Selected quad for the lemma: evil_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
evil_n acre_n land_n level_n 48 3 16.5261 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
B06154 To the supreme authority, the Parliament of the Commonwealth of England. The humble petition of the owners and commoners of the town of Islelham [sic] in the county of Cambridge. 1652 (1652) Wing T1748A; ESTC R185349 3,989 10

There is 1 snippet containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

●o the Supreme Authority the Parliament of the Commonwealth of ENGLAND The humble Petition of the Owners and Commoners of the Town of Islelham in the County of Cambridg Sheweth ●Hat the Earl of Bedford Edward Russel Esq Robert Henly Esq and Robert Castle Esq in trust for the Earl of Bedfords ●●●●●cipants and adventurers by vertue of a late Act of Parliament ●●●…nd they have drained your Petitioners Fens consisting of a●●●… 2500 acres and by an Adjudication as we are informed by ●●me of the Commissioners mentioned in the said Act have Ditch●●●ut to themselves about 930 acres of your Petitioners said Fens 〈◊〉 are in possession thereof 1. Your Petitioners wil make it appear unto your Honors That ●●ntrary to the Law of God by the said Act parties interessed are ●●●cted Judges 2. That the said Act is destructive to Propriety for by it the ●●●mmissioners who for ought we know are Judges and Parties 〈◊〉 impowred to take away our Estates without our consents and ●●●…st it 3. It enacts impossibilities and falsities as that land to be drain●● which was never drowned and that hurtfully surrounded which ●●…ettered by overflowing 4. We have not been used like English-men for contrary to the ●●ndamental Laws of the Land we are disseised of our Free-holds ●●ard by our witnesses upon Oath or by view or by Juries of the ●●●●hbourhood In the beginning of ●●e last P●●●●●ment when very few of th● Members were ingaged in this project In their first and grand Remonstrance 1641. In the like Case this draining of us by forc● was declared An Injustice oppression violence project and gri●vance and in more express words Thus large quantities of Commons and Severals have been taken away from the Subject by colour of the Statute of Improvement and by the abuse of the Comission of Sewers without their consents and against it yet this late Act for Draining hath ratified and confirmed all those agrievance● and oppressions which the people suffered concerning draining in the Kings time The cause of all this is plain and clear which was because there were so many Parliament men parties interessed when the said Act was passing The Premises considered the humble desires of your Petitioners are 1. That we may enjoy our Proprieties and that according to the Statute of Improvement of 43 Eliz. Cap. 11. wherein is provisio● made sufficient for any undertaking for draining whatsoever your Petitioners may be at liberty to make the best of their own● And that you will be pleased to consider of our Exceptions agains● The late Act for Draining for the repealing thereof which w● humbly tender herewith unto your Honours 2. That our adversaries may not be enabled by their illegal possess●on of our Estates to wage Law with us with our own Revenue● by receiving this Summers profit of our said Fens For preve●tion whereof we humbly crave your Honors Order for our speed● re-possession of our said Grounds having already received 〈◊〉 least 500 l. damage by the undertakers pernicious new Ditches ● our said Fens And your Petitioners shall pray c. Exceptions taken to a late Act of Parliament intituled An Act for the Draining the great Level of the Fens THe first Exception is against the Title of the Act viz. An Act for Draining the great Level of the Fens extending it self c There are many fallacies couched under this word Level First it is an equivocal word and hath two significations As fist the great Level signifies a bare flat whether dry or drowned The undertakers cannot mean dry land for how can that Land be drained which was never drowned Therefore by the Undertakers meaning it must be such Land as is really hurtfully surrounded which are 300000 acres The next fallacie in the word Level is begging of the Question Taking for granted that 300000 acres are the Level hurtfully surrounded which in truth are not The third fallacie is the ignorance of a contradiction As it is the great Level and not the great Level in divers respects As first it is a great Flat or Level but not such a one as is hurtfully surrounded for it will be proved many thousands of acres were never drowned thousands of acres not hurtfully surrounded but bettered by overflowing thousands of acres are Osier Reed Sedg So deduct the premised Land the great Level will be much lessened The fourth fallacie in the word Level is joyning such Lands together that ought to be devided or calling Good Evill and Evil Good As calling dry ground and Land bettered by overflowing the Level or hurtfully surrounded which words are convertible As for instance in the Town of Isleham which contain 2500. acres of Fens we have 1200 acres dry Land and another considerable part of the said Fens are bettered by overflowing Ye● the Undertakers take 930 acres out of the 2500 acres for draining So being Judges and parties the Undertakers have mis-stated the Level The second Exception is against the Preamble of the said Act viz. Whereas the said great Level by reason of overflowing of the Rivers of c. have been of small and uncertain profit but if drained may be improved The Undertakers take it for granted the great Level is little worth because it is hurtfully surrounded as they falsely suggest Those who live in the Fens and are neighbours to them know the contrary For first The Fens breed infinite numbers of Horses Mares and Colts and all sorts of other Cattel and the Horses and Mares are kept on our Fens in Summer which till our Land Secondly We breed and feed great store of young Cattel as Calves and Buds which are yearlings and wee keep great Dairies which afford great store of Butter and Cheese and multitudes of Heifers and other Cattel are fatted on our Fens which afford Hides and Tallow Thirdly We Mow off our Fens Fother which feeds our Neat in Winter which being housed we gather such quantities of Compost or Dung that it inriches our Pastures and Corn-ground half in half Fourthly We keep great Flocks of Sheep Fifthly Our Fens are a great relief in a dry Summer not only to the Uplanders of our own but neighbour Countries which otherwise thousands of Cattel would perish Sixthly We have great store of Osier Reed and Sedg which are such necssaries as the Countries cannot want them for many uses and sets many poor on work Lastly We have many thousand Cottagers which live on our Fens which have no right of Common which we connive at otherwise they would go a begging So that if the Undertakers take away a third part of our Fens they destroy our Pastures and Corn-ground and lessen our Revenues proportionably What is Cole-Seed Rape and Hemp they are but Dutch Commodities and but trash and trumpery and pils land in respect of the fore-cited Commodities which are the rich Ore of the Commonwealth The third Exception is against what is enacted to be the particular bounds and limits of the great Level much of which we