea for them to consider who do mind the restitution of this shattered Frame of Policy for as in all other Cures so in that of a distempered Government the Original Constitution of the Body is not lightly to be regarded and the contemplation of the Proportions and manners of the Nation in a small Model brings no less furtherance to the right apprehension of the true nature thereof besides the delight than the perusing of a Map doth to the Traveller after a long and tedious travel I propound not this Discourse as a Patern drawn up to the life of the thing nor the thing it self as a Master-piece for future Ages for well I know that Commonwealths in their minority want not onely perfection of Strength and Beauty but also of Parts and Proportion especially seeing that their full age attaineth no further growth than to a mixture of divers Forms in one Ambition hath done much by Discourse and Action to bring forth Absolute Monarchy out of the Womb of Notion but yet like that of the Philosopher's Stone the issue is but wind and the end misery to the undertakers And therefore more than probable it is that the utmost perfection of this Nether-worlds best Government consists in the upholding of a due proportion of several Interests compounded into one temperature He that knoweth the secrets of all Mens Hearts doth know that my aim in this Discourse is neither at Scepter or Crosier nor after Popular Dotage but that Justice and Truth may moderate in all This is a Vessel I confess ill and weakly built yet doth it adventure into the vast Ocean of your Censures Gentlemen who are Antiquaries Lawyers and Historians any one of whom might have steered in this course much better than my self Had my own credit been the fraight I must have expected nothing less than wrack and loss of all but the main design of this Voyage being for discovery of the true nature of this Government to common view I shall ever account your just Censures and Contradictions especially published with their grounds to be my most happy return and as a Crown to this Work And that my labour hath its full reward if others taking advantage by my imperfections shall beautifie England with a more perfect and lively Character THE CONTENTS Of the FIRST PART CHAP. I. Of the Britons and their Government page 1 II. Concerning the Conversion of the Britons into the Faith. 2 III. Of the entry of the Romans into Britain and the State thereof during their continuance 3 IV. Of the entry of the Saxons and their manner of Government 8 V. Of Austin's coming to the Saxons in England his Entertainment and Work. 11 VI. Of the imbodying of Prelacy into the Government of this Kingdom 13 VII Of Metropolitans in the Saxons time 15 VIII Of the Saxon Bishops 16 IX Of the Saxon Presbyters 17 X. Of inferiour Church-Officers amongst the Saxons 18 XI Of Church-mens maintenance amongst the Saxons ibid. XII Of the several Precincts or Jurisdictions of Church-Governours amongst the Saxons 22 XIII Of the manner of the Prelates Government of the Saxon Church 23 XIV Of Causes Ecclesiastical 24 XV.
A brief censure of the Saxon Prelatical Church-Government 27 XVI Of the Saxons Commonwealth and the Government thereof and first of the King. 29 XVII Of the Saxon Nobility 33 XVIII Of the Freemen amongst the Saxons 34 XIX Of the Villains amongst the Saxons 35 XX. Of the grand Council amongst the Saxons called the Micklemote 36 XXI Of the Council of Lords 38 XXII Of the manner of the Saxon Government in the time of War. 39 XXIII Of the Government of the Saxon Kingdom in the times of peace and first of the division of the Kingdom into Shires and their Officers 40 XXIV Of the County-court and Sheriffs Torn 41 XXV Of the division of the County into Hundreds and the Officers and Court thereunto belonging 42 XXVI Of the division of the Hundreds into Decennaries 43 XXVII Of Franchises and first of the Church-franchise 44 XXVIII Of the second Franchise called the Marches 45 XXIX Of County Palatines ibid. XXX Of Franchises of the person 46 XXXI Of Mannors ibid. XXXII Of Courts incident and united unto Mannors 48 XXXIII Of Townships and their Markets 49 XXXIV Of the Forests 51 XXXV Concerning Judges in Courts of Justice 52 XXXVI Of the proceedings in Judicature by Indictment Appeal Presentment and Action 53 XXXVII Of the several manners of extraordinary trial by Torture Ordeal Compurgators and Battle 55 XXXVIII Of the ordinary manner of Trial amongst the Saxons by Inquest 56 XXXIX Of passing Judgement and Execution 59 XL. Of the penal Laws amongst the Saxons 60 XLI Of the Laws of property of Lands and Goods and the manner of their Conveyance 64 XLII Of the times of Law and vacancy 68 XLIII An Epilogue to the Saxons Government 69 XLIV OF the Norman entrance 70 XLV Of the Title of the Norman Kings to the English Crown that it was by Election 72 XLVI That the Government of the Normans proceeded upon the Saxon principles and first of Parliaments 75 XLVII Of the Franchise of the Church in the Norman times 77 XLVIII Of the several subservient Jurisdictions by Marches Counties Hundreds Burroughs Lordships and Decennaries 82 XLIX Of the Immunities of the Saxon Freemen under the Norman Government 84 L. Recollection of certain Norman Laws concerning the Crown in relation to those of the Saxons formerly mentioned 86 LI. Of the like Laws that concern common Interest of Goods 89 LII Of Laws that concern common Interest of Lands 90 LIII Of divers Laws made concerning the execution of Justice 94 LIV. Of the Militia during the Normans time 65 LV. That the entry of the Normans into this Government could not be by Conquest 97 LVI A brief Survey of the sense of Writers concerning the point of Conquest 99 LVII OF the Government during the Reigns of Stephen Henry the Second Richard the First and John and first of their Titles to the Crown and disposition in Government 103 LVIII Of the state of the Nobility of England from the Conquest and during the Reign of these several Kings 107 LIX Of the state of the Clergie and their power in this Kingdom from the Norman time 109 LX. Of the English Commonalty since the Norman time 117 LXI Of Judicature the Courts and their Judges 118 LXII Of the certain Laws of Judicature in the time of Henry the 2. 120 LXIII Of the Militia of this Kingdom during the Reign of these Kings 125 LXIV OF the Government of Henry the Third Edward the First and Edward the Second Kings of England And first a general view of the disposition of their Government 129 LXV Of the condition of the Nobility of England till the time of Edward the Third 137 LXVI Of the state of the English Clergie until the time of Edward the Third and herein concerning the Statutes of Circumspecte agatis Articuli Cleri and of General Councils and National Synods 140 LXVII Of the condition of the Freemen of England and the Grand Charter and several Statutes concerning the same during the Reign of these Kings 158 LXVIII Of Courts and their Proceedings 177 LXIX Of Coroners Sheriffs and Crown-Pleas 179 LXX Of the Militia during these Kings Reigns 184 LXXI Of the Peace 188. THE PREFACE THe policy of the English Government so far as is praise-worthy is all one with Divine Providence wrapped up in a Vail of Kings and Wise men and thus implicitely hath been delivered to the World by Historians who for the most part read Men and wear their Pens in decyphering their Persons and Conditions Some of whom having met with ingenious Writers survive themselves possibly more famous after death than before Others after a miserable life wasted are yet more miserable in being little better than Tables to set forth the Painters Workmanship and to let the World know that their Historians are more witty than they of whom they wrote were either wise or good And thus History that should be a witness of Truth and Time becomes little better than a Parable or rather than a Nonsence in a fair Character whose best commendation is that it is well written Doubtless Histories of Persons or Lives of Men have their excellency in Fruit for imitation and continuance of Fame as a reward of Vertue yet will not the coacervation of these together declare the nature of a Commonwealth better than the beauty of a Body dismembered is revived by thrusting together the Members which cannot be without deformity Nor will it be denied but many wise and good Kings and Queens of this Realm may justly challenge the honour of passing many excellent Laws albeit it is the proper work of the Representative Body to form them yet to no one nor all of them can we attribute the honour of that Wisdom and Goodness that constituted this blessed Frame of Government For seldom is it seen that one Prince buildeth upon the foundation of his Predecessor or pursueth his ends or aims because as several men they have several Judgements and Desires and are subject to a Royal kind of self-love that inciteth them either to exceed former Precedents or at least to differ from them that they may not seem to rule by Copy as insufficient of themselves which is a kind of disparagement to such as are above Add hereunto that it is not to be conceited that the wisest of our Ancestors saw the Idea of this Government nor was it any where in precedent but in him that determined the same from Eternity For as no Nation can shew more variety and inconstancy in the Government of Princes than this especially for three hundred years next insuing the Normans So reason cannot move imagination that these Wheels by divers if not contrary motions could ever conspire into this temperature of policy were there not some primum mobile that hath ever kept one constant motion in all My aim therefore shall be to lay aside the consideration of Man as much as may be and to extract a summary view of the cardinal passes of the Government of this Kingdom and
especially such as the King was most devoted unto to put more confidence in the Pope's Amen than in all the prayers of his Commons with his own Soit fait to boot The sum then will be that the Prize was now well begun concerning the Pope's power in England Edward the Third made a fair blow and drew bloud Richard the Second seconded him but both retired The former left the Pope to lick himself whole the later gave him a salve and yet it proved a Gangrene in the conclusion The second means used to bring down the power of the Pope in this Nation was to abate the power or height of the English Clergie For though the times were not so clear as to espy the root of a Pope in Prelacy yet experience had taught them that they were so nigh engaged that they would not part And therefore first they let these men know that Prelacy was no essential Member to the Government of the Kingdom but as there was a Government established before that rank was known so there may be the like when it is gone For Edward the Third being troubled with a quarrel between the two Archbishops of Canterbury and York concerning Superiority in bearing the Cross and the important affairs of Scotland so urging summoned a Parliament at York which was fain to be delayed and adjourned for want of appearance and more effectual Summons issued forth But at the day of adjournment none of the Clergy of the Province of Canterbury would be there and upon this occasion the Parliament was not onely interrupted in their proceedings but an ill Precedent was made for men to be bold with the King's Summons in such Cases as liked not them and thereupon a Statute was made to enforce Obedience upon Citizens and Burgesses and such Ecclesiasticks as held per Baroniam Nevertheless when the matters concerning provisors began to come upon the Stage which was within two years after that Law was made the Clergy found that matter too warm for them and either did not obey the Summons or come to the Parliament or if they came kept aloof or if not so would not Vote or if that yet order their Tongues so as nothing was certainly to be gathered but their doubtful or rather double mind These Prelates thus discovered the Parliament depended no more upon them further than they saw meet At six or seven Parliaments determined matters without their Advice and such matters as crossed the principles of these men and therefore in a rational way might require their Sence above all the rest had they not been prepossessed with prejudice and been parties in the matter Nor did Edward the Third ever after hold their presence at so high Repute at such Meetings and therefore summoned them or so many of them as he thought meet for the occasion sometimes more sometimes fewer and at a Parliament in his forty and seventh year he summoned only four Bishops and five Abbots And thus the matter in fact passed in these times albeit the Clergie still made their claim of Vote and desired the same to be entred upon Record And thus the Parliament of England tells all the world that they hold themselves compleat without the Clergie and to all intents and purposes sufficient to conclude matters concerning the Church without their Concurrence Thus began the Mewing time of Prelacy and the principal Feather of their wings to fall away having now flourished in England nigh eight hundred years And had future Ages pursued the flight as it was begun these Lordings might have beaten the air without making any speedy way or great work saving the noise A third step yet was made further in order to the reducing of the power of the Popedom in England but which stumbled most immediately upon the greatness of the Prelates For it was the condition of the Spiritual powers besides their height of Calling to be set in high places so as their Title was from Heaven but their Possessions were from Men whereby they gained Lordship Authority and power by way of Appendix to their Spiritual Dignities This addition however it might please them yet for a long time before now it had been occasion of such murmure and grudge in the Commons against the Clergie as though it advanced the Clergie for the present yet it treasured up a back-reckoning for these men and made them liable to the displeasure of the Laity by seizure of their great places whenas otherwise their Ecclesiastical Dignities had been beyond their reach And of this these times begin now to speak louder than ever not only by complaints made in Parliament by the people but also by the Lords and Commons in Parliament to the King That the Kingdom had been now long and too long governed by the Clergie to the disherison of the Crown and therefore prayed that the principal Offices of the Kingdom might henceforth be executed by the Laity And thus the stir arose between the Lords Temporal and Spiritual each prevailing or losing ground as they had occasion to lay the way open for them The Duke of Lancaster being still upon the upper ground that as little regarded the Popes Curse as the Clergie loved him But the worst or rather the best is yet behind outward power and Honourable places are but under-setters or props to this Gourd of Prelacy that might prove no less prejudicial by creeping upon the ground than by perking upward For so long as Errour abideth in the Commons Truth can have little security amongst Princes although it cannot be denyed but it is a good sign of a clear morning when the Sun-rising gloryeth upon the top of the Mountains God gives Commission therefore to a Worm to smite this Gourd in the Root and so at once both Prelate and Pope do wither by undermining This was Wickliff that had the double honour of Learning in Humane and Divine Mysteries The latter of which had for many years passed obscurely as it were in a twilight amongst the meaner sort who had no Endowments to hold it forth amongst the throng of Learned or great men of the world And though the news thereof did sound much of Holiness and Devotion Themes unmeet to be propounded to an Age scarce civilized yet because divers of them were more immediately reflecting upon the policy of the Church wherein all the greater sort of the Church-men were much concerned but the Pope above all the rest the access of all the matter was made thereby more easie to the consideration of the great Lords and Princes in the Kingdom who out of principles of State were more deeply engaged against the Pope than others of their Rank formerly had been Duke John of Gant led the way in this Act and had a party amongst the Nobility that had never read the Canon-Law These held forth Wickliff and his Learning to the world and Edward the Third himself favoured it well enough but in his old Age desiting his
the issue will be And therefore though it in the general be more beneficial that all Exportation and Importation might be by our own Shipping yet in regard times may be such as now they were that the Shipping of this Nation is more than ordinarily employed for the service of the State And that every Nation striveth to have the benefit of Exportation by Vessels of their own And Lastly in regard the case may be such as Importation may be at a cheaper rate by forein Vessels and Exportation likewise may for the time be more prejudicial to this Nation if done by our own Shipping than those of other Nations Therefore the course must be changed so far forth as will stand with the occasions of the State and common profit of this Nation And for these causes and such-like in the times whereof we now treat the Laws often varied Sometimes no Staple-Commodity must be Exported in English bottoms sometimes all must be done by them and within a year again that liberty was restrained and after that liberty given to Foreiners to Export as formerly The third and last Consideration is as necessary as any of the former for if Trade be maintained out of the main Stock the Kingdom in time must needs be brought to penury because it is their Magazine And for this cause it was provided That all Wool should remain at the Staple 15 days to the end it might be for the Kingdoms use if any one would buy they must do it within that time otherwise it might be exported The sixth means of advancement of Trade was the setling of the Staple for as it was an encouragement to the first establishing of the Manufacture that the Staples were let loose so when the Manufactures had taken root the Staple especially now fixed to places within this Kingdom brought much more encouragement thereto First For preserving a full Market For whilst the Commodity lies scattered in all places the Market must needs be the leaner partly in regard the Commodity lies in obscurity and partly because when it is known where yet it is not easily discovered whether it be vendible or not and besides small parcels are not for every man's labour and the greater are not for every man's money Secondly Staples are convenient for the slating of the general price of the Commodities in regard the quantity of the Commodity is thereby the more easily discovered which commonly makes the price And the quantity of the Commodity thus discovered will not onely settle the price to it self but also ballance the price of the Manufacture Thirdly The Staple having thus discovered the quantity of the Commodity will be a ready way to settle the quantity of the main Stock that must be preserved and regulate Exportation as touching the overplus But it cannot be denied that the first and principal mover of the making of the Staple was the benefit of the Crown For when the Commodity was gone beyond the Sea it importeth not to the Subjects in England whether the same be sold at one place or more or in what place the same be setled until the Manufacture was grown to some stature and then the place became litigious The benefit of Exportation pretended much interest in the setling thereof beyond the Sea but in truth it was another matter of State. For when it was beyond Sea it was a moveable Engine to convey the King's pleasure or displeasure as the King pleased for it was a great benefit to the Countrey or place where-ever it setled or else it moved or stayed according to the inclination of the People where it was either for War or Peace But on the contrary the Interest of the people began to interpose strongly And for these causes the Parliament likewise intermeddled in the place and thus the Scene is altered Sometimes it is beyond the Seas in one place or in another sometimes in England In Edward the Third's time we find it sometimes at Calis sometimes in England In Richard the Second's time we find it again beyond the Seas at Middleburgh thence removed to Calis and after into England Where at length the people understood themselves so well that the Parliament setled the same it being found too burthensome for the Manufactures to travel to the Staple beyond the Seas for the Commodity that grew at their own doors besides the enhansing of the price by reason of the Carriage which falling also upon the Manufactures must needs tend to the damage of the whole Kingdom This was one way indeed and yet possibly another might have been found For if a Computation had been made of the main Stock and a Staple setled within the Kingdom for that and the overplus exported to a Staple beyond the Sea it might have proved no less commodious and more complying It is very true that there are many that call for the Liberty of the people that every man may sell his own Commodity as he pleases and it were well that men would consider themselves as well in their Relations as in their own Personal Respects For if every man were independent his liberty would be in like manner independent but so long as any man is a Member of a Common-wealth his liberty must likewise depend upon the good of the Common-wealth and if it be not good for the Nation that every man should sell his own Commodity as he pleaseth he may claim the liberty as a Free-man but not as an English-man Nor is that liberty just so long as his Country hath an interest in his Commodity for its safety and welfare as in his own person I do not assert the manner of buying the Staple-Commodities by Merchants of the Staple to sell the same again in kind for their private advantage Divers limitations must concur to save it from an unlawful ingrossing nor doth it appear to me that the Staplers in these times used such course or were other than mere Officers for the regulating of the Staple in nature of a Court of Piepowders belonging to some Fair or Market Nevertheless I conjecture that it may well be made evident from principles of State that Marts Markets and Staples of Commodities that are of the proper Off-spring of this Nation are as necessary to Trade as Conduits are to places that want Water The seventh and last means that was set on foot in these times for the advance of Trade was the regulating of the Mint and the current of Money This is the life and soul of Trade for though exchange of Commodities may do much yet it cannot be for all because it is not the lot of all to have exchangeable Commodities nor to work for Apparel and Victual Now in the managing of this trick of Money two things are principally looked unto First That the Money be good and currant Secondly That it should be plentiful As touching the excellency of the Money several Rules were made as against
in the French Wars the Duke of Gloucester obtained the same power and place But Henry the Sixth added a further Title of Protector and Defender of the Kingdom and Church of England this was first given to the Duke of Bedford and afterwards he being made Regent of France it was conferred upon the Duke of Gloucester And towards the latter time of Henry the Sixth it was granted by him to Richard Duke of York This Title carried along with it a power different from that of a King onely in honour and the person so adorned may be said to sway the Scepter but not to wear the Crown And therefore in the minority of Henry the Sixth whenas the Government was ordered by the Parliament and to that end a Protector was made and he well guarded with a Privy Council and they provided with Instructions one of them was That in all matters not to be transacted ordinarily but by the King 's express consent the Privy Council should advise with the Protector But this is not so needful in regard that it concerneth the power of executing of Laws which by right of the liberty of the Subject is the known duty of the Scepter in whose hands soever it is holden And therefore I shall pass to the Legislative Power wherein it is evident that the Protector 's power was no whit inferiour to the King's power For First the Protector Ex Officio by advice of the Council did summon Parliaments by Writs even as the Kings themselves under their own Test and if they did not bear the Royal Assent yet did they direct the same and received Petitions in Parliament to them directed as to Kings and every way supplied the room of a King in order to the perfecting publishing and enforcing of Law to Execution Secondly the Parliaments holden by Protectors and Laws therein made are no whit inferiour to those by the King whether for Honour or Power And therefore if a Parliament be holden by the Lord Warden and sitting the Parliament the King in person shall arrive and be there present neither is the Parliament interrupted thereby nor the power thereof changed at all though the power and place of the Wardenship of the Kingdom doth utterly vanish by the personal access of the King because in all places where the King is subservient to the Kingdom or the Commonwealth the Lord Warden in his absence is conservient unto him being in his stead and not under him for the very place supposeth him as not because not present And this was by a Law declaratively published at such time as Henry the Fifth was Regent of France and therefore by common presumption was likely to have much occasion of residence in that Kingdom a●● it holdeth in equal force with all other Laws of the highest size which is the rather to be noted because it is though under a Protector obligatory to the King and makes his personal presence no more considerable than the presence of his shadow For the King spent three whole years in the French Wars and during that time never saw England where nevertheless in that interim three Parliaments had been holden one by the Duke of Bedford and two by the Duke of Gloucester in the last of which this Law was made And in truth if we look upon this Title of the Kingdoms Guardianship in its bare Lineaments without lights and shadows it will appear little better than a Crown of Feathers worn onely for bravery and in nothing adding to the real ability of the governing part of this Nation Neither were the persons of these Magnificoes so well deserving nor did the Nation expect any such matter from them Edward the First was a wise King and yet in his absence chose Edward the Second to hold that place he being then not above fourteen years of age Afterwards Edward the Second's Queen and the Lords of her party were wise enough in their way and yet they chose Edward the Third to be their Custos Regni then not fourteen years old his Father in the mean time being neither absent from the Kingdom nor deposed but onely dismissed from acting in the administration of the Government Edward the Third follows the same example he first makes his Brother John of Eltham Custos Regni and this he did at two several times once when he was but Eleven years old afterwards when he was about Fourteen Then he made his Son the Black Prince upon several occasions three times Lord-Warden of the Kingdom once he being about Nine years old and again when he was Eleven years old and once when about Fourteen years old Lastly Edward the Third appointed his Son Lionel Duke of Clarence unto this place of Custos Regni when as he was scarce Eight years old all which will appear upon the comparing their Ages with the several Rolls of 25 E. 1. 3 5 12 14 26. 19 E. 3. If therefore the work of a Custos Regni be such as may be as well done by the Infants of Kings as by the wisest Counsellor or most valiant man it is in my opinion manifest that the place is of little other use to this Commonwealth than to serve as an attire to a comely person to make it seem more fair because it is in fashion nor doth it advance the value of a King one grain above what his Personal endowments do deserve Hitherto of the Title and Power the next consideration will be of the original Fountain from whence it is derived wherein the Precedents are clear and plain that ordinarily they are the next and immediate Off-spring of Kings if they be present within the four Seas to be by them enabled by Letters-Patents or Commission But whether present or absent the Parliament when it sate did ever peruse their Authority and if it saw need changed enlarged or abridged both it and them Thus was the Duke of Gloucester made Lord Warden in the time of Henry the Fifth he being then in France in the room of the Duke of Bedford The like also in Henry the Sixth's time when as the King was young for then the Parliament made the Duke of Bedford Lord Warden and added unto that Title the Title of Protector Afterward at the Duke's going over into France they committed that service to the Duke of Gloucester if I forget not the nature of the Roll during the Duke of Bedford's absence and with a Salvo of his right Not unlike hereunto was the course that was taken by the Parliament in these sullen later times of Henry the Sixth whereof more hereafter in the next Paragraph Lastly The limitation of this high power and Title is different according to the occasion for the Guardianship of the Kingdom by common intendment is to endure no longer than the King is absent from the Helm either by voluntary deserting the work or employment in Foreign parts though united they be under the Government of the same King together