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A41303 The free-holders grand inquest touching our Sovereign Lord the King and his Parliament to which are added observations upon forms of government : together with directions for obedience to governours in dangerous and doubtful times / by the learned Sir Robert Filmer, Knight. Filmer, Robert, Sir, d. 1653. 1679 (1679) Wing F914; ESTC R36445 191,118 384

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Barons made an Ordinance touching the Exemption of the Abby of Bury from the Bishops of Norwich In the tenth year of the Conquerour Episcopi Comites Barones regni regia potestate ad universalem Synodum pro causis audiendis tractandis convocati saith the Book of Westminster In the 2 year of William 2. there was a Parliament de cunctis regni Principibus another which had quosque regni proceres All the Peers of the Kingdom In the seventh year was a Parliament at Rockingham-Castle in Northampton-shire Episcopis Abbatibus cunctique regni Principibus una coeuntibus A year or two after the same King de statu regni acturus c. called thither by the Command of his Writ the Bishops Abbots and all the Peers of the Kingdom At the Coronation of Hen. 1. All the People of the Kingdom of England were called and Laws were then made but it was Per Commune Concilium Baronum meorum by the Common Councel of my Barons In his third year the Peers of the Kingdom were called without any mention of the Commons and another a while after consensu Comitum Baronum by the consent of Earls and Barons Florentius Wigoriensis saith these are Statutes which Anselme and all the other Bishops in the Presence of King Henry by the assent of his Barons ordained and in his tenth year of Earls and Peers and in his 23. of Earls and Barons In the year following the same King held a Parliament or great Councel with His Barons Spiritual and Temporal King Hen. 2. in his tenth year had a great Councel or Parliament at Clarendon which was an Assembly of Prelates and Peers 22. Hen. 2. saith Hovenden was a great Councel at Nottingham and by the Common Councel of the Archbishops Bishops Earls and Barons the Kingdom was divided into six parts And again Hovende●… saith that the same King at Windsor apud Wind●… shores Communi Concilio of Bishops Earls and Barons divided England into four Parts And in hi●… 21 year a Parliament at Windsor of Bishops Earl●… and Barons And another of like Persons at Northampton King Richard 1. had a Parliament at Nottingham in his fifth year of Bishops Earls and Barons Thi●… Parliament lasted but four days yet much was don●… in it the first day the King disseiseth Gerard de Canvil of the Sherifwick of Lincoln and Hugh Bardol●… of the Castle and Sherifwick of York The second day he required judgment against his Brother Iohn who was afterwards King and Hugh de Nova●… Bishop of Coventry The third day was granted to th●… King of every Plow-land in England 2 s. He required also the third part of the Service of every Knights F●… for his Attendance into Normandy and all the Woo●… that year of the Monks Cisteaux which for that 〈◊〉 was grievous and unsupportable they fine for Mo●…ny The last day was for Hearing of Grievances●… and so the Parliament brake up And the same yea●… held another at Northampton of the Nobles of th●… Realm King Iohn in his fifth year He and his Great m●…met Rex Magnates convenerunt and th●… Roll of that year hath Commune Concilium B●…ronum Meorum the Common Councel of my Baron●… at Winchester In the sixth year of King Henry 3. the Noble●… granted to the King of every Knights Fee two Mark●… in Silver In the seventh year he had a Parliament at London an Assembly of Barons In his thirteenth year an Assembly of the Lords at Westminster In his fifteenth year of Nobles both Spiritual and Temporal M. Par. saith that 20. H. 3. Congregati sunt Magnates ad colloquium de negotiis regni tractaturi the Great men were called to confer and treat of the Business of the Kingdom And at Merton Our Lord the King granted by the Consent of his Great men That hereafter Usury should not run against a Ward from the Death of his Ancestor 21. Hen. 3. The King sent his Royal Writs commanding all belonging to His Kingdom that is to say Arch-bishops Bishops Abbots and Priors installed Earls and Barons that they should all meet at London to treat of the Kings Business touching the whole Kingdom and at the day prefixed the whole multitude of the Nobles of the Kingdom met at London saith Mat. Westminster In his 21 year At the Request and by the Councel of the Lords the Charters were confirmed 22. Hen. 3. At Winchester the King sent his Royal Writs to Arch-bishops Bishops Priors Earls and Barons to treat of Business concerning the whole Kingdome 32. Hen. 3. The King commanded all the Nobility of the whole Kingdom to be called to treat of the State of His Kingdom Mat. Westm ' 49. Hen. 3. The King had a Treaty at Oxford with the Peers of the Kingdom M. Westminster At a Parliament at Marlborow 55. Hen. 3. Statutes were made by the Assent of Earls and Barons Here the Place of Bracton Chief Justice in thi●… Kings time is worth the observing and the rathe●… for that it is much insisted on of late to make fo●… Parliaments being above the King The words i●… Bracton are The King hath a Superiour God also th●… Law by which he is made King also his Court viz the Earls and Barons The Court that was said i●… those days to be above the King was a Court of Earls and Barons not a Word of the Commons or th●… representative Body of the Kingdom being any pa●… of the Superiour Court Now for the true Sen●… of Bractons words how the Law and the Court 〈◊〉 Earls and Barons are the Kings Superiours the●… must of Necessity be understood to be Superiours 〈◊〉 far only as to advise and direct the King out of hi●… own Grace and Good Will only which appea●… plainly by the Words of Bracton himself wher●… speaking of the King he resolves thus Nec potest 〈◊〉 necessitatem aliquis imponere quod injuriam suam corrig●… emendat cum superiorem non habeat nisi Deum 〈◊〉 satis ei erit ad poenam quod Dominum expectat ultore●… Nor can any man put a necessity upon Him to corre●… and amend his Injury unless he will himself sin●… he hath no Superiour but God it will be sufficie●… Punishment for him to expect the Lord an avenge●… Here the same man who speaking according to som●…mens Opinion saith the Law and Court of Earls a●… Barons are superiour to the King in this place tel●… us himself the King hath no Superiour but God th●… Difference is easily reconciled according to the D●…stinction of the School-men the King is free from t●… Coactive Power of Laws or Councellors but may be su●…ject to their Directive Power according to his ow●… Will that is God can only compell but th●… Law and his Courts may advise Him Rot. Parliament 1 Hen. 4. nu 79. the Commons expresly affirm Iudgment in Parliament belongs to the King and Lords These Precedents shew that from the Conquest untill a great
at that Election sending back unto Us the other part of the Indenture aforesaid affiled to these Presents together with this Writ Witness Our Self at Westminster By this Writ we do not find that the Commons are called to be any part of the Common Councel of the Kingdom or of the Supream Court of Iudicature or to have any part of the Legislative Power or to Consult de arduis regni negotiis of the difficult Businesses of the Kingdom The Writ only sayes the King would have Conference and Treat with the Prelates Great men and Peers but not a word of Treating or Conference with the Commons The House of Commons which doth not minister an Oath nor fine nor imprison any but their own Members and that but of late in some Cases cannot properly be said to be a Court at all much less to be a part of the Supream Court or highest Judicature of the Kingdom The constant Custom even to this day for the Members of the House of Commons to stand bare with their Hats in their Hands in the Presence of the Lords while the Lords sit covered at all Conferences is a visible argument that the Lords and Commons are not fellow Commissioners or fellow Counsellors of the Kingdom The Duty of Knights Citizens and Burgesses mentioned in the Writ is only ad Faciendum Consentiendum to Perform and to Consent to such things as should be ordained by the Common Councel of the Kingdom there is not so much mentioned in the Writ as a Power in the Commons to dissent When a man is bound to appear in a Court of Justice the words are ad Faciendum recipiendum quod ei per curiam injungetur which shews that this word Faciendum is used as a Term in Law to signifie to give Obedience For this we meet with a Precedent even as ancient as the Parliament-Writ it self and it is concerning Proceedings in Parliament 33. Ed. 1. Dominus Rex mandavit vicecom ' quod c. summon ' Nicolaum de Segrave ex parte Domini regis firmiter ei injungeret quod esset coram Domino Rege in proximo Parl. c. ad audiendum voluntatem ipsius Domini Regis c. Et ad Faciendum recipiendum ulterius quod curia Domini Regis consideraret in Praemissis Our Lord the King commands the Sheriff to summon Nicholas Segrave to appear before the Lord our King in the next Parliament to hear the Will of the Lord our King himself and to Perform and receive what the Kings Court shall further consider of the Premises Sir Ed. Coke to prove the Clergy hath no Voice in Parliament saith that by the Words of their Writ their Consent was only to such things as were ordained by the Common Councel of the Realm If this argument of his be good it will deny also Voices to the Commons in Parliament for in their Writ are the self-same words viz. to consent to such things as were ordained by the Common Councel of the Kingdom Sir Edw. Coke concludes that the Procuratores Cleri have many times appeared in Parliament as Spiritual Assistants to Consider Consult and to Consent but never had voice there how they could consult and Consent without Voices he doth not shew Though the Clergy as he saith oft appeared in Parliament yet was it only ad consentiendum as I take it and not ad faciendum for the Word Faciendum is omitted in their Writ the cause as I conceive is the Clergy though they were to assent yet by reason of Clerical Exemptions they were not required to Perform all the Ordinances or Acts of Parliament But some may think though the Writ doth not express a Calling of the Knights Citizens and Burgesses to be part of the Common Councel of the Kingdom yet it supposeth it a thing granted and not to be questioned but that they are a part of the Common Councel Indeed if their Writ had not mentioned the Calling of Prelates Great men and Peers to Councel there might have been a little better colour for such a Supposition but the Truth is such a Supposition doth make the Writ it self vain and idle for it is a senseless thing to bid men assent to that which they have already ordained since ordaining is an Assenting and more than an Assenting For clearing the meaning and sense of the Writ and Satisfaction of such as think it impossible but that the Commons of England have alwayes been a part of the Common Councel of the Kingdom I shall insist upon these Points 1. That anciently the Barons of England were the Common Councel of the Kingdom 2. That until the time of Hen. 1. the Commons were not called to Parliament 3. Though the Commons were called by Hen. 1. yet they were not constantly called nor yet regularly elected by Writ until Hen. 3. time For the first point M. Cambden in his Britania doth teach us that in the time of the English Saxons and in the ensuing Age a Parliament was called Commun●… concilium which was saith he Praesentia Regis Praelatorum Procerumque collectorum the Presence of the King Prelates and Peers assembled No mention of the Commons the Prelates and Peers were all Barons The Author of the Chronicle of the Church of Lichfield cited by M. Selden saith Postquam Rex Edvardus c. Concilio Baronum Angliae c. After King Edward was King by the Councel of the Barons of England he revived a Law which had layen asleep threescore and seven years and this Law was called the Law of St. Edward the King In the same Chronicle it is said that Will. the Conquerour anno regni sui quarto apud Londin ' ha●… Concilium Baronum Suorum a Councel of his Barons And of this Parliament it is that his Son Hen. 1. speaks saying I restore you the Laws of King Edward the Confessor with those amendments wherewith my Father amended them by the Councel of his Barons In the fifth year as M. Selden thinks of the Conquerour was a Parliament or Principum conventus a●… Assembly of Earls and Barons at Pinenden Heath i●… Kent in the Cause between Lanfranke the Arch-bishop of Canterbury and Odo Earl of Kent The King gave Commission to Godfrid then Bishop of Constan●… in Normandy to represent His own Person for Hearing the Controversie as saith M. Lambard and caused Egelrick the Bishop of Chichester an aged man singularly commended for Skill in the Laws and Customes of the Realm to be brought thither in a Wagon for his Assistance in Councel Commanded Haymo the Sheriff of Kent to summon the whole County to give in Evidence three whole dayes spent in Debate in the End Lanfranke and the Bishop of Rochester were restored to the Possession o●… Detling and other Lands which Odo hath withholden 21. Ed. 3. fol. 60. There is mention of a Parliament held under the same King William the Conquerour wherein all the Bishops of the Land Earls and
the King at His Parliament of his special Grace and for Affection which he beareth to his Prelates Earls and Barons and others hath granted that they that have Liberties by Prescription shall enjoy them In the Stat. de finibus Levatis the Kings Words are We intending to provide Remedy in our Parliament have ordained c. 28. Edw. 1. c. 5. The King Wills that the Chancellor and the Iustices of the Bench shall follow Him so that he may have at all times some neer unto him tha●… be learned in the Laws and in Chap. 24. the words are Our Lord the King after full Conference and Debate had with his Earls Barons Nobles and other Great men by their whole Consent hath ordained c. The Stat. de Tallagio if any such Statute there be speaks in the Kings Person No Officer of Ours No Tallage shall be taken by Us We Will and Grant 1. Edw. 2. begins thus Our Lord the King Willeth and Commandeth The Stat. of 9. the same King saith Our Lord the King by the Assent of the Prelates Earls and other great States hath Ordained 10. Edw. 2. It is provided by our Lord the King and his Iustices The Stat. of Carlile saith We have sent our Command in writing firmly to be observed 1. Edw. 3. begins thus King Edw. 3. at his Parliament at the request of the Commonalty by their Petition before him and his Councel in Parliament hath granted c. and in the 5th Chap. The King willeth that no man be charged to arm himself otherwise than he was wont 5. Edw. 3. Our Lord the King at the Request of his People hath established these things which He Wills to be kept 9. Of the same King there is this Title Our Lord the King by the Assent c. and by the Advice of his Councel being there hath ordained c. In his 10 year it is said Because Our Lord King Edw. 3. hath received by the Complaint of the Prelates Earls Barons also at the shewing of the Knights of the Shires and his Commons by their Petition put in his Parliament c. Hath ordained by the Assent c. at the Request of the said Knights and Commons c. The same year in another Parliament you may find these be the Articles accorded by Our Lord the King with the Assent c. at the Request of the Knights of the Shires and the Commons by their Petition ●…ut in the said Parliament In the year-Book 22 Edw. 3. 3. pl. 25. It is said The King makes the Laws by the Assent of the Peers and Commons and not the Peers and Commons The Stat. of 1. Ric. 2. hath this Beginning Rich●…d the 2. by the Assent of the Prelates Dukes Earls and Barons and at the Instance and special Request of ●… Commons Ordained There being a Statute made 5 Ric. 2. c. 5. against Lollards in the next year the Commons Petition Him Supplient les Commons que come un estatute fuit fait c. The Commons beseech that whereas a Statute was made in the last Parliament c. which was never Assented to nor Granted by the Commons but that which was done therein was done without their Assent In this Petition the Commons acknowledge it a Statute and so call it though they assented not to it 17 Ric. 2. nu 44. The Commons desire some pursuing to make a Law which they conceive hurtful to the Commonwealth That His Majesty will not pass it As for the Parliaments in Hen. 4. Hen. 5. Hen. 6. Edw. 4. and Ric. 3. Reigns the most of them do agree in this one Title Our Lord the King by the Advice and Assent of His Lords and at the special Instance and Request of the Commons Hath ordained The Precedents in this Point are so numerous that it were endless to cite them The Statutes in Hen. 7. days do for the most part agree both in the Titles and Bodies of the Acts in these words Our Lord the King by the Assent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons i●… Parliament assembled and by the Authority of the same hath ordained Unto this Kings time we find the Commons very often petitioning but not petitioned unto The first Petition made to the Commons that I meet with among the Statutes is but in the middle of this King Hen 7. Reign which was so well approved that the Petition it self is turned into ●… Statute It begins thus To the Right Worshipfu●… Commons in this present Parliament assembled Sheweth to your discreet Wisdoms the Wardens of the Fellowship of the Craft of Upholsters within London c. This Petition though it be directed to the Commons in the Title yet the Prayer of the Petition is turned to the King and not to the Commons for it concludes therefore it may please the Kings Highness by the Advice of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and his Commons in Parliament c. Next for the Statutes of Hen. 8. they do most part agree both in their Titles and the Bodies of the Acts with those of his Father King Hen. 7. Lastly In the Statutes of Edw. 6. Qu. Mary Q. Elizabeth K. Iames and of our Sovereign Lord the King that now is there is no Mention made in their Titles of any Assent of Lords and Commons or of any Ordaining by the King but only in general terms it is said Acts made in Parliament or thus At the Parliament were Enacted yet in the Bodies of many of these Acts of these last Princes there is sometimes Mention made of Consent of Lords and Commons in these or the like words It is Enacted by the King with the Assent of the Lords and Commons Except only in the Statutes of our Lord King Charles wherein there is no Mention that I can find of any Consent of the Lords and Commons or Ordaining by the King But the words are Be it Enacted by Authority of Parliament or else Be it Enacted by the King the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and Commons as if they were all Fellow-Commissioners Thus it appears that even till the time of K. Ed. 6. who lived but in our Fathers dayes it was punctually expressed in every King's Laws that the Statutes Ordinances were made by the King And withal we may see by what degrees the Styles and Titles o●… Acts of Parliament have been varied and to whose Disadvantage The higher we look the more absolute we find the Power of Kings in Ordainin●… Laws nor do we meet with at first so much as th●… Assent or Advice of the Lords mentioned Nay 〈◊〉 we cast our eye upon many Statutes of those that b●… of most Antiquity they will appear as if they we●… no Laws at all but as if they had been made only to teach us that the Punishments of many Offenc●… were left to the meere pleasure of Kings The punitive part of the Law which gives all the Vigo●… and Binding Power to the Law we find committed by the
Augustissimi CAROLI Secundi Dei Gratia ANGLIAE SCOTIAE FRANCIAE ET HIBERNIAE REX Bona agere mala pati Regium est Page 1 THE Free-holders GRAND INQUEST Touching Our Sovereign Lord the KING And His PARLIAMENT To which are added OBSERVATIONS UPON FORMS OF GOVERNMENT Together with Directions for Obedience to Governours in Dangerous and Doubtful Times By the Learned Sir ROBERT FILMER Knight Claudian de laudibus Stiliconis Fallitur egregio quisquis sub Principe credit Servitium Nunquam Libertas gratior extat Quàm sub Rege pio LONDON Printed in the Year MDCLXXIX The Author's PREFACE THere is a general Belief that the Parliament of England was at first an Imitation of the Assembly of the Three Estates in France therefore in order to prepare the Understanding in the Recerche we have in hand it is proper to give a brief Accompt of the mode of France in those Assemblies Scotland and Ireland being also under the Dominion of the King of England a touch of the manner of their Parliaments shall be by way of Preface 1. In France the Kings Writ goeth to the Bailiffs Seneschals or Stewards of Liberties who issue out Warrants to all such as have Fees and Lands within their Liberties and to all Towns requiring all such as have any Complaints to meet in the Principal City there to choose two or three Delegates in the name of that Province to be present at the General Assembly At the day appointed they meet at the Principal City of the Bailiwick The King 's Writ is read and every man called by name and sworn to choose honest men for the Good of the King and Commonwealth to be present at the General Assembly as Delegates faithfully to deliver their Grievances and Demands of the Province Then they choose their Delegates and swear them Next they consult what is necessary to be complained of or what is to be desired of the King and of these things they make a Catalogue or Index And because every man should freely propound his Complaint or Demands there is a Chest placed in the Town-Hall into which every man may cast his Writing After the Catalogue is made and Signed it is delivered to the Delegates to carry to the General Assembly All the Bailiwicks are divided into twelve Classes To avoid confusion and to the end there may not be too great Delay in the Assembly by the Gathering of all the Votes every Classis compiles a Catalogue or Book of the Grievances and Demands of all the Bailiwicks within that Classis then these Classes at the Aslembly compose one Book of the Grievances and Demands of the whole Kingdom This being the order of the Proceedings of the third Estate the like order is observed by the Clergy and Nobility When the three Books for the three Estates are perfected then they present them to the King by their Presidents First the President for the Clergy begins his Oration on his knees and the King commanding he stands up bare-headed and proceeds And so the next President for the Nobility doth the like But the President for the Commons begins and ends his Oration on his knees Whilst the President for the Clergy speaks the rest of that Order rise up and stand bare till they are bid by the King to sit down and be covered and so the like for the Nobility But whilst the President of the Commons speaks the rest are neither bidden to sit or be covered Thus the Grievances and Demands being delivered and left to the King and His Counsel the General Assembly of the three Estates endeth Atque ita totus actus concluditur Thus it appears the General Assembly was but an orderly way of presenting the Publick Grievances and Demands of the whole Kingdom to the consideration of the King Not much unlike the antient Usage of this Kingdom for a long time when all Laws were nothing else but the King's Answers to the Petitions presented to Him in Parliament as is apparent by very many Statutes Parliament-Rolls and the Confession of Sir Edw. Coke 2. In Scotland about twenty dayes before the Parliament begins Proclamation is made throughout the Kingdom to deliver in to the King's Clerk or Master of the Rolls all Bills to be exhibited that Sessions before a certain day then are they brought to the King and perused by Him and onely such as he allows are put into the Chancellour's hand to be propounded in Parliament and none others And if any man in Parliament speak of another matter than is allowed by the King the Chancellour tells him there is no such Bill allowed by the King When they have passed them for Laws they are presented to the King who with his Scepter put into His hand by the Chancellor ratifies them and if there be any thing the King dislikes they raze it out before 3. In Ireland the Parliament as appears by a Statute made in the Tenth year of Hen. 7. c. 4. is to be after this manner No Parliament is to be holden but at such Season as the King's Lieutenant and Councel there do first certifie the King under the Great Seal of that Land the Causes and Considerations and all such Acts as they think fit should pass in the said Parliament And such Causes and Considerations and Acts affirmed by the King and his Councel to be good and expedient for that Land And His Licence thereupon as well in affirmation of the said Causes and Acts as to summon the Parliament under His Great Seal of England had and obtained That done a Parliament to be had and holden after the Form and Effect afore rehearsed and if any Parliament be holden in that Land contrary to the Form and Provision aforesaid it is deemed void and of none Effect in Law It is provided that all such Bills as shall be offered to the Parliament there shall first be transmitted hither under the Great Seal of that Kingdom and having received Allowane and Approbation here shall be put under the Great Seal of this Kingdom and so returned thither to be preferred to the Parliament By a Statute of 3 and 4 of Philip and Mary for the expounding of Poynings Act it is ordered for the King 's Passing of the said Acts in such Form and Tenor as they should be sent into England or else for the Change of them or any part of them After this shorter Narrative of the Usage of Parliaments in our Neighbour and Fellow Kingdoms it is time the inquisitio magna of our own be offered to the Verdict or Iudgment of a moderate and intelligent Reader REFLECTIONS Concerning the ORIGINAL OF GOVERNMENT Upon I. Aristotle's Politiques II. Mr. Hobs's Leviathan III. Mr. Milton against Salmasius IV. H. Grotius De Iure Belli V. Mr. Hunton's Treatise of Monarchy VI. Another Treatise of Monarchy by a nameless Author Arist. Pol. Lib. 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 LONDON Printed in the Year MDCLXXIX THE ANARCHY OF A LIMITED OR MIXED Monarchy OR A
part of Henry the Third's Reign in whose dayes it is thought the Writ for Election of Knights was framed which is about two hundred years and above a third part of the time since the Conquest to our dayes the Barons made the Parliament or Common Councel of the Kingdom under the name of Barons not only the Earls but the Bishops also were Comprehended for the Conquerour made the Bishops Barons Therefore it is no such great Wonder that in the Writ we find the Lords only to be the Counsellours and the Commons Called only to perform and consent to the Ordinances Those there be who seem to believe that under the word Barons anciently the Lords of Court-Ba●…ons were Comprehended and that they were Called to Parliament as Barons But if this could be proved to have been at any time true yet those Lords of Court-Barons were not the representative Body of the Commons of England except it can be also proved that the Commons or Free-holders of the Kingdome chose such Lords of Court-Barons to ●…e present in Parliament The Lords of Manors ●…ame not at first by Election of the People as Sir Edw. Coke treating of the institution of Court-Ba●…ons resolves us in these words By the Laws and Ordinances of ancient Kings and especially of King Al●…red it appeareth that the first Kings of this Realm ●…ad all the Lands of England in Demean and les grand Manors and Royalties they reserved to themselves and of the remnant they for the Defence of the Real●… enfeoffed the Barons of the Realm with such Iurisdiction as the Court-Baron now hath Coke's Institute●… First part Fol. 58. Here by the way I cannot but note that if th●… first Kings had all the Lands of England in Demean 〈◊〉 Sir Edward Coke saith they had And if the fir●… Kings were chosen by the People as many thin●… they were then surely our Forefathers were a ver●… bountiful if not a prodigal People to give all th●… Lands of the whole Kingdom to their Kings wit●… Liberty for them to keep what they pleased and t●… give the Remainder to their Subjects clogg'd an●… cumbred with a Condition to defend the Realm●… This is but an ill sign of a limited Monarchy by original Constitution or Contract But to conclude th●… former Point Sir Edward Coke's Opinion is th●… in the ancient Laws under the name of Barons were comprised all the Nobility This Doctrine of the Barons being the Comm●… Councel doth displease many and is denied a●…tending to the Disparagement of the Commons an●… to the Discredit and Confutation of their Opinio●… who teach that the Commons are assigned Councello●… to the King by the People therefore I will call in M●… Pryn to help us with his Testimony He in his Boo●… of Treachery and Disloyalty c. proves that before th●… Conquest by the Laws of Edward the Confesso●… cap. 17. The King by his Oaths was to do Iustice 〈◊〉 the Councel of the Nobles of his Realm He also resolves that the Earls and Barons in Parliament a●… above the King and ought to bridle him when he exor●…tates from the Laws He further tells us the Peers an●… Prelates have oft translated the Crown from the right He●… 1. Electing and Crowning Edward who was illegitimate and putting by Ethelred the right Heir after Edgars decease 2. Electing and Crowning Canutus a meer Foreigner in opposition to Edmund the right Heir to King Ethelred 3. Harold and Hardiknute both elected Kings successively without title Edmund and Alfred the right Heirs being dispossessed 4. The English Nobility upon the Death of Harold enacted that none of the Danish bloud should any more reign over them 5. Edgar Etheling who had best Title was rejected and Harold elected and crowned King 6. In the second and third year of Edw. 2. the Peers and Nobles of the Land seeing themselves contemned entreated the King to manage the Affairs of the Kingdome by the Councel of his Barons He gave his Assent and sware to ratifie what the Nobles ordained and one of their Articles was that he would thenceforward order all the Affairs of the Kingdom by the Councel of his Clergy and Lords 7. William Rufus finding the greatest part of the Nobles against him sware to Lanfranke that if they would choose him for King he would abrogate their over-hard Laws 8. The Beginning saith Mr. Pryn of the Charter of Hen. 1. is observable Henry by the Grace of God of England c. Know ye That by the Mercy of God and Common Councel of the Barons of the Kingdom I am Crowned King 9. Maud the Empress the right Heir was put by the Crown by the Prelates and Barons and Stephen Earl of Mortain who had no good Title assembling the Bishops and Peers promising the amendment of the Law●… according to all their Pleasures and Liking was by th●… all proclaimed King 10. Lewis of France Crowned King by the Barons in stead of King John All these Testimonies from Mr. Pryn may satisfie that anciently the Barons were the Common Councel or Parliament of England And if Mr. Pryn could have found so much Antiquity and Proof for th●… Knights Citizens and Burgesses being of the Common Councel I make no doubt but we should have heard from him in Capital Characters but alas he meets not with so much as these Names in those elder Ages He dares not say the Barons were assigned by the People Councellors to the King for he tells us every Baron in Parliament doth represent hi●… own Person and speaketh in behalf of himself alone but in the Knights Citizens and Burgesses are represented the Commons of the whole Realm therefore every one of the Commons hath a greater voice in Parliament than the greatest Earl in England Nevertheless Maste●… Pryn will be very well content if we will admi●… and swallow these Parliaments of Barons for the representative Body of the Kingdom and to that Purpose he cites them or to no Purpose at all But to prove the Treachery and Disloyalty of Popish Parliaments Prelates and Peers to their Kings which i●… the main Point that Master Pryn by the Title of hi●… Book is to make good and to prove As to the second Point which is That untill the time of Hen. 1. the Commons were not called to Parliament besides the general Silence of Antiquity which never makes mention of the Commons Coming to Parliament untill that time our Histories say before his time only certain of the Nobility were called to Consultation about the most important affairs of the State He caused the Commons also to be assembled by Knights Citizens and Burgesses of their own Appointment much to the same Purpose writes Sir Walter Raleigh saying it is held that the Kings of England had no formal Parliaments till about the 18th year of King Hen. 1. For in his Third year for the Marriage of his Daughter the King raised a Tax upon every Hide of Land by the Advice of His Privy Councel alone And
the Subjects saith he soon after this Parliament was established began to stand upon Terms with their King and drew from him by strong hand and their Swords their Great Charter it was after ●…he establishment of the Parliament by colour of it that ●…hey had so great Daring If any desire to know the ●…ause why Hen. 1. called the People to Parliament ●…t was upon no very good Occasion if we believe Sir Walter Raleigh The Grand Charter saith he was not originally granted Regally and freely for King Hen. 1. did but usurp the Kingdom and therefore the ●…etter to assure himself against Robert his elder Brother ●…e flattered the People with those Charters yea King John ●…hat confirmed them had the like Respect for Arthur D●… Britain was the undoubted Heir of the Crown upon whom John usurped so these Charters had their original ●…rom Kings de facto but not de jure and then afterwards his Conclusion is that the Great Charter had ●…rst an obscure Birth by Usurpation and was fostered and ●…ewed to the World by Rebellion in brief the King cal●…ed the People to Parliament and granted them Magna Charta that they might confirm to him the Crown The third Point consists of two parts First that ●…he Commons were not called unto Parliament until Hen. 3. dayes this appears by divers of the Prec●…dents formerly cited to prove that the Barons we●… the Common Councel For though Hen. 1. called a●… the People of the Land to His Coronation and agai●… in the 15. or 18. year of his Reign yet alwayes h●… did not so neither many of those Kings that di●… succeed him as appeareth before Secondly for calling the Commons by Writ find it acknowledged in a Book intituled The Privilege and Practice of Parliaments in these words l●… ancient times after the King had summoned His Parliament innumerable multitudes of People did ma●… their Access thereunto pretending that Privilege ●… Right to belong to them But King Hen. 3. havi●… Experience of the Mischief and inconveniences by occasion of such popular Confusion did take order that no●… might come to His Parliament but those who were spec●…ally summoned To this purpose it is observed b●… Master Selden that the first Writs we find accompani●… with other Circumstances of a Summons to Parliamen●… as well for the Commons as Lords is in the 49 ●… Hen. 3. In the like manner Master Cambden speaking of the Dignity of Barons hath these Words King Hen. 3. out of a great Multitude which w●… seditious and turbulent called the very best by Writ ●… Summons to Parliament for he after many Troubles a●… Vexations between the King himself and Simon ●… Monefort with other Barons and after appeased d●…decree and ordain That all those Earls and Barons u●…to whom the King himself vouchsafed to direct H●… Writs of Summons should come to his Parliament an●… no others but that which he began a little before h●… Death Edward 1. and his Successours constantly o●…served and continued The said prudent King Edwar●… summoned always those of ancient Families that were most wise to His Parliament and omitted their Sons after their Death if they were not answerable to their Parents in Understanding Also Master Cambden in another place saith that in the time of Edw. 1. select men for Wisdom and Worth among the Gentry were called to Parliament and their Posterity omitted if they were defective therein As the power of sending Writs of Summons for Elections was first exercised by Hen. 3. so succeeding Kings did regulate the Elections upon such Writs as doth appear by several Statutes which all speak in the Name and Power of the Kings themselves for such was the Language of our Fore-fathers In 5 Ric. 2. c. 4. these be the words The King Willeth and Commandeth all Persons which shall have Summons to come to Parliament and every Person that doth absent himself except he may reasonably and honestly excuse him to Our Lord the King shall be amerced and otherwise punished 7 Hen. 4. c. 15. Our Lord the King at the grievous complaint of his Commons of the undue Election of the Knights of Counties sometimes made of affection of Sheriffs and otherwise against the Form of the Writs to the great slander of the Counties c. Our Lord the King willing therein to provide Remedy by the Assent of the Lords and Commons Hath Ordained That Election shall be made in the full County-Court and that all that be there present as well Suitors as others shall proceed to the Election freely notwithstanding any Request or Command to the contrary 11 Hen. 4. c. 1. Our Lord the King Ordained that a Sheriff that maketh an undue Return c. shall incur the Penalty of 100 l. to be paid to Our Lord the King 1 H. 5. c. 1. Our Lord the King by the Advice and Assent of the Lords and the special Instance and Request of the Commons Ordained that the Knights of the Shire be not chosen unless they be resiant within the Shire the day of the date of the Writ and that Citizens and Burgesses be resiant dwelling and free in the the same Cities and Burroughs and no others in any wise 6 Hen. 6. c. 4. Our Lord the King willing to provide remedy for Knights chosen for Parliament and Sheriffs Hath Ordained that they shall have their Answer and traverse to Inquest of Office found against them 8 Hen. 6. c. 7. Whereas Elections of Knights have been made by great Out-rages and excessive number of People of which most part was of People of no value whereof every of them pretend a Voice equivalent to Worthy Knights and Esquires whereby Man-slaughters Riots and Divisions among Gentlemen shall likely be Our Lord the King hath Ordained That Knights of Shires be chosen by People dwelling in the Counties every of them having Lands or Tenements to the value of 2 l. the year at the least and that he that shall be chosen shall be dwelling and resiant within the Counties 10. H. 6. Our Lord the King ordained that Knight●… be chosen by People dwelling and having 2 l. by the year within the same County 11 H. 6. c. 11. The King willing to provide for the Ease of them that come to the Parliaments and Councels of the King by his Commandment hath ordained that if any Assault or Fray be made on them that com●… to Parliament or other Councel of the King the Par●… which made any such Affray or Assault shall pay doubl●… Damages and make Fine and Ransom at the Kings Wil●… 23. H. 6. c. 15. The King considering the Statutes of 1 H. 5. c. 1. 8. Hen. 6. c. 7. and the Defaults of Sheriffs in returning Knights Citizens and Burgesses ordained 1. That the said Statutes should be duely kept 2. That the Sheriffs shall deliver Precepts to Maiors and Bayliffs to chuse Citizens and Burgesses 3. The Penalty of 100 l. for a Sheriff making an untrue Return concerning the election of
be Kings in Fact and Kings themselves to be but Subjects We read in Sir Ro●…ert Cotton that towards the end of the Saxons and ●…he first times of the Norman Kings Parliaments stood 〈◊〉 Custom-grace fixed to Easter Whitsontide and Christmas and that at the Kings Court or Palace Parliaments sate in the Presence or Privy Chamber from whence he infers an Improbability to believe the King excluded His own Presence and unmannerly f●… Guests to bar Him their Company who gave them the●… Entertainment And although now a-days the Parliament sit not in the Court where the Kings houshol●… remains yet still even to this day to shew that Parliaments are the Kings Guests the Lord Steward o●… the Kings Houshold keeps a standing Table to entertain the Peers during the sitting of Parliament and he alone or some from or under him as the Treasurer or Comptroller of the Kings Houshold take●… the Oaths of the Members of the House of Commo●… the first day of the Parliament Sir Richard S●…roop Steward of the Houshold of our Sovereign Lord the King by the Commandment of the Lords sitting in full Parliament i●… the Great Chamber put I. Lord Gomeniz and William Weston to answer severally to Accusations brough●… against them The Necessity of the King's Presence in Parliamen●… appears by the Desire of Parliaments themselves i●…former times and the Practice of it Sir Robert Cotto●… proves by several Precedents whence he conclude●… that in the Consultations of State and Decisions of private Plaints it is clear from all times the King w●… not only present to advise but to determine also Whensoever the King is present all Power of judging which is derived from His ceaseth The Votes of the Lords may serve for matter of Advice the fina●… Judgment is only the Kings Indeed of late years Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth by reason of thei●… Sex being not so fit for publick Assemblies have brought it out of Use by which means it is com●… to pass that many things which were in former times acted by Kings themselves have of late been left to the Judgment of the Peers who in Quality of Judges extraordinary are permitted for the Ease of the King and in His absence to determine such matters as are properly brought before the King Himself sitting in Person attended with His great Councel of Prelates and Peers And the Ordinances that are made there receive their Establishment either from the Kings Presence in Parliament where his Chair of State is constantly placed or at least from the Confirmation of Him who in all Courts and in all Causes is Supream Judge All Judgement is by or under Him it cannot be without much less against his Approbation The King only and none but He if He were able should judge all Causes saith Bracton that ancient Chief Justice in Hen. 3. time An ancient Precedent I meet with cited by Master Selden of a judicial Proceeding in a Criminal Cause of the Barons before the Conquest wherein I observe the Kings Will was that the Lords should be Judges ●…n the Cause wherein Himself was a Party and He ●…atified their Proceeding The case was thus Earl Godwin having had a Trial before the Lords under King Hardicanute touching the Death of Alfred Son to King Ethelbert and Brother to him who was afterward Edward the Confessor had fled out of England and upon his Return with Hope of Edward the Confessor's Favour he solicited the Lords ●…o intercede for him with the King who consulting together brought Godwin with them before the King to obtain his Grace and Favour But the King ●…resently as soon as he beheld him said Thou Traytor Godwin I do appeal thee of the Death of my Brother Alfred whom thou hast most trayterously slain Then Godwin excusing it answered My Lord the King may it please your Grace I neither betrayed nor killed your Brother whereof I put my self upon the Iudgment of your Court Then the King said You noble Lords Earls and Barons of the Land who are my Liege men now gathered here together and have heard My Appeal and Godwins Answer I Will that in this Appeal between Us ye decree right Iudgment and do true Iustice. The Earls and Barons treating of this among themselves were of differing Judgments some said that Godwin was never bound to the King either by Homage Service or Fealty and therefore could not be his Traytor and that he had not slain Alfred with his own hands others said that neither Earl nor Baron nor any other Subject of the King could wage his War by Law against the King in his Appeal but most wholly put himself into the Kings Mercy and offer competent Amends Then Leofric Consul of Chester a good man before God and the World said Earl Godwin next to the King is a man of the best Parentage of all England and he cannot deny but that by his Counsel Alfred the Kings Brother was slain therefore for my part I consider that He and his Son and all we twelve Earls who are his Friends and Kinsmen do go humbly before the King laden with so much Gold and Silver as each of us can carry in our Arms offering him That for his Offence and humbly praying for Pardon And he will pardon the Earl and taking his Homage and Fealty will restore him all his Lands All they in this form lading themselves with Treasure and coming to the King did shew the Manner and Order of their Consideration to which The King not willing to contradict did ratifie all that they had judged 23 Hen. 2. In Lent there was an Assembly of all the Spiritual and Temporal Barons at Westminster for the determination of that great Contention between Alfonso King of Castile and Sancho King of Navarre touching divers Castles and Territories in Spain which was by compromise submitted to the Judgment of the King of England And the King consulting with his Bishops Earls and Barons determined it as he saith Himself in the first Person in the Exemplification of the Judgement 2 Of King Iohn also that great Controversie touching the Barony that William of Moubray claimed against William of Stutvil which had depended from the time of King Hen. 2. was ended by the Councel of the Kingdom and Will of the King Concilio regni voluntate Regis The Lords in Parliament adjudge William de Weston to Death for surrendring Barwick Castle but for that Our Lord the King was not informed of the manner of the Judgment the Constable of the Tower Allen Buxall was commanded safely to keep the said William untill he hath other Commandment from our Lord the King 4 Ric. 2. Also the Lords adjudged Iohn Lord of Gomentz for surrendring the Towns and Castles of Ardee and for that he was a Gentleman and Bannaret and had served the late King he should be beheaded and for that our Lord the King was not informed of the manner of the Iudgment the Execution thereof
shall be respited untill our Lord the King shall be informed It is commanded to the Constable of the Tower safely to keep the said John untill he hath other commandement from our Lord the King In the case of Hen. Spencer Bishop of Norwich 7 Ric. 2. who was accused for complying with the French and other Failings the Bishop complained what was done against him did not pass by the Assent and Knowledge of the Peers whereupon it was said in Parliament that The cognisance and Punishment of his Offence did of common Right and antient Custom of the Realm of England solely and wholly belong to Our Lord the King and no other Le cognisance punissement de commune droit auntienne custome de Royalme de Engleterre seul per tout apperteine au Roy nostre Seignieur a nul autre In the case of the Lord de la Ware the Judgment of the Lords was that he should have place next after the Lord Willoughby of Erisbe by consent of all except the Lord Windsor and the Lord Keeper was required to acquaint Her Majesty with the Determination of the Peers and to know her Pleasure concerning the same The Inference from these Precedents is that the Decisive or Iudicial Power exercised in the Chamber of Peers is merely derivative and subservient to the Supreme Power which resides in the King and is grounded solely upon his grace and favour for howsoever the House of Commons do alledge their Power to be founded on the Principles of Nature in that they are the Representative Body of the Kingdom as they say and so being the whole may take care and have power by Nature to preserve themselves yet the House of Peers do not nor cannot make any such the least Pretence since there is no reason in Nature why amongst a company of men who are all equal some few should be picked out to be exalted above their Fellows and have power to Govern those who by Nature are their companions The difference between a Peer and a Commoner is not by Nature but by the grace of the Prince who creates Honours and makes those Honours to be hereditary whereas he might have given them for life onely or during pleasure or good behaviour and also annexeth to those Honours the Power of having Votes in Parliament as hereditary Counsellours furnished with ampler Privileges than the Commons All these Graces conferred upon the Peers are so far from being derived from the Law of Nature that they are contradictory and destructive of that natural equality and freedom of mankind which many conceive to be the foundation of the Privileges and Liberties of the House of Commons there is so strong an opposition between the liberties of Grace and Nature that it had never been possible for the two Houses of Parliament to have stood together without mortal Enmity and eternal jarring had they been raised upon such opposite foundations But the truth is the Liberties and Privileges of both Houses have but one and the self same foundation which is nothing else but the meer and sole Grace of Kings Thus much may serve to shew the Nature and Original of the deliberative and decisive Power of the Peers of the Kingdom The matter about which the deliberative power is conversant is generally the Consulting and Advising upon any urgent Business which concerns the King or Defence of the Kingdom and more especially sometimes in preparing new Laws and this Power is grounded upon the Writ The décisive Power is exercised in giving Judgment in some difficult Cases but for this Power of the Peers I find no Warrant in their Writ Whereas the Parliament is styled the Supreme Court it must be understood properly of the King sitting in the House of Peers in Person and but improperly of the Lords without him Every Supreme Court must have the Supreme Power and the Supreme Power is alwayes Arbitrary for that is Arbitrary which hath no Superiour on Earth to control●… it The last Appeal in all Government must still b●… to an Arbitrary Power or else Appeals will b●… in Infinitum never at an end The Legislative Power is an Arbitrary Power for they are termini convertibiles The main Question in these our dayes is Where this Power Legislative remains or is placed upon conference of the Writs of Summons for both Houses with the Bodies and Titles of our Ancient Acts of Parliament we shall find the Power of making Laws rests solely in the King Some affirm that a part of the Legislative Power is in either of the Houses but besides invincible reason from the Nature of Monarchy it self which must have the Supreme Power Alone the constant Antient Declaration of this Kingdom is against it For howsoever of later years in the Titles and Bodies of our Acts of Parliament it be not so particularly expressed who is the Author and Maker of our Laws yet in almost all our elder Statutes it is precisely expressed that they are made by the King Himself The general words used of later times that Laws are made by Authority of Parliament are particularly explained in former Statutes to mean That the King Ordains the Lords Advise the Commons Consent as by comparing the Writs with the Statutes that expound the Writs will evidently appear Magna Charta begins thus Henry by the grace of God Know ye that WE of Our Meer and Free Will have given these Liberties In the self-same style runs Charta de Foresta and tells us the Author of it The Statute de Scaccario 41 H. 3. begins in these words The King Commandeth that all Bailiffs Sheriffs and other Officers c. And concerning the Justices of Chester the King Willeth c. and again He Commandeth the Treasurer and Barons of the Exchequer upon their Allegiance The Stat. of Marlborough 52 Hen. 3. goeth thus The King hath Made these Acts Ordinances and Statutes which He Willeth to be Observed of all his Subjects high and low 3 Edw. 1. The Title of this Statute is These are the ACTS of King EDWARD and after it follows The KING hath Ordained these ACTS and in the first Chapter The King Forbiddeth and Commandeth That none do hurt damage or grievance ●…o any Religious Man or Person of the Church and in the thirteenth Chapter The King prohibiteth that none do Ravish or take away by force any Maid within age 6 Edw. 1. It is said Our Sovereign Lord the King hath established these Acts commanding they be ●…bserved within this Realm and in the fourteenth Chap. the words are The King of his special Grace granteth that the Citizens of London shall recover in an Assise Damage with the Land The Stat. of West 2. saith Our Lord the King hath ordained that the Will of the Giver be observed and in the 3. Chap. Our Lord the King hath ordained that a woman after the Death of her Husband shal recover by a Writ of Entry The Stat. of Quo Warranto saith Our Lord
Statutes to the Kings meer Will and Pleasure as if there were no Law at all I will offer a few Precedents to the Point 3 Edw. 1. c. 9. saith That Sheriffs Coroners a●… Bailiffs for concealing of Felonies shall make grievo●… Fines at the Kings pleasure Chap. 13. Ordains That such as be found culpabl●… of Ravishing of Women shall Fine at the Kings pleasure Chap. 15. saith The penalty for detaining a Priso●…er that is mainpernable is a Fine at the Kings pleasure or a grievous Amercement to the King and he th●… shall take Reward for deliverance of such shall be at th●… Great Mercy of the King Chap. 20. Offenders in Parks or Ponds shall ma●… Fines at the Kings pleasure Chap. 25. Committers of Champerty and Extortioners are to be punished at the Kings pleasure Chap. 31. Purveyors not paying for what they tak●… shall be Grievously punished at the Kings pleasure Chap. 32. The King shall punish Grievously the Sheriff and him that doth maintain Quarrels Chap. 37. The King shall grant Attaint in Plea of Land where it shall seem to him necessary 7 Edw. 1. saith Whereas of late before certain Persons deputed to Treat upon Debates between Us and certain Great Men it was accorded that in our next Parliament provision shall be made by Us and the common Assent of the Prelates Earls and Barons that in all Parliaments for ever every man shall come without Force and Armour And now in our next Parliament the Prelates Earls Barons and Commonalty have said That to US it belongeth through Our Royal Signory straitly to defend Force of Armour at all times when it shall please Us and to punish them which shall do otherwise and hereunto they are bound to Aid Us their Sovereign Lord at all Seasons when Need shall be 13 Edw. 1. Takers away of Nuns from Religious Houses Fined at the Kings Will. If by the Default of the Lord that will not avoid the Dike Underwoods and Bushes in High-wayes murder be done the Lord shall make Fine at the Kings pleasure 28 Edw. 1. If a Gold-smith be attainted for not Assaying Touching and Working Vessels of Gold he shall be punished by Ransome at the Kings pleasure 2 Hen. 4. The Commons desire they may have Answer of their Petitions before the gift of any Subsidy to which the King answers He would conferr with the Lords and do what should be best according to their Ad●…ice and the last day of Parliament He gave this An●…er That that manner of Doing had not been Seen nor used in no time of his Progenitors or Predecessors that they should have any Answer of then Petitions or knowledge of it before they have shewed and finished all their other Business of Parliament be it of any Grant Business or otherwise and therefore the King would not in any wayes change the Good Customs and Usages Made and Used of Antient Times 5 Hen. 4. c. 6. Whereas one Savage did Beat and maime one Richard Chedder Esquire Menial Servan●… to Tho. Brook Knight of the Shire for Somerset-shire the Statute saith Savage shall make Fine and Ransom at the Kings Pleasure 8 Hen. 4. It is said POTESTAS PRINCIPIS NON EST INCLUSA LEGIBUS the Power of the Prince is not included in the Laws 13 Hen. 4. nu 20. we read of a Restitution i●… Bloud and Lands of William Lasenby by the King by the Assent of the Lords Spiritual and Commons omitting the Lords Temporal 2 Hen. 5. in a Law made there is a Clause That it is the Kings Regalty to grant or deny such of their Petitions as pleaseth Himself 6 Hen. 6. c. 6. An Ordinance was made for to endure As long as it shall please the King 11 Hen. 7. c. 1. hath this Law The King o●… Sovereign Lord calling to His remembrance the duty of Allegiance of His Subjects of this His Realm and that by reason of the same they are bound to serve their Prince and Sovereign Lord for the time being in His Wars for the Defence of Him and the Land against every Rebellion Power and Might reared against Him and with Him to enter and abide in Service in Battel if Case so require and that for the same Service what fortune ever fall by chance in the same Battel against the Mind and Will of the Prince as in this Land some time past hath been seen that it is not reasonable but against all Laws Reason and good Conscience that the said Subjects going with their Sovereign Lord in Wars attending upon Him in His Person or being in other places by his Commandement within the Land or without any thing should lose or forfeit for doing their true Duty and Service of Allegiance Be it therefore Enacted That no Person that shall attend upon the King and do Him true Service shall be attainted therefore of Treason or any other Offence by Act of Parliament or otherwise Also the 18 Chap. of the same Year saith Where every Subject by the Duty of his Allegiance is bounden to Serve and Assist his Prince and Sovereign Lord at all Seasons when need shall require and bound to give attendance upon his Royal Person to defend the same when He shall fortune to go in Person in War for Defence of the Realm or against His Rebels and Enemies for the Subduing and Repressing of them and their malitious purpose Christopher Wray Serjeant at Law chosen Speaker 13 Eliz. in his Speech to Her Majesty said that for the orderly Government of the Commonwealth three things were necessary 1. Religion 2. Authority 3. Law By the first we are taught not only our Duty to God but to obey the Queen and that not only in Temporals but in Spirituals in which Her Power is absolute Mr. Grivel in the 35 Eliz. said in Parliament He ●…ished not the making of many Laws since the more we make the less Liberty we have our selves Her Majesty not being bound by them For further proof that the Legislative Power is proper to the King we may take notice that in antient time as Sir Edw. Coke saith All Acts of Parliament were in form of Petitions if the Petitions were from the Commons and the Answer of them the King 's it is easie thereby to judge who made the Act of Parliament Also Sir Io. Glanvil affirms that in former times the course of Petitioning the King was this The Lords and Speaker either by Words or Writing preferr'd their Petition to the King this then was called the Bill of the Commons which being received by the King part He received part He put out and part he ratified for as it came from Him it was drawn into a Law Also it appears that Provisions Ordinances and Proclamations made heretofore out of Parliament have been alwayes acknowledged for Laws and Statutes We have amongst the printed Statutes one called the Statute of Ireland dated at Westminster 9 Feb. 14 Hen. 3. which is nothing but a Letter of the King to Gerard Son of
Commons may be unjust so that the Lords and Commons themselves may be the Judges of what is just or unjust But where a King by Oath binds his Conscience to protect just Laws it concerns him to be satisfied in his own Conscience that they be just and not by an implicite Faith or blind Obedience no man can be so proper a Judge of the Justness of Laws as he whose Soul must lie at the Stake for the Defence and Safeguard of them Besides in this very Oath the King doth swear to do equal and right Iustice and Discretion in Mercy and Truth in all His Iudgments facies fieri in omnibus judiciis tuis aequam rectam justitiam discretionem in Misericordia Veritate if we allow the King Discretion and Mercy in his Iudgments of Necessity he must judge of the Justness of the Laws Again the clause of the Oath quas vulgus elegerit doth not mention the assenting unto or granting any new Laws but of holding protecting and strengthning with all his Might the just Laws that were already in Being there were no need of Might or Strength if assenting to new Laws were there meant Some may wonder why there should be such Labouring to deny the King a negative Voice since a negative Voice is in it self so poor a thing that if a man had all the Negative Voices in the Kingdom ●…t would not make him a King nor give him Power to make one Law a negative Voice is but a ●…ivative Power that is no Power at all to do or act any thing but a Power only to hinder the Power of another Negatives are of such a malignant or destructive Nature that if they have nothing else to destroy they will when they meet destroy one another which is the reason why two Negatives make an Affirmative by destroying the Negation which did hinder the Affirmation A King with a Negative Voice only is but like a Syllogisme of pure negative Propositions which can conclude nothing It must be an Affirmative Voice that makes both a King and a Law and without it there can be no imaginable Government The reason is plain why the Kings negative Voice is so eagerly opposed for though it give the King no Power to do any thing yet it gives him a Power to hinder others though it cannot make Him a King yet it can help him to keep others from being Kings For Conclusion of this Discourse of the negative Voice of the King I shall oppose the Judgment of a Chief Iustice of England to the Opinion of him that calls himself an utter Barister of Lincolns Inn and let others judge who is the better Lawyer of the two the words are Bracton's but concern Mr. Pryn to lay them to heart Concerning the Charters and Deeds of Kings the Iustices nor private men neither ought nor can dispute nor yet if there rise a Doubt in the Kings Charter can they interpret it and in doubtful and obscure Points or if a word contain two Senses the Interpretation and Will of Our Lord the King is to be expected seeing it is his part to interpret who makes the Charter full well Mr. Pryn knows that when Bracton writ the Laws that were then made and strived for were called the Kings Charters as Magna Charta Charta de Foresta and others so that in Bracton's Judgment the King hath not only a Negative Voice to hinder but an Affirmative to make a Law which is a great deal more than Master Pryn will allow him Not only the Law-maker but also the sole Iudge of the People is the King in the Judgment of Bracton these are his words Rex non alius debet judicare si solus ad id sufficere possit the King and no other ought to judge if He alone were able Much like the words of Bracton speaketh Briton where after that he had shewed that the King is the Viceroy of God and that He hath distributed his Charge into sundry portions because He alone is not sufficient to hear all Complaints of His People then he addeth these words in the Person of the King Nous volons que nostre jurisdiction soit sur touts Iurisdictions c. We Will that Our Iurisdiction be above all the Iurisdictions of Our Realm so as in all manner of Felonies Trespasses Contracts and in all other actions Personal or Real We have Power to yield or cause to be yielded such Iudgments as do appertain without other Process wheresoever we know the right Truth as Iudges Neither was this to be taken saith Mr. Lambard to be meant of the Kings Bench where there is only an imaginary presence of His Person but it must necessarily be understood of a Iurisdiction remaining and left in the King 's Royal Body and Brest distinct from that of His Bench and other ordinary Courts because he doth immediately after severally set forth by themselves as well the authority of the Kings Bench as of the other Courts And that this was no new-made Law Mr. Lam●…d puts us in mind of a Saxon Law of King Edgars Nemo in lite Regem appellato c. Let no man i●… Suit appeal unto the King unless he cannot get Right a●… home but if that Right be too Heavy for him then l●… him go to the King to have it eased By which i●… may evidently appear that even so many years ag●… there might be Appellation made to the Kings Persae whensoever the Cause should enforce it The very like Law in Effect is to be seen in the Laws of Canutus the Dane sometimes King of th●… Realm out of which Law Master Lambard gathe●… that the King Himself had a High Court of Iustia wherein it seemeth He sate in Person for the words b●… Let him not seek to the King and the same Court ●… the King did judge not only according to mee●… Right and Law but also after Equity and goo●… Conscience For the Close I shall end with the Suffrage ●… our late Antiquary Sir Henry Spelman in his Glossary he saith Omnis Regni Iustitia solius Regis est c. All Iustice of the Kingdom is only the King 's and H●… alone if He were able should Administer it but th●… being impossible He is forced to delegate it to Ministers whom he bounds by the limits of the Laws the positive Laws are only about Generals in particular Cases they are sometimes too strict sometimes too remis●… and so oft Wrong instead of Right will be done if w●… stand to strict Law also Causes hard and difficult d●…ly arise which are comprehended in no Law-books ●… those there is a necessity of running back to the King t●… Fountain of Iustice and the Vicegerent of God himself who in the Commonwealth of the Iews took such Cause to His own cognisance and left to Kings not only the Example of such Iurisdiction but the Prerogative also Of Privilege of Parliament WHat need all this ado will some say to
can be saved whence it may be inferred That if the Masterly Government of Tyrants cannot be safe without the Preservation of them whom they govern it will follow that a Tyrant cannot govern for his own Profit only and thus his main Definition of Tyranny fails as being grounded upon an impossible Supposition by his own Confession No Example can be shewed of any such Government that ever was in the World as Aristotle describes a Tyranny to be for under the worst of Kings though many particular men have unjustly suffered yet the Multitude or the People in general have found Benefit and Profit by the Government It being apparent that the different kinds of Government in Aristotle arise onely from the difference of the number of Governours whether one a few or many there may be as many several Forms of Governments as there be several Numbers which are infinite so that not onely the several Parts of a City or Commonweal but also the several Numbers of such Parts may cause multiplicity of Forms of Government by Aristotle's Principles It is further observable in Assemblies that it is not the whole Assembly but the major part onely of the Assembly that hath the Government for that which pleaseth the most is alwayes ratified saith Aristotle lib. 4. c. 4. by this means one and the same Assembly may make at one Sitting several Forms of Commonweals for in several Debates and Votes the same number of men or all the self-same men do not ordinarily agree in their Votes and the least Disagreement either in the Persons of the men or in their number alters the Form of Government Thus in a Commonweal one part of the Publick Affairs shall be ordered by one Form of Government and another part by another Form and a third part by a third Form and so in infinitum How can that have the Denomination of a Form of Government which lasts but for a moment onely about one fraction of Business for in the very instant as it were in the Twinkling of an eye while their Vote lasteth the Government must begin and end To be governed is nothing else but to be obedient and subject to the Will or Command of another it is the Will in a man that governs ordinarily mens Wills are divided according to their several Ends or Interests which most times are different and many times contrary the one to the other and in such cases where the Wills of the major part of the Assembly do unite and agree in one Will there is a Monarchy of many Wills in one though it be called an Aristocracy or Democracy in regard of the several Persons it is not the many Bodies but the one Will or Soul of the Multitude that governs Where one is set up out of many the People becometh a Monarch because many are Lords not separately but altogether as one therefore such a People as if it were a Monarch seeks to bear Rule alone L. 4. c. 4. It is a false and improper Speech to say that a whole Multitude Senate Councel or any Multitude whatsoever doth govern where the major part only rules because many of the Multitude that are so assembled are so far from having any part in the Government that they themselves are governed against and contrary to their Wills there being in all Government various and different Debates and Consultations it comes to pass oft-times that the major part in every Assembly differs according to the several Humours or Fancies of men those who agree in one Mind in one Point are of different Opinions in another every Change of Business or new Matter begets a new major part and is a Change both of the Government and Governours the Difference in the Number or in the Qualities of the Persons that govern is the only thing that causes different Governments according to Aristotle who divides his Kinds of Government to the Number of one a few or many As amongst the Romans their Tribunitial Laws had several Titles according to the Names of those Tribunes of the People that preferr'd and made them So in other Governments the Body of their Acts and Ordinances is composed of a Multitude of momentary Monarchs who by the Strength and Power of their Parties or Factions are still under a kind of a civil War fighting and scratching for the legislative miscellany or medly of several Governments If we consider each Government according to the nobler Part of which it is composed it is nothing else but a Monarchy of Monothelites or of many men of one Will most commonly in one Point only but if we regard only the baser part or Bodies of such Persons as govern there is an interrupted Succession of a Multitude of short-lived Governments with as many Intervalls of Anarchy so that no man can say at any time that he is under any Form of Government for in a shorter time than the word can be spoken every Government is begun and ended Furthermore in all Assemblies of what Quality soever they be whether Aristocratical or Democratical as they call them they all agree in this one Point to give that honourable Regard to Monarchy that they do interpret the major or prevailing part in every Assembly to be but as one man and so do feign to themselves a kind of Monarchy Though there be neither Precept nor Practice in Scripture nor yet any Reason alledged by Aristotle for any Form of Government but only Monarchy yet it is said that it is evident to common Sense that of old time Rome and in this present Age Venice and the Low-Countries enjoy a Form of Government different from Monarchy Hereunto it may be answered That a People may live together in Society and help one another and yet not be under any Form of Government as we see Herds of Cattel do and yet we may not say they live under Government For Government is not a Society only to live but to live well and vertuously This is acknowledged by Aristotle who teacheth that the End of a City is to live blessedly and honestly Political Communities are ordained for honest Actions but not for living together only Now there be two things principally required to a blessed and honest life Religion towards God and Peace towards men that is a quiet and peaceable Life in all Godliness and Honesty 1 Tim. 2. 2. Here then will be the Question Whether Godliness and Peace can be found under any Government but Monarchy or whether Rome Venice or the Low-Countries did enjoy these under any popular Government In these two Points let us first briefly examine the Roman Government which is thought to have been the most glorious For Religion we find presently after the Building of the City by Romulus the next King Numa most devoutly established a Religion and began his Kingdom with the Service of the Gods he forbad the Romans to make any Images of God which Law lasted and was observed 170 Years there being in
all that time no Image or Picture of God in any Temple or Chappel of Rome also he erected the Pontifical Colledge and was himself the first Bishop or Pontifex These Bishops were to render no Account either to the Senate or Commonalty They determined all Questions concerning Religion as well between Priests as between private men They punished inferiour Priests if they either added or detracted from the established Rites or Ceremonies or brought in any new thing into Religion The chief Bishop Pontif●… Maximus taught every man how to honour and serve the Gods This Care had Monarchy of Religion But after the Expulsion of Kings we do not find during the Power of the People any one Law made for the Benefit or Exercise of Religion there be two Tribunitian Laws concerning Religion but they are meerly for the Benefit of the Power of the People and not of Religion L. Papirius a Tribune made a Law called Lex Papiria that it should not be lawful for any to consecrate either Houses Grounds Altars or any other things without the Determinatin of the People Domitius Aenobarbus another Tribune enacted a Law called Domitia Lex that the Pontifical Colledge should not as they were wont admit whom they would into the Order of Priesthood but it should be in the Power of the People and because it was contrary to their Religion that Church-Dignities should be bestowed by the common People hence for very Shame he ordained that the lesser part of the People namely seventeen Tribes should elect whom they thought fit and afterwards the Party elected should have his Confirmation or admission from the Colledge thus by a Committee of seven Tribes taken out of thirty five the ancient Form of Religion was alter'd and reduced to the Power of the lesser part of the People This was the great Care of the People to bring Ordination and Consecration to the Laity The Religion in Venice and the Low-Countries is sufficiently known much need not be said of them they admirably agree under a seeming contrariety it is commonly said that one of them hath all Religions and the other no Religion the Atheist of Venice may shake hands with the Sectary of Amsterdam This is the Liberty that a popular estate can brag of every man may be of any Religion or no Religion if he please their main Devotion is exercised only in opposing and suppressing Monarchy They both agree to exclude the Clergy from medling in Government whereas in all Monarchies both before the Law of Moses and under it and ever since all Barbarians Graecians Romans Infidels Turks and Indians have with one Consent given such Respect and Reverence to their Priests as to trust them with their Laws and in this our Nation the first Priests we read of before Christianity were the Druides who as Caesar saith decided and determined Controversies in Murder in Case of Inheritance of Bounds of Lands as they in their Discretion judged meet they grant Rewards and Punishments It is a Wonder to see what high Respect even the great Turk giveth to his Mufti or chief Bishop so necessary is Religion to strengthen and direct Laws To consider of the Point of Peace It is well known that no People ever enjoyed it without Monarchy Aristotle saith the Lacedemonians preserved themselves by Warring and after they had gotten to themselves the Empire then were they presently undone for that they could not live at Rest nor do any better Exercise than the Exercise of War l. 2. c. 7. After Rome had expelled Kings it was in perpetual War till the time of the Emperours once only was the Temple of Ianus shut after the end of the first Punique War but not so long as for one year but for some Moneths It is true as Orosius saith that for almost 700 years that is from Tullus Hostilius 〈◊〉 Augustus Caesar only for one Summer the Bowels 〈◊〉 Rome did not sweat Blood On the Behalf of the Romans it may be said that though the Bowels of Rome did always sweat Blood yet they did obtain most glorious Victories abroad But it may be truly answered if all the Roman Conquests had no other Foundation but Injustice this alone soils all the Glory of her warlike Actions The most glorious War that ever Rome had was with Carthag●… the Beginning of which War Sir Walter Raleig●… proves to have been most unjustly undertaken by the Romans in confederating with the Mamertines and Aiding of Rebels under the Title of protecting their Confederates whereas Kings many times may have just Cause of War for recovering and preserving their Rights to such Dominions as fall to them by Inheritance or Marriage a Popular Estate that can neither marry nor be Heir to another can have no such Title to a War in a Foreign Kingdom and to speak the Truth if it be rightly considered the whole time of the Popularity of Rome the Romans were no other than the only prosperous and glorious Thieves and Robbers of the World If we look more narrowly into the Roman Government it will appear that in that very Age wherein Rome was most victorious and seemed to be most popular she owed most of her Glory to an apparent kind of Monarchy For it was the Kingh●… Power of the Consuls who as Livy saith had the same Royal Iurisdiction or absolute Power that the Kings had not any whit diminished or abated and held all the same Regal Ensignes of supreme Dignity which helpt Rome to all her Conquests whiles the Tribunes of the People were strugling at home with the Senate about Election of Magistrates enacting of Laws and calling to Account or such other popular Affairs the Kingly Consuls gained all the Victories abroad Thus Rome at one and the same time was broken and distracted into two Shewes of Government the Popular which served only to raise Seditions and Discords within the Walls whilest the Regal atchieved the Conquests of Foreign Nations and Kingdomes Rome was so sensible of the Benefit and Necessity of Monarchy that in her most desperate Condition and Danger when all other Hopes failed her she had still Resort to the Creation of a Dictator who for the time was an absolute King and from whom no Appeal to the People was granted which is the royallest Evidence for Monarchy in the World for they who were drawn to swear they would suffer no King of Rome found no Security but in Perjury and breaking their Oath by admitting the Kingly Power in spight of their Teeth under a new name of a Dictator or Consul a just Reward for their wanton expelling their King for no other Crime they could pretend but Pride which is most tolerable in a King of all men and yet we find no particular Point of Pride charged upon him but that he enjoyned the Romans to labour in cleansing and casting of Ditches and paving their Sinks an Act both for the Benefit and Ornament of the City and therefore commendable in the King But the
Centuries This Assembly by Centuries as it was more Ancient than that by Tribes so it was more truly popular because all the Nobility as well as the Commons had Voices in it The Assembly by Tribes was pretended at first only to elect Tribunes of the People and other inferiour Magistrates to determine of lesser Crimes that were not Capital but only finable and to decree that Peace should be made but they did not meddle with denouncing War to be made for that high Point did belong only to the Assembly of the Centuries and so also did the judging of Treason and other Capital Crimes The Difference between the Assembly of the Tribes and of the Centuries is very material for though it be commonly thought that either of these two Assemblies were esteemed to be the People yet in Reality it was not so for the Assembly of the Centuries only could be said to be the People because all the Nobility were included in it as well as the Commons whereas they were excluded out of the Assembly of the Tribes and yet in Effect the Assembly of the Centuries was but as the Assembly of the Lords or Nobles only because the lesser and richer part of the People had the Sovereignty as the Assembly of the Tribes was but the Commons only In maintenance of the popular Government of Rome Bodin objects that there could be no regal Power in the two Consuls who could neither make Law nor Peace nor War The Answer is though there were two Consuls yet but one of them had the Regality for they governed by Turns one Consul one Moneth and the other Consul another Moneth or the first one day and the second another day That the Consuls could make no Laws is false it is plain by Livy that they had the Power to make Laws or War and did execute that Power though they were often hindered by the Tribunes of the People not for that the Power of making Laws or War was ever taken away from the Consuls or communicated to the Tribunes but onely the Exercise of the Consular Power was suspended by a seeming humble way of intercession of the Tribunes The Consuls by their first Institution had a lawful Right to do those things which yet they would not do by reason of the shortness of their Reigns but chose rather to countenance their actions with the title of a Decree of the Senate who were their private Councel yea and sometimes with the Decree of the Assembly of the Centuries who were their Publick Counsel for both the Assembling of the Senate and of the Centuries was at the Pleasure of the Consuls and nothing was to be propounded in either of them but at the Will of the Consuls which argues a Sovereignty in them over the Senate and Centuries the Senate of Rome was like the House of Lords the Assembly of the Tribes resembled the House of Commons but the Assembling of the Centuries was a Body composed of Lords and Commons united to Vote together The Tribunes of the People bore all the Sway among the Tribes they called them together when they pleased without any Order whereas the Centuries were never Assembled without Ceremony and Religious observation of the Birds by the Augurs and by the Approbation of the Senate and therefore were said to be auspicata and ex authoritate Patrum These things considered it appears that the Assembly of the Centuries was the only legitimate and great Meeting of the People of Rome as for any Assembling or Electing of any Trustees or Representors of the People of Rome in nature of the modern Parliaments it was not in Use or ever known in Rome Above two hundred and twenty years after the expulsion of Kings a sullen humour took the Commons of Rome that they would needs depart the City to Ianiculum on the other side of Tybur they would not be brought back into the City until a Law was made That a Plebiscitum or a Decree of the Commons might be observed for a Law this Law was made by the Dictator Hortensius to quiet the Sedition by giving a part of the Legislative Power to the Commons in such inferiour matters only as by Toleration and Usurpation had been practised by the Commons I find not that they desired an Enlargement of the Points which were the Object of their Power but of the Persons or Nobility that should be subject to their Decrees the great Power of making War of creating the greater Magistrates of judging in Capital Crimes remained in the Consuls with the Senate and Assembly of the Centuries For further manifestation of the broken and distracted Government of Rome it is fit to consider the original Power of the Consuls and of the Tribunes of the Commons who are ordinarily called the Tribunes of the People First it is undeniable that upon the expulsion of Kings Kingly power was not taken away but only made Annual and changeable between two Consuls who in their Turns and by course had the Sovereignty and all Regal power this appears plainly in Livy who tells us that Valerius Publicola being Consul he himself alone ordained a Law and then assembled a general Session Turemillus Arsa inveighed and complained against the Consul's Government as being so absolute and in Name only less odious than that of Kings but in Fact more cruel for instead of one Lord the City had received twain having Authority beyond all Measure unlimited and infinite Sextius and Licinus complain that there would never be any indifferent Course so long as the Nobles kept the Sovereign Place of Command and the Sword to strike whiles the poor Commons have only the Buckler their Conclusion was that it remains that the Commons bear the Office of Consuls too for that were a Fortress of their Liberty from that day forward shall the Commons be Partakers of those things wherein the Nobles now surpass them namely Sovereign Rule and Authority The Law of the twelve Tables affirms Regio imperio duo sunto iique Consules appellantor Let two have regal Power and let them be called Consuls also the Judgment of Livy is that the Sovereign Power was translated from Consuls to Decemvirs as before from Kings to Consuls These are proofs sufficient to shew the Royal Power of the Consuls About sixteen years after the first Creation of Consuls the Commons finding themselves much run into Debt by wasting their Estates in following the Wars and so becoming as they thought oppressed by Usury and cast into Prison by the Judgment and Sentence of the Consuls they grievously complained of Usury and of the Power of the Consuls and by Sedition prevailed and obtained Leave to choose among themselves Magistrates called Tribunes of the People who by their Intercession might preserve the Commons from being oppressed and suffering Wrong from the Consuls and it was further agreed that the Persons of those Tribunes should be sacred and not to be touched by any By means of this Immunity of
his own Will V. If it be demanded what is meant by the word People 1. Sometimes it is Populus universus and then every Child must have his Consent asked which is impossible 2. Sometimes it is pars major and sometimes it is pars potior sanior How the major part where all are alike free can bind the minor part is not yet proved But it seems the major part will not carry it nor be allowed except they be the better part and the sounder part We are told the sounder part implored the help of the Army when it saw it self and the Commonwealth betrayed and that the Souldiers judged better than the Great Councel and by Arms saved the Commonwealth which the Great Councel had almost damned by their Votes p. 7. Here we see what the People is to wit the sounder part of which the Army is the judge thus upon the matter the Souldiers are the People which being so we may discern where the Liberty of the People lieth which we are taught to consist all for the most part in the power of the Peoples Choosing what Form of Government they please pag. 61. A miserable Liberty which is onely to choose to whom we will give our Liberty which we may not keep See more concerning the People in a Book entituled The Anarchy p. 8 9 10 11 12 13 14. VI. We are taught that a Father and a King are things most diverse The Father begets us but not the King but we create the King Nature gives a Father to the People the People give themselves a King If the Father kill his Son he loseth his life why should not the King also p. 34. Ans. Father and King are not so diverse it is confessed that at first they were all one for there is confessed Paternum imperium haereditarium p. 141. and this Fatherly Empire as it was of it self hereditary so it was alienable by Patent and seizable by an Usurper as other goods are and thus every King that now is hath a Paternal Empire either by Inheritance or by Translation or Usurpation so a Father and a King may be all one A Father may dye for the Murther of his Son where there is a Superiour Father to them both or the Right of such a Supreme Father but where there are onely Father and Sons no Sons can question the Father for the death of their Brother the reason why a King cannot be punished is not because he is excepted from Punishment or doth not deserve it but because there is no Superiour to judge him but God onely to whom he is reserved VII It is said thus He that takes away from the People the power of Choosing for themselves what Form of Government they please he doth take away that wherein all Civil Liberty almost consists p. 65. If almost all Liberty be in Choosing of the Kind of Government the People have but a poor Bargain of it who cannot exercise their Liberty but in Chopping and Changing their Government and have liberty onely to give away their Liberty than which there is no greater mischief as being the cause of endless Sedition VIII If there be any Statute in our Law by which thou canst find that Tyrannical Power is given to a King that Statute being contrary to Gods Will to Nature and Reason understand that by that general and primary Law of ours that Statute is to be repealed and not of force with us p. 153. Here if any man may be judge what Law is contrary to Gods Will or to Nature or to Reason it will soon bring in Confusion Most men that offend if they be to be punished or fined will think that Statute that gives all Fines and Forfeitures to a King to be a Tyrannical Law thus most Statutes would be judged void and all our Fore-fathers taken for Fools or Madmen to make all our Laws to give all Penalties to the King IX The sin of the Children of Israel did lye not in Desiring a King but in desiring such a King like as the Nations round about had they distrusted God Almighty that governed them by the Monarchical Power of Samuel in the time of oppression when God provided a Judge for them but they desired a perpetual and hereditary King that they might never want in Desiring a King they could not sin for it was but Desiring what they enjoyed by Gods special Providence X. Men are perswaded that in Making of a Covenant something is to be performed on both parts by mutual Stipulation which is not alwayes true for we find God made a Covenant with Noah and his Seed with all the Fowl and the Cattel not to destroy the Earth any more by a flood This Covenant was to be kept on Gods part neither Noah nor the Fowl nor the Cattel were to perform any thing by this Covenant On the other side Gen. 17. 9 10. God covenants with Abraham saying Thou shalt keep my Covenant every male child among you shall be circumcised Here it is called Gods Covenant though it be to be performed onely by Abraham so a Covenant may be called the Kings Covenant because it is made to him and yet to be performed only by the People So also 2 Kin. 11. 17. Iehoiada made a Covenant between the Lord and the King and the People that they should be the Lords People Between the King also and the People which might well be that the People should be the Kings Servants and not for the King 's covenanting to keep any Humane Laws for it is not likely the King should either Covenant or take any Oath to the People when he was but seven years of age and that never any King of Israel took a Coronation-Oath that can be shewed when Iehoiada shewed the King to the Rulers in the House of the Lord he took an Oath of the People he did not Article with them but saith the next Verse Commanded them to keep a Watch of the Kings House and that they should compass the King around about every man with his weapon in his hand and he that cometh within the Ranges let him be slain XI To the Text Where the word of a King is there is Power and who may say unto him What dost thou J. M. gives this Answer It is apparent enough that the Preacher in this place gives Precepts to every private man not to the great Sanhedrin nor to the Senate shall not the Nobles shall not all the other Magistrates shall not the whole People dare to mutter so oft as the King pleaseth to dote We must here note that the great Councel and all other Magistrates or Nobles or the whole People compared to the King are all but private men if they derive their Power from him they are Magistrates under him and out of his Presence for when he is in place they are but so many private men I. M. asks Who swears to a King unless the King on the other side be sworn
forgot himself and reckons up a fifth kind of Monarchy which is saith he When one alone hath Supream power of all the rest for as there is a domestical Kingdom of one house so the Kingdom of a City or of one or many Nations is a Family These are all the sorts of Monarchy that Aristotle hath found out and he hath strained hard to make them so many first for his Lacedemonian King himself confesseth that he was but a kind of Military Commander in War and so in effect no more a King than all Generals of Armies And yet this No-king of his was not limited by any Law nor mixed with any companions of his Government when he was in the Wars out of the Confines of Lacedemon he was as Aristotle stiles him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of full and absolute command no Law no companion to govern his Army but his own will Next for Aristotles Aesymnetical King it appears he was out of date in Aristotles time for he saith he was amongst the antient Greeks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Aristotle might well have spared the naming him if he had not wanted other sorts for the honour of his own Nation for he that but now told us the Barbarians were of a more servile nature than the Grecians comes here and tells us that these old Greek Kings were Elective Tyrants The Barbarians did but suffer Tyrants in shew but the old Grecians chose Tyrants indeed which then must we think were the greater slaves the Greeks or the Barbarians Now if these sorts of Kings were Tyrants we cannot suppose they were limited either by Law or joyned with companions Indeed Arist. saith some of these Tyrants were limited to certain times and actions for they had not all their power for term of life nor could meddle but in certain businesses yet during the time they were Tyrants and in the actions whereto they were limited they had absolute power to do what they list according to their own will or else they could not have been said to be Tyrants As for Aristotles Heroick King he gives the like note upon him that he did upon the Aesymnet that he was in old time 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Heroick times The thing that made these Heroical Kingdoms differ from other sorts of Kingdoms was only the means by which the first Kings obtained their Kingdoms and not the manner of Government for in that they were as absolute as other Kings were without either limitation by Law or mixture of companions Lastly as for Arist. Barbarick sort of Kings since he reckoned all the world Barbarians except the Grecians his Barbarick King must extend to all other sorts of Kings in the world besides those of Greece and so may go under Aristotles fifth sort of Kings which in general comprehends all other sorts and is no special form of Monarchy Thus upon a true accompt it is evident that the five several sorts of Kings mentioned by Aristotle are at the most but different and accidental means of the first obtaining or holding of Monarchies and not real or essential differences of the manner of Government which was always absolute without either limitation or mixture I may be thought perhaps to mistake or wrong Aristotle in questioning his diversities of Kings but it seems Aristotle himself was partly of the same mind for in the very next Chapter when he had better considered of the point he confessed that to speak the truth there were almost but two sorts of Monarchies worth the considering that is his first or Laconique sort and his fifth or last sort where one alone hath Supream power over all the rest thus he hath brought his five sorts to two Now for the first of these two his Lacedemonian King he hath confessed before that he was no more than a Generalissimo of an Army and so upon the matter no King at all and then there remains onely his last sort of Kings where one alone hath the Supream power And this in substance is the final resolution of Aristotle himself for in his sixteenth Chapter where he delivers his last thoughts touching the kinds of Monarchy he first dischargeth his Laconick King from being any sort of Monarchy and then gives us two exact rules about Monarchy and both these are pointblank against limited and mixed Monarchy therefore I shall propose them to be considered of as concluding all Monarchy to be absolute and Arbitrary 1. The one Rule is that he that is said to be a King according to Law is no sort of Government or Kingdom at all 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. The second rule is that a true King is he that ruleth all according to his own will 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This latter frees a Monarch from the mixture of partners or sharers in Government as the former rule doth from limitation by Laws Thus in brief I have traced Aristotle in his crabbed and broken passages touching diversities of Kings where he first finds but four sorts and then he stumbles upon a fifth and in the next Chapter contents himself onely with two sorts of Kings but in the Chapter following concludes with one which is the true perfect Monarch who rules all by his own will in all this we find nothing for a regulated or mixed Monarchy but against it Moreover whereas the Author of the Treatise of Monarchy affirms it as a prime principle That all Monarchies except that of the Iews depend upon humane designment when the consent of a society of men and a fundamental contract of a Nation by original or radical constitution confers power He must know that Arist. searching into the original of Government shews himself in this point a better Divine than our Author and as if he had studied the Book of Genesis teacheth That Monarchies fetch their Pedigree from the right of Fathers and not from the gift or contract of people his words may thus be Englished At the first Cities were Governed by Kings and so even to this day are Nations also for such as were under Kingly Government did come together for every House is governed by a King who is the eldest and so also Colonies are governed for kindred sake And immediately before he tells us That the first society made of many Houses is a Village which naturally seems to be a Colony of a House which some call foster-brethren or Children and Childrens Children So in conclusion we have gained Aristotles judgment in three main and essential points 1. A King according to Law makes no kind of Government 2. A King must rule according to his own will 3. The Original of Kings is from the right of Fatherhood What Aristotles judgment was two thousand years since is agreeable to the Doctrine of the great modern Politician Bodin Hear him touching limited Monarchy Unto Majesty or Soveraignty saith he belongeth an absolute power not subject to any Law Chief power given unto a Prince with condition is not properly
I read that the Senators who are all chosen out of the Nobility and seldom exceed the number of 28 with the chief of the Realm do chuse their King They have always in a manner set the Kings eldest Son upon the Royal Throne The Nobility of Denmarke withstood the Coronation of Frederick 1559 till he sware not to put any Noble-man to death until he were judged of the Senate and that all Noble-men should have power of life and death over their Subjects without appeal and the King to give no Office without consent of the Councel There is a Chancelour of the Realm before whom they do appeal from all the Provinces and Islands and from him to the King himself I hear of nothing in this Kingdom that tends to Popularity no Assembly of the Commons no elections or representation of them Sweden is governed by a King heretofore elective but now made hereditary in Gustavus time it is divided into Provinces an appeal lieth from the Vicount of every territory to a Soveraign Judge called a Lamen from the Lamens to the Kings Councel and from this Councel to the King himself Now let the Observator bethink himself whether all or any of these three Countries have found out any art at all whereby the people or community may assume its own power if neither of these Kingdomes have most Countries have not nay none have The people or Community in these three Realms are as absolute vassals as any in the world the regulating power if any be is in the Nobility Nor is it such in the Nobility as it makes shew for The election of Kings is rather a Formality than any real power for they dare hardly chuse any but the Heir or one of the blood Royal if they should chuse one among the Nobility it would prove very factious if a stranger odious neither safe For the Government though the Kings be sworn to raign according to the Laws and are not to do any thing without the consent of their Councel in publick affairs yet in regard they have power both to advance and reward whom they please the Nobility and Senators do comply with their Kings And Boterus concludes of the Kings of Poland who seem to be most moderated that such as is their valour dexterity and wisdome such is their Power Authority and Government Also Bodin saith that these three Kingdoms are States changable and uncertain as the Nobility is stronger than the Prince or the Prince than the Nobility and the people are so far from liberty that he saith Divers particular Lords exact not onely Customs but Tributes also which are confirmed and grow stronger both by long prescription of time and use of Iudgments The End AN ADVERTISEMENT TO THE JURY-MEN of ENGLAND TOUCHING WITCHES ADVERTISEMENT To the JURY-MEN OF ENGLAND THE late Executon of Witches at the Summer Assises in Kent occasioned this brief Exercitation which addresses it self to such as have not deliberately thought upon the great difficulty in discovering what or who a Witch is To have nothing but the publick Faith of the present Age is none of the best Evidence unless the universality of elder times do concur with these Doctrines which ignorance in the times of darkness brought forth and credulity in these days of light hath continued Such as shall not be pleased with this Tractate are left to their liberty to consider whether all those Proofs and Presumptions number'd up by Mr. Perkins for the Conviction of a Witch be not all Condemned or confessed by himself to be unsufficient or uncertain He brings no less than eighteen signs or proofs whereby a Witch may be discovered which are too many to be all true his seven first he himself confesseth to be insufficient for Conviction of a Witch His eight next proofs which he saith men in place have used he acknowledgeth to be false or insufficient Thus of his Eighteen proofs which made a great shew fifteen of them are cast off by himself there remains then his sixteenth which is the Confession of a Witch yet presently he is forced to yield That a bare Confession is not a sufficient proof and so he cometh to his seventeenth proof which is two credible witnesses and he here grants that the League between the Devil and the Witch is closely made and the practices of Witches be very secret that hardly a man can be brought which upon his own knowledge can aver such things Therefore at last when all other proofs fail he is forced to fly to his eighteenth proof and tells us that yet there is a way to come to the knowledge of a Witch which is that Satan useth all means to discover a Witch which how it can be well done except the Devil be bound over to give in evidence against the Witch cannot be understood And as Mr. Perkins weakens and discredits all his own proofs so he doth the like for all those of King James who as I remember hath but Three Arguments for the discovery of a Witch First the secret Mark of a Witch of which Mr. Perkins saith it hath no power by Gods Ordinance Secondly The discovery by a fellow Witch this Mr. Perkins by no means will allow to be a good proof Thirdly the swimming of a Witch who is to be flung cross ways into the water that is as Wierus interprets it when the Thumb of the right Hand is bound to the great Toe of the left Foot and the Thumb of the left Hand to the great Toe of the right Foot Against this Tryal by water together with a disability in a Witch to shed Tears which King James mentions Delrio and Mr. Perkins both argue for it seems they both write after King James who put forth his Book of Daemonologie in his youth being in Scotland about his age of thirty years It concerns the people of this Nation to be more diligently instructed in the Doctrine of Witch-craft than those of Forraign Countries because here they are tyed to a stricter or exacter Rule in giving their sentence than others are for all of them must agree in their Verdict which in a case of extream difficulty is very dangerous and it is a sad thing for men to be reduced to that extremity that they must hazard their Consciences or their Lives A DIFFERENCE BETWEEN An English and Hebrew WITCH THE Point in Question is briefly this Whether such a Witch as is Condemned by the Laws and Statutes of this Land be one and the same with the Witch forbidden by the Law of Moses The Witch Condemned by our Statute-law is 1 Iacob Cap. 12. One that shall use practice or exercise any Invocation or Conjuration of any evil or wicked spirit or consult covenant with entertain or employ feed or reward any evil or wicked spirit to or for any intent or purpose or take up any dead man woman or child out of his her or their grave or any other place where the dead body resteth or the