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A65682 The second part of The ignoramus justices, or, An answer to the scandalous speech of Sir W.S. Barronet spoken to the grand-jury at the Sessions of Peace held for the county of Middlesex, at Hick's-hall, on Monday the 24 of April, 1682 : together with several remarks upon the order of Sessions, for the printing and publishing the same / by the same authour.; Ignoramus justices. Part 2 Whitaker, Edward.; England and Wales. Court of Quarter Sessions of the Peace (Middlesex) 1682 (1682) Wing W1705; ESTC R2042 37,153 39

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a Speech But why must the Dissenters Trading together and taking one anothers Parts be a Design against the Government more than of those that call themselves the Church-Party Is it not as lawful for one as well as the other Sort to trade with whom they will and to eat and drink with whom they please If so then it is most plain the boasting Church-Men do feast together often and associate themselves in Clubs Cabals Taverns and Coffee-Houses and divers other Places both Sundays and Working-Days to manage the Cause which the Justice aims at and the Church-men in reality as they would be accounted such as they are have in reality stuck by their Champion Cradock so far that no less than two Knights and four or five Esquires and Gentlemen to save their Brother Cradock have joined together in a solemn Oath before the Judg that the Earl of Shaftsbury doth live in Thanet-House and is a great Trader in the City I am confident the Justice cannot shew us any such voluntary Oath of Men of their Quality that ever did so far take one anothers Parts among the Dissenters as to swear in Clubs So after the Justice had shewed the Dissenters Dealings of laying their Heads together in disturbing the Peace in the next place pag. 5. he tells us in praise of the Church Pary and in opposition to the Dissenters that they the Chuch Party are good honest Men in these Words viz. The Church Party the Children of Light they trust in a good Cause put out their own Eyes and will neither see their Danger or Interest most of them endeavour to build upon their own Ground and raise to themselves Pyramids of Honour and Riches and have not minded them of the same Party who are forced to shift for themselves as well as they can Now I would have the ingenuous Church-Men consider what a great deal of Honour this Gentleman hath done them he has to vindicate them called them blind Fools nay such Fools that no brute Beasts can be worse what is it I pray you to them to put out their own Eyes and not see for themselves and when that is done he tells us it is the only way to get Riches If this be the way of the Children of Light to put out their own Eyes and trust to others I pray God with all my Heart that I may be in Darkness still and that this Child of Light tho a Church-Man may get Honour and in his own way for my part I will neither envy his nor his Church-Men's Happiness as to their Wisdom nor as to their Honour and Riches but this I may say that had the Church of England-men received such a Vilifying from a Dissenter as this certainly they would have called loudly for Satisfaction either from the Court Christian or our Temporal Courts What call them such Fools and treat them as such as will pull out their own Eyes and not see can the Church-Men forgive this I dare not say they cannot because some of them are Men of great Charity but were it not for that doubtless such an Affront as this would be enough to raise the whole posse Clergy about the Knights Eyes for in effect he calls them blind Papists for none but those poor deluded Souls that ever live in the Light of the Sun would rather trust other Folks Eyes than their own Well but what must not a Justice make a slip but there must be all this notice taken yes sure he may be allowed many when he means well for in this whole Speech if you observe it and if you believe himself He doth say and do all for the Established Church and the Publick Good Now then if so he ought to have Mercy shewn him In the next place you will find he deserves it too because the Dissenters in this page are made by the same Man Coblers and nothing but their last is their Coat and so fearful is he of them If as he saith the Cards should be shufled again that these Coblers will have all the Shoes and himself go Bare-foot that he advises here in this Page That it is not prudent to trust them tho they are contented with their own Vertue a most strange Paradox what if they will be contented with their own Vertue shan't they be let alone it is mighty hard especially when in the next place he himself commends Vertue as a choice Plant or Tree that bears excellent Fruit and saith he The Gardiners must nourish and cherish this Plant and Tree or else in time this Tree will bear sower Fruit that is I suppose he means the Magistrate and you Grand Inquest-men you must Present these Dissenters that we may get some of their Money lop off their loose Twigs and Wild-Sprigs that makes them too rich and too proud and then thier Fruit will be Savoury such as I like for tho I like not the Men yet their Money I like and so do all their Enemies but to quiet the Church whom before he abused he now makes them full amends again for saith he in this Page viz. I hope for the Honour of the King and Safety of the Government no Man for the future shall be employed until he be first sifted and winnowed and if any Grain of Faction be found in him he shall be laid aside But then Sir W. What will you do and your Addressers Do you not remember Sir W. the very day you made this learned Speech when you and the rest of the Tribe were withdrawn out of the Court you propounded or at least abetted one of the greatest pieces of Faction that ever was done in England this 20 Years except F. H. which was it was urged among you Justices to Address His Majesty that he would be pleased to keep the Duke by him at home to join with him in the Government or at least to assist him therein Pray Sir W. had you gone on in this Address had it not been the heighth of Faction and Sedition if not High-Treason in designing to alter the Government What are you in such haste that you cannot stay the time must Popery and Protestantism be joined together in our days Pray Sir will you before your next Speech consider it well and tho you abhor the Parliaments because they would have no Popish Successor yet methinks you should not dig a Grave for our King and Government while he is alive and what other construction sober thinking Men as you call them can make of such Designs time may shew but for your placing so much upon that Text By me Kings Reign and Princes decree Justice I know not what you mean unless you would by that Scripture insinuate that because there is such a place of Scripture therefore the People should have no Law of the Land to be their Standard but the Will of the Prince to be absolute Lord Paramount above all Laws and no Bounds to be set by the Law of the Land
Sheriffs of each County and how far this last abrogates the former Statutes I must leave to the judicious Reader But except the Justice can shew me some other Statute I cannot see how he can make good his Assertion of the Right to be in the Kings of England by their Prerogative to chuse Sheriffs no more than he can make good his own infallibility And why he should start such a Point with so little ground I cannot imagine unless he was resolved to put on a Janus Face and intended to row one way when he looked another And now for this Gentleman to pretend to exalt the Prerogative and to cry out for that as he doth and yet at the same time lay so many false Surmises is strange But I conceive his Design is to destroy the Law and the Government or when he speaks of the Prerogative in general he intends some for himself but if he should that cannot be altogether strange neither since we know very well both now and heretofore even in all Ages Men that are set upon their own Lusts and Pleasures have been crying up the King's Prerogative and damning the Law only that thereby they might under Monarchy exercise a greater Prerogative over their Fellow-Subjects without any Account to be given to the Law than the true King doth over his Subjects for it oftentimes happens that Persons in great Command and Authority under the King do more enslave the People than the King ever meant or intended and hide all from the King with this Cheat that they are Loyal and whoever is not contented with his domineering is represented to the King by that Flatterer as the King 's great Enemy And so Kings oft-times both live and die blindfold never seeing or hearing any Thing much less any Complaints but what the Oppressor pleases And that undoubtedly must not be much for it must be the Courtier 's Policy that hath once dipped himself in Roguery both to hide it himself and endeavour to prevent all Persons else from discovering it And this is the true and only Reason why these Loyal Boys hate and cry down Parliaments for if they once come the Court-Knaves are undone every thing then being brought to the Light and it may be the King undeceived and these Miscreants punished But Sir W. to wind up all now your Hand is in for Abhorrences go through-stitch set an Abhorrence on Foot for the abhorring of Parliaments too and doubt not but among your Adherers the Project will take and then you and they are safe without the Devil should cheat you and a Parliament come when you least think on 't but do not let him cheat you into the belief that there will be no more you know the Law saith we ought to have it and the King hath said we shall have Parliaments and that he will govern according to Law and remember if it should be yet seven Years time before it come yet it may come too soon for your store I have but one Word more to the Justices your Associates who bring up the Rear of your Speech they being elevated and wrapp'd up as it were in the third Heaven thought it not enough for themselves to be happy with the hearing of this profound Discourse but out of their good Nature were desirous to communicate it to the World and tho it be something strange that Charges to Grand Juries should be published in Print as they seem to allow when they say the reason why 't was publish'd was to prevent Misrepresentation which they had observed already from Janeway's Paper yet it was pitty such a Discourse should be hid in that Grand Jury's Breast to whom it was spoken and therefore the Justices order the Printing thereof And who is to draw up the Order but their wise Clerk of the Peace who undoubtedly did it and it may easily be proved to be his own not only from his putting his Name to it but from its resembling his former Draught and Orders about the Constables to turn Informers against Conventicles The Order begins thus viz. Ordered by this Court That the Charge given in Sessions by Sir W. S. be Printed and that the Thanks of this Bench be given to Sir W. S. for his prudent Care and constant Endeavour in the management of Affairs for the preservation of the publick Peace and his Majesties Government And this Court doth declare they will adhere to Sir W. S. and stand by him Well be it so that the Thanks be given for his prudent Management and his constant Care for the publick Peace and His Majesties Government But now how if Sir W. should die or be put out of Commission which way then must His Majesties Government be preserved truly by this Order it seems as if the very Government would be in danger if not utterly lost now How the preservation of His Majesties Government is upheld or can be upheld by this single Justice alone seems strange for they seem to put it as if by his prudent Management of Affairs the Government was upheld if so I hope His Majesty will never part with this Knight for fear of the worst Well but how comes it to pass that all the rest of the Justices that admire him have not done the same what do they cast all the whole burden of the Peace and Government upon one poor Knight's Shoulders and he but a thin Man neither for Shame to themselves they should not have attributed all to him but this shews them as insufficient Men as well as good natur'd to Sir W. But by their next Words viz. And this Court doth declare they will adhere to Sir W. S. and stand by him c. If Lives and Fortunes had been put too then there had been ground for the Whigs to abhorr'd too What will the Justices set up Sir W. to any thing like Royal Majesty or to be chief of the Government that these Gentlemen called Justices will both adhere to him and stand by him What can they mean but to devote themselves to his Service instead of the Kings and what can they mean by their standing by him but in a Warlike Posture to defend him when he shall command their Service nor can any rational Man put any other construction on the Words And since that is the construction what is this but an Association of the Justices to set up Sir W. instead of the Government or at least to be one of the chief in it And when they have brought their Ends about that Sir W. is to be exalted then I doubt not but their Clerk Mr. Adderly shall be Secretary to that great Heroe where we leave them to caress themselves within their own Shadows until another fit opportunity FINIS
THE SECOND PART OF THE Ignoramus Iustices OR An Answer to the Scandalous SPEECH OF Sir W. S. Barronet Spoken to the Grand-Jury at the Sessions of Peace held for the County of Middlesex at Hick's-hall On Monday the 24 of April 1682. TOGETHER With several Remarks upon the Order of Sessions for the Printing and Publishing the same By the same Authour LONDON Printed for E. Smith at the Elephant and Castle in Cornhill 1682. THE SECOND PART OF THE Ignoramus Iustices OR An ANSWER to the Scandalous SPEECH OF Sir W. S. Barronet I Will not ong ltrouble the Courtious Reader with a difcription of the Person that made this learned Speech which is Sir W. S. And the very same Sir Wm. which heretofore as I am informed in the late troubles was called Col. S. And though I love not to rake in Dunghills or into the lives and actions of men at any time much less after so long an intervale yet because he himself hath been pleased to make the world so happy not only in the publication of that Excellent speech but also told us in p. 4. that he feels the smart of Goldsmith's and Haberdashers Hall to this day it may not therefore be amis a little to give him a hint of his Piety when he was in the Station of a Souldier that as in a looking-glass he may view himself now being a Justice and as this is done as well to inform the world of the person and his zeal for the cause of God in times past as now he pretends by his speech both for the cause of God and his R. H. for time to come so learnedly interwoven with Scripture Phrases and larded with such Sentenses of Elegant Latine If this be the same S. that was called Col. S. in the late troubles he may remember and bless God for his great Conversion since that time and if it be not painted Piety that he now makes the world believe he hath then he above all men hath the greatest reason in the world to admire the free grace of God in converting his bloudy heart for in those dayes and in cool of bloud too in the County of Bucks he like as wicked Haman did against the Jews gave this Councel to kill and destroy all the Gentlemen Yeomen Farmers their wives and Children without regard either to Sex Age or condition in that Country for fear that there being many in that County as he believed would be of the other side when they had an opportunity and should take part against them Now if this be the same man his nature is mightily altered for now his gaul goes no further but that the Dissenters Purses should pay that shot he has so elegantly manifested and if the standers by did not mistake his words he both speak and meant that the Dissenters should be prosecuted for their money to help pay the charge the King had been out in the war with Argier c. and the building the 30 Ships to save the Parliament a labour which was a most ingenious Contrivance but more of that in its due place But whether this be the same Coll. S. or not yet I am fully asured this is the very same Sir W. S. that the last Westminster Parliament was had before the Committee for stoping and hindring Petitioning the King for calling of Parliaments and therein abusing that law he hath since owned by his late Abhorrencies who was then heard to say that he was falsely accused for that he was so far good man from offering any such violence to the Rights of the people and Parliaments that he protested his innocency with much more asseverations then now in his grand speech he doth his sincerity of obedience to the King and the Laws yet at that time true evidence tells us that the very same day he made that so solemn protestation of his Innocency the very thing he was accused of before the Committee of Parliament was most evidently proved against him and had not the Parliament been Prorogued he might have met with as seveer a Censure by the Parliament as now he is pleased in his Oration to wish and urge for the Dissenters but more of this in its due place And that very same Col. S. not many years after the war was done when the tide was turned was the chief promoter in the County of Bucks and other places to procure Addresses to Richard Cromwel and was then the most zealous and forwardest man in that Service A mighty great sign of his Loyalty to our present King by which it seems his trade is Addresses And the very same Col. S. did as was most commonly reported when he was Governour of Chepstow Castle for the King find out a way to surrender or rather betray the same to the Parliament without blows or force of iron or leaden bullets French or English Crowns at that time being his Conqueror the same Col. S. who was the Son of an Attorney and being imployed either as Agent or Steward to the noble Lady Cleveland or Wentworth being called to an account for high misdemeaners in that Trust and being prosecuted in the Court of Exchequer for the same in the time when the late Lord Chief Justice Hales was one of the Barrons of the Exchequer the Baron having seen so much in that Cause so evidently proved before him of certain frauds used by him gave this opinion of him in open Court That it was pitty the honour of Knight-hood should ever be so blemished as to be bestowed on such a Person guilty of those fowl things which that S. who ever he was best knows what the good Barons reason was for such expressions And I presume if any person would be further satisfied whether it be the same Sir W. S. he may be informed from the Records there And if it should prove to be their Chairman of the Sessions then the world may see what a kind of Loyal upright person we have to justisie and adhere unto as the worthy order of Sessions puts it Fol. 11. These things should not have been touched although a deal more is due had it not pleased the Justice so much to vindicate his uprightness and Loyalty By this the Reader may see the old cheat whores will alwayes cry whore first but if these be the men that his Majesty must rely on and which makes this bustle and stir with Loyalty in prosecuting Addresses and Abhorrencies in what miserable condition is that Prince that trusts them or their Loyalty for can it be supposed that he that has Addressed to Richard Cromwel one day will not Address to the King the next if that side be uppermost and if to the King one day why not to his Enemies the next day if the wind change for what hath been may be if he cannot be faithful to a trust reposed in him of a private Estate and Concernment as a Steward certainly he is a very unsit man to be entrusted with a
where he sat Chairman then that the Commission of Oyer and Terminer might be read having something to move which was not proper to be moved before it was read it being for the making of a request for the Prisoners then in the Tower upon the Statute of 31 of this King And the Chairman as well as the Justices being aware of it made an excuse to put it off till the Afternoon which was only a trick or in effect a modest denial but when that time came and the same request made then another excuse was made by the Justices that though they had such a Commission yet they heard there was a new one Sealed and so they thought it not safe to execute it but that being inquired into was false so by this trick the Commission was never read and the Law was defeated and the Justices so to elude the Law used this triek so those Persons who were then prisoners in the Tower was forced to loose the benefit of the Act that Sessions which was made on purpose that Justices and Judges should not dare but to deliver upon bayl or try them as the Law directed Well but saith the Justice and his Associates that are resolved to adhere to him page 11 This is but one Instance and in that the Justices as to the law might be mistaken it being a surprize upon them for you hear the Justice himself in page 2. declares he knows not if it be against the Law or not it is a sign Justice is come to a fine pass then in England for certainly if he undertook that place of a Justice he ought neither to pretend he knows not the Law nor that he was surprized for at that rate the whole County may be ruined Well but to show Sir W's Wisdom Justice and Conscience further and his impartiality in a Sessions that was held before him and the rest of his Adherers about August last past after the Grand-Jury was sworn divers bills of Indictment were presented to the Grand-Jury for to be found against certain persons of most wicked fame for Subornation Perjury and such other Villanies as scarce ever was heard went unpunished for they were Bills against a pack of Conspirators that had a design to have murthered divers Noble and Worthy persons in this Kingdom by Perjury and Witnesses to prove those Bills was produced to the Court to be sworn in order to give their Testimony to the Grand Jury against those Villains but this just upright Sir W. and his Associates stopped it in open Court in the face of the Sun and denyed the Witnesses to be sworn till they had leave from the Attorney General which certainly was the greatest stab that ever was given to the Common Law of England and a perfect turning and altering the course of Justice making the Law subservient to protect the Guilty and condemn the Innocent This thing is of so high a Nature that no King in England ever did or dare attempt the same or like it publickly what ever secret tricks may be underhand shewed for this was not only to break the Grand Juries Oath who are sworn to present all without favour or affection And the Justices Oath who are sworn not to deny or delay Justice to any man but forcing the King if possible but at least as much as in them lies to violate and break his Coronation Oath that sacred Tye and the fundamental Laws of the Land And that I may not be said to speak without book I shall here incert a Copy of the Judges Oath and give a short touch of the fundamental Laws of the Land established in this Kingdom concerning the true Execution of Justice and which the Kings of England are bound to observe by vertue of their Oath and the trust the people repose in them and this digression I hope will not be amiss before we come further to take notice of the Speech The 27 Cap. of Magna Charta Magna Charta Anno c. H. 3. Chap. 27 which Magna Charta is no other then thē Confirmation of the ancient Rights Customs and Common Law of the Land It is ordained viz. Do Freeman shall be Taken or Imprisoned or be Diseased of his fréehold Liberties or free Customes or be out Lamed or Excited or any otherwise destroyed nor we will not pass upon him or condemn him but by Lawful Judgment of his Peers or by the Law of the Land We will sell to no man 9. H. 3. C. 29. we will not deny or defer to any man either Justice or Right Pray mark this last clause and see how it suits the Justices refusing and stopping Justice and with what impudence he dares do that which no King of England did or can do without violation of his Oath and Laws of the Land and yet now tells you of Loyalty and Justice and you will find in the Statute made in Edward the 3. time that by no Commandment whatsoever the course of Justice could be stopped The Title of the Act is this Vid. Rot. Anno. E. 3. Chap 1. No Commandment under the Kings Seal shall disturb or delay Justice Which Sattute I shall Incert Verbatim as it is upon the Roll viz. Item it is Accorded and Established that it shall not be Commanded by the Great Seal or the Little Seal to disturb or delay Common Right and though such Commandment do cōme the Iustices shall not therefore leave to do right in any point There was another Record of 14 Ed. 3. See Crook fol 417. Eliz. Chap. 14. Intitled there shall be but four writs of Search for the King nothing shall hinder the Execution of Justice In the last part of the Statute are these words viz. Nor that the Iustices of whatsoever place it be sha l let to do the Common Law by Commandment which shall come to them under the Great Seal or Privy Seal The 11 R. 2. Vid. 11. R. 2. Cap. 10. Chap. 10. The same is again Asserted that the Law shall not be stopped or Disturbed and begins thus viz. Item It is Ordained and Established that neither Letters of the Signet nor of the Kings Privy Seal shall be from hence forth sent in damage or prejudice of the Realm nor in disturbance of the Law By this it appears most plain that by no Command of the King or his Ministers the Law can be stopped It is true the King in some Cases may pardon by his Prerogative but to stop the Course of Law though you have the Command of the King or his Ministers is point blanck against the Law and tends to the overthrow of the Government and that very Law which the Kings of England by their places are the Executioners off for this land in all ages never knew any Government but by their own Laws and to which Laws the Kings who are Crowned in England doth swear and ought and must maintain otherwise let him be what he will and who he will he
transgresses that Law that made him so and his Ministers Judges and Justices of all sorts that either assists him in it or Act by such Commands shall account to the people by the Law of the Land and reckon one day for it to their cost for though it be a maxim in Law the King can do no wrong which is meant as to his pollitick capacity yet the Ministers and Officers that act under the pretence of his command if it be an unlawful Act they do though they are commanded by the King to do it it shall be no excuse for them for if the Kings Commands or his Patents be not according to the Law they are Null and Void and the Person that Acts by such Commands though he hath such pretended Authority shall be punished for the same with Life and Member as the crime deserves And the efore our wise Ancestors foreseeing the mischief that corrupt Ministers and Judges about the King might bring upon the Nation always took care that within some convenient time a General Councel of the whole Nation should meet for to judg of matters hear complaints redress Grievances punish Evil Councellors wicked Judges Officers and Offenders who had wronged the King and People by such their foul practices and pernitious Councels well foreseeing that in a pollitick Body as well as in a Corporal Body Deseases and Scurbitick humours will ever be growing and therefore must stand in need of good Physick and wise and honest Physitians to heal them lest the Disease grows incurable And therefore in all ages we find that our Ancestors took care that the people should meet together at certain times sometimes twice in a year and oftner if need required As in King Alfred's time and the reason by the Records is given to keep the people of God from sin and to do Holy Judgments as you may see by our Law Books Vid. Flornes Merrour of Justice Sect. 3. p. 10. Cook and Lit●leton fol. 110. See Hornes Mirrour of Justice and my Lord Cooks second part of the Institutes of the Law of England The words of the Law are these viz. That a Parliament shall be called at London twice every year or oftner if need be to keep the people of God from Sin that they might live in peace and true Religion certain Vsages and Holy Iudgments Now of later years in Edward the thirds time a Law was made that a Parliament should be holden once a year and more often if need be See the Statute of the 4 E. 3. Cap. 4. which ordains viz. Item 4 E. 3. C. 14. It is Recorded that a Parliament shall be holden every year once and more often if need be There is another Act made in the 36 E. 3. in these words viz. Item 36 E. 3. C. 10. For maintenance of the said Articles and Statutes and Redress of divers Mischiefs and Grievances which daily happen A Parliament shall be holden every year as another time was ordained by a Statute Now by these Statutes we may plainly see what is the Right of the Subject and the Law of the Land Why it is frequent Parliaments to protect and preserve the Nation without which it is impossible for either the King or People to be safe from violence oppressions and incroachment of proud and insolent men which always was and over will be designing to root up the Government and the peoples Rights and get them into their own Clutches under the disguise of their serving the King in his own way And if this be so that both these last recited Laws be yet in force which I am sure neither the wise Justice or any Judg of England that is a man of Law can say they are not And since we have been now without a Parliament above one whole year sure Sir W. in his Speech ought to have given some touch to the Jury to present as a Grievance and a Breach of the Law the want of a Parliament and it would have better befitted him to have discoursed about the Effluviums of the Mouth and Haggs And since we are governed by Laws and our Kings are sworn to maintain them as we shall show you anon and that we are sure our Kings receive the Crowns they wear from the Law of the Land And that no King of England came into the world booted and Spurred ready prepared to ride the people to death nor drop from Heaven in a Cloud nor yet riseth in a night like a Mushroom but that he is the Ordinance of man as St. Paul calls him for their good And that the Kings of England can deny then Subjects nothing in Parliament that is for the publick welfare as appears in the latter clause of the Statutes of provisoes made in the 25 year of Edward the 3 25 E. 3. C. 1. and since the Justice is pleased to say page 1. that it is high time to speak plain English methinks he could not have spoken better English then this that the want of a Parliament is the greatest mischief this Nation now groanes under especially if his own words are true that we are a miserable devided people what means can better be found out to unite and help us then the Parliament where every mans complaint may be heard and where the King is most powerful to Redress which is no where so great as in the High Court of Parliament but to justifie what I have before propounded or rather asserted that Justice cannot be stopped either by the King his Ministers or his Judges on any other pretence whatever I shall here add to what hath been said a short branch of the Statute of Provisoes and the Coronation Oath which plainly shews that our Kings are so by Law and not otherwise of Divine institution then any other man in such Station as God calls them to for every man in his several calling may be said to be by Gods permission and allowance in some way or other as much as Kings in their way of Government which appears plainly by the Text the Justice hath named to wit by me Kings Reign but with his good leave the Law choose them or else they come by force and are Tyrants and that will appear not only by our Records of our English Government both in the altering and translating of the Crown from one to another in all ages by Act of Parliament but in holy Record too though we are not under the same Dispensation the Jews were under yet the Scripture tells us they choose and made their King See the 2d of Kings Cap. 17. ver 21. The words are And they made Jeroboam Son of Nebat King and though the prophet did anoint David to be King yet all the people met together to make David King and to in divers other places but I think Jure Divino is so far out of the case that it would show in the Author as much Ignorance to spend time to make Arguments about so vain
really so But if by Craft or Dissimulation all this be done to colour what he did before then the very Ite maledicti he pronounces against others may chance to light upon his own Pate but far is the Author from wishing such a severe Sentence upon the Noble Justice whatever he seeks and clandestinely wishes against others And now after the Justice hath read this Lecture of Christianity he comes in pag. 9. to tell the Court and the Jury of the Rarity and Excellency of the Thing called Grand-Juries and tells them It is the Honour of the Government to have them Well then since it is so and that it cannot be denied it is a great deal of pity that the Justice and others of his Coat have not taken more care to preserve their Reputation but have suffered not only the Gazette but other scandalous Libels to walk about the Streets and defame them as late Times have most notoriously shown But this I conceive came into his Head by the by a meer Accident in the Justice's Speech for by what goes before and what follows it appears plain he did not intend them any Honour but only had some other meaning as may be easily discerned if we compare the Whole of his Discourse and what he and the rest of the Justices did sometimes since at Hicks's Hall endeavouring to curtail the Grand-Juries and to strike out and put in whom they pleased when there was a Job to do at the time when the Lord Shaftsbury Lord Howard Mr. Whitaker and others were in the Tower O then what a Speech was made to the Under-Sheriff to alter his Pannel and what Conscience and Religion was press'd to have it done by this very Justice And if the Sheriff had yielded that Point then the Subornation had taken effect and the Work done upon the innocent Prisoners in the Tower contra omnes Gentes But because Sir W. is pleased to top upon the World with his Loyalty and to shew it pretends to extol in this Page the Happiness of the Nation that the Kings of England have by their Prerogative always had the nominating of Sheriffs by which the Grand Juries are returned I shall crave leave a little to speak to that Point not that I deny it to be in the King in some measure as the Statutes have settled it but the Justice mistakes the Case as will appear if the thing be well and throughly considered and what this Justice aims at ought also to be fully searched into but that I may not seem to misconstrue the Justice I shall set down his Words in this Page viz. Grand Juries have always been esteemed the Honour of the Government and the great Security of the Lives and Liberties of the Subjects they are to be probi legales Homines and so is a Golden Chain as well for Ornament as Security if they should prove otherwise this Chain of Gold would be turned into Fetters of Iron and Brass and we should be greater Slaves here in England than they are in Algier Our Ancestors have taken great Care that Grand Juries should be such as they ought to be and as you may see the Statutes made in that Case provide but for all that it is happy for the People that the King hath the Nomination of Sheriffs by whom the Juries are to be returned it is a Prerogative of great Consequence and not to be entrusted into the hands of any Subject or Subjects whatsoever Now as to his Commendation of the Constitution of the Government relating to Juries as being a sacred thing there is no doubt of that and we hope it will never be in his Power or in the Power of any Judg Justice or Magistrate in England to alter that Fundamental Constitu ion which our wise Ancestors have laid that make us both a free and safe People for by that means to ambitious or foolish Prince tho led away by Court-Flatterers and pernicious Counsels can hurt the Subject so powerfully as otherwise they might do every Man's Life and Estate here by this means are safe and cannot be touched or taken from him but by he Approbation and Consent of his Peers and they must be of the Vicinage and probi legales Homines as the Justice observes but because the Justice is pleased to expresse himself or rather to flatter the Kings of England that by their Prerogative they have the sole right of chusing of Sheriffs And that it is the Happiness of the Nation that the Subject do it not I must crave leave to put the justice in mind of the ancient Practice in that very Case of choice of Sheriffs and also show that in all probability the whole Body of the County have been as fit to see and chuse who is fit to serve the County in the Office of Sheriffs as Kings who do but see often times with other Mens Eyes and hear with other Mens Ears and often times led by the Nose of some Persons about them as either work their own Ends or the Ends and Interest of their Friends and not the Countries Good For who knows not but that the old saying is true in Princes Courts Kissing goes by Favour But to answer the Justice I do say and aver from ancient Records the People of the several Shires in England had the sole right of chusing their Sheriffs without the King 's Appointment Consent or Nomination and that was the Law of the Land and if it be not now so yet it is but some late Statutes that have abridged the Counties of their Choice And to shew that I do not mistake the Point I have inserted a new Copy of the Record which is by me and that is a Statute made in the Confirmation of Ancient Right too in the Roll of Parliament made at Westminster in the 28 E. 1. cap. 8. The Title of the Statute is this viz. The Inhabitants of every County shall make Choice of their Sheriffs being not of Fee the words are these Rot. 2.28 E. 1. An. 1300 Cook on Lit. 2d part 559. viz. The King hath granted unto his People that they shall have the Election of their Sheriffs in every Shire where the Sheriffalty is not of Fee if they list To this Statute agree our Law-Books See Cook 's Institutes and this Statute in the same Roll 13th Chapter is again confirmed and explained the Statute begins thus viz. And for as much as the King hath granted the Election of Sheriffs to the Commons of the Shire the King will that they shall chuse such Sheriffs that shall not charge them and that they shall not put any Officers in Authority for Rewards or Bribes and such as shall not lodg so oft in one place nor with poor Persons or Men of Religi n. Indeed after this in Edward the second 's time Power was given at the Complaint of the Commons in Parliament That the Chancellor Treasurer Barons of the Ex hequer should appoint the
publick one if these be the conscientious men Sir William esteems then Libera nos Domine But as to the Speech it self Page 1. in the first place his Title is transcendent and far out does the common way of giving charges to Juries For in the beginning he tells us he hath had the Honour to Discourse the Country from this Bench several times well what then why must it be a discourse instead of a charge I never heard of a Grand Jury that was sworn to take notice of a Discourse but the Oath of Grand Jury men is to present all such things as shall be given them in charge as the Law directs But what Sir W means by entring into a discourse with them about other matters especially about how much will build a Ship and how much his Majesty hath laid out in the war with Argier or to preserve Tangier and against the Indians in New England as in page second is a most strange thing to be discoursed to a Grand Jury unless he would perswade the Grand Jury to present the Parliament for not making up the damage certainly that was his intent though he will not make the Nation so happy as to speak it out Well but then still to the entrance into this discourse pray observe the method first seek peace good man that is his aim witness his earnest endeavour to have Conventicles disturbed though his Majesty and the Parliament thought it the best way to preserve peace was to let them alone for that it was never proved nor can be proved that ever since the Act of Uniformity they that go to Conventicles as he calls them seditious Meetings did ever disturb the Goverment and if that be so and that the only Church of England is that which is made by the Act of Uniformity then sure Sir W. Undermines and Acts against his own Expressions for if they were never unpassable why is there all this ado to make a disturbance but have patience Sir W. S. by and by will tell you all Well then in the next place he tells us page the first that nothing procures Wealth sooner then Trade it is well observed and if the persons that are Traders and the greatest Traders in the Nation be hindred in serving of God according to their Consciences and for this serving of God only as they in their Conscience believe they ought to do without disturbing the peace of the Nation must be torn in pieces their Estates taken from them and they put by their Trade how shall the wealth of the Nation be preserved if he could have found out an experiment for this his discourse ought to have been writ in Letters of Gold as well as replenish'd with Latin Sentences well but he goes on nor will any thing secure it better then Unity If so why then must the Neighbours of each others be forced to prosecute one another to bing us into confusion Why Sir W. S. tells you anon and that is in plain terms his sense though not in words the Nation can be better Governed without Unity then with it For the Justice tells you plainly that the King by his wisdom and care hath hitherto preserved peace without the help of Unity for certainly saith he no Nation can be more devided then this Well now how will this agree together with what went before which was that Unity and Trade was the only way to peace and yet now he tells us that the King hath a better way for he can better govern without Unity then with it even for twenty years together So then the consequence is Unity may be good but no Unity is better or at least he thinks our King is so indued from above that it is all one to Him to Govern with or without Unity well then if it be so the King hath Governed for these twenty years without disturbance though we are an United People and a divided Nation as this Chairman tells us what is the meaning then of all this bussel now about conformity in point of profit to the King when by his own shewing the Government hath received no prejudice Well but since Sir W. gives no better reason pray let us guess his reasons for once and those may be two or three The first is there wants money to defray the publick charge and to repay the King his own page 2. but that is but a pretence the next reason the Papists and their Adherents would feign provoke the Dissenters so far as to make them quarrel and rebel a troubled water is the best for their turn which they always live by and if they could but once blow up the flame so high which God forbid then they have gained their full point which they have so long been aiming at both of covering their own hellish Plot and the rooting out the Pestilent Heresy as Sir W. S's brother was pleased to term it and could they catch the Fanaticks by this bait not only them but the whole Protestant Interest in England might be rooted up indeed and then the Papists takes the Possession of their Lives and Estates all at once which is the thing driven at as appears by all the Proceedings and manifest Declarations of several of our Parliaments they were all of that mind that the chief design of the Papists was to set the Protestants together by the ears well fore-seeing that Device And therefore both Lords and Commons ordered bills to be brought in to Unite the Dissenting Protestants all in one against the common Enemy the Papists and made applications to the King to stop all such prosecutions as was acting against the Dissenters But a third reason is the vexing and perplexing the Protestants may be a design of tiring them out and by threats and vexatious Prosecution to see if they can be forced to yield up their Reasons and when made poor that they may be the easier made slaves and be compelled to if ever there should be an other Election of Members to give their Votes for such Persons as instead of keeping out of Arbitrary Power and Popery by Law will bring it in by a colour of Law and if men do but observe the Transactions for these twelve months past in divers Corporations It cannot but be thought that this is one of the main designes now on foot For a great man not long since openly declared that the Country was not yet fit to choose a Parliament they had not smarted enough and saith he they are for Law but replies to himself with an Oath they shall have Law enough that is they shall have the form of Law and tricks in Law to make a specious pretence but the designes is the easier to undoe them and this is the Law the Justices intends thoug they do not speak it which I gather from an other passage from the same Sir W. S. at another Sessions about nine or ten moneths ago Councel coming to Hick's-Hall to move the Court
and foppish an assertion as it will be if the Justice should the next Sessions spend his time in his Discourse of catching of Connies in a Warren he is well acquainted with In the Statute of Provisoes the Parliament there asserts these words viz. The Commons have prayed our Lord the King that since the Crown of England and the Law of the said Realm is such that upon the mischief and damages which happen to this Realm he ought and is bound by his Oath with the accord of his People in his Parliament thereof to make Remedy and Law in removing the mischiefs and damages which thereof ensue that it may please him thereupon to ordain remedy The King in the same Statute Answers the Prayer of the Commons and saith by his Oath he is bound to it which Statute may be read at leasure to this plainly agrees the Kings Oath at his Coronation viz. R●t Parliament 1 H. 4. Num. 17. Forma Juramenti solit consueti prestart per Reges Angliae in horam Coronatione Servabis Ecclesiae Dei cleroque populo pacem ex integro concordium in Deo secundum Vices tuas Respondebit Servabo Facias fieri in omnibus Judiciis tuis equam Rectam Justitiam Discretioonem in misericordia veritate secundum Vices tuas Respondebit faciam Concedis Justas Leges Consuetudines esse tenendas promittis per te eas esse protegendas ad honorem cas Corroborandas quas vulgus elegerit secundum Vices tuas Respondebit Censedo Promitto Aujiciantque puldutis interrogationibus que justa fuerint pronunciat iisque orbus confirmet Rex se omnia servatur sacramento super altare Prestito cora●● Cunctis By which Oath we may perceive the Kings of England are bound to keep all Laws and to grant fulfil and defend all rightful Laws which the people of the Realm shall choose and to strengthen and maintain them the Chancellor and Ministers about him are sworn to give him true and faithful advice the Judges are sworn to advice the King in point of Law and to Administer the Law indifferently between the King and his Subjects which Oath begins thus viz. An oath of the Iustices being made in the year of Edw. the 3d. in the year 1344. Ye shall swear that well and lawfully ye shall serve our Lord the King and the people in the office of Iustice and that lawfully ye shall Coucel the King in his business and that ye shall not Councel or Assent to any thing which may turn him in damage or dishersion by any manner way or culler and that ye shall not know the damage or dishersion of him whereof ye shall not cause him to be warrented by your self or by other and that ye shall do equal law and right to all his Subjects rich and poor without haveing regard to any Person and that you take not by your self or by others privately or apertly gifts nor rewards of Gold nor Silver nor of any other thing which may turn to your profit unless it be meat or drink and that of small value of any man that shall have any plea or process hanging before you as long as the same process shall so be hanging nor after for the same Cause and that ye take no fee as long as ye shall be Iustice nor Roabes of any man great or small but of the King himself and that ye give no Advice or Councel to no man great or small in no case where the King is party and in case that any of what Estate or Condition they be come before you in your Sessions with force and armes or otherwise against the peace or against the form of the Statute thereof made to disturb execution of the Common Law or to mennace the people that they may not pursue the Law that ye shall cause their Bodies to be Arrested and put in prison and in case they be such that ye cannot arrest then that ye certifie the King of their Names and of their misprision hastily so that ye may thereof ordain a conveneable Remedy And that ye by your self nor by others privity or apertly maintain any Plea or Quarrel hanging in the Kings Court or elsewhere in the County And that ye deny no man common Right by the Kings Letters nor no other mans nor for none other Cause And in case any Letters come to you contrary to the Law that ye do nothing by such Letters but certifie the King thereof and proceed to execute the Law Notwithstanding the same Letters and that ye shall do and procure the profit of the King and of his Crown with all things where you may reasonably do the same And in case ye be from hence forth found in default in any of the points aforesaid ye shall be at the Kings will Body Lands and Goods thereof to be done as shall please him As God you help and all Saints Now having given you the Oaths as the Law hath setled it I shall add one Statute more to shew how careful and diligent our Ancestors were to preserve this Nation from Arbitrary Power not only in the King but also in Judges and Officers that we might not be enslaved and opprest by the Judges under a colour and pretence of Law And that is the Statute of 20 E. 3. The Title is viz. The Justices of both Benches 20 E. 3. cap 10 Assices c. shall do right to all men take no fee but of the King nor give Councel where the King is party First we have commanded all our Iustices that they shall from henceforth do equal Law and Execution of Right to all our Subjects rich and poor without having regard to any person and without omitting to do right for any Letters or Commandment which come to them from us or from any other or by any other Cause And if that any Letters Writs or Commandments come to the Iustices or to others deputed to do Law and Right according to the usage of the Realm in disturbance of the Law or of Execution of the same or of Right of the Parties The Iustices and others aforesaid shall proceed and hold their Courts and Process where they please and matters be depending before them As if no such Letters Writs or Commandments were come to them And they shall certifie us and our Councel of such Commandment is which be contrary to Law as aforesaid and to the Iuter● that our Iustices shall do even right to all people in manner aforesaid without more favour shewn to one then to the other We have ordained and caused out Iustices to be sworn That they shall not from henceforth as long as they shall be in Office of Iustice take Fee nor Roab of any man but of our self and that they shall take no gift or reward by themselves nor by others privily or apertly of any man that hath to do before them by any way except meat and Drink and that of small value
a promise not to be angry with her told him Sir you have a wart upon your Nose I saith he so I have and I have another upon my Ar put that to that Sir as you did yesterday But now I the hope Courteous Reader will pardon this slip though I leave Sir W. at his pleasure In page 2d Sir W. tells the Jury that the Conventiclers had abused and reviled those officers and others who in obedience to their Commands have endeavoured to put the Laws in Execution if the Dissenters have done so they are highly to blame but if neither himself nor all his fellow Justices can shew wherein they have so abused or reviled them for doing their duty sure then the Dissenters have great cause to say Sir W. is not sure any of them hath so done because he neither names the person that did the fact nor wherein the abuse was done some of the Standers by I am told was of opinion Sir W's meaning was the Constables and the Pamphlets called Order of Sessions was what he meant or the Answer to them now if his worship would be pleased but to explain himself both as to the persons and things he speaks of he would highly add to his former merits otherwise we are like to be in the dark still notwithstanding his state of convallency But Sir William goes on page 2. the question he askes is he would know of any sober thinking man which of the two parties his prudence would invite him too whether those under his Majesties and the Laws Protection or to that party which leads through Briars and Thornes which I suppose he meanes to be the Dissenters if so then I must tell him that the Laws do equally Protect both the one and the other and for him to start such a question under his favour is no less then to tell the world that his Majesty will protect one and not the other and since Sir W. is resolved to pun upon the honest plain Country Jury-men that hath not been used to be so accosted by such Rhetorick heretofore it may not be amiss to sift this part of the Speech a little further In this page he tells the Country men of slippery places where they shall never be able to stand their groud but what ground he means is kept secret and therefore we can't guess at the meaning which is suppos'd to be this Gentlemans Grand-Jury men and all that hear me this day I tell you I am a thinking man I think of the times past when I was a Col. and how I behaved my self in Richard's time past when I Addressed to him swimming then with the Tide I was safe I scorned that pittiful thing called concience I alwayes trod upon sure ground and in frosty hard weather tho' the wind blew never so hard yet I always sheltered my self under some penthouse though it was but a thatched Cottage I would never deny my self in any thing but whatever Richard who then Reigned de facto though not de jure did yet I was the same to him as I pretend now to the King and I stood by that means fast and by that meanes I stand fast now and so may you grand Jury-men if you will but think on me you never need fear treading upon Knives or Razors for what ever Card turns up Trump I have a Knave at all times ready both in heart and hand And therefore you thinking Grand Jury men remember me and be sure to take care of self preservation and be obedient to me and present these unthinking people that do not know their own safety But to proceed in this Page 2d here is so much of excellent Variety and depth of Wisdom that is seems wonderful especially if we consider the State matters here in this page set forth and that is he not only tells us of the expence of money his Majesty hath been at as was before hinted and the benefit like to accrew to Trade by the peace with Algier and the Turkey Trade but he seems to understand the whole series of all the State affairs of the King as a great and learned Privy Councellor For he tells you that some had the impudence to report that Tangier was or would be sold to the French King how was it possible the Justice should know that except he were of the Cabinet Councel at home or the French Kings Councel abroad For he doth not say he heard it was reported to be sold or would be sold but that some had the impudence to say so and this must be certainly to himself it was spoken or else he devised it for he cannot produce his Author but that which may cause a further belief of his being a Courtier and in the most deepest State of affairs is his telling us in the same page the very exact quantity of money the thirty Capital Ships will cost more then the Parliament did give which is thus the King was forced to advance 100000 of his own money now it is a very great wonder that this Justice in such a capacity not being a Ship-wright should exactly know these things if he be not either a Privy Councel or one of the Treasury and that which makes it a wonder how he comes to know the exact charge is that yet all the thirty Capital Ships are not built and some of them not so much as begun to this day But I suppose Sir W. did not speak from a Command he had but to shew his zeal to raise the 100000 l. that would be wanting when the Ships were done or rather that he might have one fling at the Parliament for being so absurd as not to compute their Matters right nor give money enough for Sir W. always hath a good wish or a good wrod for the Parliament since he was summon'd before the Committee Well but now in the third page he tells us the whole Charge the King haht disbursed is about 800000 l. which ought to be paid him by the people for whom it was disbursted and that the Establish'd Revenue will not ballance the necessary Charges of the Government and where shall the accidental charge be born I am confident the King never bid him put such a question to the Grand-Jury for this reason because he well knows they nor their whole single County cannot do it if it were lawful for Loans or Ship-money or Privy-Seals to go about the Country again as was done by the wicked enemies of the King and Kingdom heretofore to keep off Parliaments that they that had acted Roguery and Villany in the Intervals in the late King's Time might not be called to account which in all probability is the design of this Justice if he dare speak out and that he can mean no less seems most plain for what should he else tell the Grand-Jury of such things as these which they have no conusance of in the least and for the Justices saying he hath heard in the House
of Commons that the Revenue will not defray the charges of the Government it is most like he hath For the Reader may please to remember that Sir W. was one of that long Pentionary-Parliament which was always free of giving what some of them was hired to give as appears by the Votes of another House And may it not well be conjectured now from his experience he pretends in the Revenue of the Crown as he seems to intimate to us that either he is or would be Lord Treasurer or at least one of the Commons very shortly by this Speech Howsoever sure he cannot miss of some great place of Trust in the State because he likewise is pleased in this third page to tell us not only that the Subjects ought to pay it with Interest and with thanks but they had done it before now if the Dissenters and Differences that are among us had not prevented it and wise men lay it upon the Conventicles being suffered thus he hath hit the point certainly and now we come to know what is the reason all of a suddain the Conventiclers and Dissenters are disturbed which we never knew before and that is the King hath disbursed a great deal of money and the Dissenters will neither pay it themselves for the benefit they enjoy of the Conventicles nor will let others pay it If this be so then 't is no wonder at this eager prosecution and this inciting Speech to stir up the Jurors but how comes it to pass it was not found out before that the Conventicles hinder'd the King of his money disbursed Is it not known both to thinking and unthinking people that when the greatest Gifts and Sums of Money that ever was given the King that now is there was as many Dissenters and Conventicles as now and that at all times they instead of hindering fo a good a Work ever paid their shares very chearfully witness the great Tax 2500000 l. at once and 1200000 l. at another time in the Pensionary Parliament and other Sums since And for the venom and infection of the Conventicle Preachers as he is pleased to call them it cannot be proved that they have ever preached or taught Sedition either in those Times or now much less to come within the compass of the Act the Justice seems to hint at and the Act of the 17th of this King if there be any such was as much violated then as ever it hath been since and it doth not appear nor can by any art uhe Justice can use that ever the Dissenters or Conventiclers did either preach or pray against Gifts and Grants of money to supply the King's Affairs especially when the good of the Nation required it And without doubt those Dissenters and Conventiclers are and ever were as ready with their Purses to serve the King and Country as any of the Abhorrers ever were or ever will be notwithstanding their Heroick expressions But yet to bring in Popery or support Popish Designs the Dissenters will not whatever the Abhorrers may yield to It is true in some of the Gazers great promises and assurances have been lately made to stand by the King with their Lives and Fortunes and their Purses to be ever at the Kings Command And not onely so but have by their Abhorrences declared their Resolutions to choose such Members for the next Parliament as his Majesty shall approve of Now if these stubborn Fanaticks would have been so mannerly as to have done that too then it is more than probable that all this prosecution against the Dissenters in the Justices opinion might cease too And it cannot be any wonder that the Abhorrers should promise to assist his Majesty with their Purses for they have nothing to assist the him with but what comes from the King either in Places or Gifts Well but after all tho' sometimes the Justice if for the Divisions to be made up that the King may be repaid with Interest and therefore saith it is high time to do it yet that must not be done by giving any grains of allowance to the Dissenters side at all or to bear with this weakness in things indifferent or to make any step of compassion towards them in leaving off one small Ceremony or sin out of the Church of England to win them no not for the whole World and all the Dissenters souls to boot but the unity the Justice would seem to aim at is that whatever the Church-men of England say the Dissenters must do that must be done or else stop their mouths the Dissenters infectious Breath will undo us all and and give us the Plague besides want of money therefore Instead of any condiscention to them stop their mouths with the Act of the 17th of this King least they grow too formidable Here is the Union the Justice but now talked of in his third page O rare charitable Justice and good natur'd man Well but what if Sir W. should be out in his Polliticks that the way to Union is to force it by devouring the Dissenters by penal Laws now I am apt to think he is out if he will but give himself leave to recollect himself a little as to History both sacred and prophane and let him but show in any one place that ever the force of the Civil Magistrate or by any one force of Arms in the whole world in matters of Religion it ever prevailed or effected such an end as Sir W. would make the world believe he aims at the Scripture tells us have a care lest you be found fighting against God and advises to let the Secrets as they were called by the Jews and the Pharisees in the Apostles Time alone for said a wise man among them then to the Councel have a care what you do if this be of God it will stand if not it will soon come to nought All that ye do against them will come to nought if they be of God for Religion is neither to be played withall nor affrighted from and it commonly thrives best when the Enemies of it do most industriously oppose it God's Justice hath a longer reach Mr. Justice than the fingers of the King or the Temporal Law more than you are aware of therefore it may be that all your malice can amount to will be so far from rooting up the Dissenters and stopping the mouths of their Teachers that it may rather increase than decrease and it may be as far out of your power to hinder it as it was once out of your power to keep Richard Cromwel in the Chair after you had taken so much pains in addressing him And for your fear of the Dissenters being formidable to the Government as you say in this page if they be so formidable in their help to support the Government with their Persons and Purses as heretofore they have been in Restoring His present Majesty then sure there will be no great terrour upon the Government from them be they
never so formidable And for what you are pleased to say they are a Herd of Swine that when one being chased all the rest go and condole pray where is the evil of that if it were so but I have been otherwise informed that they are not so kind and natural one to the other However since you have so compared them to swine and since it is their nature as you say to condole one with another when they are all chased I wish that part of your Speech were true that these Dissenters will make your words good and stand by one another in Righteous and good things to oppose the wicked malice of their enemies who daily watch not only for their goods and estate but for their blood too could they have but an opportunity once put into their hands which as is said you and the rest Sir W. of your fellow Justices were indeavouring after when a Petition was by you preferred that the Sheriffs of Middlesex might not be chose by the City could you Sir W. and the rest of your crew but have got that either by hook or by crook you would no doubt have stopped all their mouths having before settled your Evidence ready for the purpose But Sir W. do but have patience and keep the Irish cattle together a little longer and you do not know how fortunate you may be after Midsummer day next and then have at the Beasts at Ephesus these unreasonable Dissenters that will not believe their Mother the Church nor pin their faith upon the Crape-Gonorum Thus our Barronet lays about him in this Page against these hoggs beasts and unreasonable men now is it not a pitty this Gentleman had not acted in Doctor Sprat's place the other day and Sprat in his if it had been so I am confident the Knight would have done more in the work of conversion by his Speech to the Artillery men than the Doctor did for the word of the Apostle and the very names of unreasonable men and wild Beasts would certainly have sounded very sweet to that Auditory for the Doctor took all to be unreasonable men that refused to dine with them that day and yet dared to eat their dinner together the next day in another place than where the D. was And if the Doctor had but spoke half so much as a Divine to the Grand-Jury about Hoggs and Religion the Jury could not for shame but have believed him because he hath authority to speak Scripture But what authority the Justice had to speak so to the Grand-Jury when he was not in Orders is not yet known and it is well if the Church do not take him to task for medling with that which did not concern him and which indeed is another man's trade and it was the Justice-trade to have preached the necessity of buying swords to suppress the Dissenters and keep their mouths stopped well but before we leave this Page we shall find out Sir W's Religion I dare lay a groat on 't for he tells us in plain English now what I did but suppose before that he was once on the other side for saith he there are not more unreasonable men than some we have in England I have heretofore had an indifferent good opinion of the Dissenters I thought they had been as they pretended a peaceable sober sort of People and that they had desired nothing but liberty of Conscience and Indulgence So then once by his own shewing he was of another mind then now he is Well what changed him in his discourse in this place it must be because of the unreasonable men that are in England but he forgets to tell us who they are and wherein it appears so but if you believe himself the unreasonableness of some men is the main reason that makes him now not of the opinion he was before and that serves him well enough for an excuse But how was he mistaken about their being a sober quiet sort of People what hath altered his mind have they been unruly or unquiet more then himself have they done any evil to the Publick now more then they did before when he had his good opinion of them nothing of that can appear But to be plain in the 4th Page he tells you what hath altered him why it is his tenaciousness that the Dissenters aim at Dominion and therefore he cannot have any longer a good Opinion of them but still this is but to excuse himself by loading of others with such untruths as there is nothing the least colour for it nor was ever proved against them unless he means by Dominion that the Dissenters will have the Dominion over their own Estates and Families and not suffer others to have it from them without better Warrant from the Law then any this Ignoramus Justice can shew to the contrary for the Dissenters do think they may with as much Law and Justice defend their Liberties and Properties as the Justice may find Law to compel them to conformity in point of Church Discipline But now the Justice must have one flout or fling at tender consciences in this Page or else the fat will be in the fire and no wonder at all why he cannot let that alone the reason may be because he having lost his if ever he had one is something like the Devil that hates man because he is in a better State then himself otherwise sure he would not mock and jeer at tender conscienes and liberty of conscience as if their were no such thing left but all was a piece of Pagentry like my Lord Mayor's show as he saith to draw the Eyes of Spectators upon them The Justice may know it is dangerous to meddle with Edge tools But to proceed the Knight tells us He met with a Pamphlet the other day wherein he read a Ticket to a Feast at the two Halls The Pamphlet he means I suppose may be the Gazette which forbids under the pretence of Authority the seditious Design of dining together at Goldsmiths Hall c. in regard his R. H. was not to be there or because they intended to be merry without a Licence from the Court Truly it was a horrible Design of those Whigs to offer to eat together and give God thanks for Mercies and not first consult the Stars or the Court at Milky-Hall And that which more affrighted the Loyal Party was there were no less than thirty odd Affidavits produced or intended in due time which made it appear that all the Pye-crust was Walls Batteries and strong Fortresses within which were hid all sorts of Warlike Provision Blunderbusses only excepted And most certain it is this was the most desperate Association that has been these many Years fit to be abhorr'd in the next Return when those now upon the Wheel shall be spun out for as the Justice tells us It is like the old Way of Associating or blowing a Trumpet before a War But the Ticket-Feast at Merchant-Taylors Hall was
if so our Ancestors were Fools to make the Coronation Oath and the good Statutes with divers others before recited But Sir W. all this you do to be Great and by this it may be you may be so fond as to believe you make the King great too tho it be the quite contrary way nay such Men as you that take away all Law do totally lessen both the Prince the Nation and the Government for if the King have no better Title than his Sword or the Jure Divino-ship you speak off then Lord have Mercy on him For you Sir W. by the same Rule tho but an Attorneys Son if you can but make your self popular enough and get a long Sword cased with a Pretence of a Divine Right you may be King as well as any only I think if you should do so and not make your Sword long enough you may chance to find that the Jure Regnum would spoil your Jure Divino But to please you in something and not to thwart all your dark Sayings so hard to be understood we will for once as you insinuate allow that Government is Jure Divino and the Ordinance of God but the Modes and Forms were ever yet left to Man which in all Countries whatsoever have been chalked out by the People themselves for their Weal and Government And if our ancient Records may be credited no Nation under Heaven ever established better Rules for Government than this Kingdom hath done for here neither the Prince can by Law hurt the People nor the People the Prince and the Law is the Standard between them and the Protector of both which sure Sir W. you ought to have known or at least to have shown us what Text of Scripture it is that establisheth our Kings in England and gives them Authority above the Law but when you have said all the Kingship of England is but an Office and a Trust reposed in them by the Law of the Land under your good Favour And they are made Kings by Humane Laws but to whom the Kings of England are accountable I am not to question nor do I think it fit for you And for your saying the King ought not to be importuned by the People to do any thing which he knows is contrary to his Duty and Trust I say so too but how this will amend the Matter or plead for your designing to join some Person with him as was told you before I know not but by the Rule of Contrary if the People ought not to importune the King nor he to grant what is not just as is clear they ought not then sure both the People ought to importune the King and he to grant them all that is Just and Right and what by the Law and his Sacred Oath he is bound to do And then Sir W. I will take leave to tell you and make your best on 't that the People ought in this imminent time of danger both from your Friends the Papists at home and the dangers from abroad to importune the King for a Parliament as their Right by Law according to the Statutes of Edw. the 3d. And if you are so conscientious a Man and mean for the Law and right Government of England as you pretend I do not doubt in the least but you will help forward such a Petition and since the Justice tells us that a Prince must be just against the importuning of his Subjects I hope Sir W. you that say so will not be so unjust as not to begin so good a work since you have ever had the knack of Addressing And now we are in the sixth Page come to Sir W's Hear-say that is The King I have heard was pressed to exclude the D. of Y. Pray saith the Justice examine the Justice of that can it be just saith he to punish in presonti for a Fault to be committed in futuro Divine Sir William he must still have a fling at the Parliament it is as good Leachery to him to scratch there as to be a standing Stallion in another place well but this is a grand Fault of the Parliament no doubt What punish a Man before he had committed any Fault as he tells the Grand Jury surely they would not find a Bill against any Man for a Fault that might be committed Now observe the cunning of this Abuse that he would sham upon the unthinking People of a Wrong the Parliament was about pray who was or who would have been wronged if such a Bill had passed altho for my own part I ever thought there were other Bills more needful Is it not strange the whole Nation in a Body in three several Parliaments could be so foolish and wicked as not to see the Sin and Evil of this thing as well as the Justice and the Justice then said nothing nor was so kind to give his Advice But the Justice will mistake the Case he looks upon the Duke as in Possession and not as a Subject and he looks upon the single Subject this one Man to be of more value than all the Subjects Good and Welfare of England and to put a blind upon the World topes upon us the D's divine Right to be King here over us and as natural for him to be our King as to do the Office of Nature Now I always thought the Kingship of England as is before hinted is by the Law of the Land and no otherwise and that every King in this Kingdom is or ought to be the Supream Magistrate for the Peoples Good But if a Prince be born a Fool an Ideot or become a mad Man how can that Man be thought to reign for the Peoples Good Now if such a thing should happen may not the King and People then in being altogether as in all Ages they have done chuse another more fit to govern in that Office is there any Injustice in this is there any more than common Prudence and would they be just to themselves if they should do otherwise Where is the Wrong to the mad Man He is bereaved of his Senses must therefore the People be so too And in all Ages hath not the Crown of England been settled by the King and Parliament and have not Forreigners done the same witness the Portugals they did not only put by a Subeject not fit to reign by his Folly but put by and do still to this day their King when in actual Possession because of his Infirmities otherwise they had sinned against the very Law of Nature for that teaches us self Preservation But so much hath been said already by abler Heads as to this most ridiculous nonsensical Notion that I thought no Man pretending to common Sense would have dared to have been so bold as to have mentioned such a thing or to arraign the Judgment of the whole Nation And now after the Justice hath thus spent the time in ranting and beating the Air about this unjust Design of the Parliament