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A28585 The continuation of An historicall discourse of the government of England, untill the end of the reigne of Queene Elizabeth with a preface, being a vindication of the ancient way of parliaments in England / by Nath. Bacon of Grais-Inne, Esquire. Bacon, Nathaniel, 1593-1660.; Bacon, Nathaniel, 1593-1660. Historicall and political discourse of the laws & government of England. 1651 (1651) Wing B348; ESTC R10585 244,447 342

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as were taking of women into captivity unlawfull huntings with disguises malicious breaking of the Dikes and Bankes in Marshland Servants embezzelling their Masters Goods to the value of forty shillings or upward which besides that of Heresie whereof formerly though of a new stamp yet of so good a constitution that they remaine unto this day under the same brand But let the Lawes be never so severe if they have not free liberty to walk at large they are soone ghostlesse and therefore these two Kings especially the later gained that Honour above their Predecessors that they gave the Law a free and full scope over all persons but themselves and their Assignees and in all places First Concerning places every one knowes the Notion but few considered the extent of Sanctuary ground in England that could sanctifie any Crime or Criminall person in such manner that though the eye of Justice could see yet the hand of Justice could never reach them till Henry the eight plundered them of all their sanctity and made all places common so as no Treason could hide it self but where the Act of Parliament did appoint and turned their names from Sanctuaries to priviledged places The sanctity of the person was yet more mischivious and hard to be reformed it had been often attempted before these times with little successe Henry the seventh gained some ground herein beyond his Ancestors the Delinquent might have his Clergy once but not the second time though he fled to the hornes of the Alter and was ever after known by a brand in the hand Thus far did Henry the seventh go and would have done more even as far as unto those in holy orders But Henry the eighth comming on in point of Treason made all persons common without respect of their orders or profession Death makes an equall end of all In cases of Murther Robbery Burnings of Houses Fellonies done in holy ground high Way or Dwelling House refusall of triall peremptory challenge of above twenty of the pannell Servants imbezzelling their Masters Goods in value forty shillings or upwards in all these Cases no Clergy could be allowed but to persons in holy Orders and those also to be perpetually Imprisoned in the Ordinaries Prison and yet this exception held not long in force but these men also were equally wrapped up in the same course to have their Clergy and indure the brand even as other men Two difficulties yet remaine which hindred the execution of the Lawes against Treason One concerning the place the other the person The place many times of the plotting and beginning of the Treason befalleth to be without the walk of the Kings Writ in which case by the Common Law it cannot be inquired or tried or it may be that the men of the place be generally disaffected and then no hope of finding out the matter In such cases therefore it is provided that be the Crime wheresoever the Delinquent will it shall neverthelesse be inquired and tried where the King will The Person of the Delinquent also many times changed its condition it might be sober at the time of the Delinquency and afterwards upon discovery prove lunatick and thereby avoide the Triall this whether in jest or earnest by a Statute is made all one and it is ordained that in case the fact be confessed by the Delinquent before the Lords of the Councell at such time as the party accused was of sound minde and the same be attested under the hands of foure of those Lords the same shall be a good ground to proceed to inquisition before Commissioners and the same being found to try the Delinquent without answer or appearence saving unto Barons their Triall by their Peeres And thus however in their Fits the Will of the Persons of these Kings was too hardy for the Kings to mannage according to rule yet the Law still in Title kept the saddle held the Reines and remaineth the cheife Arbitrator unto every man CHAP. XXXIV Of the generall Government of Edward the sixth Queene Mary and Queene Elizabeth WEE are at length come within sight of the shore where finding the Currents various and swift and the Waves rough I shall first make my course through them severally and then shall bring up the generall account of the Reignes of one King and three Governours The King was a Youth of about ten yeares old yet was older then he seemed by eleven yeares for he had all the Amunition of a wise King and in one respect beyond all his Predecessors that made him King indeed By the grace of God He was the onely Son of Henry the Eighth yet that was not all his title he being the first President in the point of a young Son and two elder Daughters by severall venters the eldest of whom was now thirty yeares old able enough to settle the Government of a distracted Nation and the Son so young as by an Act of Parliament he was disabled to settle any Government at all till he should passe the fifteenth yeare of his Reigne But the thing was settled in the life time of his Father whose last Will though it speake the choise yet the Parliament made the election and declared it The condition of this Kings Person was every way tender borne and sustained by extraordinary meanes which could never make his dayes many or Reigne long His spirit was soft and tractable a dangerous temper in an ill aire but being fixed by a higher principle then nature yeelded him and the same beautified with excellent indowments of nature and Arts and Tongues he outwent all the Kings in his time of the Christian World His Predecessors provided Apparell and Victuall to this Nation but he Education and thereby fitted it to overcome a firy tryall which soon followed his departure The modell of his Government was as tender as himselfe scarce induring to see his Funerall ready for every change subject to tumults and Rebellions an old trick that ever attends the beginning of Reformation like the winde the Sun rising The diversity of Interests in the Great Men especially in point of Religion for the most part first set these into motion for some of them had been so long maintained by the Romish Law that they could never endure the Gospell and yet the different Interests in matters of State made the greater noise All was under a Protector fitly composed to the Kings minde but ill matched with rugged humorous aspiring mindes whereof one that should have been the Protectors great Freind became his fatall Enemy and though he were his Brother to prejudice his Interest pawned his owne blood The other which was the Duke of Northumberland had his will but missed his end for having removed the Protector out of the way and gotten the cheife power about the King yet could he not hold long what he had gotten for the King himselfe after sixteen moneths decaying went into another World and
THE CONTINUATION OF AN HISTORICALL DISCOURSE OF THE GOVERNMENT OF ENGLAND Vntill the end of the Reigne of Queene ELIZABETH WITH A Preface being a Vindication of the ancient way of Parliaments in ENGLAND By Nath Bacon of Grais-Inne Esquire LONDON Printed by Tho Roycroft for Matthew Walbanck and Henry Twyford and are to be sold at Grais-Inne Gate and in Vine Court Middle Temple 1651. The Contents of the severall Chapters of this Book I. THe sum of the severall Reignes of Edward the third and Richard the second fol. 3. II. The state of the King and Parliament in relation of him to it and of it to him fol. 13. III. Of the Privy Council and the condition of the Lords f. 26. IV. Of the Chancery fol. 35. V. Of the Admirals Court. fol. 41. VI. Of the Church-mens Interest fol. 45. VII Concerning Trade fol. 64. VIII Of Treason and Legiance with some considerations concerning Calvins Case fol. 76. IX Of Courts for causes criminall with their Laws fo 92. X. Of the course of Civill Justice during these times fo 96. XI Of the Militia in these times fol. 98. XII Of the Peace fol. 108. XIII A view of the summary courses of Henry the fourth Henry the fifth and Henry the sixth in their severall Reignes fol. 115. XIV Of the Parliament during the Reignes of these severall Kings fol. 127. XV. Of the Custos or Protector Regni fol. 134. XVI Concerning the Privy Councell fol. 141. XVII Of the Clergie and Church-government during these times fol. 146. XVIII Of the Court of Chancery fol. 162. XIX Of the Courts of Crown Plas and Common Law fo 165 XX. Concerning Sheriffs fol. 168. XXI Of Justices and Lawes concerning the Peace fol. 170. XXII Of the Militia during these times fol. 175. XXIII A short survey of the Reignes of Edward the fourth Edward the fifth and Richard the third fol. 181. XXIV Of the Government in relation to the Parliament fol. 187. XXV Of the condition of the Clergie fol. 191. XXVI A short sum of the Reignes of Henry the seventh and Henry the eighth fol. 194. XXVII Of the condition of the Crowne fol. 202. XXVIII Of the condition of the Parliament in these times fol. 223. XXIX Of the power of the Clergy in the Convocation f. 229. XXX Of the power of the Clergy in their ordinary Jurisdiction fol. 232. XXXI Of Judicature fol. 241. XXXII Of the Militia fol. 245. XXXIII Of the Peace fol. 253. XXXIV Of the generall Government of Edward the sixth Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth fol. 259. XXXV Of the Supream power during these times fol. 268. XXXVI Of the power of the Parliament during these times fol. 277. XXXVII Of the Jurisdiction Ecclesiasticall during these last times fol. 283. XXXVIII Of the Militia in these later times fol. 290. XXXIX Of the Peace fol. 297. XL. A summary Conclusion upon the whole matter fol. 300. A PREFACE CONTAINING A Vindication of the Ancient way of the Parliament OF ENGLAND THE more Words the more Faults is a divine Maxime that hath put a stop to the publishing of this second part for some time but observing the ordinary humor still drawing off and passing a harsher censure upon my intentions in my first part then I expected I doe proceede to fulfill my course that if censure will be it may be upon better grounds when the whole matter is before Herein I shall once more minde that I meddle not with the Theologicall right of Kings or other Powers but with the Civill right in fact now in hand And because some mens Pens of late have ranged into a denyall of the Commons ancient right in the Legislative power and others even to adnull the right both of Lords and Commons therein resolving all such power into that one principle of a King Quicquid libet licet so making the breach much wider then at the beginning I shall intend my course against both As touching the Commons right jointly with the Lords it will be the maine end of the whole but as touching the Commons right in competition with the Lords I will first endeavour to remove out of the way what I finde published in a late Tractate concerning that matter and so proceede upon the whole The subject of that Discourse consisteth of three parts one to prove that the ancient Parliaments before the thirteenth Century consisted onely of those whom we now call the House of Lords the other that both the Legislative and Judiciall power of the Parliament rested wholly in them lastly that Knights Citizens and Burgesses of Parliament or the House of Commons were not knowne nor heard of till punier times then these This last will be granted Viz. That these severall titles of Knights Citizens and Burgesses were not known in Parliament till of later times Neverthelesse it will be insisted upon that the Commons were then there The second will be granted but in part Viz. That the Lords had much power in Parliament in point of Jurisdiction but neither the sole nor the whole The first is absolutely denyed neither is the same proved by any one instance or pregnant ground in all that Book and therefore not cleerly demonstrated by Histories and Records beyond contradiction as the Title page of that Book doth hold forth to the World First because not one instance in all that Book is exclusive to the Commons and so the whole Argument of the Discourse will conclude Ab authoritate Negativa which is no argument in humane testimony at all Secondly the greatest number of instances in that Booke are by him supposed to concerne Parliaments or generall Councils of this Nation holden by the Representative thereof whereas indeed they were either but Synodicall Conventions for Church matters whereunto the poore Commons he well knoweth might not come unlesse in danger of the Canons dint or if they did yet had no other worke there then to heare learne and receive Lawes from the Ecclesiasticks And the Lords themselves though present yet under no other notion were they then as Councell to the King whom they could not cast out of their Councell till after Ages though they often endeavoured it Thirdly the Author of that Tractate also well knoweth that Kings usually made Grants and Infeodations by advice of the Lords without the ayde of the Parliament And it is no lesse true that Kings with the Lords did in their severall ages exercise ordinarily Jurisdiction in cases of distributive Justice especially after the Norman entrance For the step was easie from being Commanders in Warr to be Lords in peace but hard to lay downe that power at the foot of Justice which they had usurped in the rude times of the Sword when men labour for life rather then liberty and no lesse difficult to make a difference between their deportment in commanding of Souldiers and governing of Countrey-men till peace by continuance had reduced them to a little more sobriety Nor doth it seeme irrationall that private differences
the taxes were frequent yet but light for frequent light taxes steal insensibly without regret and as they grow into matters of course so they meete with acceptance of course Two things made them of light account First they were not taxes altogether of Money in kind but of goods such as the sheafe and fleece and such like things whereof the ownership is visible whereas many are supposed to have Money which have it not but must borrow it or sell their goods at an under rate many times to accomplish it for the payment of their Taxes Secondly these Taxes were assessed by the Neighborhood and not upon extremity of Survey by Commissioners who many times are subject to miscarry upon grounds of private Interest or for want of due information or by making more haste then good speed These Taxes likewise were reduced to the ancient rule according to the Statute of Westminster the first And thus did this King shew himself truely Royall in demanding his Taxes upon evident grounds of State levying them with a tender hand and imploying them to their right end Thirdly that which digested all and bred good blood was in that the people had quid pro quo by the advance of Trade wherein the King shewed himselfe the Cape Merchant of the World Certainly mens parts in these times were of vast reach that could manage such Warres settle such a Government and lay such a foundation of a treasury by Trade a thing necessary to this Island next unto its owne being as may appear not onely in regard of the riches of this Nation but in regard of the strength thereof And in regard of the maintenance of the Crowne the two later of which being no other then a naturall effluence of the former it will be sufficient to touch the same in order to the thing in hand Now as touching that its evident that the riches of any Nation are supported by the Conjuncture of three regards First that the naturall Commodities of the Nation may be improved Secondly that the poorer sort of people be set a worke Thirdly that the value of money be rightly ballanced For as on the one part though the people be never so laborious if the naturall Commodities of the Island be not improved by their labour the people can never grow much richer then barely for subsistance during their labour so neither can the improvement of the naturall Commodity inrich the Kingdome so long as many mouthes are fed upon the main stock and waste the same by idlenesse and prodigality Nor though both these should concurre yet cannot the Kingdome be said truly to be rich unlesse by intercourse and traffique there be an emptying out of the superfluity of such Commodities by way of barter or otherwise for such Forrain Commodities whereof this Nation standeth in most need for supply of all occasions For God hath so attempered the whole Regiment of the earth in such manner that no one Nation under Heaven can well and comfortably subsist in and by it self but all must give and receive mutuall Commodity from each other otherwise superfluity would make any Commodity though in it self never so precious vile and little conducible to the inriching of the Nation Now for the compassing of all these the Wise men of these times first tooke into their consideration the principall Commodities of this Kingdome and because they found them impounded in the Staple they set all at liberty to buy and sell the same as they pleased And thus began a Free Trade of Wooll throughout the Realme and matter for imployment by every man that would but this continued not long The people soon had Commodity enough for work and Kings liked too well of the restraining of that liberty in order to their owne benefit and soon found out occasions to reconcile the reason of State with their own Interests and at length settled the Staple in certain places in severall parts of the Kingdome but this extended onely unto the Commodities of Wooll Leather and Lead for as yet the Manufactures were not come to Maturity Secondly the indeavour was to advance Manufacture and principally such of them as are made of the Staple Commodities amongst all which Wooll had the precedency as being the most principall and ancient Commodity of the Kingdome and the Manufacture of Wooll of long use but had received little encouragement before these times For that it formerly had been the principall flower in the Flemish Garden and nourished from this Nation by the continuall supply of Wooll that it received from hence which was the principall cause of the ancient League between the House of Burgundy and this Crowne But Edward the Third was now too well acquainted with the Flemings Affaires by a joynt Engagement with them in the Wars with France and therein had gained so good an opinion amongst them that he might adventure to change a Complement for a Courtesie The Staples beyond the Sea were now taken away he now inhibiteth the Importation of Forraine Cloathes and having gained these two steps onward his way he represents to the Flemings their unsettled Condition by these bordering Warres with France the peaceable Condition of England and Freedome of the People then propounds to them an Invitation to come over into England promiseth them share and share like with his own People with such other Immunities as they take his offer come over and brought their Manufacture with them which could never after be recalled So as now the Wooll and Manufacture dwell together and like to Man and Wife so long as they care for one another both will thrive but if they come to play their games apart both will be loosers in the Conclusion The third step to the advance of Trade was the Exportation of the surplusage of the Staple Commodities that remained over and besides that proportion that should suffice for the Manufactures to which end it was ordered that no Wooll should be Exported till it had remained at the Staple by the space of fifteen dayes That time was necessary and longer time might have been Convenient but that the Markets beyond the Sea could not be delayed longer time without much damage to the Merchant and Owner for as much as Winter time is no time to prepare Wooll for the Manufacture and by over long continuance of the Commodity upon the hand of the Merchant or Owner both the Commodity and the Manufacture might surfet lye in dispaire and Trade choked thereby For its a necessary preparative to Trade to keep the Nation in some kinde of hunger after the Staple Commodities so as the main stock be not too great to occupy and yet to leave enough to use But because this Nation formerly had been and as yet were used too much to Forrain Manufactures the importing of which did debase the Home made Manufactures and discouraged that work therefore the Law was made to reduce the vanity of Apparrell which infected
Parliament is looked upon as the cheif supporters in the maintaining both the Honour and Power of that Authority that otherwise would fall under contempt A work that must be done with a curious touch or a cleare hand or they must look for the like Censure to that of a King to a great Lord that Crowned him My Lord I like your work very well but you have left the print of your fingers upon my Crown Such was the condition of these times wherein a Child and two Women are the cheifs but ever under the correction and direction of the Common Councel in matters of common concernment Two things declare the point the course of the Title of the Crown and the order of the powers thereof The Title ever had a Law which was at the Helm although diversly expounded Kings ever loved the rule of inheritance and therefore usually strained their Pedegree hard to make both ends meet though in truth they were guilty oftentimes to themselves that they were not within the degrees The People ever loved the Title of Election and though ever they joyned it to the Royall blood and many times to the right Heire to make the same pass more currant without interruption of the first love between them and their Princes yet more often had they Kings that could not boast much of their birth-right in their first entry into their Throne Of three and twenty Kings from the Saxons time foure of the former had no Title by inheritance the two Willams Henry the first and King Steven of two others Viz. Henry the second and Richard the first had right of birth yet came in by compact The seventh which was King John had no title but election The eight Viz. Henry the third came in a Child and contrary to compact between the Nobility and the French Lewes the ninth and tenth succeeded as by unquestionable Title of discent yet the Nobles were preingaged The eleventh which was Edward the third in his entry eldest Son but not Heire for his Father was alive but his Successor was his Heire its true there were other Children of Edward the third alive that were more worthy of the Crown but they were too many to agree in any but a Child that might be ruled by themselves Three next of the ensuing Kings were of a collatterall line Their two Successors Viz. Edward the fourth and Edward the fifth were of the right line yet Edward the fourth came in by dissesin and Edward the fifth by permission Richard the third and Henry the seventh were collatterall to one another and to the right blood Henry the eighth though when he was King might claime from his Mother yet came in as Heire to his Father And if Edward the sixth was right Heire to the House of Yorke by his Grand-Mother yet cannot the Crown be said to descend upon the two Sisters neither as Heires to him nor Henry the eighth nor to one another so long as the Statute of their illigittimation remained which as touching Queen Mary was till three Months after her entry upon the Throne and as touching Queen Elizabeth for ever for that Virago provided for her self not by way of repeale as her Sister had done but more tenderly regarding the Honour of her Father and the Parliament then to mention their blemishes in Government by doing and undoing She overlooked that Act of Henry the Eighth and the Notion of Inheritance and contented her self with her Title by the Statute made by her Father in his thirty fifth yeare which to her was a meere purchase and was not ashamed to declare to all the World that She did have and hold therby and that it was high Treason for any Subject to deny that the course of the Crown of England is to be ordered by Act of Parliament And this power did the Parliament exercise not onely in ordering the course of the Crown to Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth but during the Reign of Queen Elizabeth so far as to dis-inherit and dis-able any person who should pretend Right to the Crown in opposition to the Right of Queen Elizabeth and upon this point onely did the whole proceedings against Mary Queen of Scots depend who claimed to be and doubtless was Heir unto Henry the eighth after the determination of his right Line and yet She was put to death for pretending Right by the Common Law in opposition to the Act of Parliament True it is that this Doctrine doth not down well with those that do pretend to Prerogative aided as they say by the Act of Recognition made to King James and the Oaths of Supremacy and Allegiance which do make much parly concerning Inheritance and Heirs nevertheless it is as true that the Act of Recognition made no Law for the future nor doth the same cross the Statute of 13 Eliz. nor doth it take away the power of the Parliament from over-ruling the course of the Common Law for after Ages Nor do the Oaths of Supremacy and Allegiance hold forth any such Obligation unto Heirs otherwise then as supposing them to be Successors and in that relation onely And therefore was no such Allegiance due to Edward the sixth Queen Mary or Queen Elizabeth untill they were actually possessed of the Crown as may appear by the Oath formed by the Statute of Henry the eighth touching their Succession Nor did the Law suppose any Treason could be acted against the Heirs of Edward the sixth Queen Mary or Queen Elizabeth untill those Heirs were actually possessed of the Crown and so were Kings and Queens as by express words in the severall Statutes do appear Nor did the Recognition by the Parliament made to Queen Elizabeth declare any ingagement of the People to assist and defend her and the Heirs of her Body otherwise then with this Limitation Being Kings and Queens of this Realm as by the Statute in that behalf made doth appear And lastly had these Oaths bin otherwise understood the Crown had by the vertue of them been pre-ingaged so as it could never have descended to Queen Mary Queen Elizabeth or King James but must have remained to the Heirs of Edward the sixth for ever Secondly the same power that the Parliament exercised in ordering the course of succession in the Crown they exercised likewise in determining and distributing the Powers and Priviledges belonging to the same for these Times were full of Novelties The Crown had formerly fitted a childes head more then once but it never tried to fit a Womans head since the Saxon Times till now that it must make triall of two France might afford us a trick of the Salique Law if it might finde acceptance And the unsettled estate of the People especially in matter of Religion might require the wisest man living to sit at the Helm and yet himself not sufficient to steer a right course to the Harbour Nevertheless the Parliament having the Statute of Henry the
from an English man is due to England and Faith to the King which I suppose must be intended to be in order to that Allegiance because by the former Plea England had them both and the King was wholly left out of the Case Neverthelesse I rather thinke that the present Point in controversie will receive little light herefrom on either part We are now come to the fourth Property of English Legiance that it is due to the Kings Naturall Capacity and not to his Politique Capacity or due to the Office of a King in regard of the Person of the man and not to the Person in regard of the Office fol. 20. And because this is of no small importance neither easily understood nor granted Therefore he backeth his Opinion by many reasons First he saith that the King sweareth to his Subjects in his Naturall Capacity therefore the Subjects swear to him in his Naturall Capacity This reason was intended to be taken from Relatives and then it should have been thus A King doth sweare to his Subjects in their Naturall Capacity therefore Subjects sweare to a King in his Naturall Capacity but it being otherwise it is mistaken and proves not the Point Yet if we should take the Reporter in sano Sensu there is no question but the Oath is made to the Naturall Capacity yet not Terminative more then the Oath of the Tenant to his Lord which this Author pleaseth to couple with the mutuall dependence between King and Subject fol. 4. b. 5. a. Nor doth the Oath of an English man binde him to the Obedience of all or any Commands which the King shall give in relation onely to his Naturall Capacity or in opposition to his Politick Capacity Nor will the Reporter himself allow that the Politique Capacity of the King can be separate from his Naturall Capacity fol. 10. And yet it is evident that a King may in his Naturall Capacity command that of which in his Politique Capacity cannot give allowance The second reason of this Opinion is taken from the nature of Treason which saith the Reporter is committed against the Naturall Person of the King and this is against due Legiance according to the form of Indictments in that Case provided This is not demonstrative because that crime which is done against the Naturall person of a man may as well extend to it in relation to his Place or Office and so may Treason be plotted against the Naturall Person of a King as he is King neither is their any other difference between the murther of a King and a private Man but onely in regard of the Place and Office of a King which makes the murther of him Treason for which cause all Indictments that doe conclude Contra Legiantiae debitum doe as well also conclude Contra Coronam Dignitatem c. The third reason is this A body politique can neither make nor take Homage 33. H. 8. Bro. tit Fealty Therefore cannot the King in his Politique Capacity take Legiance The first must be granted onely sub modo for though it cannot take Homage immediately yet by the means of the Naturall Capacity it may take such service and therefore that Rule holds onely where the Body Politique is not aggregate and not one person in severall Capacities for the Tenant that performes his service to his Lord performs the same to his Lord in his Naturall Capacity but it is in relation to his Politique Capacity as he is his Lord For Lord and Tenant King and Subject are but Notions and neither can give nor take service but that man that is Lord or Tenant or King or Subject may even as the power of Protection is in a King not as he is a Man but as a King The fourth reason is this The Kings naturall Person hath right in the Crowne by Inheritance therefore also in the Legiance of the Subject This is the strength as nigh as I can collect of that which is set down as a sixth reason but I make it the fourth because the third as I conceive is but an illustration of the second and the fifth is upon a supposall of a Fides ficta whereas that Faith of an English Subject which is according to Law is the truer of the twaine But to the substance of this fourth reason If the first be granted yet the Reporter cannot attain his conclusion for the King may in his Naturall Capacity have right to the Crowne by Inheritance and yet not right in the Legiance of his Subjects otherwise then in right of the Crowne As in the Case of Lord and Tenant the Lord may inherite the Lordship in his naturall Capacity but the Service is due to him as Lord and not as by Inheritance in the Service in the abstract And though it be granted that the Legiance to a King is of a higher strain then that of a Tenant to his Lord fol. 4. b. 5. a. Yet doth the Reporter bring nothing to light to prove them to be of a different Nature in this regard The fifth and last reason that commeth to consideration is from a Testimony of the Parliament for it is said That this damnable Tenet of Legiance to the King in his Politique Capacity is condemned by two Parliaments But in truth I can finde but one under that Title that mentioneth this Opinion and that is called Exilium Hugonis which in summe is nothing else but Articles containing an enumeration of the particular offences of the two Spencers against the State and the Sentence thereupon The offences are for compassing to draw the King by rigor to govern according to their wills for withdrawing him from hearkning to the advice of his Lords for hindering of Justice and Oppression and as a means hereunto They caused a Bill or Scedule to be published containing that Homage and Legiance is due to the King rather in relation to the Crowne then absolutely to his Person because no Legiance is due to him before the Crowne be vested upon him That if the King doe not govern according to Law the Leiges in such case are bound by their Oath to the Crown to remove him either by Law or Rigor This is the substance of the Charge and upon this exhibited in the Lords House the Lords super totam materiam banish them before their Case is heard or themselves had made any appearance thereto So as to the matter of this Scedule which contains an Opinion suitable to the Point in hand with some additionall aggravations the Parliament determineth nothing at all but as to the publishing of the same to the intent to gather a party whereby they did get power to act other enormities mentioned in the Charge and in relation to these enormities the Lords proceeded to Sentence of banishment all which was done in the presence of the King and by his disconsent as may appear by his discontent thereat as all Historians of those Affaires witnesse and it is not probable that the King
the Houses its true that sad Presidents have beene of later times in that kinde and so for want of due attendance Parliaments have been inforced to adjourn to prevent a worse inconvenience but these are infirmities better buried in silence then produced as Arguments of power seeing its evident that Kings themselves were no greater gainers thereby then an Angry man is by his passions It is true also that Kings may make Lords and Corporations that may send their Burgesses to the Parliament and thus the King may make as many as he will as the Pope did with the Bishops in the Councill of Trent yet cannot he unmake them when he pleases nor take the Members from the Parliament without attainder and forfeiture according to the knowne Law Neither can all these Instances prove that the Kings of England have the sole and supreame Power over the Parliament Nor did the Parliament in these times allow of any such Authority and therefore proceeded for the reforming of themselves by themselves in many particulars as the Statutes do hold forth And first in the point of Elections for an error in that is like an error in the first Concoction that spoiles the whole Nutriment they ordained that the Election of Knights shall be at the next County Court after the Writ delivered to the Sheriffe That in full Court betweene the houres of eight and nine in the morning Proclamation shall be made of the day and place of the Parliament That the Suters duely summoned and others there Present shall then proceed to the Election notwithstanding any Prayer or Commandement to the contrary That the names of the Persons elected whether present or absent they be shall be returned by Indenture betweene the Sheriffe and the Elizors and that a Clause to that end shall be added to the Writ of Summons This was enough to make the Sheriffe understand but not to obey till a penalty of one hundred pound is by other Lawes imposed upon him and a yeares imprisonment without Baile or Mainprise besides damages for false return in such Cases and the party so unduely returned Fined and deprived of all the wages for his service Thus the manner of Election is reduced but the Persons are more considerable For hitherto any man of English blood promiscuously had right to give or receive a Vote although his residency were over the wide World But the Parliament in the time of Henry the Fifth reduced these also whether they were such as did chuse or were chosen unto their proper Counties or else rendered them uncapable to Vote or serve for any County And the like Order was made for the Burroughs Viz. That no Person must serve for any City or Burrough nor give Vote in Electing such as shall serve for that Towne unlesse they be both Free and Resiants within that City or Burrough A Law no lesse wholsome then seasonable For the times of Henry the Fourth had taught men to know by experience That a King that hath Souldiers scattered over the Kingdome can easily sway the County-Courts and make Parliaments for their owne tooth Yet this was not enough For all Elizors though of the meanest sort yet are still able to doe as much hurt with their Vote as those of the best sort both for wisedome and publique minde can doe good by theirs This made Elections much subject to parties and confusions and rendered the Parliament much lesse considerable A remedy hereunto is provided in the minority of Henry the Sixth Viz. That no man should give his Vote in Elections in the County unlesse he hath forty shillings yearely in Free Lands or Tenements and this is to be testified upon Oath of the Party And more plainly it is ordered within two yeares after that each Elizor shall have Frank Tenement of that vallue within the same County And thus the Freemen yeilded up their liberty of Election to the Free-holders possibly not knowing what they did Neverthelesse the Parliament well knew what they did this change was no lesse good then great For first these times were no times for any great measure of Civility The Preface of the Statute shewes that the meanest held himself as good a man as the greatest in the Countrey and this tended to parties tumults and bloodshed Secondly where the multitude prevaile 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 then by right Understanding make their Elections and thereby the Generall Councell of this Nation lesse generous and noble Thirdly there is no lesse equity in the change then policy for what can be more reasonable then that those men onely should have their Votes in Election of the Common Councell of the Kingdome whose Estates are chargeable with the publique Taxes and Assessements and with the wages of those persons that are chosen for the publique Service But above all the rest this advancing of the Free-holders in this manner of Election was beneficiall to the Free-men of England although perchance they considered not thereof and this will more clearly appeare 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 rendered 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 publique regards and under a kinde of Ambition to aspire unto the degree of a Free-holder that they may be some what in the Common-wealth and thus leaving the meanest rank sifted to the very branne they become lesse considerable and more subject to Coercive power whiles in the mean time the Free-holder now advanced unto the degree of a Yeoman becomes no lesse carefull to maintain correspondency with the Lawes then he was industrious in the attaining of his degree Thirdly by this means now the Law makes a separation of the inferiour Clergy and Cloystered 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 neverthelesse Fsee-men in Fact and lost not the liberty of their Birth-right by entering 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 Countrey which tacitely 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 rudenesse in account Or it may be the Yeomanry grew now to feel their strength and meant not to be further
perpetuall and so gave a restraint unto the power of the King and Councell But where no Positive restraint was made by any Statute the King and Councell seemed to have the sole power left unto them to open and shut the passes of Trade as they pleased For whereas the Commodity of Butter and Cheese was made Staple the King and Councell had power to stop the sale thereof notwithstanding that the Law gave full liberty to the Subjects to bring all their Staple Commodities to the Staple Neverthelesse this power in the King is not Primitive but derived from the Parliament for they had power over the Kings Licences and Restraints in such Cases as by the severall Statutes doe appeare A third power given to the Privy Councell was a power of Summons and Processe against Delinquents in Cases of Riots Extortions Oppressions and greivous Offences the Summons to be by Privy Seale the Process Proclamations and for Non-appearance Forfeiture if the Delinquent be of the Degree of a Lord if of inferiour ranke then a Fine or Outlary At the first view the Statute hath an ill-favoured aspect as if it raised up a new Court of Judicature but the time is to be considered with the occasion for it was made for the securing of the Peace in a turbulent time And besides the Law carrieth along with it two Restrictions which puts the right of Cognisance in the Privy Councell to the question First it saveth the Jurisdiction of other Courts and provideth further That no matter determinable by the Law of this Realme shall be by this Act determined in other forme then after the course of the same Law in the Kings Court having determination of the same which implieth that some kindes of Riots and Extortions are of so high a nature that though determinable in the Kings Court yet are they to be determined before the Lords In the next place this Law provideth that such offences as are determinable by the Law of the Realme that is by Jury shall still be so tried Secondly if Conviction be upon Confession or by Certificate in case where by reason of Parties and partakings Inquisition by Jury can not be had there the Lords shall immediately determine the same Lastly if the Certificate be traversed then the same shall be tried in the Kings Bench. But there is another Restriction that undoeth all in effect in point of right because what this Law setleth therein it setleth but for seven yeares and leaveth the Privy Councell to the limits of the Common Law for the future In the mean time the Privy Councell may be thought terrible and very high both by this Law and the greatnesse of the Lords Kings Unkles and Kings Brothers are Subjects indeed but of so high a Degree that if a little goodnesse of Nature or publique Spirit shine in them they soon become the Objects of Admiration from the Vulgar and gain more from them by their vicinity then the King can doe at a distance For the Commons of England by the fair demeanour of popular great men are soon won out of their very cloathes and are never more in danger to part with their liberties then when the Heaven is faire above their heads and the Nobility serve the King and flatter them Neverthelesse as I said the season must also be considered of this power thus by this Law contracted for what the Lords gained not by their Popularity the Queen did with her power who now mindfull of her contemned beauty and opposition from the Duke of Glocester against her marriage removes him out of the way gets the reines of Government into her hand and like a Woman drives on in full careere The Duke of Yorke and other Lords not liking this gallop indeavour to stop her pace but are all overborn the Duke taken prisoner and doubtlesse had pledged the Duke of Glocester but that the Heire apparent of the House of Yorke steps in to rescue and new troubles arise in Gascoigne to put an end to which the Queenes party gaines and takes the Duke of Yorkes word for his good behaviour gets this Law to passe expecting hereby if not a full settlement at Home yet at least a respite to prevent dangers from abroad during the present exigency And thus upon the whole matter the Lords and Privy Councell are mounted up by the Commons to their own mischeif CAHP. XVII Of the Clergie and Church-government during these times IT was no new thing in the World for Princes of a wounded Title to goe to the Church-men for a plaister and they are ready enough to sing a Requiem so as they may be the gainers The Princes therefore of the House of Lancaster had offended against common sense if they had not done the like themselves being not onely guilty in their Title but also by a secret Providence drawn into one interest together with the Church-men to support each other For Henry the Fourth and Arch-bishop Arundell meeting together under one condition of Banishment become Consorts in sufferings and Consorts in Honour for Society begotten in trouble is nourished in Prosperity by remembrance of mutuall kindnesses in a necessitous Estate which commonly are the more hearty and more sensible by how much other Contentments are more scant But the Arch-bishop had yet a further advantage upon the heart of Henry the Fourth though he was no man of power yet he was of great Interest exceedingly beloved of the English Clergy and the more for his Banishment sake Now whatsoever he is or hath is the Kings and the King is his the sweet influence of the Arch-Bishop and the Clergy enters into his very Soule they are his dearly beloved for the great Naturall Love as he sayes to the World they beare to him what he could he got what he got he gave to the Church Thus the Family of Lancaster becomming a mighty support unto the Clergy Romane as it was they also became as stout maintainers of the crackt Title of that younger House So was fulfilled the old Prophecy of the Oyle given to Henry the first Duke of Lancaster wherewith Henry the Fourth was anointed That Kings anointed with that Oyle should be the Champions of the Church Now for the more particular clearing of this we are to consider the Church absolutely or in relation to the Politicall Government of the People Concerning the later many things did befall that were of a different peice to the rest in regard that the Lords for the most part were for the Clergy and they for themselves but the Commons began to be so well savoured with Wickl●●fs way that they begin to bid defiance to the Clergies self-ends and aimes and because they could not reach their heads they drive home blowes at their legs A Parliament is called and because the King had heard somewhat feared that the People were more learned then was meete for his purpose and that the Parliament should be too wise he therefore will
in this Nation one way by the Regulars the other by the Seculars the Parliament by the dissolutions of Monastries c. consumed one to ashes and by breaking the fealty between the other and the Pope parted the other root and the stock asunder thence ensued the downfal of this tal Cedar in this Nation and Prelacy now left alone must fawn elsewhere or lye along a posture wherein that rank of men can never thrive Up againe they peepe and espying a King that loved to towre aloft they suddainely catch hold promising their help to maintaine his flight and so are carried up and like a Cloud borne between Heaven and Earth making the Commons beholding to them for the Kings Sunn-shine and the King for their interests in the People and for his superlative advancement above them all Now though the English Prelates may thinke their Orbe above the winds yet were they herein deceived The Parliament had power in their Election before the Pope usurped that to himself now that they are discharged Kings are possessed of them by long desire but it is not by way of restitution for Kings were never absolutely possessed of any such power but as Committees of Parliament and by delegation and concession from them and therefore must render an account to them and abide their judgment when they are thereto called Thirdly the Parliament had the disposing and ordering of all the Church Revenues as the Lawes concerning Monastries Sanctuaries Mortuaries First Fruits Tenths Annates and such like sufficiently manifesteth Fourthly the Parliament had the power of granting Licenses Dispensations and Faculties setting a rule thereunto as in case of Nonresidency and delegating the power to Committees whereof see more in the Chapter following concerning ordinary jurisdiction Fifthly the Parliament reserved the Cognisance of all appeales for finall sentence unto themselves and disposed of all the steps thereunto as unto them seemed most convenient For though it be true in some cases the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury had the definitive sentence and in other Cases the Convocation yet was this but by a temporary Law and this also granted to them by the Parliament which took it away from the Pope and never interested the Crowne therein but made the Arch-Bishop and the Convocation their immediate Delegates so long as they saw good Afterwards when they had done their work Viz. The determining the appeal and Divorce of Queen Katharine and some other matters the same hand that gave that power tooke it away and gave it not to the King or Crowne but to Delegates from the Parliament from time to time to be nominated by the King and may as wel alter the same settle the power elsewhere when they please And therefore after the appeale of the Dowager thus determined and the sentence definitive thus settled upon Delegates The Parliament neverthelesse determined the other causes of the Marriages of the Lady Anne Bullen and the Lady Anne of Cleve the jurisdiction of the Crown never intermedling therein so as upon the whole it must be acknowledged that however the King was supreame head of causes Ecclesiasticall yet had not the definitive sentence in Appeales nor absolute Supremacy but that the same was left to the Parliament Sixthly and Lastly what attempts the Parliament had met with partly from the designes of some great men that sought their own ends and partly from the endeavors of these Kings that sought their own heighth and greatnesse above their Peoples good hath beene already related and the utmost issue hath beene truly stated Viz. That the gaines have come to the Kings Persons and not to their Crowne and that therein they have put their Seale to the Law and made their submission to the Parliament as touching both their Persons and Power Add hereunto that however Henry the eighth aimed much at himself in his ends in two other maine Interests that most nighly concerned him yet the cheife gaine came to the Parliament The one concerned his owne Wife which-however so nighly related to him as next to his owne Person and under the determination of the immediate Law of God yet was so cast upon their sentence as if he durst adventure his owne Soule at their direction The other concerned the Crowne to which he ought relation above his owne person which he laid downe at the feet of the Parliament seeking to their power to fulfill his owne pleasure The ball is tossed up and downe somtimes amongst the issue betweene the King and the Lady Ann Bullen another while amongst the issue betweene him and the Lady Jane Seymor or such as the King should nominate by Letters Patents or last Will. After that to the Ladyes Mary and Elizabeth to performe conditions declared by the Kings Letters Patents or his last Will. The King then is trusted but he hath his trust from the Parliament the Crowne is intailed as it hath beene ever since Richard the seconds time but it is done by the Parliament The reversion is in the the Clouds but the right of inheritance much more The Conclusion of all is this the Parliament by serving these Kings turnes turned their turnes into their owne CHAP. XXIX Of the power of the Clergy in their Convocation THe Convocation of the Clergy like some froward Children loves not new dressing though it be a gainer thereby Before the Pope and Henry the Eighth were falne asunder their masters their minds their work all was double their Councels uncertain their Conclusions slow in Production and sleight in their Fruit and Consequence sometimes displeasing to the Pope sometimes to the King generally to themselves who naturally lingering after their own interests were compelled to feed that body that breathed in them rather then that wherein themselves breathed and so like hunted Squirrells from bough to bough were ever well tired yet hardly escaped with their owne skins in the conclusion Now Henry the Eighth tenders them better conditions both for ease and Honour and more suitable to their own Interest yet they are loath to accept because they had been slaves by prescription Formerly they were troubled with multiplicity of Summons somtimes from the King sometimes from the Pope sometimes from the Metropolitan and alwayes overdripped by a Forrain Power that they could propound nothing for the good of the Souls of themselves or others but must be blasted from without their labours lost their undertakings vain and themselves in the conclusion sit downe hoaked in their Consciences and desires Now they are at no mans call but the Kings and that by Writ both Provinciall and Legate è Latere must meddle no more Formerly it s taken for granted that Kings have no Vote in matters Ecclesiasticall though themselves be interested therein and therefore if he will accept of a Disme he must accept it Statu quo it is granted nor can he interpose his Dissent nor do they much care for his Consent But whether the King be
Justice of Queen Elizabeth to grant Commissions of Array Secundum formam Statutorum and do hurt to no man its true her Commissions of Lord Lievtenancy wanted that limitation in words yet they carried the sense for if the Crown were bound by the Law the Lord Leivtenants were much rather but the danger arose after the death of Queen Elizabeth for when King James came to the Crown under colour of pleasing the People and easing them of a burthen he pleased himself more and made the yoke upon the People much more heavy in the conclusion for where no declared Law is there the discretion of them that have the care lying upon them must be the rule thus came the Scottish blood to have pretentions to a greater Prerogative then all their Predecessors had upon this supposal that the Statute of Queen Mary took away all former Lawes of that kinde and then the taking away of the Statute of Q. Mary takes away all declared Law as to that point But more truly it may be inferred that if all Statute-Laws be taken away then the rule of Tenures at the Common Law must remain in force and no other Nevertheless this Statute of Queen Mary though in force for the present was not a generall rule for Armes in all places of this Nation for the Marches of Scotland were a peculier jurisdiction as to this point They stood in more constant need of Armes then any other part of this Nation in regard of their uncertain condition in relation to their Neighbouring jurisdiction and therfore were the Farmes of these parts generally contracted for upon a speciall reservation of Armes for each particular which being now decaied are again reduced by Queen Elizabeth to their ancient condition in the time of Henry the eighth A second thing which may come under this generall consideration of arming is the arming of places by making of Forts and Castles which was not in the immediate determinate will of the Crown to order as it pleased for though they may seem to be meanes of Peace and present safety yet they are Symptomes of Warr and in the best times are looked upon with a jealous eye especially such as are not bordering upon the Coasts Because that Prince that buildeth Castles within the Land is supposed to feare the Neighbourhood This was more especially regarded in the dayes of Phillip and Mary For when that marriage was to be solemnized it was one of the Articles to provide for the safety of such Forts and Castles as then were maintained to the end they might be preserved free from usurpation for the Use Profit Strength and Defence of the Realme onely by the naturall borne of the same And afterwards when occasion was offered for the building of more of that nature a new power is given to King Phillip and Queen Mary to re-edifie or make Forts and Castles which must be executed by Commission to the Legies for ten years and only within the Counties bordering upon Scotland and these perticularly named in the Statute so as the Crown had not power to build in all places nor to any end they pleased nor to place therein or betrust the same to whom it would Nor yet had Edward the sixth that absolute power although not ingaged in forrain interests as his sister Mary was and therefore whereas Castellanes had been made for life by Patent and so the absolute power of the Crown was barred in the free disposal of the same during such time The Parliament gave the King power to remove such as were not liked or thought faithfull to the publique interest although they gave no cause of Seisure by any disloyal act The like also may be observed of the Ships and Ordnance for they also do belong to the State as the Jewels of the Crown and therefore upon the Marriage of Queen Mary they also are by Articles preserved and saved for the use profit strength and defence of the Realm by the natural born of the same Thirdly as touching the ordering of the Souldiery the matter is not much to be insisted upon for little doubt is to be made but that power that raiseth them also ordereth them to the same ends that they are raised and therefore as the sole power of the Crown doth not the one so neither doth it the other but in cases formerly mentioned and yet in no case though the War b be never so absolutely defensive and the Souldiers raised by the Kings own and onely power yet hath not the King absolute Authority and arbitrary power in the ordering of them when they are raised but he must so behave himself to them as to Free-men according to Laws made by themselves in their Representative in Parliament and therefore are particular Laws made to that end against undue levying and discharging of Souldiers and Defaults in paying of them as also against the Souldiers departing from their Service without Licence or wasting their Arms and such as wilfully absent themselves from Musters as also for the preserving the Castles Forts Ships and Munition for War from being with-holden from their due use or from burning or destroying Lastly as touching the charge of the War and pay of the Souldies It s evident that in all offensive Wars the Souldier was paid by the Crown although they might be said in some manner to be in order to the Defence and Safety of the Nation nevertheless where the same was so apparent to the people it was the common course in these Times to have often Parliaments and often Subsidies which were no less in a good measure satisfactory to the Crown for the Charges of the War then Testimonies of the Peoples good Acceptance of the Government of Affairs and so accepted at their hands The particular Records will warrant all this For of all the Wars in these Times that of 88. excepted not any of them were ever managed at the Peoples charge by Contribution but by Retribution So happy were these Times wherein the People looking upon the Crown as under a kinde of infirmity of Childhood or Womanhood did therefore bear a kinde of compassionate regard thereunto without jealousie at Prerogative could condiscend and allow the Crown its full Grains and somewhat more yea more then was meet for some other Princes to desire or the People to give up and yet more happy were they wherein the Crown knew no interest but in dependence upon the People good and so understanding were rightly understood CHAP. XXXIX Of the Peace IT is but little that can be said of Peace in these Times wherein so little freedom was found from forrain pretentions and intestine irregularities or both and yet the People were never more resolved against the former nor secure against the later and had God to Friend in all But most apparently was this observable in the Times of Queen Elizabeth whose Government took up four parts of five of these Times whereof we