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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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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
granted prohibition enjoyned the Ordinary to grant absolution where it saw cause neverthelesse in some cases Henry the Eighth gives way to some Statutes to allow them this power as in the levying of Tenths In the next place the Prelacy had not this Ecclesiasticall jurisdiction in themselves so as to grant it to others but the Parliament did dispose thereof not only to Bishops but to Chancellors Vicars generall Commissaries being Doctors of the Law and not within holy Orders and limiting their jurisdiction in cases concerning the Papall jurisdiction and their manner of sending their processe and Citations to draw men from their proper Diocesse and also their inordinate Fees in cases Testamentary The Prelates therefore might possibly make great claim hereof for generally they were still of the old stamp loved to have all by Divine right and lived they cared not by what wrong But the Laity inclining too much to the new Religion as then it was termed refused to yeeld one foot unto their pretentions And so like two Horses tied together by their Bits indeavor after severall courses ever and anon kicking one at another yet still bestrode by a King that was joynted for the purpose and so good a horse-man that neither of them could unhorse him till Death laid him on the ground And thus was the Romane Eagle deplumed every Bird had its own feathers the great men the Honours and Priviledges the meaner men the profits and so an end to Annates Legatine levies Peterpence Mortuaries Monestries and all that retinue the vast expences by Bulls and Appeales to Rome to all the cares expences and toile in attendance on the Romane Chaire The beginning of all the happinesse of England CHAP. XXXI Of Judicature THese two Kings were men of towreing Spirits liked not to see others upon the wing in which regard it was dangerous to be great and more safe not to be worthy of regard Especially in the times of Henry the eighth whose motion was more eager and there was no comming nigh to him but for such as were of his own traine and would follow as fast as he would lead and therefore generally the Commons had more cause to praise the King for his Justice then the Nobility had Both the Kings loved the aire of profit passing well but the later was not so well breathed and therefore had more to do with Courts which had the face of Justice But behinde were for the Kings Revenue Such were the Court of Requests of meane originall meane education yet by continuance attained to a high growth The Court of Tenths and first fruits The Court of Surveyors The Court of the Lord Steward of the houshold The Court of Commission before the Admirall The Court of Wards The Court of the President of the North The Prerogative Court The Court of Delegates The Court of Commission of Review Others of more private regard and that which might have given the name to all the rest the Court of Augmentation Besides these there were some in Wales but that which concerned more the matter of Judicature was the losse of that grand liberty of that Countrey formerly a province belonging to this Nation and now by Henry the eighth incorporated into the same and made a Member thereof and brought under the same fundamentall Law a work that had now been long a doing and from the time of Edward the third brought on to perfection by degrees First by annexing the Tenure of the Marches to the Crowne Then upon occasion of their rebellion by losse of many of their wonted liberties Afterwards Henry the eighth defaced the bounds of diverse the ancient Counties and setled them a new and the bounds of the Marches also and appointed Plees in Courts of Judicature to be holden in the English tongue And last of all reunited them again to the English Nation giving them vote in Parliament as other parcell of the English Dominions had True it is that from their first submission even unto Edward the first they were summoned unto Parliament and had vote there but onely in order to the Interests of their own Countrey now and henceforth they possesse one and the same vote as English men Secondly as Courts and Judicatories multiplied so some also of those that were ancient enlarged their Jurisdiction especially such of them as most nighly related to Prerogative amomgst others the privy Councell leads the way Who now began to have too much to do in a double capacity one at the Councell Table the other in the Star Chamber For now their Power began to be diversly considered In their first capacity they had too much of the Affaires of the Common Pleas in the later they had too much of the Crown Pleas both of them serving rather to scare men from doing wrong then to do any man right And therefore though some men might seeme to have some recompence yet the greatest gain fell to the King and his Courtiers and thus became Majesty or State or Prerogative to be more feared then beloved What the Power of the Councell was formerly hath already beene manifested that which both these Kings conspired in and whereby they gained more Power over the People then all their Predecessors was this that other Kings stood too much upon their own leggs these leaned much upon the Lords and gained the Lords to stick close to them and in this they had both the Kings Love and the Peoples Leave who now disjoynted upon severall Interests especially that of Religion must be contented to let go that which they had no heart to hold And thus they obtained a judicatory Power over the people like that of great men whose Censures are commonly above capacity and not like to that of the Peers This was begun in Henry the sevenths time who taking occasion to complain of corruption and neglect in ordinary Trialls of the Common Law gets the People to yeild to the Councell or some of them a Power of Oier and Terminer by examination upon Bill or information in matters concerning Maintenance Liveries Retainders Embraceries corruption in Sheriffs and Juries Riots and unlawfull Assemblies Crimes all of them of the same Blood with rebellion which the King as much hated as the thought of his Title to the Crowne and therefore would have it feared as much as the punishment by such a mighty Power and a Triall of a dreadfull Nature could effect A Triall I say wherein both the guilty and the guiltlesse adventure their whole Estates against the edge of the arbitrary wills of great men of unknown Interests in an unknown way at unknown places having no other assurance how or when to come off but a Proclamation to tell the People that the King above all things delighted in Justice A bitter pill this was for the People to swallow yet it was so artificially composed that at the first taste it gave a prety rellish the King delights in Justice the
had they might let to Farme And then wherein are the People the better for these Lawes Seeing its all one for them to be oppressed by the Sheriffe immediately and by the Proxie For preventing of this inconvenience another Law is made That the Sheriffe shall not let his Bailywicke to Farme nor be Nonresident and to this he must binde himselfe by Oathe So as now the Sheriffe is double girt and may be fairely ridden without danger to the King or People But men ride horses for ease and pleasure and he that must bend his minde alwayes to watch his horses motion will choose rather to goe on foote and therefore Henry the Fifth renewed the Law of Richard the Second that Sheriffs shall be but for one yeare and then not to be chosen again nor serve for three yeares next following This Order continued for the space of eight yeares within which time Warre and Pestilence had consumed so many of the richer sort of People that a Dispensation is granted that Sheriffs may continue in their places for foure yeares And it was above twenty yeares after ere the Stocke was recruted againe after which time the substance of the former Statutes of Edward the Third Richard the Second and 1. Henry the Fifth is revived againe with a penaltie upon the Sheriffe his Deputy or Clerke that shall execute that place above one yeare so the custome of holding that Office tenne or twelve yeares by occasion of the Dispensation for foure yeares was laid aside But the Cure would never be perfect so long as Sheriffs held by Inheritance For it was easie to finde new Deputies but not to lay downe old Customes nor could it be lasting unlesse the penalties also had beene annexed to the particular crimes For a Sheriffe before he is a yeare old by experience formerly had becomes too cunning for all these Lawes and therefore Lawes are made also against the ordinary corruption of these places such as are extorting of Fees false making of Juries false returnes of Writs c. and damages in such cases given to the party wronged and when all is done he is not trusted with taking of Indictments Thus with much adoe a Sheriffe is made a tollerable Officer and his place by Degrees so hedged in that what was in former times hard to plucke up is now become hard to sett CAHP. XXI Of Justices and Lawes concerning the Peace THe faint title of Henry the fourth to the Crowne made him ever tender of the Civill Peace without breach whereof he was sure to be quiet in the Throne he undertooke not this worke by any superlative power from and by himselfe but useth the help of the Parliament and Lawes wherein he was industrious pretending love of Unity amongst his People which neverthelesse he liked not unlesse in order to quiet between himselfe and them The former way of Justices of Peace he followed close reducing the Persons to their ancient qualifications The most sufficient Persons Inhabitants in the County worth at least twenty pound yearly unlesse they be Lawyers or such as are Justices in Corporations nor is the King troubled or trusted with the naming or electing of these men but the Chancellor or the Kings councell so as now by Law the King can neither be Justice nor make Justice Jure proprio but as his interest with the Councell is more or lesse prevalent and that power that first gave it to the Crowne the same power tooke it away or imparted and placed it elsewhere But as touching the Worke or Power of the Justices themselves it grew exceedingly much wheerof was onely of inquiry and to make Certificate as of Herisie Treason Falshood of Sheriffs c. But more of Oier and Terminer as in Case of Watches deceitfulnesse in Trades as of making arrow heads guilding of Mettall tanning of Leather inbasing of Silver selling of waxen Images and Pictures c. for the superstition of these times was such as these petty Gods were not set at so high a Price by the Seller but at a higher price by the Buyer the Parliament therefore set a truer vallue of them Viz. For the Wax so much as the Wax is worth by weight and but foure pence for the Godhead so as it seemes the Parliament was not very superstitious in their House what ever they were at Church Further-more the Justices of the Peace had power to punish deceit in Measures Weights forcible entries and Detainers In many of which Cases the Penalty being fine and imprsonment became a snare to many of the Justices especially such as were of the greater and higher ranke who having Castles of their owne under colour of justice imprisoned Delinquents in their owne Castles and ransomed them at their owne pleasure which proved a great oppression to the People and occasioned a Law that no Justice should commit any Delinquent to other then the County Goale saving Franchises to the Lords Those times are happy when justice waites not altogether at Court but growes up in the feilds and Justices of Peace as the Kings armes upon the Royall Mace are terrible onely to the bad and not as they are pictured before an Ale-house door to invite men to transgresse The Lawes for the preservation of the Peace concerne either punishment of Crimes committed or prevention of them from being committed There is a succession of Crimes as of men and ages because the Scripture tells us that the hearts of all are fashioned alike yet it is with generations as with men some incline to some Crimes more then other and that is the reason that the title Treason sometimes is set forth in Folio sometimes in a lesser Volume It s evident in Story that the violent times of Richard the second had raised the vallue of that amongst other offences above measure not long before his time his Father had reduced that wilde Notion of Treason to a certaine rule that formerly wandred in a Wildernesse of opinion But Henry the fourth either to save his own Stake or to take the People or both reduced it againe to the Statute rule of Edward the third and made void that Statute of his Predecessors which had made a former Act of Parliament and all the service thereby done Treason The dimensions of Treason thus clearly limmed and declared taught ill disposed mindes to keep out of the Letter and yet to be bold with the sense counterfeit Money they durst not yet to diminish the same they thought came not within the circle and so it became a common greivance till a Law was made that all purposed impairing of Mony shall be Treason And so the Parliament held forth to all men that they had a power to declare Treason without the bounds of the Statute of Edward the third The like power it held forth in the time of Henry the sixth for men knew that Burglary and robbery were mortall crimes they would no
also For Kings were mistaken in the Lords who meaned nothing lesse then to serve them with the peoples liberties together with their owne which they saw wrapped up in the grosse Thirdly by this meanes the Councils of the King and Lords grew potent not onely for advise in particular occasions but in matters of judicature and declaring of Law ordering of processe in Courts of Plees which in the first framing were the workes of Wise and Learned men but being once setled become part of the liberties of every Free-man And it is not to be doubted but these Councills of Lords did outreach into things two great for them to mannage and kept the Commons out of possession of their right during the present heat of their ruffling condition yet all this while could not take absolute possession of the legislative power I now come to the remainder of the particular instances produced by the Opponent which I shall reduce into severall Categories for the more cleere satisfaction to the Reader with lesse tediousnesse First it cannot be denied but the Councill of Lords gave advise to Kings in cases of particular immergency nor is it incongruous to the course of government even to this day nor meete that the Parliament should be troubled with every such occasion and therefore the giving of advise to William the Conqueror what course he should take to settle the Lawes of England according to the instances in Councills holden An 1060. And 1070. And to gaine favour of the great men according to that in An 1106. and in the manner of endowment of the Abby of Battell as in pag 25. of the Opponents discourse and what to do upon the reading of the Popes Letter according to that in An 1114. And whether the Popes Legate should be admitted as in pag. 18. And how King Steven and Henry shall come to agreement as An 1153. And how to execute Lawes by Judges and Justices Itinerant as An 1176. And touching the manner of ingageing for a voyage by Croisado to Jerusalem An 1189. And to give answer to Embassadors of a forraine Prince pag. 25. And how King John shall conclude peace with the Pope An 1213. Where neverthelesse Math. Paris saith was Turba multa nimis I say all these might well be done by a Councell of Lords and not in any posture of a Parliament albeit that in none of all these doth any thing appeare but that the Commons might be present in every one or many of them all Secondly as touching judicature the Lords had much power therein even in the Saxon times haveing better opportunites for Knowledge and Learning especially joyned with the Clergy then the Commons in those times of deep darknesse wherein even the Clergy wanted not their share as in the first part of the discourse I have already observed Whatsoever then might be done by Judges in ordinary Courts of judicature is inferiour to the regard of the Parliament and therefore the Plea between the Arch-Bishop and Aethelstan concerning Land instanced An 1070. And betweene Lanfranke and Odo An 1071. and betweene the King and Anselme pag 15 16. and the determining of Treason of John afterwards King against his Lord and King Richard pag 23. And the difference concerning the title of a Barony between Mowbray and Scotvile pag 25. And giving of security of good behaviour by William Brawse to King John pag. 26. All these might well be determined onely before the Lords and yet the Parliament might be then sitting or not sitting as the contrary to either doth not appeare and therefore can these forme no demonstrative ground to prove that the Parliament consisted in those times onely of such as we now call the House of Lords A third worke whereby the Opponent would prove the Parliament to consist onely of the House of Lords is because hee findeth many things by them concluded touching the solemnization and the settling of the succession of Kings both which he saith were done by the Lords in Parliament or those of that House and I shall crave leave to conclude the contrary For neither is the election or Solemnization of such election a proper worke of the Parliament according to the Opponents principles nor can they prove such Conventions wherein they were to be Parliaments Not the election of Kings for then may a Parliament be without a King and therefore that instance concerning William Rufus page 16. will faile or the Opponents principles who will have no Parliament without a King The like may also be sayde of the instance concerning King Steven page 18. Much lesse can the solemnization of the election by Coronation be a proper worke for the Parliament Neverthelesse the Opponent doth well know that both the election of a King and the solemnization of such election by Coronation are Spiritlesse motions without the presence of the people and therefore though his instance page 17. concerning the election of Henry the First by the Bishops and Princes may seeme to be restrictive as to them yet it is not such in fact if Matthew Paris may be beleeved who telleth us that in the Conventus omnium was Clerus and Populus universus and might have been noted by the Opponent out of that Learned Antiquary so often by him cited if he had pleased to take notice of such matters A fourth sort of Instances concerneth matters Ecclesiasticall and making of Canons and hereof enough hath been already sayd that such worke was absolutely challenged by the Church-motes as their proper worke and therefore the Instance page 16 17. of the Councill in Henry the firsts time and the Canons made by the Bishops there and that other called by Theobald Arch-Bishop of Canterbury and instanced by the Opponent page 19. I say both these doe faile in the conclusion propounded Fifthly As touching the most proper worke of Parliaments which is the making of Lawes concerning the liberties and benefit of the people the Opponent produceth not one instance concerning the same which doth not conclude contrary to his proposall for as touching those two instances in his thirteenth page Anno 1060. they concerne not the making of Lawes but the reviving of such as had been disused formerly which might well enough be done by private Councell But as to that in his fifteenth page of the Law made by the Conquerour concerning Remigius Bishop of Lincolne although it be true that wee finde not the particular titles of Knights Citizens and Burgesses yet besides the Councill of Arch-Bishops Bishops Abbats and Princes we finde the Common Councill for so the words are Communi Concilio Concilio Archiepiscopus Episcopus Abatus omnium Principum although the Opponent would seeme to wave these words Et Concilio but putting them in a small Character and the rest in a voluminous Letter that the Readers eyes might be filled with them and overlook the other Secondly as to the instance of the Councill at Clarindon in his nineteenth page which he citeth out
Livery so long as he may live without care and spend without controll For by this time the humour of his great Grand-father budded in him he pawned his heart to young men of vast desires and some say so inordinately as he prostituted his chastitie unto them And it s no wonder if the Revenues of the Crowne are insufficient for such Masters Thi● the people soon felt and feared their own Free-holds for they are bound saith he not to see the Crowne deflowred for want of maintenance it s very true nor to see the Crowne deflowred of its maintenance A Parliament therefore is called in which diverse Lords associate and prepare Physick for the Kings lavish humour which being administred wrought for ten yeares after till it had purged him of his life and the Kingdome of their King It was an Act of Parliament that gave power to fourteen Lords and others to regulate the Profits and Revenues of the Crowne and to doe Justice to the People this was to continue for one whole yeare The Parasites no sooner found the effect hereof to their Cost but the King growes sicke of it and findes an Antidote to over-rule Acts of Parliament by Acts of Privy Councell declares this ill-favoured Commission voide and the Contrivers Advisers and Inforcers Traytors To make it more Majesticall he causeth the Judges to Subscribe this Order and so it becomes Law in repute This foundation thus laid he buildeth in hast an Impeachment of these Commissioners of high Treason and supposing that they would not readily stoope himselfe stoopes lower for he would put his Right to triall by battell which was already his owne by the judgement of the Masters of the Law For so they may be well called seeing they had thus Mastered it In this the King had the worst for he lost his Honour and himselfe God hath a care of common right even amongst Idolaters Then comes the Parliament of Wonders wherein the Kings Party are declared Traytors and the chiefe Judges with their Law judged by another Law The King not medled with thinks it high time to come out of his Minority and assumes the Government of the Kingdome and himselfe to himself being now three and twenty yeares of age old enough to have done well if he had cared for it But resolving to follow the way of his owne will at length it led him to his owne ruine onely for the present two things delayed it Viz. The Authority Wisedome and Moderation of his Unckles especially of the Duke of Lancaster now come out of Spain and the great affection which the King pretended to the Queen who had also gained a good opinion amongst the People The benevolent aspect of the People not for their owne advantage but for the Publick quiet procured many Parlies and interviewes between the King and People and many Lawes for the upholding of the Court and Government although both Warre Lawes Justice and Councells all are faint as all is faint in that man that hath once dismanned himself This he perceives well enough and therefore Peace he must have by any means The Queen dies himselfe being nigh eight and twenty yeares old takes a Creature like a Wife but in truth a Childe of eight yeares old and this is to get Peace with France It s no wonder if now he hunts after unlawfull game and that being ill taken brings all things out of order For abused Marriage never wants woe Civill men are now looked upon as severe Cators and his Unckles especially the Duke of Glocester with a jealous eye which accomplished his death in the conclusion The Dukes of Lancaster and Yorke forsake the Court Favorites step into their roomes The old way of the eleventh yeare is re-assumed Belknap and others are pardoned and made of the Cabinet The Pardon of the Earle of Arundell is adnulled contrary to the advise of the major part and the Arch Bishop the Earles brother is banished The Lords forsake the wilfull King still the Kings jealousie swells The Duke of Hertford is banished or rather by a hidden Providence sent out of the way for a further worke The Duke of Lancaster dies and with him all hope of moderation is gone for he was a wise Prince and the onely Cement that held the joynts of the Kingdome in correspondency And he was ill requited for all his Estate is seised upon The Duke of Hertford and his Party are looked upon by the People as Martyrs in the Common Cause and others as Royalists Extremities hasten on and Prerogative now upon the wing is towering above reach In full Parliament downe goes all the worke of the tenth and eleventh yeares Parliament which had never bin if that Parliament had continued by adjournment The King raiseth a Power which he calleth his Cuard of Cheshire men under the terror of this displaying rod the Parliament Kingdom are brought to Confession Cheshire for this service is made a Principality thus goes Counties up and Kingdoms down The Kings Conscience whispers a sad Message of dethroning and well it might be for he knew he had deserved it Against this danger he intrenches himself in an Act of Parliament That made it Treason To purpose and endeavor to depose the King or levy War against him or to withdraw his Homage hereof being attainted in Parliament And now he thought he was well guarded by Ingagement from the Parliament but he missed the right Conclusion for want of Logique For if the Parliament it self shall depose him it cannot be made a Traytor or attaint it selfe and then hath the King gain'd no more then a fals birth But the King was not thus quiet the sting of guilt still sticks within and for remedy he will unlaw the Law and gets it enacted that all Procurers of the Statute of 10. Richard the Second and the Commission and Procurers of the Kings assent thereto and hinderers of the Kings proceedings are adjudged Traitors All these reach onely the branches the root remains yet and may spring again and therefore in the last place have at the Parliament it self For by the same its further declared That the King is the sole Master of the Propositions for matters to be treated in Parliament and all gainsayers are Traitors Secondly That the King may dissolve the Parliament at his pleasure and all gainsayers are Traitors Thirdly That the Parliament may not proceed against the Kings Justices for offences by them committed in Parliament without the Kings consent and all gainsayers are Traitors These and the like Aphorismes once Voted by the Cheshire men assented unto by the Parliament with the Kings Fiat must passe for currant to the Judges and if by them confirmed or allowed will in the Kings opinion make it a Law for ever That the King and all Parliaments is Dominus fac primum and Dominus fac totum But the Judges remembred the tenth yeare and Belknaps intertainment and so dealt warily their opinion is thus
set down It belongeth to the Parliament to declare Treason yet if I were a Peere and were commanded I should agree So did Thorning under-write and thereunto also consented Rickill and Sir Walter Clopton the last being chief Justice of the Kings Bench the first chief Justice of the Common-Pleas and the second another Judge of the same Bench. The summe in plainer sense is that if they were Peeres they would agree but as Judges they will be silent And thus the Parliament of England by the first of these foure last mentioned conclusions attainted themselves by the second yeilded up their liberties by the third their lives and by the last would have done more or been lesse And to fill up the measure of all they assigned over a right of Legislative Power unto six Lords and three Commons and yet the King not content superadded that it should be Treason for any man to indeavor to repeal any of their determinations The Common-wealth thus underneath the King tramples upon all at once for having espied the shadow of a Crown fleeting from him in Ireland he pursues it leaves the noble Crown of England in the base condition of a Farme subject to strip and waste by mean men and crosses the Irish Seas with an Army This was one of Englands Climactericall years under a disease so desperate that no hope was left but by a desperate Cure by sudden bleeding in the head and cutting off that Member that is a principle of motion in the Body For it was not many moneths ere the winde of affaires changed the King now in Ireland another steps into the Throne the noise hereof makes him return afarr of inraged but the nigher he comes the cooler he growes his conscience revives his courage decayes and leaving his Army his Lordship Kingdome and Libertie behinde as a naked man submits himself to release all homage and fealtie to resigne his Crown and Dignitie his Titles and Authoritie to acknowledge himself unworthy and insufficient to reign to swear never to repent of his Resignation thus if he will have any quiet this wilfull man he must be content for the future neither to will nor desire And poore England must for a time bee contented with a dolefull condition in which the King cannot rule and the Parliament will not and the whole body like a Chäos capable of any form that the next daring spirit shall brood upon it CHAP. II. Of the State of the King and Parliament in relation of it to him and him to it A King in Parliament is like the first-born of Jacob The excellencie of Dignitie and the excellencie of Power but alone unstable as water Examples of both these we have in these two Kings Whereof the first was Crowned by the Parliament and Crowned it the latter also Crowned it but with Thornes and yet the Parliament in all held on that wise way that it neither exceeded its own bounds nor lost its own right I shall enter into the consideration of particulars under these heads First In relation more immediately to the interest of the King Secondly To the interest of the Kingdome in generall The King though higher then all the people by the head and so hath the Prerogative of Honour as the most worthy yet his strength and abilities originally doe rise from beneath otherwise he is but like a Generall without an Army the Title big but aiery and many times his person subject to so much danger that in stead of drawing the eyes of all the people to look upon him with admiration they are drawn to look to him with observation and in this respect he may be said to be lesse his own man and more the Kingdomes then any of the inferiour sort This befell in both these Kings in a speciall manner each entering upon the grand government of a Kingdome before they were able to understand the work or govern themselves and therefore were under power of Protectors for the guard of their Persons and their Education and of the Parliament for Councell and Direction in Cases relating to the Kingdome The chide of a mean man when its Parents are dead is Filus Amici but of a King is Filius Populi to be by them trained up in such manner that he may be Pater populi when he is come to age In the mean time though he be a King yet his Person like a precious Jem must not out of the ring but must be directed by Councell though under some kind of restraint the Councellors all the while no Offenders in such Cases against the Prerogative Royall And therefore though it be true that Kings grow faster then other men and sooner come to full age then they yet Edward the third now in his sixteenth yeare might not passe over Sea into France though it were for restoring of Peace but by direction of the Parliament nor is it meet in such Cases that Kings should stand upon the Prerogative of a Negative Secondly it may likewise be said that his Family is lesse his owne as he is a man then another mans For private Families are no further under the publique Law then in relation to the publique Peace to punish after breach made But the Families of Kings are looked upon by all in relation to the honour and profit of the Publique not onely because the Kings servants have by their nigh attendance upon his Person a more powerfull influence into his actions which may reflect a malevolent aspect upon the whole course of affaires if they be not better ordered that are so nigh him But more especially in regard that the government and order of the Royall Family trencheth deep upon the Honor of the Kingdome and purses of the People who are concerned to see the same accommodated sutable to the State and Port which the Nation would bear forth to the World And therefore for the Parliament to intermeddle in the Kings Family is not forrain nor new Alice Piers was a Familier if not of the Family of Edward the third yet both her selfe and others of that Family were complained of as a grievance Richard the second was once a young man and ever a young King and what Edward the third wanted onely in his youth and in his infirme old age this man ever wanted for he that knew not how to govern himselfe how much lesse could he govern his Family And if in this condition the Parliament become his Stewards to set a yearely Survey and Check upon his Servants and Family in order to good order of the same and Kingdome otherwise men must conclude it did that which was just though Richard the second and those of his minde thinke not so But this is not all Kings have not onely such as serve the outward man but some that serve their Consciences of old time called Confessors in those dayes without name for feare of Superstition yet the thing remaineth still in some well favored Chaplain and
determined to be against the King but against the Man and though against the private will of the Commander yet not against the Law nor therefore can it be said illegall or unjust The Parliament in these times held forth this Doctrine plainly to the World that it is their proper work in Cases needfull to doe right to such as are wronged by the King his command is no Warrant in such Cases If a man be wrongfully imprisoned by him he shall be released and set at liberty by them Let his Act be never so authenticall under the Broad-Seale it can take no mans right away Richard the Second did his utmost to satisfie and quiet the tumultuous rabble under Cade and Straw and granted store of Manumissions to the Bond-men by Declaration and by his Letters Patents but not one of them good enough to deprive any one of the meanest of the Free-men of their rights in those Bond-men The priviledge of shewing mercy and granting pardon hath beene antiently betrusted to the King as to an Overseer of the execution of Law yet he hath not that Prerogative To have mercy on whom he will have mercy Ever since this Narion had learned to read the Bible Murder hath been excepted from mercy nor did the Law ever allow any King any Prerogative to pardon that Edward the Third did not challenge any such not onely bound thereto by his Coronation Oath but by publique Acts of State declaring the same yet because the Parliament was not alwayes sitting and Kings were ever subject to this Temptation to favour Servants by granting mercy to Malefactors a generall rule of Inhibition is made against all pardon to be granted by the King in Case of Fellony but onely in Cases allowed by advise of the Councel It s true that in the first times of Richard the Second he liked not to be thus girt in his power which he pretended was more at liberty in his Predecessors possibly he meaned King John and Edward the Second who many times did what they listed yet under his favour no Law was so shamelesse as to hold forth such a power till Richard the Seconds Law countenanced it But why doe I call it a Law which is onely a Declaration by consent of the Lords such as then were the Commons would never owne such an opinion and therefore it soone proved abortive for within three or foure yeares by publique Act of Parliament it s peremptorily declared that the Kings Pardon shall not extend to murther So as upon the whole matter its plain that it is not the Kings will though supported by the Councell of Lords and backed by the opinion of the Judges that must be a rule for the government of this Kingdome nor doth any Allegience binde obedience thereunto in Case where Justice or the liberty of the People is concerned Three things yet remain which Kings have claimed to be their own Viz. Conferring Titles of Honour and places of Trust and the Legislative power The first is but a Feather and not worthy of regard yet it is plain that these times produce many presidents of Dukes Marquesses and Earles made in Parliament and possibly it may be apparent that the first motion of any such Title of Honour did first fetch its Originall thence if not in the field But it s not worthy of the labour The second is more considerable Viz. The power of conferring places of Publique Trust This Kings have pretended unto although in course of Congruity it will be thought more meet that it belongeth rather to that cheife and grand Trust of the whole Kingdome committed to the Parliament and the Practice of these times is not much discrepant whether we regard such as are for advice or execution Of the first of these are those whom we commonly call the Privie-Councell whose advise in course toucheth first upon the Kings Person but by reflexion worketh strong impressions upon the People so far as the influence of the Kings power extends And therefore it s not beyond the Sphear of the Parliament to interpose and qualifie that influence so as it may be for the generall good of the whole Kingdome For many times Kings are either above or beneath themselves and in such Cases if the Councell be of the Kings suite he is of the deeper die and proves more Malignant to the People Edward the Third growing into great opinion in the World his Proportion exceeds his own Portion and the Peoples good wills to boote they think the fault is in the privy Councell and an Inquisition set upon it So also they doe in his fiftieth yeare when he growes downward And the like in the beginning of Richard the Seconds Reigne he being now a Youth and therefore unstable in his Resolutions and unable to make Election So as upon the whole matter if the King fall short in point of judgement or Resolution or inordinate in his Affections But more especially where they observe the Major or more considerable part of the Councell to draw towards a designe in such Cases as these the Parliament as its own duty undertooke to settle a good Councell about the Kings Person that might advise him during their Recesse For the Privy Councell is never more it selfe then when it is an Epitome of the Common Councell of the Kingdome In like manner such Officers as concern Execution of Law and Councell are as narrowly to be inquired into for if their motion be irregular it s lesse materiall what the rule be the Parliament therefore held it their duty to interpose in the Election of grand Officers of the Kingdome such as are the Chancellors Judges and Justices or to confirm or displace them or binde them by Oath the Rolls of the eighth fourteenth fifteenth and thirty sixth years of Edward the Third and the sixth tenth and eleventh years of Richard the Second do manifest this sufficiently I have done with the Subject matter or work of the Parliament in the mutuall Relation of the King and it the manner of proceeding was either joyntly with the King or without him and either joyntly with the two Houses or severally and either immediately by themselves or their Committees As touching the first its evident that in all matters wherein gain ariseth to the Crown from the people by Subsidy or otherwise the strength of the Grant by Act of Parliament resteth in the two Houses and that the Kings assent is but Pro forma as touching that matter and therefore such Grants have been made as tended in some measure to derogate either from the Kings wisedome care or fidelity yet even these have passed with the Royall Assent though the full Assent or good will of the Person of the King was not correspondent thereto as in these Cases formerly noted where Subsidies were given with Limitations and Conditions and upon rendering account to the People And it is as evident that where the Kings Person is
shall be imprisoned untill he shall satisfie the Defendant of his damages And furthermore shall make Fine and Ransome to the King But because that the Defendant many times held his advantage even to extremity this course lasted not long but a new Law was made which put the power of awarding damages in such cases into the Chancellor to doe according to his discretion And thus the Chancery obtained power to award damages which they never had formerly and the Chancellor a Precedency both in the Chancery and of the Councell in the Court of Starre-Chamber and in many cases in the Exchequer by the first he had a power in matters of meum and tuum by the last in matters Mei and Regis and by the other in matters Mei and Regni A considerable man certainly he was in the motions of Government but how much more if he be made Arch Bishop of Canterbury Cardinall and Legate è Latere or Arch Bishop Lord Treasurer and Legate è Latere as these dayes had divers times seen Extraordinary advancements bestowed upon the Nobility brings Honour to the Throne but if they be not men of noted worth and uprightnesse they make the Scepter stoope by stirring up of envy in the Nobility and indignation from the People For seldome is it seene that Advancements are fed from the Crowne though they be bred from thence but either maintained by new supplies from the Peoples purses or the ruine or decay of some Offices more ancient then themselves or both And such was the condition of the Chancellor he sucked fat from beneath and blood and Spirits from the Grand chiefe Justiciar of England and so reduced that Honourable Potentate unto the Degree of chiefe Justice of the Kings Bench leaving scarcely unto him the name or title of Lord. One thing more remaineth touching the election or nomination of this Great man At the first he was no better then a Register or the Kings remembrancer or Secretary having also the Honour to advise the King in such matters as came within the circuite of the Writings in his custody and questionlesse Eo usque its sutable to all the reason in the World that he should be of the Kings sole Nomination and Election But when it befalls that in stead of advising the King his word is taken to be the rule and a Judicatory power put upon that and unto this is superadded that Honourable trust of keeping and governing the great Seale of the Kingdome with the continuall growing power occasionally conferred upon him by the Parliament He is now become no more the Kings Remembrancer but the Lord Chancellor of England and Supreame Officer of State And it seemes but reasonable that he should hold his place by publique Election as well as the Grand Justiciar whose Plumes he borrowed and other Grand Officers of State did before him For he that will have his Servant to worke for another must give the other that Honour of Electing him thereto nor was this laid aside or forgotten by these times but a claim was put in for the Election or allowance of this principall Officer amongst others the Parliament obtaining a judgement in the case by the Kings Confession and so the thing is left to the judgement of future Ages Viz. Whether a King that can do no man wrong can dissemble the Royall Assent in Parliament or declare himselfe Legally in that manner by Proclamation CHAP. V. Of Admiralls Court. THis is a third Court that maintained the Kings judicatory power in a different way from that which is commonly called the Common law and by many is therefore supposed to advance the Kings Prerogative but upon mistaken grounds It is very true that the way is different from the common rode both in its originall and in the course of proceedings nor could it other be considering the condition of the Nations and the People of the same interested in common traffique The people thus interested as much differed from the other sort of dry men if they may be so called as Sea from Land and are in nature but as march men of severall Nations that must consenter in some third way for the maintenance of commerce for peace sake and to the end that no Nation may be under any other Law then its owne The condition of the Nations in the times when civillized government began to settle amongst them was to be under the Roman Emperours who having setled one Law in the generall grounds throughout all Nations made the Sea likewise to serve under one rule which should float up and downe with it that men might know upon what tearmes they held their owne wheresoever they went and upon what tearmes to part with it for their best advantage in its originall therefore this Law may be called Imperial and likewise in the process because it was directed in one way of triall and by one law which had its first birth from the Imperiall power and probably it had not been for the common benefit of Europe to have been otherwise at other time or by other directories formed Neverthelesse this became no Gemm of Prerogative to the English Crowne for if England did comply with forraine Natives for its owne benefit it being an Iland full of the Sea and in the common rode from the most parts of Europe that border upon the Sea and of delight in Merchandise it is but sutable to it selfe and it did so comply as it saved the maine Stake by voluntary entertaining those Laws without being imposed upon by Imperiall power for the Saxons came into this Kingdome a free People and so for ought yet appeareth to me continueth to this day I say that in those first times they did take into the consideration of Parliament the regulating of the fluctuating motions of Sea-laws nor were they then or after properly imposed by the Kings Edict For though it were granted that Richard the first reduced the Sea-laws in the Isle of Oleron yet that the same should be done without advise of Parliament in his returne from the holy Land is to me a riddle considering what Histories doe hold forth concerning of his returne through Germany nor can that be good evidence to intitle Kings of England to a power to make and alter Laws according to their private pleasure and interest Nor doth that Record mentioned in the Institutes warrant any such matter but rather on the contrary groundeth the complaint upon laws statutes Franchises and Customes Estabilished and that this Estabilishment was by the King and the Councell This Law was of a double nature according to the Law of the Land one part concerning the Pleas of the Crowne and the other between party and party for properly the Kings authority in the Admiralty is but an authority of Judicature according to Laws established which both for processe and sentence are different from the Common Law as much as the two Elements do differ yet not different in
confusion in stead of Law CAHP. VI. Of the Churchmens Interest BUt the Churchmens interest was yet more tarte standing in need of no lesse a lay then that of the Kings Authority for that the King is no lesse concerned therein then the People and the rather because it was now growne to that pitch that it is become the Darling of Kings and continually henceforth courted by them either to gaine them from the Papall Jurisdiction to be more ingaged to the Crowne or by their means to gaine the Papall Jurisdiction to be more favourable and complying with the Prerogative Royall The former times were tumultuous and the Pope is gained to joyne with the Crowne to keep the people under though by that means what the Crowne saved to it selfe from the people it lost to Rome Henceforth the course of Affairs grew more civill or if you will graced with a blush of Religion and it was the pollicy of these times whereof we now Treat to carry a benigne aspect to the Pope so farre onely as to stave him off from being an enemy whiles Kings drove on a new designe to ingratiate and ingage the Churchmen of their owne Nation unto its owne Crowne This they did by distinguishing the Office or Dignity of Episcopacy into the Ministeriall and Honourable parts the later they called Prelacy and was superadded for incouragement of the former and to make their work more acceptable to men for their Hospitalities sake for the maintenance whereof they had large Endowments and Advancements And then they reduced them to a right understanding of their Originall which they say is neither Jus Divinum nor Romanum but that their Lordships Power and great Possessions were given them by the Kings and others of this Realm And that by vertue thereof the Patronage and custody of the Possessions in the vacancy ought to belong to the Kings and other the Founders and that unto them the right of Election into such advancements doe belong and not unto the Pope nor could he gain other Title unto such power but by usurpation and incroachment upon the right of others But these Great men were not to be wonne by Syllogismes Ordinarily they are begotten between Ambition and Covetousnesse nourished by Riches and Honour and like the Needle in the Compass turn ever after that way Edward the Third therefore labours to winne these men heaped Honour and Priviledges upon them that they might see the gleanings of the Crowne of England to be better then the vintage of the triple Crown Doubtlesse he was a Prince that knew how to set a full value upon Churchmen especially such as were devout and it may be did somewhat outreach in that course For though he saw God in outward events more then any of his Predecessors and disclaiming all humane merits reflected much upon Gods mercy even in smaller blessings yet we finde his Letters reflect very much upon the Prayers of his Clergy and loved to have their Persons nigh unto him put them into places of greatest Trust for Honour and Power in Judicature that not altogether without cause he had thereby purchased unto his Kingdome the name and repute of being a Kingdome of Preists But all this is but Personall and may give some liking to the present Incumbents but not to the Expectants and therefore the Royall Favor extended so far in these times as to bring on the Parliament to give countenance to the Courts and Judiciary power of the Ordinaries by the Positive Law of the Kingdome although formerly the Canons had already long since made way thereto by practice I shall hereof note these few particulars ensuing Ordinaries shall not be questioned in the Kings Court for Commatation Testamentory Matters or Matrimoniall Causes nor other things touching Jurisdiction of Holy Church Things formerly bred by the Canon nourished by continuall practise allowed by Ordinance of Parliament or Grant from Kings in Parliament are now confirmed by solemne concurrence of the whole representative Body of the Kingdome to have and to hold with Warranty And yet the sense is not so generall as the words nor doth it seeme much other then a Confection made for the Arch Bishops appetite to cure a distemper between him and the King for the Civill Judge lost nothing hereby nor would the Crowne as may appear by a Law of equall Authority with the former for though an Executor or Administrator may cheat yet it tells us that Ordinaries onely can oppresse and extort from dead men and therefore in such cases doth provide remedy by inquiry and Indictment before the Kings Justices They shall have Cognisance of Vsury during the Delinquents life and the King after the Delinquents death The difference ariseth from the different end the first being to reforme the Person by Church-censures and to urge him to restitution the latter is for the Kings Fine or Forfeiture For as touching the Usurers estate the offence was in the nature of Felony forfeiting both Lands and goods to the King after the Delinquents death And it seemeth the manner was to Indict the Delinquent during his life and that stuck to him as a deadly arrow in his side till he died Nor did it lye in the power of the Ordinary by Ecclesiasticall censure so to reforme the Offender as to cleare him to the King unlesse the party offending made his peace with the King by Composition and thus the Law continued for ought appeareth to mee till the time of Henry the Eighth They shall have Cognisance of avoydance of Benefices of Right They shall certifie Bigamy and Bastardy had beyond the Sea and whether a Prior be perpetuall or dative The first of these concerning avoydance of Churches it seemeth was somewhat doubtfull in point of Practice for that the Civill Judge used to determine all manner of avoydances as well in Fact as of right but by this Statute they are restrained onely unto avoydances in Fact so as after this Statute it is holden that avoydances by death shall be tried by the Countrey but if the avoydance be by Deprivation Resignation Creation or otherwayes it shall be tried by the Ordinary because by common intendment he is more connusant of the thing then Countrey people But as touching the point of Bigamy the matter is more doubtfull in regard that commonly the marriage of a second Wife or Widow is a matter in Fact done in the face of the People and of which they take notice especially where the life of man is concerned which rather requireth the judgement of his Peires then where the outward maintenance onely is ingaged Neverthelesse because the main point is whether the Party be a Clerk or not and the same anciently rested upon the Certificate of the Ordinary It s by this Law again allowed to him to try and certifie this point of Bigamy also although the Statute of Bigamists might seeme to Intitle the civill Magistrate thereto as the Law
he made the penalty of Praemuniri to extend to all Farmores or others in nature of Bailiffs that held any Church maintenance to the use of any alien and unto all Aliens that are Purchasors of such Provisions to any use and unto all Lieges that shall in like manner purchase such Provisions But as touching such as shall accept such provisions he ordained Banishment for their Persons and Forfeiture of their Estate Notwithstanding all this the Romane Horse-leach would not so give over The King grew into displeasure with his Subjects and they with him and with one another they see the Pope still on Horseback and fear that the English Clergy their own Countrey men if not Friends and Abbettors yet are but faint and feigned Enemies to the Popes Cause Nor was it without Cause that their fear was such for as the Pope had two hands to receive so they had two hearts making show of forming blowes at the Pope but then alwayes at a distance or when without the Popes Guard and thus the Lawes begin to stammer and cannot speake so plain English as they were wont The people hereat offended resolve to put the Clergy into the Van and to try their mettle to the full At the last Parliament that Richard the Second did hold both the Lords Temporall and Spirituall are opposed one by one The Lords Temporall like themselves resolve and enter their Resolutions to defend the right of the Crowne in the Cases of Provisors although even amongst these great men all were not equally resolute for Sir William Brian had purchased the Popes Excommunication against some that had committed Burglary and he was committed to the Tower for his labour But the Prelates answer was ambiguous and with modifications which was all one to cry as men use to say Craven yet was the Statute made peremptory according to what was formerly Enacted And though the Prelates cautionary way of proceeding might be a principall reason why the Popes power held so long in England in an usurping way yet Kings also much conduced thereto by seeking too much their Personall ease above the Honour of their Place and the Popes blessings and opinion of his Favour more then their owne good or the Peoples liberty for there was no other balme for a distracted minde then that which dropped from the Popes lips In like manner Richard the Second being already at least in purpose estranged from his People sought to get freinds at Rome to hold by the Spirituall Sword what he was in danger to loose by laying aside the Sword of Justice which is the surest Tenure for Kings to hold by And though the Popedome was now under a Schisme between two Popes Clement and Vrban yet he was so farre won for Vrban that he not onely ingaged himselfe and the Parliament to determine his Election and uphold the same but also Ex abundante did by Implication allow to him an Indefinite Power to grant Provisions and so at once he lost the Die and gained a Stake that like a bubble looked faire but soon vanished away Neverthelesse these two Comrades whiles they were together resolved to make the most of each other that they could and therefore though the Popedome liked not the King yet the Pope had his love so farre as he could deny himselfe for he had already denied his Kingdome And if the Articles exhibited against the King by Henry the Fourth be true the Pope had his Faith also For that he might be rid of his reputed Enemy Arch Bishop Arundell he trusted the Pope with that Complement of making Walden Arch Bishop of Canterbury in Arundells stead which the Pope tooke so kindly as he made it a President for Provisors for the future Nor did the King stick in this one Singular but made it his Custome in passing of Lawes especially such as the King was most devoted unto to put more Confidence in the Popes Amen then in all the Prayers of his Commons with his owne Soit fait to boot The summe then will be that the Prize was now well begun concerning the Popes power in England Edward the Third made a fair blow and drew blood 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 Clergy for though the times were not so cleare as to espy the Root of a Pope in Prelacy yet experience had taught them that they were so nigh ingaged that they would not part And therefore first they let these men know that Prelacy was no Essentiall Member to the Government of the Kingdome but as there was a Government established before that ranke was known so there may be the like when it is gone For Edward the Third being troubled with a quarrell between the two Arch Bishops of Canterbury and Yorke concerning Superiority in bearing the Crosse and the important Affaires of Scotland so urging Summoned a Parliament at Yorke which was fain to be delaied and adjourned for want of appearance and more effectuall 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 president was made for men to be bold with the Kings Summons in such Cases as liked not them and thereupon a Statute was made to inforce Obedience upon Citizens and Burgesses and such Ecclesiasticks as held per Baroniam Neverthelesse when the matters concerning Provisors began to come upon the Stage which was within two yeares after that Law was made the Clergy found that matter too warme for them and either did not obey the Summons or come to the Parliament or if they came kept aloofe or if not so would not Vote or if that yet order their tongues so as nothing was certainly to be gathered but their doubtfull or rather double minde These Prelates thus discovered the Parliament depended no more upon them further then they saw meet At sixe or seven Parliaments determined matters without their Advice and such as crossed the Principles of these men and therefore in a rationall way might require their Sense above all the rest had they not beene prepossessed with prejudice and 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 somtimes fewer and at a Parliament in his fourty and seventh yeare he Summoned onely foure Bishops and five Abbots And thus the matter in Fact passed in these times albeit the Clergy still made their claim of Vote and desired the same to be entered upon Record And
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 severall Counties had formerly the power but were found to savour too much of Neighbourhood and Alliance the leading of the work therefore is now committed to the Judges at Westminster and the other made onely Associates to them But above all the Courts of Sheriffes Coroners and Leets were now grown soure with Age having attained courses by common Practice differing from Oppression onely in name and yet were the times so unhappy as by these courses they had obtained fovour and respect amongst the great men and so gained more power from above to abuse them below These men loved to be Commissioners of Oier and Terminer and having learned how to make capitall offences pecuniary found such sweetnesse as they used not to be weary of their places though the Countrey grew weary of them and therefore disliking uncertainties in such matters of benefit they cannot rest till they obtaine more certaine settlement in their places some for yeares others for life and some for ever The disease thus contracted by degrees the cure must be accordingly first the Sherifwicks much dismembred to please the Court Favorites and fill the Kings privy purse and all raised to the utmost penny of the full and beyond the just vallue A Law is made to restore the severall Hundreds and Wepentakes to the Sheriffs and their Counties and all of them are reduced to the old rent and it is likewise provided that none shal execute that place in County or Hundred who shall not then have sufficient Lands in that County to answer dammages for injustice by them done And that no Sheriff shall serve in that place above one yeare and then not to be chosen againe for that service till three yeares be past which later clause was only a medium taken up for the present occasion in regard that men of ability became very rare in these times especially in some of the Counties The election of the Sheriff is likewise not to be forgotten for though the Counties had the election of Coroners in regard they looked that no man should come nigh their blood but whom they trusted yet the Sheriffe came not so nigh their skinne nor yet so nigh their freeholds as anciently they had done for that their power in judicature was much abated and so not worthy of so high regard yet in respect he was still to be a Minister of justice and his place valuable more then formerly it was holden convenient that such as had the cheife power of judicature at Westminster Viz. the Chancellor Treasurer Cheife Baron and the two cheife Justices should nominate the man that should be their Servant and in the Parliament neverthelesse interposed in that Election as often as they saw cause Secondly as touching Causes criminall which more ordinarily come within the Cognisance of these Courts They generally held the same regard in the eye of Law in these times that they had done formerly neverthelesse in two crimes these times wrought diversly urging the edge of Law against the one and abating it as to the other The later of these is commonly called Petit Treason which is a murder destructive to the Common-wealth in an inferiour degree and at a further distance because it is destructive to that Legiance by which Families doe consist and of whom Kingdomes are derived In former times it extended unto the Legiance between Lord and Tenant and Parents and Children but by this Law of 25. E. 3. it is reduced to the Legiance onely of Man and Wife Master and Servant Clerk and his Ordinary the last of which was now lately taken up and might have beene as well laid aside as divers others were but that in these times much is to be yeilded to the power of the Prelacy who loved to raise the power of the Ordinary to an extraordinary pitch that themselves might be the more considerable This reducing of Treason into a narrower ground made the Regiment of Fellonies to swell A hard thing it was in a Warring time for men to conceit themselves well drest untill they were compleatly armed Some used it for a Complement and amongst others honest men had as good cause to use it as some that were ill affected had a bad and of the last sort some did aime at private revenge though many aimed against the Publique quiet But however the intentions of men thus harnessed might be different the lookes of them all are so soure that its hard to know a man for Peace from a man for Warre And therefore the People were now so greedy after Peace as they are ready to magnifie or multiply all Postures of Armed men into the worst fashion being well assured that the readiest way to keep themselves from the hurt of such men is to have none of them at all But Edward the Third had more need of them then so and will therefore allow men to ride Armed but not to Troope together to rob kill or imprison any man and if any Person did otherwise it should be Fellony or Trespasse but not high Treason All this was in favour to the People and yet it was not all for when Mercy groweth profuse it becomes cruelty Murder is very incident to times of Warre yet is an Enemy to the Peace of so high a nature that though the Kings pardon may doe much yet both King and People declare it an impardonable crime by the Common Law and that the Kings Prerogative shall not extend so farre as to Pardon the same This justice done to the party dead was a mercy to them that were alive a means to save blood by blood-shed and not so much by the Kings Grant as by his Release One thing more in these cases of blood the people obtained of the King which they had not so much by Release as by Grant and that was the taking away of Englishire an ancient Badge of the Imperiall Power of the Danes over the Saxons and which had either continued through the desidiousnesse of the Saxons in the times of Edward the Confessor unto the Normans time or by them taken up again and continued untill these times that Edward the Third was so farre desirous to declare his readinesse to maintaine the Liberties of the people as to be willing to restore them where they failed and in particular tooke away the manner of Presentment of Englishire blotting out the Title and Clause concerning it out of the Articles of inquiry for the Judges Itinerant And thus whether Native or Forrainer all men are now made in death equall and one Law serves all alike Next unto blood these times grew more sensible of Ravishments then former times had done For though they had determined a severe Penalty against so foule a Crime and made it in the nature of Fellony capitall which was enough to have scared any man from such attempts yet for the proof of the matter in Fact much rested upon the will of the Woman which for
from the Truth some of the common Books have the words thus None shall be destrained to goe out of their Counties unlesse for cause of necessity and of sudden coming of Strangers or Enemies into the Kingdome Others reade it thus But where necessity requireth and the coming of strange Enemies into the Kingdome The Kings answer to the Parliaments Declaration concerning the Commission of Array would reade it thus Vnlesse in case of Necessity or of sudden coming of strange Enemies c. But the words in the Roll are these Et que nulls ne soient distresses d'aller hors de les Countees Si non pur Cause de necessity de suddaine venue des Stranges Enemies en Reqaulme In English thus word for word And that none be destrained to goe out of the Counties if not for cause of Necessity of sudden coming of strange Enemies into or in the Kingdome which words determine the Point That none shall be by Commission of Array drawn out of their County but in case of Necessity And secondly that this Case of Necessity is onely the coming of strange Enemies into or in the Kingdome so as probably the Invasion must be actuall before they be drawn out of their Counties and not onely feared and it must be a sudden Invasion and not of publique note and common fame foregoing for then the ordinary course either of Parliament or otherwise must be used to call those that are bound by Statute or Tenures or Volunteires to that Service seeing every Invasion is not so fatall as to require a Commission for a Generall Array Against what hath been thus noted the judgement of Sir Edward Coke in Calvins Cafe lies yet in the way who affirmeth that the Subjects of England are bound by their Legiance to goe with the King in his Warres as well within the Realme as without and this Legiance he telleth us is that Naturall Legiance which he saith is absolute and Indefinite c. and not Locall which if not so then were not the English bound to go out of England an inference that is neither necessary nor is the thing affirmed certain It is not necessary because English men may be bound to goe out of England by vertue of their Tenures particular Contract or else by speciall Act of Parliament and not by vertue of that Naturall Legiance which in Truth is no where Now for the maintenance of the Point the Reporter alledgeth two Statutes affirming the thing and Common practice and lastly Authorities of the Judges of the Common Law As touching the Statutes one in Henry the Sevenths time and the other in Edward the Sixths time I shall speake of them in the succeeding times when we come at them for they are no Warrant of the Law in these times whereof we now treat much lesse is the modern practice of these later dayes a Demonstration of the Law in the times of Edward the Third nor of the Nature of the Law in any time seeing that it is obvious to times as well as particular Persons to doe and suffer things to be done which ought not so to be and therefore I shall for the present lay those two Considerations aside But as touching the Opinions of the Judges of the Common Law two Cases are cited in the Affirmative which seeme in the Negative and the rest conclude not to the Point The first of the two cases is the opinion of Justice Thirning in the time of Henry the Fourth word for word thus A Protection lies for the Defendant in a Writ upon the Statute of Labourers and yet the Defendant shall not have such matter by way of Plea Viz. That the King hath retained him to goe beyond the Sea for the King cannot compell a man to goe out of the Kingdome That is as the Reporter saith Not without Wages intimating thereby that if the King shall tender wages to any man he must goe whither the King shall please to send him which is not onely destructive to the opinion of Thirning concerning the Plea but also though granted is destructive to the Reporters judgement in the main point For if an English man may refuse to goe without wages then is he not bound to goe by any naturall absolute Legiance as the Reporter would have it And as touching the second Case which is Bigots and Bohuns Case it cleareth the same thing for it was resolved that they ought to goe but in manner and form according to the Statutes then is not the ground in the absolute Legiance for that is not qualified but in the Positive Statute-Law which tieth onely in manner and form and that by voluntary consent in Parliament The rest of the Cases do neither conclude the main point nor the particular thing that the Reporter intendeth for he would imply to the Reader that English men were anciently used to be imprested for the Warres in France and hereunto he voucheth one Authority out of ancient Reports of Law in Edward the Thirds time one authority in the time of Henry the Fourth and three in the time of Henry the Sixth none of all which doe speake one word concerning impresting and that in Edward the hird doth imply the contrary for the Case is that in a Praecipe quod reddat a Protection was offered by the Defendant as appointed to goe beyond Sea with the Duke of Lancaster and the Plaintiffes Councell alledged that the Defendant had been beyond Sea with the Duke and was returned To this the Defendants Councell answered that the Duke was ready to return again and for this cause the Protection was allowed Yet a Quere is made upon this ground that it might be that the Defendant would not goe over with him nor was it proved that he would which sheweth plainly the party was not imprested for then the thing had not been in his power to will or nill The last instance that the Reporter produceth is that of Forinsecum Servitium or Forrain Service and that seemerh to be Knight Service to be performed abroad But this falleth short of the Reporters intention in three respects First though it belongeth to the King yet not to him onely but to other cheif Lords so saith Bracton Secondly it is not due from every English man And lastly it is a Service due by vertue of Tenure and then the Conclusion will be That which is due by Tenure of Lands is not due by naturall and absolute Legiance and so this Forrain Service arising meerly by compact and agreement between Lord and Tenant and not by the naturall duty of an English born Subject which is the thing that the Reporter driveth at in all this discourse will be so far from maintaining the Reporters opinion as it will evidently destroy the same And thus the Posture of this Nation in the Feild remaineth regular in the rule what ever hath been said against it notwithstanding that in the very instant of Action there may be some
at a distance and after long delay But Edward the Third sums up all into one breif and brings a compleate modell thereof into the World for future Ages to accomplish as occasion should lead the way The cours was now established to have Justices settled in every County there to be resident and attending that Service First they were named Guardians or Wardens of the Peace but within a few yeares altered their Title to Justices First they were chosen out of the good and lawfull men of each County After that they were two or three chosen out of the worthiest men and these were to be joyned with Lawyers Then was one Lord and three or foure in each County of the most worthy men adjoyned with Lawyers Afterward in Richard the Seconds time the number of Justices in each County might attain to the number of six and no Steward of any Lord to be admitted into the Commission but within half a yeare all is at large so be it that the choise be out of the most sufficient Knights Esquires and Gentlemen of the County Again within two yeares the number in each County is set at eight yet in all these the Judges and Serjeants were not reckoned so as the work then seemeth not so much as now a dayes although it was much of the same kinde and yet it grew up into that greatnesse which it had by degrees Before they were settled by Edward the Third there were Custodes pacis which might be those whom we now a dayes call the High-Constable of the Hundred whose work was purely Ministeriall Afterward about the second yeare of Edward the Third the Guardians of the Peace had power of Oier and Terminer in matters of riding Armed upon the Statute 2. Ed. 3. After that they have power of inquiry by Indictment in certain Cases within foure yeares after they have power of Oier and Terminer in Cases of false Jurors and maintenance and about tenne years after that they obtained like power in matters of Fellony and Trespasse The way of Commissions in case of life and member thus opened another occasion of Commission offers it self for a determinative power in case of offences against the Statute of Labourers and the Cognisance hereof is soon settled upon Commissioners in the Counties specially chosen for that Service which questionlesse as the times then stood was as commendable work as it was necessary For Souldiers were so many that Labourers were very few and those that once are accustomed to Armes thinke ever after meanly of the handycraft nor will they ever stoop thereto after their Spirits are once elivated by Mastery of Adventures And secondly those few Labourers that remained of the Sword Plague and other disasters of these wasting times understood their advantage and set a value upon their labours far above their merit apprehending that men would rather part with too much of a little then to let their work lie still that must bring them in all they have but these Commissioners lasted not long though the worke did The Justices of Peace are looked upon as meet for that service and its a vain thing to multiply Commissions where the work may be done by one that before this time had obtained an additionall Cognisance of all Causes of Riots Batteries wandering dangerous Persons and offences in Weights and Measures and in Purveiance To them I say all this work concerning Labourers is also committed by the Parliament and herewith a way was laid open for Crimes of greatest regard under Fellony to be determined by triall in the Countrey according to the course of Common Law The issue of all which was not only ease to the People but a great escape from the rigor of the Councel-Table in the Star-Chamber and the Kings-Bench at Westminster on the one side and also from the gripe of the Clergy on the other who hitherto held the Cognisance of the Markets in Weights and Measures to themselves This modell so pleased all men that Richard the Second that was pleased with nothing but his owne pleasure gave unto the Justices of Peace yet further power to execute the Statute at Northampton against riotous ridings and to settle the wages of Labourers and Servants to punish unlawfull Huntings by the meaner sort of people and regrators of Wooll fals Weights in the Staple unlawfull wearing of Liveries and unlawfull fishings contrary to the Statute at Westminster 2. Thus was the power of Justices of the Peace grown to that heighth in these and other things that it undermined not onely the Councel-Table and Kings Bench but the Commissions of Gaole delivery and of Oier and Terminer so farre forth as their work was much lesse then formerly for Neighbous in cases of Crime are better trusted with the lives and estates of men then strangers so as in all this the people are still the gainers The manner of Judicature by these Justices of the Peace still remains nothing appears by any Statute in these times that one Justice of the Peace might doe alone but record a forcible detainer although questionlesse in point of present security of the Peace and good behavior by the intent of the Statutes he might doe many things but in Cases of Oier and Terminer all must be done in publique Sessions which the Justices of the Peace had power to hold by Commission onely untill the thirty sixth year of Edward the Third and ever after that they held their Sessions by vertue of the Statutes and had power to determine divers things in their Sessions according to discretion These were remedies after the Fact now see what preventing Physick these times afforded One thing that much irritated the spirits of men into discontents was false newes or slanderous reports raised and spread amongst the great men For in these times the Lords were of such considerable a power as the vexation of one Lord proved the vexation of a multitude of the meaner sort and though the Statute of Westminster the 1. formerly had provided against such tales yet it touched onely such as concerned discord between the King and People although by implication also it might be construed to extend further But Richard the Second willing to live in quiet that he might injoy his pleasure would have the people know their duties in plain words and agreed to a Law that all such as published such false newes tending to sow strife between the great men should be imprisoned untill the first mover was found and if he were not found then the Relator should be punished by advice of the Councell So much power was then given to the Councell what ever it was Thus the seed was choked or was so intended to be though every passion was not thus suppressed For some angers conquer all feare and will hold possession come what will In the next place therefore provision is made against the first actings in sorting of parties by
tokens and liveries utterly inhibiting the meaner sort of the people from giving of Liveries to maintain quarrells upon pain of Fine and Imprisonment and the triall to be before the Justices of Assize which it seems was in affirmance of former Lawes as by the Preamble of the Statute doth appeare though the Lawes themselves are not extant About fifteen years after it was by sad experience found that the Lords maintained quarrells by multitude of Liveries and therefore another Law was made inhibiting the Lords to give Liveries to any but their meniall Servants and it s ordered that the Justices of the Peace shall make inquiry of such offences and punish them according to their discretion A third prevention was provided against gathering together of parties after they are sorted For the humors may so abound as nothing will keep them in they must either breake out into a sore or a long sicknes of State will certainly follow To this end therefore the Statute made at Northampton is again revived expresly forbidding all Persons to ride Armed unles in some particular Cases of executing Justice or guarding the Person of the King or his Justices and such like And if men will be so adventerous as to outdare Law by publique force Troopings together and Riotous ridings Another course is taken not by Commission of the Peace but rather of Warre directed unto valiant persons in every County and they have power thereby to apprehend such Offenders and imprison them untill the Goale-delivery though no Indictment be found thereof untill the Goale-delivery shall be By this Commission therefore power is given of Posse Comitatus in nature of a Commission of Array with an additionall power of fighting and destroying so as though the King granteth the Power by the Commission yet the Parliament giveth the power to the Commission and be it a Commission for Peace or Warre it is Originally from that power The fourth and last prevention was the taking away means of continuance and supporting such Riotous wayes Viz. Castles and Goales out of the Custody of private hands and restoring them to their Counties For Goales and Castles are taken promiscuously for places of security in times of Peace to keep ill persons from going out and in times of Warre from getting in Amongst these some belonged to the King and were committed to such as he favoured who commonly in such times of Oppression and Violence grew too big for Justice usurping a Gaole-delivery and making such places of strength many times even to the innocent a Prison to keep them from the Law but unto guilty persons an Assilum to defend them against the Law And these thus belonging to the King were under no Law but of Prerogative whereas other Castles of private persons were under the yoake of the Statute 13 E. 1. For remedy of all which the Kings Castles are once more returned to the Sheriffes Custody by Act of Parliament who questionlesse hath the power to dispose of all places of Strength whether in order to Peace or Warre and could not dispose them into a more fafe and indifferent hand then the Sheriffes who is as well the Kings Officer as the Kingdomes Servant and much intrusted by the Law in the execution of its owne power And thus is this Nation now prepared for a settled Peace a Condition that is long in ripening and soon rotten unlesse it be well fenced and over-awed by a good Conscience But Richard the Second was neither so good nor so happy his Heart affected to be high but his Head could not bear it he turns giddy and runs far wide Those that would reduce him he inforces into Forrain Countries and himselfe holds on his careere over hedge and ditch into Ireland where under pretention of holding Possession of that Kingdome he lost England and whiles he playes his game in that Country another playes King by your leave in this and steps into the Throne teaching the King thereby this lesson though too late That Nonresidency is dangerous for a Preist but unto a Prince fatall unlesse his Subjests be fast to him when he is loose to them CHAP. XIII A view of the summary Courses of Henry the Fourth Henry the Fifth and Henry the Sixth in their severall Reignes HE that played this pranke was the banished Duke of Hertford sonne of John of Gaunt and by his death now become Duke of Lancaster by Title and as the times then were it proved not hard to get more For in uncertain Common-wealths it is an easie thing for a man of opinion that hath lesse then his due to get more then he ought As sonne of John of Gaunt this Duke had the peoples good wishes he a wise and a brave man and under oppression gained the more upon the people by how much they love brave men and compassionate such as suffer wrong especially from such persons from whom they all found the like measure All these concurring with the Kings absence invited the Duke to adventure himself upon the influence of the peoples favour to gain his own right and what more the people would allow him and if no more yet his Honour is saved he came for his own and attained his end Thus then he comes over without Army or Forraine power or other help saving the advice and interest of Arch-Bishop Arundell who was his Companion in suffering Partner in the Cause and no lesse welcome to the Clergy then the Duke himself was to the people and so gained power to the Duke though he brought none Upon their Arivall the aspects of all are benigne the Dukedome waits for him and in that as in a mirrour he beholds the way fair and easie yet further it pities him to see the Kingdome so torne in peices and spoyled The People knew him able and hoped him willing to amend all they offer him their Service which he accepts and therewith the Crowne so hard a thing it is for to put a stop to a Conquerour in his careere By this time was the Duke of Hertford thus become Duke of Lancaster and King of England under the name of Henry the Fourth by a designe that in the proof was more easie then commendable and which being effected cost more skill to make that seem fair which was so foul then to accomplish the thing He therefore first heaps together Titles enough to have buried the clamour of Usurpation if it would have succeeded Conquest was a Title freest from dispute whiles Power holds but it lookes better from a Forrain Enemy then one sworn to the English Crowne and therefore after that had served his turne he disclaymed it as that which was though meet enough to have yet unmeet to hold His right by Designation from his Predecessour he glanced upon but durst not adventure it too deep into the Peoples consideration whose Ancestors had formerly over-ruled the Case against King John He then stayed upon a concealed Title from a concealed Sonne of
Henry the Third of whom they who listed might be perswaded but few beleived the thing nor did himself but thence takes his flight up to a Jus Divinum or some hidden Fate that called him to the worke but even there his wings failed him and so he falls flat upon the Peoples Election De bene esse Some of these or all together might make Title enough for a great man that resolved to hold by hooke what he had got by crooke and therefore trussing them up all together he enters his claime to the Crown As comming from the blood Royall from King Henry and through the Right that God his grace hath sent me with the help of my Kinne and Freinds to recover the same which was in point to be undone for want of good Governance and due Justice The extract of all is that he was chosen by the People and Parliament then sitting And allbeit that by the Resignation of Richard the Second the Parliament might seem in strict construction of Law to be expired together with the Kings power who called them together yet did not that Parliament so apprehend the matter but proceeded not onely to definitive Sentence of Deposing him but declared themselves by their Commissaries to be the three States and Representative of the People of England maintaining thereby their subsistency by the Consistence of the Members together although their Cheif was for the present like a head in a trance till they had chosen Henry the Fourth to succeed in the Throne by this means preventing the conceit of discontinuance in the very Bud of the Notion Much like his entry was his continuance a continuall tide of Forraine and Domesticke Warre and Conspiracy enough to exercise his great Courage although he was more Wise then Warlike being loath to take up Armes for well he knew that a sick Title never sleeps but in a Bed of Peace and more loth to lay them down for besides Victory whereby he gained upon his Enemies in time of Warre he knew how to make advantage of them in time of Peace to secure his Freinds to keep others in awe to inforce such Lawes as stood with reason of State and the present posture of Affaires and where Lawes failed to fill up the period with Dictates of his owne will And upon this Account the Product was a government full of Ulcers of Blood-shed without regard of Persons whether of the Lay or Religious Order without Legall triall or priviledge of Clerke So was Arch Bishop Walden Dethroned Arch Bishop Scroope put to death and Dukes were dismounted without Conviction or Imputation saving of the Kings displeasure Taxes multiplied although begotten they were upon the Parliament like some monstrous Births shewne to the World to let it know what could be done but concealed by Historians to let it know what may not be done Yea the priviledges of Parliament invaded in point of Election A thing that none of his Predecessors ever Exemplyfied to him nor none of his Successors ever Imitated him in nor had he purposed it but that he was loath the People should know more of the Government then needs must To keep off Forrain troubles he made Peace with France for longer time then he lived yet was ever infested with the Sword of Saint Paul in behalf of Richard the Seconds Queene and with the Factions betweene the Houses of Orleance and Burgundy in which he had interested himselfe to preserve the Forraine Neighbour-hood in Parties one against another that himselfe might attend his owne Security at home He would have moved the Scots but they were already under English Banners nor could he reach so farre having so many Enemies even in his owne bosome The Welsh were big with Antiquity and Mountains of Defence they beginne to bethinke themselves of their Ancient Principality hold the Kings Armes at hard Duty till by Lawes enacted in Parliament they lost their Liberties of bearing Office Ministeriall or of Judicature of holding Castle of Convention without the Kings Licence yea of Purchase and so by degrees were brought downe from the height of a Free Principality to be starved in their Power and inferiour to a Free People And thus the Welsh on the one side the discontented Lords on the other and Mortimars Title in all so busied the King as though he lopped off the tops as they sprang up yet they sprang forth as they were lopped nor was it the Kings lot all this while to finde out the Root of All or to strike at that Lastly when time had made all troublers weary yet he stil sits upon thornes he was jealous of his Subjects jealous of his Son yea jealous of himself It being ever the first and last of his thoughts how to keep his Crowne For the most part of his Reigne he was troubled with the walking Ghosts of Richard the second ever and anon he was alive he was here he was there and so the Peoples mindes were alwayes kept at random but when all these Spirits are conjured downe Richard the seconds Ghoste is yet within Henries owne breast So ruled Henry the fourth an unhappy confident man that durst undertake more then he would did more then he ought was successfull in what he did yet never attained his end to be sure of his Crowne and quiet of minde For a plaister to this sore he turned somewhat towards Religion but shewed it more in Zeale to Church-men then workes of Piety and therefore may be thought to regard them rather as his best freinds in right of Arch Bishop Arundell then as in relation to Religion yet as if he overlooked that he desires their prayers becomes a strict observer of superstitious rights is fiery Zealous against the Lollards intends a journey into the holy Land and Warr against the Infidels the common Physick of guilty Kings in those dayes Breifly he did will to do any thing but undoe what he had done and had done more had his journey to the holy Land succeeded but whither hastned or delayed by a prophesie of the ending of his dayes falls not within my Penn to censure entring upon the worke he died in the beginning of his purposes in the midst of his feares never came to the holy Land and yet yeilded up his last breath in Jerusalem THe Parliament was then sitting and was witnesse of the death of Henry the fourth as it had beene of his entrance upon the Throne as if purposed to see to the cours of the Crowne in the doubtfull currant betweene the two Houses of Lancaster and Yorke and to maintaine their own honor in directing the Scepter according to their warranty upon a late intaile by act of Parliament yet did not all rest upon this for the Heire of Henry the fourth was a man every inch of him and meant not to Moote upon the point His Father died a King and he his Heire had the Crowne and was resolved to hold it A rough young man he
had beene formerly and bold enough to outface small doubts in point of succession for he could for a need outface common civility it selfe This might have lien in his way for he that cannot govern himselfe can much lesse govern a Kingdome Yet a hidden Providence concluded quite contrary and rendred him a cleare testimony of a strange change by the annointing oyle like that of Saul that forthwith had the Spirit of another man So though not hammered thereto by affliction as was Edward the first yet was he his parallell in Government and superiour in successe Being seated in the Throne all men thought it dangerous to abide the adventure of the turne of this Kings Spirit The Clergy had but yesterday tryed the Mastery with the Laity and gained it but by one Vote there was no dealing with the Clergy while Arch Bishop Arundell lived nor with him whiles Henry the fourth lived or his merits were in memory but now they both are dead the Clergy and the Laity are upon even ground this might make the Clergy now not over confident The Lords looked on the King as a man like enough to strike him that stands next The wise men saw he would be doing all men were tired with intestine quarrells and jumped in one that he that would be in action should act abroad where he might get renowne and a purchase big enough for his Spirit Scotland was a Kingdome yet incompetent to the Kings appetite France was the fairer marke and better game and though too big for the English gripe yet the Eagle stooped and sped himselfe so well as within six yeares he fastned upon the Sword and Scepter and a daughter of France and might have seised the Crowne but chose to suffer a blurr to lye upon his title derived from Edward the third rather then to incurr the Censure of Arrogancy over a stooping enemy or to Pluck the fruit from the tree before it was fully ripe which in time would fall into his lap by a better Law then that of the Sword otherwise it might be well conceited that he that hath both right and Power and will not seise disclaimes Besides the King was as well Inheritor to his Fathers Fate as Crowne still he had successe but the end was so farr distant that he died in the way thereto The brave Dauphine of France maintaining Warr after his Father the French King had yeilded up the Bucklers to Henry the fifth till Henry the fifth died and the English did foregoe what they had formerly gotten in France by the Sword of that great Commander Nor did the English gaine any thing in the conclusion of this Warr but an honorable windy repute of being one of the five cheif Nations of Christendome if honor it be to be reputed amongst the Nations a Conquerer of France the cheif Leader unto the dethroning of three Popes at once the election of Pope Martin and of giving a cure to that deadly wound of the Popedome which had spent the bloud of two hundred thousand mens lives lost in that quarrell These forraine ingagements made the King lesse solicitous of point of Prerogative at home and the rather because he knew the way to conquer his private enemies armes and his Subjects hearts without losse of honor in the one or reverence in the other He loved justice above the ranke of his Predecessors and in some respects above himselfe for he advanced Gascoigne for doing justice though to the Kings owne shame He liked not to intrude himselfe into elections and therefore though requested by the Monks of Canterbury he would not nominate a Successor to Arch Bishop Arundell but left the whole worke to them In the authority of his place he was moderate and where his Predecessors did matters without the Lords consent when he made his Uncle the Marquis of Dorcet Duke of Exceter and had given him a pention to maintaine that honor he asked the Lords consent thereto To the Clergy he was more then just if not indulgent led thereto by his Fathers example as being wrapped up in the same Interest as I conceive rather then out of any liking of their wayes now growing more bold upon usurpation then in former times Or it may be that having prevailed in that work in France which to any rationall man must needs appear above the power of the King and all the Realm of England he looked upon it as more then humane and himself as an instrument of Miracles and was stirred up in his zeal to God according to his understanding in those darke times to give the Clergy scope and to pleasure them with their liberty of the Canon Law that began now to thunder with fire and terror in such manner that neither greatnesse nor multitude could withstand the dint as was evidenced in that Penance inflicted upon the Lord Strange and his Lady in Case of bloodshed in Holy Ground and their hot pursuit of the Lord Cobham unto a death of a new Nature for somewhat done which was sometimes called Treason and sometimes Heresie And thus became Henry the Fifth baptized in the flames of the Lollards as his Father had sadly rendered up his Spirit in the same I say in this he is to be looked upon as one misled for want of light rather then in opposition against the light For in his last Will wherein men are wont to be more serious and sincere amongst his private regards he forgets not to reflect upon Religion to this purpose We further bequeath saith he to the redundant Mercy of the most excellent Saviour the Faith Hope and Charity the Vertue Prosperity and Peace of the Kings our Successours and of our Kingdome of England that God for his Goodnesse sake would Protect Visite and Defend them from Divisions Dissensions and from all manner of deceitfulnesse of Heretiques And thus Piety Justice and Moderation of Henry the Fifth Adorned and Crowned the honour of his Courage and Greatnesse with that honourable Title of Prince of Preists and had he been blessed with a clearer light he might as well under God have obtained the Title of Prince of Princes wanting nothing that might have rendered him a president of Fame BUt the time is now come that the Tide of Englands Glory must turn and the sudden Conquest in France by Henry the Fifth not unlike the Macedonian Monarchy must disgorge it selfe of what it had hastily devoured but never could digest Three things concurred hereunto one dangerous the other two fatall to the flourishing condition of any Nation First the King is a Minor in the least degree that ever any Prince sate on English Throne He entered thereinto neither knowing what he did nor where he was and some say he sate therein in his Mothers lap for his life had been more in the wombe then abroade A sad presage of what followed for many men thinke that he was in a lap all his dayes Nor are the cheife men to be
uncertain colour neither made by the Clergy nor Laity but spoyled between them both The intent thereof seemeth to be principally to draw on the House of Commons to passe the Law under hope of gain by the forfeitures for the penalty is like that of Fellony though the Crime be not expresly declared to be Fellony But the intent fell short in event For first the nature of the Crime is not defined nor declared by any Law and therefore can no man by Indictment be found to be such Secondly no penalty of death hath been by any former or by this Law determined upon such as are guilty for it s not enacted by any Law that such Person shall be delivered to the Seculer power c. Thirdly this Statute determining the forfeiture to be not till death and neither that nor any other Law of this Kingdome determining death then is no forfeiture determined Fourthly though this Law taketh it for granted That Heresie and Errors belong to Ecclesiasticall Cognisance yet the same allowes of no further proceedings then Ecclesiasticall Censures Lastly by this Law there can be no proceeding but in case of Indictment for otherwise without Record no forfeiture can be therefore where no Indictment is there is no forfeiture In all which regards its evident that the Clergy could by this Law neither get fat nor blood and therefore at their Convocation in the next yeare following they tooke another course and ordered that three in every Parish should make presentment upon Oath of such Persons as are defamed for Hereticks and the truth so farre as they can learn which puts me in minde of a Presentment that I have seene by some of Saint Mary-Overies in these times Item we saine that John Stevens is a man we cannot tell what to make of him and that he hath Bookes we know not what they are This new course shewes plainly that the former held not force as they intended it So God blasted the practises of the Clergy at this time also rendering this Law immateriall that had the form as the other missed in the form and had the matter CHAP. XVIII Of the Court of Chancery IT often befalls in State Affaires that extraordinary Exigencies require extraordinary remedies which having once gotten footing are not easily laid aside especially if they be expedient for Prerogative The Privy Councell in the Star-Chamber pretending default of the Common Law both in speed and severity in Cases whereby the State is indangered The Chancery pretends default by the Common Law in point of equity and moderation The People taken with these pretences make that rod more heavy which themselves had already complained of What the Chancery was in times past hath been already shewed still it is in the growing and gaining hand First in the Judicatory power it prevailed in relation to the Exchequer exercising a kinde of Power to survay the proceedings thereof in Cases of Commissioners distrained to account for Commissions executed or not executed for it was no easie matter to execute Commissions from the Exchequer in those times of Parties nor were men willing with such unwelcome occasions between Freinds and Neighbors and it may be they grew weary of imbroyling themselves one against another and of being Instruments of the violent counter-motions of Princes and great Men. Secondly it gained also upon the Admiralty which by former Lawes had Jurisdiction in all Cases incident upon the great Sea but now either through neglect of the Admirall or the evill of the times occasioning Piracies to grow Epidemicall the ill government upon the Sea became dangerous to the State trenching upon the Truce made between this and other Nations For a remedy whereof first Conservators of the Truce were settled in every Port who had power committed to them to punish Delinquents against the Publick Truce both by Indictment at the Kings suite and according to the course of the Admiralty by complaint saving matters of death to the Cognisance of the Admirall But this was soon found defective for Justice done in the dark is many times more respective and lesse respected and therefore within a few yeares it is provided that Offenders against the Kings Truce upon the Sea or in any of the Ports shall be proceeded against in the Chancery before the Chancellour who hath power given him calling to his Assistance some of the Judges to execute the Statute of 2 H. 5. foregoing by a handsome contrivance For that Statute was once and again suspended for the rigour that was used by the former Conservators who being Borderers upon the Sea for their own peace spared as few as they could which had so discouraged the Sea-men that the Kingdome had been almost utterly bereaved of its strength at Sea Neverthelesse all this while these Lawes were but penall and not remediall for the Parties wronged And therefore another Law is made to give the Chancellour and Judges power to make restitution and reparation Thirdly the Chancery gained upon the Ecclesiasticall Court for whereas by the Canon the Church-men were to be judged by their Superiours according to Ecclesiasticall and Ordinary Jurisdiction and the iniquity of the times was again returned to that height that Parents could not enjoy their own Children but the little ones were allured stolne away and detained in Cloysters nor did the Church-men afford remedy in such Cases A Law was made that upon complaint hereof made to the Chancellor the Provinciall should be by him sent for and punished according to his discretion Lastly the Chancery incroached upon the Common Law For whereas the stirs between the two Houses of Yorke and Lancaster beganne to rise Men made their dwellings in places of security and strength Women likewise and other persons flying thither for refuge especially such of them as had most to lose these were contrary to the Law of common honesty urged to ingage their Estates unto the desires of such to whom they had fled for refuge and some times compelled to marry before they could gain their liberty It was now provided that all such complaints should be heard and determined by the Chancellor Secondly as touching the Ministeriall power of the Chancery this likewise was inlarged in making of Processe to compell appearance in cases of forcible Entries Murders Manslaughters Robberies Batteries Assemblies in nature of Insurrections Riots and Plunder committed by Servants upon their Masters goods before their Masters death and such like Offences now growne common and in need of sudden remedy Thus as the worke and power of the Chancery grew so did the Place and Person of the Chancellor grow more considerable raised now from being the Kings Secretary for no better was he in former times to be the Kingdomes Judge and of such Trust that although the King might make election of his owne Secretary yet the Parliament would first know and allow him that must be trusted with the power over the Estates of so
many of the People And therefore did in these times both place and displace him as they saw expedient In a word he is become the Kingdomes Darling and might be more bold with the Common Law then any of his Peeres CHAP. XIX Of the Courts of Crowne Pleas and Common Law AS the Chancery on the one side did swell and increase so was the Kings Bench in an Ebb the Councill Table in the Star-Chamber on the one side and the Itenerant Courts in the Countrey intercepted and drew away much to their own shares Making themselves fat the Kings Bench leane and the Rurall Courts for Crown Pleas almost to starve The Crown Pleas formerly had been determinable in the Kings-Bench Goale-Delivery Oier and Terminer and many of them by Justices of the Peace Coroners and Sheriffe The Goale-Delivery was afterwards united to the Judges of Assize and if one of them were a Clergy man then to the other and cheif men of the County This was usefull for the Publique but not beneficiall for some men and therefore they laboured for Commissions especially directed to parties that they thought would partake but these were found soone to be dangerous soone taken away and the Goale-Delivery restored to the Judges of Assize as formerly The Commissions of Oier and Terminer were sued forth upon extraordinary immergencies and offences wherein the State was much concerned for speedy Execution In former times both these and Goale-Deliveries were but rarely had and then granted unto some that perchance knew more of the Case then before hand was meete to be known Edward the Third amended this errour and ordered that no Commissions of Oier and Terminer should issue forth but unto Commissioners named by the Court and not by the party complaining But the Judges of Assize are now in the growing hand hoth for Honour Use and Power the rather because their Persons are of high repute in the Benches at Westminster which are the Master-peices of Judicature and their Iters are constant and ordinary Neverthelesse the Judges of Assize though they have the Goale-Delivery annexed to them yet have they not that absolute power of the Kings-Bench but are still under the rule of their Commission which is not alterable but by Parliament and which by it was altered by way of adding of new powers as new crimes arose that required the eye of the State to provide and so the Judges of Assize by degrees grew to be the ordinary Administrators of Justice throughout the Kingdome yet holding still forth to them a limited power to heare and determine in some Cases but in others onely to inquire and certifie as in the Case of false returns by the Sheriffe of persons elected for the Parliament And also in Cases concerning the Statutes of Labourers and unlawfull games and pastimes in which case the Certificate is to be made to the Chancellor And also in Cases concerning Liveries contrary to the Statutes wherein the Certificate is to be made to the Kings-Bench which power in this last Case continued in that manner by the space of thirty yeares and then by another Statute they had the power to determine such cases before themselves In like manner they had power to heare and determine cases of falshood in counterfeiting and corrupting of money by washing clipping c. And also defaults committed by Sheriffs Bayliffs and their Officers against the Statutes of forcible Entries and of wearing of Liveries as aforesaid These were signes of much confidence and trust in them and yet notwithstanding in these nor none of these were the Penalties by Fine left to the Arbitry of the Judges no nor to the Justices of the Kings-Bench but were by the very Letter of the Law determined Nor would the Parliament trust these men with doing Justice in the cases aforesaid in their own Counties where they dwelled nor did it think expedient to allow the cheif Justice of the Kings Bench unto that Service in any of them all but onely once in the County of Lancaster and then onely at the Kings pleasure otherwise it was to be as was used by the space of one hundered yeares foregoing possibly because his power was too great to be trusted amongst the People Lastly the Judges of Nisi prius were anciently made by Edward the First by whom also the Assizes were setled at certain times of the yeare and afterwards by the Statute at Yorke the Nisi prius in smaller cases was granted before one Justice of the Bench where the Plea dependeth and one substantiall man of the County but those of greater concernment were to be had before two Justices of that Bench or in case they were wanting then before Justices of the other Bench or in default of them before the cheif Baron if he were a man of Law and in default of that before the Judges of Assize Therefore in those dayes the Justices of the Benches in their Iters in the Counties divided in their power Some being for Assizes others for Nisi prius and in some times and cases some were for both For in those times of Edward the Third Judges of Assize had power to inquire in some matters that concerned the Crowne or to try Nisi prius nor were these powers united till in Henry the Sixths time Justices of Nisi prius had the power of Oier and Terminer annexed to them in all cases of Fellony and Treason What was formerly provided by Edward the Third and Richard the Second for Instruction to these Judges and to binde them thereto by solemne Oath I shall not particularly mention but shall leave the consideration of the Originall of the whole Judicature of this Nation unto the Readers observation upon the Premises CHAP. XX. Concerning Sheriffs HEnry the Fourth after a small rest in his Throne though he alwayes sate loose sought after the civill Peace as the corner Stone of his subsistence and that by a way of Justice which found more acceptance with the Vulgar then the common Education of the greater number in these times could promise for the worst of men cannot endure to suffer injustice though themselves will doe it Now because where Kings are reputed to be the Fountain and Life of Justice Sheriffs may be reputed to be the breath thereof and by their irregularities doe render the Government of the King as loathsome as unsavoury breath doth the Person whose it is Therefore Henry the Fourth chose rather to be a looser in his Farme-Rents of the Sheriffwicks then to occasion the Sheriffs to save their bargains by oppression And to this end he tooke away the course of forming of Sheriffwicks and made the Sheriffs bare accountants for the Annuall profits and as touching the casuall profits the Sheriffe discharged himselfe upon Oath This was a good security to the King but yet the People was not herewith satisfied For though the Sheriffs might not take to Farme yet what they
more of that now they devise a way to spoile and prey for themselves and yet neither to rob nor break house To this end they would scatter little Scrolls in writing requiring the party that they intended to prey upon to leave so much Money upon such a day at such a place and this was Sub paena of burning the parties house and goods which many times did insue upon default made this practise was at once made Treason to prevent the grouth of such an evill And the like was done with Robberies and Manslaughters contrary to the Kings Truce and Safeconduct As many or more new Fellonies were also now created One was the cutting out of mens tongues and plucking out of eyes a strange cruelty and that shewed the extreame savagenesse of those times so much the more intollerable by how much the poore tortured creature could hardly be either eye or eare witnesse of the truth of his own wrong A second Fellony was the customary carrying of Wooll or Wool-fells out of the Realme to other places except Callis Another Fellony concerneth Souldiers which I refer over to the next Chapter The last was Servants plundering their Masters Goods and absenting themselves if upon Proclamation made they appeare not this was also made Fellony In the next place as touching forcible entries and riots the remedies so often inculcated and new dressed shew plainly the nature of the times These kind of crimes commonly are as the light Skirmishes in the beginning of a War and follow in the conclusion also as the faintings of a battell fought till both sides be weary I shall not enter into each particular Statute diverse of them being little other then as asseverations annexed to a sentence to add credit and stirr up minding in men that otherwise would soone forget what is sayd or done The remedies formerly propounded are now refined and made more effectuall First in regard of speed which is as necessary in these forces as the stopping of the breaches of waters in the first Act and therefore one Justice of the Peace may proceed upon a holder by force or breaker of the Peace with a Continuando but Riots are looked upon as more dangerous and the first opposition had need be more stiffe least being uneffectuall aggravates the violence and therefore it s required that two Justices and the Sheriffe should joyne in the worke to carry one the worke with more Authority and Power And what they cannot do in the punitive part they must certifie to the King and his Councel or to the Kings Bench if traverse be made So as though the Power of the County be annexed to the Sheriffe Jure ordinario to maintaine the peace yet the Parliament did delegate the same upon Justices as it thought most expedient To maintaine and recover the Peace when it s broken shewes more Power but to prevent the breach shewes more Wisdome and therefore to all the rest the Wisdome of these times provided carefully First for Guards and Watches according to the Statute at Wint and committed the care thereof to the Justices of the Peace And secondly against the gendring of partyes for its commonly seene that such as are admired for excellecies of Person are so far adolized of some as that their gestures actions and opinions are observed tokens of favour though never so small are desired from such and the Idoll likes it well gives Points Ribbons it may be Hats and with these men are soon gained to be Servants in the fashion and not long after to be servants in Action be it War or Treason or any other way This manner of cheat the former times had been too well acquainted with Knights and Esquires are not feared in times where the word Lord carries the wonderment away their offences against the Statutes of Liveries are all great though in themselves never so small and therefore are sure of Fine and Ransome and it s well if they escape a yeares Imprisonment without baile or mainprize Lords may weare the Kings Livery but may give none Knights and Esquires may weare the Kings Livery in their attendance upon his Person but not in the Countrey The King and Prince may give Liveries to Lords and meniall Servants The summe is that Liveries may be given by the more publique Persons for State not to make parties and Men may weare Liveries in token of Service in Peace and not in Armes One thing must be added to all which may concern triall in all Viz. A Law was now made that Noble Ladies shall be tried by their Peeres a Law now of the first stamp and strange it is that it never came before now into the breast of the Law but that it came now it is not strange no meaner Person then the Dutches of Glocester is first charged with Treason when that could not appear then for Necromancy very fitly that she might be tried by the Ecclesiasticall way of witnesses She is found guilty and a Sentence of Penance and imprisonment or banishment passed thereupon after such a wilde way as both Nobles and Commons passed this Law for the Vindication of that Noble Sexe from such hudling trialls for the future CHAP. XXII Of the Militia during these times THe Title of Henry the Fourth to the Crown was maintained principally by his Tenures which the Courtiers call Knight-Service but the Common People force of Armes and that which destroyed many a man was the principall means of his subsistence Otherwise its clear that his Title was staring naught nor could he outface Mortimars Title without a naked Sword which he used warily for he had Enemies enough to keep his Sword in hand and Freinds enough to keep it from striking at randome for coming in by the Peoples favour he was obleiged to be rather remisse then rigorous yet his manner of comming was by the Sword and that occasioneth men much to debate about his absolute power in the Militia as supposing that what power he had other Kings may De jure challenge the same and let that be taken for granted though it will not necessarily follow in true reasoning And let it also be taken for good that Henry the Fourth entered the Throne by his Sword yet is there not any Monument in Story or Antiquity that favoureth any absolute right in him over the Militia but the current is I think somwhat clear against it First because Henry the Fourth De Jure could not compell men to serve beyond the Seas but raised them by contract and therefore by Act of Parliament he did confirme the Statute 1 Ed. 3. Stat. 2. cap. 5. which Statute was purposely made to that end And the same also is countenanced by another Statute made in these times whereof we now Treat by the words whereof appeareth that the Souldiers for the Forrain Service were levied by Contract between them and the Captain who undertooke to Levy them by
Money possibly when he had no need and paying them againe thereby to gain credit for greater sums of which he intended not so suddain returne Then he charges them home with Benevolences a trick gained in right of his Wife from her Father for he hoped that the Person of Richard the third was now become so abominable as his Laws would be the lesse regarded But in this course he gained nothing but winde then as Edward the fourth he falls upon Malevolences of penall Lawes things made in terrorem to scare men to obedience rather then to compell them but are now executed Ad angorem and the people find that he is but a word and a blow with them and thus serving his Prerogative with Power and his Purse with his Prerogative he made all serve his owne turne Humanitatem omnem vicente periculo In the feild he alwayes put his Wisdome in the Van for as he was parcimonious in expences of Money so much rather of Blood if he could prevaile by wit Generally he was the first in armes to make men beleeve he was more ready to fight then they Thus he many times gained the advantage of his adversaries and sometimes came off without blowes In the Battell he did put on courage as he did his armor and would dare to adventure just as far as a Generall should as if he had ever regard of his Crown rather then of the honor of a forward Souldier which neverthelesse was also so dear to him as he is seldome found in the reare although his judgment commanded in cheife rather then his courage In the Throne he is much more wise because he was willing it should be known In doing Justice he is seldome suspected unlesse where himselfe is party and yet then he is also so shamfaced as he would ever either stalk behinde some Law that had a semblance to his ends or when he meant to step out of the way he would put his Ministers before not so much that his finenesse might be known but his royalty For the Lion hunts not his own prey nor is it regall for a King to be seen in catching of mony though he be understood besides it was needlesse he had Lords Bishops Judges and other instruments of malevolent aspect as so many furies outwardly resembling men for the Common-wealth but working for the common mischeife like some pictures one way looking right and another looking wrong and thus the King comes lawfully by what he catched though his instruments did not and must be still holden for a good King though it be his hard hap to have ill Servants Take him now amongst the People he is alike to all yea in some things that might seem to brush upon the Kings owne traine for he had some of his suite that were not altogether of his minde and these he would spare to the Course of Justice if need were as it befell in the Case of the Duke of Suffolk whom he suffered to be tried at the Kings Bench bar for a murther done upon a meane person and by such meanes obtained the repute of a Zealous Justiciar as if Justice had been his principall vertue All this suited well with his maine end for he that will milk his cattell must feed them well and it incourages men to gather and lay up when they have Law to hold by what they have His religion I touch upon in the last place as most proper to his temper for it was the last in his thought though many times the first in the acting but where it stood in his way he turned it behinde him he made Church-men his instruments that the matter might better relish for who wil expect ought save well from men of religion and then if the worst come he was but misled by such as in common reason ought to be trusted And it is his unhappynesse to meet with Clergy men to serve a turn and a Pope to give his benediction to a●l Nor was this Gratis for there were as many mutuall ingagements between the Clergy and him as any of his Predecessors of the hous of Lancaster besids Lastly it may wel be supposed however wise this King seemed to be that many saw through him which procured him a troublesome reigne though many times occasioned by his owne interposing in forraine Interests wherein he suffered more from others then they from him Amongst the rest the Dutches of Burgundy though a Woman shee were mated him with Phantomes and apparitions of dead bodyes of the House of Yorke the scare whereof put the King and all his people in allarme and striking at idle shadows slew one another All which together with the appearances of Collections Taxes and other accoutrements to furnish such imployments were enough to disturb that ease and rest that the King aimed to enjoy make him burdensome to his People and both himselfe and them weary of each other and so he went down to the grave with but a dry funerall leaving no better testimony behinde him then that he was a cunning man rather then a wise English King and though he died rich yet is he since grown into debt to the Pen-men of his story that by their owne excellency have rendred him a better King then he was HEnry the Eight was a conception in whom the two Bloods of Yorke and Lancaster did meete both of them unconquered both of them predominant and therefore no wonder if he was a man beyond the Ordinary proportion of other men in stature of body and in qualities of mind not disproportionable It s regularly true that great bodies move slowly but it holds not where much spirit is and it was the condition of this Prince to have a Spirit of the largest size that acted him into motion with no lesse speed then mighty Power This himselfe understood right well and therefore might be haughty upon a double title both of purchase and inheritance nor did he faile of expectation herein for he could not endure that man that would owne his right in competition with the Kings aimes and therefore would have his Kingdome be like his doublet to keep him warme and yet sit loose about him that he might have elbow room suitable hereunto were his undertakings invited thereunto by the inordinate motions or rather commotions of his neighbouring Princes for it was now full Sea in all Countries and though England was inferiour to some of them yet the King held it dishonorable for him not to adventure as far as the bravest of them and in the end outwent them all What he wanted in number he supplyed in courage wherein he so exceeded that he avoyded dangers rather out of judgment then feare His thoughts resolutions indeavors and actions were all the birth of occasion and of each other as if he had obtained a generall Passe from Providence with warranty against all Counterguards whatsoever His Wisdome served him to espy present opportunities rather then to foresee
Rome Sixthly an ingagement to informe the King of all Messages or Bulls sent from Rome into England Seventhly An ingagement not to send or be privy to the sending of any message to Rome for any such purpose The third oath was that of fealty which anciently was due to Kings and now revived to be taken by all Bishops upon their admission And thus the English Prelacy having beene sworn slaves to the Papacy ever since Beckets time are now preferred to a more Royall service and the persuit by Kings after their right being laid a side by the space of 300. yeares is now renued and the prey seised upon by the Lion we found it upon a better title and in better condition by much then when at the first it was lost for it was upon som semblance of reason that the Arch-Bishop and Clergy gained it but being afterwards dispossessed thereof by the Pope and yet without any other shadow of Title but the Power of his own gripe for the present he is the occupant and becomes Proprietor by prescription Till now the felon apprehended the stolne goods are the Kings in right and by Remitter whereunto the Parliament were by the Statute adding their conveiance establishes the same by an unquestionable Title neverthelesse their service is no lesse servile to this Crown then it had beene to the Romish Miter formerly they asserted the Popes infallibility now the Kings supremacy They are now called by the King made by the King sent by the King maintained by the King whatsoever they are whatsoever they have all is the Kings He makes Bishops he makes new Bishop-ricks and divides or compounds the old as he pleaseth by a power given to Henry the eighth by Parliament which oath was never in any Prince before or after him that I can finde so as the Crown had it not but the man and it died with him The King thus loaden with Power and Honour above all his Predecessors if without proportionable maintenance to support the one and act the other must needs consume himself as one in a Tympany by growing great For though he was left rich by his Fathers Treasure yet his Zeale to Rome in its now Poor captived condition under the Imperiall power stirring up in him great underrakings abroad besides his own pleasures and gallantry at home exhausted that and doubtlesse had starved these his grand designes had he not found the hidden Treasures of the Cells and Monastries the sight whereof so rouzed up his Spirits that he adventured upon the purchase though he knew difficulties enough to have stopped his undertakings if he had not resolved both against feare and flattery It was not done without deliberation for the thing was felt as a greivance before the Norman times and complained of in Parliament above a hundred and forty years ago and diverse times since but Kings either understood not or beleeved not or durst not give remedy or had much else to do But now the King is beyond all his Predecessors he knowes much dares do more and is at leisure he will go as far as Emperour or French King and beyond them also but would not try masteries with either for they were all Cocks of the game The first occasion that discovered the wroke feasible was a president made by Cardinall Woolsie whose Power was enough to dissolve some petty Cells and no opposition made The King might well expect the worke would be as lawfull for him and not much more difficult or if any stormes ensued the People that had so long complained and felt the burthen of these excrescences of the Clergy would soon find out a way to Calme them the King need do no more then speake and the people will do This opened the doore but that which brought the King in was the hold the Pope had in this Kingdome by these Cloystered People who were persons dead in Law and dead to all Law but the Canon and upon this account the Kings Ancestors had possessed themselves of the Cells in the hands of Forrainers in times of War and now a deadly feud is stirred betweene Henry the eighth and the Pope their holy Father the Children cannot expect to thrive when as their Father is cast out of doores and so all must out together yet the manner is observable they must not be cast out but must go out the inferiour and greater part are dead persons have learnt obedience they can neither bark nor bite and therefore they may sleep and what is don must be don with such of them as are alive Upon a Visitation these are brought under the Test and found in such a condition that they had better give way and voluntarily surrender then abide the triall Once more the smallest are picked out whiles the greater stand by and wonder but either do not foresee or in dispaire of altering the Kings resolution do nothing but expect the sad hour which within four yeares comes upon them all every one of them choosing rather to surrender and expect the Kings mercy for maintenance during life then adventure against the dint of his Justice and Power and so loose all for they were ill befreinded amongst all sorts of the People Thus came the personall Estate and Stock of these Houses to the Kings immediate Treasury and their yearly maintenance to the disposing of the Crowne which might have advanced the same well nigh to the value of two hundred thousand pounds yearly but that the King intended to let the People enjoy the fat as well as he that they might be mutually engaged to maintain hold of the prey that they had joyntly gotten Out of all which neverthelesse the Crowne had a small rent or service annuall for the acknowledgement of their tenure besides the first fruits of the spirituall dignities and the tenths both which he formerly had already obtained The first whereof was but casuall and occasionall in the payment arising onely at the entrance of the party into his promotion and which was gained by the Pope from Edward the first although at his Parliament at Carleile in his thirty fourth yeare he withstood the same This was above three hundred and twenty thousand pounds in the whole summ The later was annuall and amounted to above thirty thousand pounds And thus the Popes Usurpaons are turned into duties to the Crowne but were much lessened in regard that these Cells and Monastries were accounted amongst these Ecclesiasticall promotions which by their dissolution fell off in that account Neverthelesse the advancement that might by a parcimonious King have beene made of the fall of this Ceder was such that the Crowne might have been rendred of it self absolute and al-sufficient But Henry the eighth was not thus minded the affairs of Europe were gotten into a high pitch Princes generally over active Henry the eight inferior to none of them what comes in goes out and he is a rare example of that Divine proverb
not so fill he would have Souldiers but they must be his Patentees not for any skill or valour in them above others but he hoped they would compound with him for Licenses to absent rather then to adventure themselves and so he might get the more Money that could finde pay for Souldiers more and better then they were or would be for otherwise the Patentees might by the Statute have beene allowed to serve the King by their Deputies which would have done the King better Service in the Warrs then themselves could have done and for this very purpose much use was made of these Statutes as well by Henry the seventh as Henry the eighth both for Licenses and Pardons for composition in such Cases as their Records do plentifully shew Secondly let the Claime of Kings be what they will yet the matter in fact shew plainly that they never had possession of what they claimed Both these Kings pretended a Forraine-Warr each of them once against one and the same Nation and to that end advanced unto one place with their Armies although the one went in good earnest the other in jest Their Armies were not gathered by Prerogative but of Volunteirs this not only the Records but also the Statutes do clearly set forth Some souldiers served under Captaines of their own choise and therefore the Law inflicteth a penalty upon such Captains as bring not their number compleat according to their undertaking other Souldiers are levied by Commission by way of imprest which in those dayes were Volunteirs also and expecting favour from the publique the rather because they devoted themselves thereto without relation to any private Captaine willingly therefore received imprest Money And of this course the State saw a necessity both for the better choise of men and for the more publique owning of the worke For such as had been usually levied by the Captaines were fit only to fill up room and make up the number and yet many times there was a failing in that also and this manner of raising the Infantry was continued by Henry the eighth as by the like Law in his time may appeare As touching the levying of the Horse although diverse Statutes were made for the maintenance of the breed of Horses and Persons of all degrees of ability were assessed at the finding and maintaining of a certaine number of Horses yet do none of them tell us that they shall finde and maintaine them armed compleatly for the Warrs nor shall send them forth upon their own charge and therefore I suppose they were raised as formerly these two Kings had the happinesse to be admired the one for his shrewd cunning Head the other for a resolute and couragious Heart And it was no hard matter to finde men that loved to ingratiate themselves and indeavour to catch their favour though with the adventure of their Lives especially if they looked after Honour and Glory which as a Crowne they saw pitched at the Goale of their Actions Thirdly Concerning the pay of the Souldier the Law was the same as formerly the same was ascertained by the Statute-Law the payment was to be made by the Captaine under perill of imprisonment and forfeiture of Goods and Chattels and the true number of his Souldiers to be maintained and listed under the like perill Fourthly As touching the Souldiers service the same course also was taken as before if they dissert their Colours they shall be punished as Felons and the manner of tryall to be at the Common Law Fifthly For Fortifications the power properly belongeth to the supream Authority to give order therein For the people may not fortifie themselves otherwise then in their particular Houses which are reputed every mans Castle because publique Forts are enemies to the publique peace unlesse in case of publique danger concerning which private persons can make no determination And furthermore no Fortifications can be made and maintained without abridgement of the Common liberty of the people either by impairing their Freehold or exacting their labour or other Contribution none of which ought to be done but by publique Law and therefore when the Inhabitants of the County of Cornwall were to make defence against Invasion and Piracy from the Coast of Little Brittaine in regard they were a long slender County and upon sudden surprisals people could not so readily flock together for their joint defence they obtained an act of Parliament to give them power to fortifie the Sea coasts according to the direction of the Sheriff and Justices of the Peace Lastly Warrs once begun must be maintained at the charge of the undertakers If they be the Kings own Wars he must maintaine them out of his owne Treasury till the benefit of them doe prove to the common good and in such cases the charges have been sometimes provided before the work by Act of Parliament and sometimes after Henry the Seventh and Henry the eighth both of them at their severall times went to Boloigne with their Armies Henry the seventh with an intent to gaine profit to himselfe by an advantagious peace and had his ends therein and was ashamed to aske ayde of the people towards the charges of that Warr. Henry the Eighth went upon his owne charge also with his Army trusting to the Parliament for consideration to be had of his imployment wherein his expectation did not faile and in his absence made Queen Katharine Generall of all the Forces of England in his absence and gave her power with other five Noble Personages to take up Money upon Loane as occasion should require and to give security for the same for the maintaining and raising of Forces if need should require as is more particularly set forth in the Patent Rolls of these times Neverthelesse the Warr at Sea Infra quatuor maria was ever reputed Defensive as to the Nation and under the publique charge because no Warr could be there but an Enemy must be at hand and so the Nation in eminent danger and therefore the maintenance of the Navy Roiall in such cases was from the publique Treasury To conclude therefore If the Parliament and Common Law in all these cases of Levies of men for Warr payment of Souldiers and their deportment in cases of Fortifications and of maintenance of Warrs at Sea and the deportment of such as are imployed therein I say if they give the Law and carry the supream directory then certainely the Law rules in that which seemes most Lawlesse and though Kings may be cheife Commanders yet they are not the cheife Rulers CHAP. XXXIII Of the Peace PEace and Warr originally depend upon the same power because they relate each to other as the end to the meanes and receive motion from one and the same fountaine of Law that ruleth both in Peace and Warr It is very true that severall Ages hitherto have been troubled with arbitrary exhalations and these very times whereof we now treat are not altogether cleare
from such an ayre Two Kings we have at once in view both of them of an elate spirit one working more closely by cunning the other more openly by Command yet neither of them pretending so high as to doe all or be all in all Peace suited more with Henry the seventh then with his Son who delighted to be accounted terrible rather then good yet both of them were glad enough to be at peace at home and were industrious to that end though by severall meanes Henry the seventh pretended Justice and Peace a welcome news to a people that formerly accounted nothing theirs but by the leave of the Souldier and therefore sets upon the reformation of the Sheriffs Courts in the entring of Plaints and making of Juries suitable to that present time wherein men of Estates were very scarce and much of the riches of the Nation evaporated into the Warrs both Civill and Forraine although the continuance of that order concerning Juries in the succeeding times of opulency hath brought these Courts into contempt and made way thereby for the Kings Courts to swell in glory and to advance Prerogative even above it selfe Secondly He reformes Goales as well in their number as their use During the Civill Warrs every small party of men that could get a strong place made the same not only a Castle but a Goale and usually imprisoned and ransomed at their owne pleasure For remedy whereof Henry the seventh restores all Goales to the Sheriffs saving such as hold hy Inheritance and gives power to two Justices of the Peace one being of the Quorum to take Baile in cases bailable and Recognisances of the Peace to be certified at the next Sessions or Goal-Delivery Thirdly Both Kings concurr in providing against such disorders as more immediately did trench upon the publique Peace and reached at the Crowne it selfe by labouring to prevent by severe punishing and lastly by regulating the proceedings of Judicature in such cases These disorders were two Inordinate wearing of Liveries and unlawfull Assemblies The first being in nature of unlawfull assembly of minds and spirits of men the second of their bodies and persons Both these had formerly been provided against but the Judges of the Common Law unto whose Cognisance these Crimes were holden did restrain their punishments to the rule of the Common Law then thought to be too facile and mean for disorders that did flye at so high a pitch and therefore they are reduced before a higher tribunall as matter of State as hath been already mentioned The severity of punishment consisted not so much in aggravating the paine as the Crime matters of injury being made Felonies and those Treason This crime of Treason at first it concerned matters acted against the Nation afterwards it reached to matters acted against the King now it reacheth even to the very thoughts and imaginations of the heart not onely of bodily harme to the King but of the Queen or their heires apparent or tending to deprive them of their Title or Name of Royall Estate This crime was formerly made but Felony by Henry the seventh and then onely extended to such offence committed by one of the Kings houshold against the Person of the King or a Lord or any of the Councell Steward Treasurer or Controller so as the person of the Queene was not then in the Case and yet then newly Crowned and at that instant bearing in her womb that royall seed which was then the onely earnest of the stability and glory of England and therefore is it a subject of wonderment unlesse it were out of extremity of Jealousie least he should seem to make too great account of her title and thereby disparage his owne and then is it a peice of wit but not without weaknesse for he that is jealous of the slightings of other men shews himselfe unresolved in his owne pretentions Now Henry the Eighth not onely raiseth the price but addeth to the thing and not onely putteth the Queen but the Prince or Heire apparent into the Case making the same Treason So as it implyeth that English Allegiance tyeth the Subject not onely to the safety of the Person of the King but also of the Queen and Heire apparent otherwise the offence is made and declared Treason against the King Secondly the Election of the object is to be considered for whether the one or other Statute be observed it will appeare that although the King was the next object expressed yet a further was intended and that the Crime is not intended in regard of his naturall Capacity as a man but of his politique Capacity and in relation to the Common good of the Nation and this is evident not onely from the severall Prefaces of the Lawes but also from the manner of Election whereby the Title of Heire apparent is taken up and not the eldest Sonn or Daughter or these and not the other Children all which are equally dearly beloved in Naturall regard Thirdly though at the Common Law Treason be properly a Crime against Allegiance yet as in cases of Felony Crimes may be by the Statute made as Treason which at the Common Law are not against the legiance of an English man for this remaineth ever one and the same but one and the same fact may be made Treason and unmade by the Statute-Law as befell this Law of Henry the eighth by a Law within twenty yeares after like as also in former times one and the same fact hath many times received the like measure Other Treasons besides these already mentioned were by Henry the eighth created as Marriage with any of the Kings Sisters Daughters or Aunts of the Fathers side or the Daughters of his Brethren or Sisters without consent first had of the King Counterfeiting of currant Money not of the Kings Coynage was likewise made Treason by Henry the seventh who was well seen in that Mistery of Money-Trade and the like also became of Counterfeitures of the Kings Privy Signet and signe manuell And Lastly that horrid trick of poysoning was reduced to this Category rather that the Penalty might be more terrible in the Death which was by boyling then for any Tincture in the Nature of the Crime or in any Forfeiture of Estate The policy of these times thus irritated against Treason had proved very irreguler if the same had not been as rigid in cases of Felony diverse new ones of that kind are also dubbed amongst which Conjuration or Witchcraft comes first an old Felony in the Saxons time but since had gotten its Clergy now well nigh for the space of five hundred years and they it so as it never walked abroad amongst the Laity but under the favour of the Cloystered People nor ever came before the Civill Power till now Henry the eighth brought it forth into its own ancient and proper regiment Other Crimes being those of the season are made into the the same degree Such
92 165 Benevolence first used by Edward the fourth 184. taken away by Richard the third 185. taken up again by Henry the seventh 196 Bishops not impeachable before the civil Magistrate 49. their Temporalties to be neither seised nor wasted in the vacancy 50. vide Ordinary Buggery made Felony 299 C. CAnons their power anciently in debate 61. such as are not according to the Law are taken away 236 Castles and Gaols restored to the County 113. vide Forts and Fortifications Chancery once an Office afterwards a Court 35. the power grows by Act of Parliament 36 162. the manner of the Proceedings 38. Keeper of the great Seal increaseth in power 162 Chancellor elected by the Parliament 39 Cheshire made a Principality 11 Children carried into Cloisters remedied 163 Clergy priviledged from Arrest 52. discharged of purveyance and free quarter 52. their Temporalties in question 63. the Commons love not their persons 147. their first declining from Rome in the matter of Provisors 150. they gain free process in matters Ecclesiastical 192. their defection from Rome and submission to the Crown 206 Clergy upon Triall but once allowed 257. in some cases disallowed 250 298 Commissioners Ecclsiastical 288. High Commission ibid. Conjuration vide Witchcraft Conservators of the Truce 162 Constables Court vid. Marshals Court Convocation established by Parliament 151. it then undertook great matters but much more after the Clergies forsaking the Pope 229 Councels the Privy Councel ordered by Parliament 21 33 141. of use for suddain motions 27. their Oath 29. and jurisdiction 31. and power 142 Magnum Concilium or the grand Councel of Lords 28 Crown intitled not by Discent 128 277. but intailed 128. vide 188. Womanhood 270. Coverture 273 Custos Regni a formality of State under the Parliaments Order 134. many times conferred upon Children 137. and upon a Woman 252 D. DElegates though named by the King yet by Authority of the Parliament 227 Defender of the Faith 213 Dispensations Licenses and Faculties never in the Crown but by the Parliament given to the Archbishop under Limitations 234 238 Duels ordered by the Martiall as Subservient to the Common Law 108 E. EDward the third his Reign 3. his Title upon Entry by Election ibid. Edward the fourth his Reign though had Title of Inheritance yet entred by Election 181 Edward the fifth approached the Crown by Inheritance but never put it on 184 Edward the sixth his Reign his Title and Possession did meet though he was a Childe and his Sister Mary grown in age 259 Ecclesiastical power vide Prelacy and Prelates Elizabeth Queen her Reign 264. her Title by Election 278 Englishire taken away 95 Episcopacy vide Prelates and Prelacy Errors vide Heresie Exchange ordered by the statute 75 Excommunication 271. the Writ de excommunicato capiendo ordered 289. vide Parliament exportation 72 F. FAlse News punished 112 Felony by riding in armed Troops 95 113 172 257 299 First-fruits regulated 153. taken away from Rome 222 Forcible Entries 173 Forts Fortificacations and Castles ordered by Parliament 252 295 G. GAol-delivery by the Judges of the Benches 92 165. vide Judges Gaols regulated 113 254 Guard for the Kings Person brought in by Henry the seventh 195 Gipsies made Felons 299 H. HEnry the fourth his Reign doubtfull in his Title but rested upon Election chosen by Parliament sitting when there was no King 116 c. Henry the fifth his Reign his Title by an Intail by the Parliament 119 c. Henry the sixth his Reign his Title by the Intail last mentioned though a Childe he is admitted to the Crown 123 c. Henry the seventh first settled a constant Guard his sixfold Right to the Crown and his gaining Prerogative in the Person and Estates of the People ibid. 194 c. Henry the eighth his natural Endowments 199 c. his power in the matters Ecclesiastical 206 c. in Tempoporals 213 c. H. HEresie and Error in Doctrine under the cognisance of the Civil Magistrate 62 156. not punishable by death by Law till Henry the eighths time 216 236. the Writ De Heretico comburendo hath no legal ground in any of those former Times 63 158 161 216 236. Honors vide Parliament Hospitals visited by the Prelacy 154 I. IMportation 70 Judges of Assize 165 244 Jurisdiction Ecclesiastical not originally in the Prelacy nor absolutely 235 Justices of the Peace their residency and quality their number various their work also 109 171. one Justice 112. and the settling of their Sessions ibid. their power to take Bail 254 K. KIngs vide Parliament Allegiance Supremacy Militia L. LAbourers their Work and Wages 70. ordered by the Justices of the Peace 110 Lancaster the Princes of that House freinds to the Clergy in policy 146 Laws made by the Successors of Henry the eighth during their minority annulled 217. Ecclesiastical Laws vide Parliament Leiges by Birth though not born within the Allegiance of England 97 Liveries and Tokens inhibited to the Lords 112 177. and limited in the Kings person 177. means of jealousie between the King and his People 244 Libels in the Spiritual Court to be delivered in Copies upon demand 154 Licenses vide Dispensations Lords their power and jurisdiction in the Parliament 23. in Councel 29 242 Lunacy no impediment in Triall of Treason 258 M. MAry Queen her Reign 261. her Title by Election 278. she prejudiced her Supremacy by Marriage 275 Marque and Reprisal 279 Martials Court 107 Matrimonial Causes after the Reformation by Henry the eighth in the Cognisance of the Clergie by leave 238 Militia 98 175 245 290 vide War Mint 74 142. vide Parliament Monastries dissolved 220 maintained by Henry the fourth 147 Money out of England to Rome stopped 54 N. NAvy Royall as Forts for the publique safety maintained at the publique charge 253 Nisi prius 167 Non-residency 238 Noble Ladies Triall 174 O. OYer Terminer 92 165 Ordinary not to be questioned in the Civil Courts for things under Ecclesiastical jurisdiction 47 49. hath Cognisances of Vsury 47. of Avoidances Bigamy and Bastardy 48. grant Administration 51. visit Hospitals and call Executors to account 154. hath power to fine and imprison 157 239. to keep Courts but the Authority doubtfull 235. have Cognisance of the Heresie 156 236. Matrimony Non-residency 236. In Queen Elizabeths time their jurisdiction left in doubt 286 c. Oath ex Officio first brought in by the Church-men in matters Ecclesiastical 157. afterwards by the Parliament into the Star-chamber in cases criminal 244 P. PArdon of Crimes not absolutely in the King 19 Parliament without the King consisting of three States 117. without the Clergie 58 Parliaments power in ordering of the Crown 127 228 277 In ordering the Kings Person by Protectors 14. vide Protector In ordering their children In ordering their Family 15 129 In ordering their Revenues 16 129 115 In ordering their Councel 141 In the Militia vide Militia and War In conferring places of Honor and Trust