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

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underlings to the great men then they are to their Fethers to were them no longer then they will make them brave Secondly the Person thus agreed upon his intertainment must be accordingly and therefore the manner of taxing in full County and levying the rate of Wages for their maintenance is reformed and settled And lastly their Persons are put under the Protection of the Law in an especiall manner for as their work is full of reflexion so formerly they had met with many sad influences for their labour And therefore a penall Law is made against force to be made upon the Persons of those workmen of State either in their going to that Service or attending thereupon making such Delinquents liable to Fine and Imprisonment and double damages And thus however the times were full of confusions yet a foundation was laid of a more uniforme Government in future times then England hitherto had seen CAHP. XV. Of the Custos or Protector Regni KIngs though they have vast dimensions yet are not infinite nor greater then the bounds of one Kingdome wherein if present they are in all places present if otherwise they are like the Sunn gone down and must rule by reflexion as the Moone in the night In a mixt common wealth they are integrall members and therefore regularly must act Per deputatum when their Persons are absent in another Ligialty and cannot act Per se Partly because their Lustre is somewhat eclipsed by another Horizon and partly because by common intendment they cannot take notice of things done in their absence It hath therefore been the ancient course of Kings of this Nation to constitute Vicegerents in their absence ' giving them severall titles and severall powers according as the necessity of affaires required Sometimes they are called Lord Warden or Lord Keeper of the Kingdome and have therewith the generall power of a King as it was with John Warren Earle of Surry appointed therunto by Edw. the first who had not onely power to command but to grant and this power extended both to England and Scotland And Peter Gaveston though a Forrainer had the like power given him by Edward the second over England to the reproach of the English Nobility which also they revenged afterward Somtimes these Vicegerents are called Lievtenants which seemeth to conferr onely the Kings power in the Militia as a Lievtenant Generall in an army And thus Richard the second made Edmund Duke of Yorke his Lievtenant of the Kingdome of England to oppose the entry of the Duke of Hertford Afterwards called Henry the fourth into England during the Kings absence in Ireland And in the mean while the other part of the Royalty which concerned the revenues of the Crowne was betrusted to the Earle of Wiltshire Sir John Bush Sir James Baggot and Sir Henry Green unto whom men say the King put his Kingdome to farme But more ordinarily the Kings power was delegated unto one under both the titles of Lord Gaurdian of the Kingdome and Lievtenant within the same such was the title of Henry Lacy Earle of Lincolne and of Gilbert De clare Earle of Glocester and of Audomar De valentia Earle of Pembroke all of them at severall times so constituted by Edward the second as by the Patent Roles appeareth So likewise did Edward the third make his Brother John of E●tham twice and the black Prince thrice and Lionell Duke Clarence and his Brother Thomas each of them once in the severall passages of Edward the third beyond the Sea in the third fifth twelfth fourteenth sixteenth nineteenth and thirty third years of his reigne concerning which see the Patent Rolls of those yeares And Henry the fifth gave likewise the same title and authority to the Duke of Bedford upon the Kings voyage into France and afterward that Duke being sent over to second the King in the French Wars the Duke of Glocester obtained the same power and place But Henry the sixth added a further title of Protector and Defendor of the Kingdome and Church of England this was first given to the Duke of Bedford and afterwards he being made Regent of France it was conferred upon the Duke of Glocester And towards the later time of Henry the sixth it was granted by him to Richard Duke of Yorke This title carried along with it a power different from that of a King onely in honor and the Person so adorned may be said to sway the Scepter but not to weare the Crowne And therefore in the minority of Henry the sixth when as the Government was ordered by the Parliament and to that end a Protector was made and he wel guarded with a Privy Councill and they provided with instructions one of them was that in all matters not to be transacted ordinarily but by the Kings expresse consent the Privy Councell should advise with the Prorector but this is not so needfull in regard that it concerneth the power of executing of Lawes which by right of the liberty of the Subject is the known duty of the Scepter in whose hands soever it is holden And therefore I shall passe to the Legislative power wherein its evident that the Protectors power was no whit inferiour to the Kings power For first the Protector Ex officio by advice of the Councell did summon Parliaments by Writs even as the Kings themselves under their owne Teste and if not bear the Royall Assent yet did they direct the same and received Petitions in Parliament to them directed as to Kings and every way supplied the roome of a King in order to the perfecting publishing and inforcing of Law to Execution Secondly the Parliaments holden by Protectors and Lawes therein made are no whit inferiour to those by the King whether for Honour or Power And therefore if a Parliament be-holden by the Lord Warden and sitting the Parliament the King in person shall arrive and be there present neither is the Parliament interrupted thereby nor the power thereof changed at all though the power and place of the Wardenship of the Kingdome doth utterly vanish by the personall accesse of the King because in all Cases where the King is subservient to the Kingdome or the Common-wealth The Lord Warden in his absence is conservient unto him being in his stead and not under him for the very Place supposeth him as not because not present And this was by a Law declaratively published at such time as Henry the fifth was Regent of France and therefore by common presumption was likely to have much occasion of residence in that Kingdome and it holdeth in equall force with all other Lawes of the highest Size which is the rather to be noted because it is though under a Protector obligatory to the King and makes his personall presence no more considerable then the presence of his shadow For the King spent three whole yeares in the French Warres and during that time never saw England where
them Church-motes For the first of them which is sayd to be holden in the yeare 816. is called a Synod and both Preists and Deacons were there present which are no Members of Parliament consisting onely of the House of Lords and they all of them did Pariter tractare de necessarijs utilitatibus Ecclesiarum The second of them is called a Synodall Councill holden Anno 822. and yet there were then present Omnium dignitatum optimates which cannot be understood onely of those of the House of Lords because they ought all to be personally present and therefore there is no Optimacy amongst them The last of these three is called Synodale Conciliabulum a petty Synod in great letters and besides there were with the Bishops and Abbots many Wise men and in all these respects it cannot be a Parliament onely of the great Lords The next Councill said to be holden in the yeare 823. cannot also be called properly a Parliament but onely a consultation between two Kings and their Councill to prevent the invasion of the Danes and the attests of the Kings Chapplain and his Scribe doe shew also that they were not all Members of the House of Lords The Councill cited by the Opponent in the next place was holden An 838. being onely in nature of a Councill for Law or Judicature to determine the validity of the Kings Grant made to the Church of Canterbury which is no proper worke for a Parliament unlesse it befall during the fitting of the same The next is but a bare title of a Councill supposed to be holden An. 850. And not worth its room for it neither sheweth whether any thing was concluded nor what the conclusions were The worke of the next Councill alleadged to be holden An. 851. was to confirme the Charter of the Monastry of Croyland and to determine concerning affaires belonging to the Mercinies and if it had beene a Parliament for that people it might be worthy of inquiry how regularly the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury and the Bishop of London and the Ambassadors from the West Saxons could sit amongst them and attest the conclusions therein made as wel as the proper members of that Nation He commeth in the next place to a Councill holden in the yeare 855. which is more likely to be a Parliament then most of them formerly mentioned if the Tithes of all England were therein given to the Church but hereof I have set downe my opinion in the former part of the discourse And though it be true that no Knights and Burgesses are therein mentioned as the Opponent observeth out of the Title yet if the body of the Lawes be duly considered towards the conclusion thereof it will appeare that there was present Fidelium infinita multitudo qui omnes regium Chirographum Laudaverunt Dignitates vero sua nomina subscripserunt And yet the Witagen-motes in these times began to be rare being continually inrerrupted by the invasions of the Danes The three next Councills alleaged to be in the yeares 930. 944. 948. Were doubtlesse of inferiour value as the matters therin concluded were of inferiour regard being such as concerne the passing of the Kings Grants Infeodations and confirmations The Councill mentioned to be in the yeare 965. is supposed to be one and the same with the next foregoing by Sir Henry Spelman which calls it selfe a generall Councill not by reason of the generall confluence of the Lords and Laity but because all the Bishops of England did then meet The Primi and Primates were there who these were is not mentioned but its evident that the King of Scots was there and that both he and diverse that are called Ministri Regis attested the conclusions It will be difficult to make out how these should be Members of the House of Lords and more difficult to shew a reason why in the attesting of the acts of these Councills which the Opponent calls Parliaments we finde so few of the Laity that scarce twelve are mentioned in any one of them and those to descend so low as the Ministri Regis to make up the number Five more of these instances remaine before the comming in of the Normans The first of which was in the yeare 975. and in a time when no Parliament according to the Opponents principles could sit for it was an Inter regnum The two next were onely Synods to determine the difference between the Regulers and the Seculers in the Kings absence by reason that he was under age and they are sayd to be in the yeares 977 and 1009. But it s not within the compasse of my matter to debate their dates The last two were Meetings or Courts for Judicature to determine the crime of Treason which every one knowes is determinable by inferiour Courts before the high Steward or Judges and therefore not so peculiar to a Parliament as to be made an argument of its existence And thus are we at an end of all the instances brought by the Opponent to prove that Parliaments before the Norman times consisted of those whom we now call the House of Lords All which I shall shut up with two other notes taken out of the Book of Councils published by Sir Henry Spelman The first of which concerneth a Grant made by Canutus of an exemption to the Abby of Bury Saint Edmonds in a Councill wherein were present Arch-Bishops Bishops Abbots Dukes Earles Cum quamplurimis gregariis militibus cum populi multitudine copiosa votis regiis unanimiter consentientes The other taken out of the confessors Lawes which tells us that Tithes were granted to the Church A Rege Baronibus populo And thus shall leave these testimonies to debate with one another whiles the Reader may judge as seemeth most equall to himselfe Being thus come to the Norman times and those ensuing I shall more summarily proceed with the particulars concerning them because they were times of force and can give little or no evidence against the customes rightly setled in the Saxon times which I have more particularly insisted upon that the originall constitution of this government may the better appeare Now for the more speedy manifesting of the truth in the particulars following I shall pre-advise the Reader in three particulars First that the Church-motes grew more in power and honor by the aide of the Normans Law refusing the concurrence and personall presence of Kings whom at length they excluded from their Councils with all his Nobles and therefore it is the lesse wonder if we heare but little of the Commons joyning with them Secondly that the Norman way of government grew more Aristocraticall then the Saxon making the Lords the cheif Instruments of keeping Kings above and people underneath thus we meet with much noise of meetings betweene the King and Lords and little concerning the grand meetings of the Kings and the representative of the people although some footsteps wee finde even of them
the State would trust it with and because it pretended Cognisance onely of matters of Record before them they found out a way of examining of witnesses by Commission and returning their Depositions in writing which being become a Record before them they gave their Sentence upon the whole matter without the ancient ordinary tryall Per pares It becomes a kinde of Peculiar exempting it selfe from the ordinary course in manner of triall and from the ordinary rules of Law in giving of Sentence and as a back doore for the Kings Arbitry in case of Judicature in matters of Common Pleas as the Councell Table was in Crowne Pleas they both are looked upon with a very pleasing eye of Majesty which loves not to be straite laced yet all is imbattelled under the colours of Equity Honor Conveniency and Conscience like a Monopoly that is bred under the wings of the Publique but feeds it selfe upon it That this had attained the Title of a Court so anciently as in K. Stevens time as the Honorable Reporter noteth I much question by the Title that Fleta gives it in later times nor under his favour will that Testimony cited out of the History of Ely warrant it but upon a mistaken ground of misplacing the note of distinction for I take the words to be thus translated King Etheldred determined and granted that the Church of Ely should for ever in the Kings Court hold the dignitie of the Chancery and not hold the dignitie of the Kings Court of Chancery Neverthelesse its clear that these times brought it to that condition that it might well carry that name if formerly it had not For it grew very fast both in honour and power and this not by usurpation though it did exceed but by expresse donation from the Parliament Yet is this power much darkned in the limits and extent thereof chiefly in regard that the Chancellor is betrusted with many things whereof there is no evidence for the Chancery to claim any Cognisance For he was in these times a person of many interests and relations being one of the Quorum in the Star-Chamber of the Kings Councell chief in the Chancery most commonly a Clergy man and therewith Legate è latere and in these severall Relations might act directly and yet in severall Courts And therefore though he had power with others to punish neglects of Execution of the Statutes of Wines by Act of Parliament and also of the Statute concerning Victuall and to determine matters of controversie between parties in Cases depending before the Parliament and in some matters that concern the Kings Revenue yet cannot these be said to be the proper worke belonging to the Cognisance of the Chancery but to the Chancellor by speciall Commission in another relation Allbeit I cannot deny but the Court it selfe had Cognisance in matters of as strange a nature Viz. To punish disturbances of Merchants in their trade to see to the executing of the Statutes of Purveiors and to remedy greivances contrary to other Statutes which generall words let in a wilde liberty to that Court to intermeddle in Lawes which were never intended for their touch to punish Nusances according to discretion to give remedy to Merchants upon the Statute of Staple so that its clear enough the Parliament intended it should be a Court and gave their Seale to their power of Judicature Nor as it seemeth was this any regret to the Courts of Common Law but as a thing taken for granted For the Reports tell us that if the King grants Tythes arising from without the bounds of any Parish the Patentee shall sue in the Chancery by Scire Facias and shall there proceed to issue or demurrer and then to the common Law where upon triall if the Defendant make default the Plaintiffe shall have Judgement and Execution And if the Heire be in Ward to the King the Mother shall sue and recover her Dower in the Chancery And they tell us that it had power to prohibite Spirituall Courts and Courts of common Law yea to over-rule or reverse judgements and yet the common Law held its ground when it was concerned for neither were all suites there by Bill as in cases of Equity nor determined according to such rules nor did the power of Judicature rest in the breast of one Chancellor but in him joyntly with other Councell of the King which were also learned Judges of the Law For the Report informeth that Edward the Second had granted a Rent in Taile to the Earle of Kent who dying his Sonne under age and Ward to the King Edward the Third seised amongst other Lands the rent and granted it to Sir John Molins Upon Petition the King refers the matter to the Arch Bishop and others of the Councell calling to them the Chancellor A Scire Facias goes forth to Sir John Molins he upon appearance pleaded to the jurisdiction as a case belonging to the common Law but it would not be allowed because it was to repeale the Kings Charter And whereas it was objected that the reference was to the Arch Bishop and others and therefore the cause ought not to be determined in the Chancery it was resolved that it did properly belong to the Chancery by the Law And in the Argument of the case it appeares clearely that the Kings Councell there were learned in the Law And the same is yet more evident by the Title of Bills in those dayes exhibited in the Chancery which was directed to the Chancellor and the Kings Councell and the rule given Per tout les Justices which I rather note for the shortnesse of the forme of Bills in those dayes farre different from these times wherein the substance of the complaint however small in it selfe is oftentimes blowne out into so great a bubble that it breakes to nothing And the Statutes formerly mentioned do assert the same thing as touching the Kings Councell For though they speake of the Councell or Chancery in the English Tongue yet in the Originall the words are Conceill en Chancery Having thus touched upon the matters under the Judicatory of the Chancery and Judges in the same in the next place the manner of proceedings comes to consideration For it seems they had been formerly very irregular and that contrary to the Grand Charter upon a bare suggestion in the Chancery the party complained of was imprisoned and no proceedings made thereupon for remedy whereof it was ordained that upon suggestions so made the complainant was to finde Sureties to pursue the suggestions and that the processe of Law should issue forth against the party without imprisoning him and that if the suggestions were not proved true the complainant should incur the like penalty that the Defendant should have done in case be had beene found guilty but afterwards this later clause was altered by another Statute because it was full of uncertainty and it was ordained that in such case the Complainant
blamed herein for its a certain Truth that its much better that Election of a King should be grounded upon a rule that is known though it be by discent of Inheritance then upon none at all For if a Childe should succeed or a Lunaticke yet where the Principle of Government resteth upon the Representative of the People there is the lesse cause of complaint the Government being still the same both for Wisedome Strength and Uniformity though it may be the Nation not so active and brave For a Common-wealth can admit of no Minority though a Monarchy by descent may Secondly this deficiency in Nature might have been supplied but that these times were unhappy in the great power of the Lords to please whom the Government is parcelled out into two shares One is made Protectour of the Kings Person the other Protectour of the Kingdome too many by one For let their Persons be never so eminent for Abilities if they be not as eminent for Humility and selfe-Command their hearts will soon over-rule their heads into a Faction And therefore though the Earle of Warwicke was a wise man and the Duke of Glocester a wise man yet the Earle of Warwicke with the Duke of Glocester were not wise On the other side the Protectorship of the Kings Person being in the Duke of Exceter and that of the Realm in the Duke of Glocester things succeeded passing well for they both had one publique aime and the Duke of Exceter could comply with the Spirit of the Duke of Glocester who otherwise was not so pliant But after five years the Duke of Exceter dying and the government of the Kings Person devolving to the Earle of Warwicke who sided with the proud Cardinall of Winchester against the Duke of Glocester and so not onely consumed the rest of the Kings Nonage in a restlesse disturbance of Affaires but also dispoyled Henry the Sixth of the spirit of a King for the future and so the Kingdome of a King For it was not the condition of Henry the Sixth to be indowed with a spirit of such height but might well have been led by advice and needed not the Earle of Warwicke rugged brow to overlooke him who was not content to have the King onely attendant upon his advice but must likewise have him under his rod to be corrected for his faults and that by a Commission under the Kings owne hand and seale dated in the eleventh yeare of the Kings Reigne and so under colour of Curbing he killed that spirit in the King which otherwise doubt lesse had both spirit and pride enough to act himself above his due height and could not have been so long a Childe and so little a Man as he was It is very true that Henry the Fifth by Will seemed to countenance his Brothers and it cannot be denied but the Duke of Glocester was of such noble parts that they could hardly dilate in any work inferiour to the government of a Kingdome Neverthelesse to yeild much to the will of a diseased King in such Cases is as ill a President as the making of a King by Adoption and it had been better for the People to have adhered to the Duke of Glocester alone then by joyning him with another bring into president such a luxurient Complement of State as a Protectorship of a Kingdome which is of such little use to a Common-wealth and of so bitter Fruit to the Party as must needs bring repentance when it is too late For he that can manage the Protectorship of a Realme without anger of good men or envy of bad men is fitting to live onely with Angels and too good for the World Nor did the Duke of Glocester meet with better measure how wise soever he was and truely devoted to the good of the Realme For after foure and twenty years government so wisely and faithfully carried on by him that Justice it self could not touch his Person unjustice did and he received this reward from his Nephew Henry the Sixth that he died in the darke because the Cause durst not indure the light Now is Henry the Sixth perswaded that he is of full age he had laid aside his Guardian the Duke of Glocester but forgetting to sue out his Livery he betakes himself from the Grace of God into the warm Sunne as the Proverb is changing the advice of a faithfull experienced wise Councellour for the government of an Imperious Woman his Queen who allowed him no more of a King then the very Name and that also she abused to outface the World and after she had removed the Duke of Glocester out of the way undertook the sway of the Kingdome in her own Person being a Forrainer neither knowing nor caring for other Law then the will of a Woman Thus the glory of the House of Lancaster goes down and now a Star of the House of Yorke appears in the rising and the People looke to it The Queene hereat becomes a Souldier and begins the Civill Warres between the two Houses wherein her English party growing wise and weary she prayes aide of Ireland a Nation that like unto Crowes ever wait to prey upon the infirmities of England The Warres continue about sixteen yeares by fits wherin the first losse fell to the English party the pretentions being yet onely for good Government Then the Feild is quiet for about foure yeares after which the clamor of ill Government revives and together therewith a claime to the Crown by the House of Yorke is avouched thereupon the Warres grew hot for about foure yeares more and then an ebbe of as long quiet ensues The Tide at last returnes and in two yeares Warre ends the quarrell with the death of fourescore Princes of the blood Royall and of this good man but unhappy King Unhappy King I say that to purchase his Kingdomes Freedome from a Forraine Warre sold himselfe to a Woman and yet lost his bargaine and left it to Observation That a Conscientious man that marries for by-regards never thrives For France espied their advantage they had maintained Warre with England from the death of Henry the Fifth with various successe The Duke of Bedford being Regent for the English for the space of fourteen yeares mightily sustained the fainting condition of the English affaires in those parts and having Crowned his Master Henry the Sixth in Paris in the ninth yeare died leaving behinde him an Honourable Witnesse even from his Enemies That he was a brave Commander a true Patriot and a faithfull Servant to his Lord and Brother Henry the Fifth and to his Sonne Henry the Sixth But now the Duke of Bedford is dead and though France had concluded a Peace with the English yet they could not forget the smart of their Rod but concluded their Peace upon a Marriage to be had with a Woman of their own blood and interest and what they could not effect by Armes in their own Feild they did upon English ground by a
his ends Thus in one Parliament for he could hold no more he gave such content as even to wonderment he could as soone finde an army in the feild to fight for him as the most meritorious of his Predecessors His ill title made him very jealous and thereby tought his best freinds to keep at a distance after which time few escaped that came within his reach and so he served Gods judgement against his adjutants though he understeod it not Amongst the rest the Duke of Buckingham his great Associate both in the Butchery of the two young Princes and usurpation of the Royall Scepter he lived till he had laid the Foundation of better times in the Person of Henry the seventh and then received his reward But an ill Conscience must be continually fed or it will eat up its owne wombe The Kings minde delivered from feare of the Sonnes of Edward the Fourth now dead torments himselfe with thoughts of his Daughter alive ashamed he is of Butchery of a Girle he chooseth a conceit of Basterdizing the Children of Elizabeth Graye that calleth her self Queen of England but this proved too hard to concoct soon after that he goes a contrary way The Lady Elizabeth Graye is now undoubted Wife of Edward the Fourth and her eldest Daughter as undoubted Heire to the Crown And so the King will now be contented to adventure himself into an incestuous Marriage with her if his own Queen were not in the way onely to secure the Peace of the Kingdome which he good King was bound in Conscience to maintain though with the perill of his owne Soule and in this zeale of his Conscience his Queen soon went out of the way and so Love is made to the young Lady But Henry Earle of Richmond was there before and the Lady warily declined the choice till the golden Apple was won which was not long after accomplished the King loosing both the Lady his Crowne and owne life together put an end to much wickednesse and had the end thereof in Bosworth-Feild CHAP. XXIV Of the Government in relation to the Parliament THe seasons now in Tract were of short continuance lives passed away more speedily then years and it may seem uselesse to inquire what is the nature of the Government in such a time when as the greatest work was to maintain life and soul together and when all is done little else is done For though the Title of the House of Yorke was never so clear against that of Lancaster yet it had been so long darkned with a continuall Succession of Kings of the Red-Rose that either by their merit had gained a Throne in the Peoples hearts or by their facility had yeilded their Throne up to the Peoples will as it proved not easie to Convince them that liked well their present Lot and were doubtfull of change or to make them tender of the right of Edward the Fourth above their own quiet Above threescore years now had England made triall of the Government of the Lancastrian Princes and thereof about thirty years experience had they of Henry the Sixth they saw he was a gentle Prince On the other side Edward the Fourth newly sprung up out of a Root watered with blood himself also a Man for the Feild This might well put the minds of the People to a stand what to think of this Man whose nature and ends are so doubtfull and brought nothing to commend him to the good wills of the People but his bare Title which the common sort usually judge of according as they see it prosper more or lesse Add hereunto that Divine Providence did not so clearly nor suddenly determine his secret purpose concerning this change by any constant successe to either part by means whereof the one half of Edward the Fourths reign was spent while as yet Henry the Sixth was in veiw and the minds of men left unassured neither trusting much to Edward the Fourth nor he to them and after that Henry the Sixth was gone out of the way Edward the Fourth could not readily change his posture used Arguments of force and power and for the most part looked like a Man in Armes with his hand on his sword ready to draw upon the next man that stands in his way Thus are the People partly driven and partly drawn into an Oath of Allegiance unto Edward the Fourth under perill of Attainder and the Parliament assured unto him once more For immediately upon the departure of Edward the Fourth beyond Sea after tenne yeares of his Reign the Parliament never staying for the issue of Providence declared the Throne void of Edward the Fourth and Henry the Sixth King The Judges likewise of the Courts at Westminster determined the same thing as may appear by the Law Reports of those times in Print wherein Re-attachments were often granted by them upon discontinuance of processe by this Demise of Edward the Fourth And thus Henry the Sixth is once more King for six moneths Viz. from October to Aprill at which time the ballance turns Edward the Fourth returns gets into the Throne Henry the Sixth is again Dethroned all things are as they were and all confirmed by Act of Parliament For that Body is ever wise enough to side with power rather then to spend much time upon fruitless Orders and Votes that will peirce no Armour and therefore like the times must needs be subject to fits of distemper at the comming in of every Tide and did build and pull down Enact and disenact turn and return the English Crown from Yorke to Lancaster and back again and in conclusion for some time did do little but undo Nor can they be justly censured herein for Councells of men are not ordained to hinder Divine Providence or over-rule Fate but to foresee and close with occasions in the most advantageous way for the Publique good and when both winds and Currents are uncertain to ride at flote till they can discern the most commodious Haven to Winter in To impute therefore fault unto the Parliament in such Cases for want of Uniformity and Immutability of Councells is somewhat like the Notion that Batchelours conceit of Wives they would have but they do not know what other then an Idea of their own Fancy Now if it be inquired which course prevailed in order either to the Kings Royalty or the Peoples Liberty I shall answer neither of these but the House of Yorke prevailed to hold the Crown and might have advanced the Authority thereof had they not falne out amongst themselves for the spoyle and Edward the Fourth was not altogether disposed thereto The successe that he had in the Feild and his Souldiery made him look big like a King of the greater size but Kings sleep not securely upon such pillowes when the Militia is on hors-back it is as ready to be a Guard upon the King as for him and when it is most sober not so easily governed as a Common-wealth And
betweene party and party should be determined in a more private way then to trouble the whole Representative of the Kingdome with matters of so meane concernment If then those Councils mentioned by the Author which concerne the Kings Grants and Infeodations and matters of Judicature be taken from the rest of the Presidents brought by him to maintaine the thing aimed at I suppose scarce one stone will be left for a foundation to such a glorying Structure as is pretended in the Title page of that Booke And yet I deny not but where such occasions have befalne the Parliament sitting it hath closed with them as things taken up by the way Fourthly It may be that the Author hath also observed that all the Records of Antiquity passed through if not from the hands of the Clergy onely and they might thinke it sufficient for them to honour their Writings with the great Titles of Men of Dignity in the Church and Common-wealth omitting the Commons as not worthy of mention and yet they might be there then present as it will appeare they were in some of the particular instances ensuing to which we come now in a more punctuall consideration The first of these by his owne words appeare to be a Church-mote or Synod it was in the yeare 673. called by the Arch-Bishop who had no more power to summon a Parliament then the Author himselfe hath And the severall conclusions made therein doe all shew that the people had no worke there as may appeare in the severall relations thereof made by Matthew Westminster and Sir Henry Spelman an Author that he maketh much use of and therefore I shall be bold to make the best use of him that I can likewise in Vindicating the truth of the point in hand For whatever this Councill was it s the lesse materiall seeing the same Author recites a president of King A●thelbert within six yeares after Austins entry into this Island which was long before this Councill which bringeth on the Vann of all the rest of the Opponents instances which King called a Councill styled Commune Concilium tam Cleri quam Populi and in the conclusion of the same a Law is made upon the like occasion Si Rex populum Convocaverit c. in both which its evident that in those times there were Councils holden by the People as well as the Magnates or Optimates His next instance is in the yeare 694. which is of a Councill holden by the Great Men but no mention of the Commons and this he will have to be a Parliament albeit that he might have found both Abbatesses or Women and Presbyters to be Members of that Assembly and for default of better attested the conclusions of the same notwithstanding the Canon Nemo militans Deo c. But I must also minde him that the same Author reciteth a Councill holden by King Ina Suasu omnium Aldermannorum Seniorum Sapientum Regni and is very probable that all the Wise men of the Kingdome were not concluded within the Lordly dignity The third instance can have no better successe unlesse he will have the Pope to be allowed power to call a Parliament or allow the Arch-Bishop power to doe that service by the Popes command for by that authority this what ever it be was called if we give credit to the relation of Sir Henry Spelman who also reciteth another Councell within three leaves foregoing this called by Withered at Barkhamstead unto which the Clergy were summoned Qui cum viris utique militaribus communi omnium assensu has leges decrevere So as it seemeth in those times Souldiers or Knights were in the common Councels as well as other Great Men. In the next place he bringeth in a Councill holden in the yeare 747. which if the Arch-Bishop were then therein President as it s sayd in the presence of the King was no Parliament but a Church-mote and all the conclusions in the same doe testifie no lesse they being every one concerning Ecclesiasticall matters And furthermore before this time the Author out of whom he citeth this Councill mentioneth another Councill holden by Ina the Saxon King in the presence of the Bishops Princes Lords Earles and all the wise old Men and People of the Kingdome all of them concluding of the intermarriage between the Brittons Picts and Saxons which formerly as it seemeth was not allowed And the same King by his Charter mentioned by the same Penman noteth that his endowment of the Monastry of Glastenbury was made not onely in the presence of the Great Men but Cum praesentia populationis and he saith that Omnes confirmaverunt which I doe not mention as a worke necessary to be done by the Parliament yet such an one as was holden expedient as the case then stood Forty yeares after hee meeteth with another Councill which he supposeth to be a Parliament also but was none unlesse he will allow the Popes Legate power to summon a Parliament It was holden in the yeare 787. and had he duely considered the returne made by the Popes Legate of the Acts of that Councill which is also published by the same Author hee might have found that the Legate saith that they were propounded in publike Councill before the King Arch-Bishop and all the Bishops and Abbots of the Kingdome Senators Dukes or Captaines and people of the Land and they all consented to keep the same Then he brings in a Councill holden in the year 793. which he would never have set downe in the list of Parliaments if he had considered how improper it is to construe Provinciale tenuit Concilium for a Parliament and therefore I shall need no further to trouble the Reader therewith The two next are supposed to be but one and the same and it s sayd to be holden Anno 974. before nine Kings fifteene Bishops twenty Dukes c. which for ought appeares may comprehend all England and Scotland and is no Parliament of one Nation but a party of many Nations for some great matter no doubt yet nothing in particular mentioned but the solemne laying the foundation of the Monastry of Saint-Albans What manner of Councill the next was appeareth not and therefore nothing can be concluded therefrom but that it was holden in the yeare 796. That Councill which is next produced was in the yeare 800. and is called in great letters Concilium Provinciale which he cannot Gramatically construe to be a Parliament yet in the Preface it is sayd that there were Viri cujuscunque dignitatis and the King in his Letter to the Pope saith concerning it Visum est cunctis gentis nostrae sapientibus so as it seemeth by this and other examples of this nature that though the Church-motes invented the particular conclusions yet it was left to the Witagen-mote to Judge and conclude them There can be no question but the next three Presidents brought by the Opponent were all of
of Matthew Paris Matthew Westminster and Hoveden although he pleaseth to mention the severall rankes of Great Men and those in blacke Letters of a greater size and saith That not one Commoner appeares yet Master Seldens Hoveden in that very place so often by the Opponent cited tells him that both Clerus and Populus were there Thirdly The Opponent citeth an instance of Lawes made by Richard the First in his twenty fourth page and hee setteth downe the severall ranks of Great Men and amongst the rest ingeniously mentioneth Milites but it is with a Glosse of his owne that they were Barons that were made Knights when as formerly Barons were mentioned in the generall and therefore how proper this Glosse is let others judge especially seeing that not onely Milites and Milites Gregorij but even Ministri were present in such conventions even in the Saxon times And Master Selden in the former knowne place mentioneth an Observation that Vniversi personae qui de Rege tenent in Capite sicut ceteri Barones debent interesse judicijs curiae Domini Regis cum Baronibus Fourthly He citeth in his twenty fifth page another instance in King Johns time in which after the assent of Earles and Barons the words Et omnium fidelium nostrorum are also annexed but with this conceit of the Opponents that these Fideles were those that adhered to the King against his enemies be it so for then the Commons were present and did assent or they may be saith he some specially summoned as Assistants take that also and then all the true hearted in the Kingdome were specially summoned and were there so as the conclusion will be the same In the fifth place hee citeth a strange President as he calls it of a Writt of Summons in King Johns time in his twenty seventh page wherein Omnes miletes were summoned Cum armis suis and he concludes therefore the same was a Councell of Warr. First Because they were to come armed it s very true and so they did unto the Councills in the ancient Saxon times and so the Knights of the Counties ought to doe in these dayes if they obey the Writte Duos Milites gladijs cinctas c. Secondly He saith That the Knights were not to come to Councill that is his opinion yet the Writt speakes that the Discreti Milites were to come Ad loquendum cum Rege ad negotijs regni Its true saith hee but not Ad tractandum faciendum consentiendum Its true it s not so sayd nor is it excluded and were it so yet the Opponents conclusion will not thence arise That none but the King and those who are of the House of Lords were there present The sixth and last instance mentioned by the Opponent is in his thirtieth page and concerneth Escuage granted to King John who by his Charter granted that in such cases he would summon Arch-Bishops Bishops Abbots Earles and the greater Barons unto such Conventions by speciall Writts and that the Sheriffe shall summon promiscuously all others which hold in Capite and thence hee concludes That none but the Great Lords and the Tenants in Capite whom he calls the lesser Barons were present but no Knights Citizens or Burgesses all which being granted yet in full Parliament the Citizens and Burgesses might be there For Councills were called of such persons as suited to the matter to be debated upon If for matters purely Ecclesiasticall the King and his Councell of Lords and the Church-men made up the Councill If for advice in immergencies the King and such Lords as were next at hand determined the conclusions If for Escuage the King and such as were to pay Escuage made up a Councill to ascertaine the sum which was otherwise uncertaine If for matters that concerned the common liberty all sorts were present as may appeare out of the very Charter of King John noted in my former discourse page 258. and also from an Observation of Cambden concerning Henry the third Ad summum honorem pertinet saith he Ex quo Rex Henricus tertius ex tanta multitudine quae seditiosa ac turbulenta fuit optimos quosque ad Commitia Parliamentaria evocaverit Secondly The Opponent takes that for granted that never will be Viz. That all the Kings Tenants In Capite were of the House of Lords when as himselfe acknowledgeth a difference page 28. Viz. That the Barons are summoned by Writs Sigillatim as all the Members of the House of Lords are but these are by generall summons their number great and hard it will be to understand how or when they came to be excluded from that Society I shall insist no further upon the particulars of this Tractate but demurr upon the whole matter and leave it to judgement upon the premises which might have beene much better reduced to the maine conclusion if the Opponent in the first place had defined the word PARLIAMENT For if it was a Convention without the People and sometimes without the KING as in the Cases formerly mentioned of the Elections of William Rufus and of King Steven And if sometimes a Parliament of Lords onely may be against the King and so without King or People as in the Case betweene Steven and Maud the Empresse and the case likewise concerning King John both which also were formerly mentioned possibly it may be thought as rationall for the Commons in after Ages to hold a Parliament without King or House of Lords and then all the Opponents labour is to little purpose THE CONTINUATION OF AN Historicall Discourse of the Government of ENGLAND THE former times since the Norman entry like a rugged Sea by crosse windes of arbitrary vapours in and about the Crowne and by Forraine ingagements from the holy Chaire made the true face of affaires cloudy and troublesome both for the Writer and the Reader Hence forward for the space of three hundred yeares next ensuing Kings by experience and observation finding themselves unequall to the double chace of absolute Supremacy over the Sturdy Laity and incroaching Clergy you will observe to lay aside their pretentions against the peoples Liberties and more intentively to trench upon the Spiritualty now growne to defie all Government but that of Covetousnesse Nor would these times allow further advantage to Kings in this worke they being either fainted by the tickle Title of the Crowne hovering between the two Houses of Yorke and Lancaster or drawne off to Forraine imployments as matters of greater concernment for the present well being of the Kingdome or for the spreading of the fame of such as desired to be renouned for valiant Men. It will be superfluous to recount the particular atchievements formerly attained by these Ecclesiasticall men the former Treatise hath already sayd what was thought needfull concerning that For the future I shall even premise this That the insuing times being thus blessed with a truce or stricter League between Kings and Commons the errours in
now began to honour his Valour above his Fathers But the Tyde is spent the Prince of Chivalry dyes the brave Commanders wasted and the French too fickle to continue subject to the English longer then needs must tack about for another Adventure and make it plaine that France is too bigg to be Garrison'd by England and that it will cost England more to hold it then to have it His Religion was more to the purpose then of any of his Predecessors since the Norman times he reflected upon God in common events more ordinarily then the generall streame of the Clergy did in those dayes He loved if not adored devout men and their prayers and yet intentively disclaimed opinion of merits in the Creature Hee saw the Pope through and through loved him but little feared him lesse and yet lost neither Honour nor Power thereby His cheife policy at home was to be much at home great with his People and they great with him what the Parliament did he accounted well done he never questioned their Power though he was over-reached in questioning their Wisedome For he that shall preferr his owne wisedome above that of the Parliament must needs thinke himselfe extreamly Wise and so much the more to know himselfe to be such But the worst of his fate was to live to his Winter age and after fifty yeares Reigne or more to dye in his minority under the rule of a Woman of none of the best fame after hee had so long enjoyed the honour of greatest note in the Christian World in his dayes Such was not Richard the Second though the onely Son of that famous Cheiftaine the Black Prince of Wales a renouned Son of a renouned Father but as a Plant transplanted into a Savage soyle in degree and disposition wholly degenerate retained a tincture of the light inconstancy of his Mother and the luxuriousnesse of his Great Grandfather Edward the Second and running his course came to his end His entrance however by colour of Inheritance yet was a greater adventure then his Predecessors that came in by election upon the designation of his Father by his last Will say some For this man came in upon many disadvantages both of time and person The times were very troublesome the Kingdome new wrapped up in a double Warr abroad and which is worse flooded with distractions at home contracted partly by his Predecessors weaknesses in his decrepit estate partly by a new interest of Religion sprung up against the Papall Tyranny from the Doctrine of Wickleiff all which required a very wise Man and a brave Commander in both which the King fayled Religion now began to dawne through the foggs of Romish usurpations and superstitions ayded thereto by a Scisme in the triple Crowne that continued forty yeares with much virulency abroad and with as bad influence upon our Myters at home Some of whom were called Clementines others Vrbanists and yet none of them all worthy of eyther of the Names in their proper signification The Laity though lookers on yet were not quiet For though Liberty be a hopefull thing yet its dangerous to them that are not a Law to themselves especially in matter of Opinion for that arraines the rule and layes the way open to licentiousnesse And now that the Liberty from the Keyes began to be taught as a duty of Religion the inferiour sort meet with Doctrines of licentiousnesse upon mistake of the notion and will acknowledge no rule now they must be all at liberty and thus sprang up the insurrection of the Servants and Bond-men against their Lords and Masters under Cade and Strawe that might have brought the Common wealth into a hideous Chaos had not the Lords and Great Men betimes bestirred themselves and the King shewed an extraordinary spirit or rather a kinde of rage that put it selfe forth beyond the ordinary temper of his minde Much of this mischeife was imputed to Wickleiffs Doctrine for it is an ordinary thing to proclaime all evills concurring with the very joynt of Reformation to be the proper fruits thereof but I looke upon it as a fruit of corruption that indeavours to stopp the breath of Reformation in the birth and there is somewhat of a hidden influence from Above in the thing for it was not onely the Cupp of England to be thus troubled but France and other places had their portion sutable The Kings minority rendred him unequall unto these contrary motions he was in his eleventh yeare when he entred the Throne and which was worse his yeares came on faster then his Parts but his worke posted before them all The common helpe of Protectors left him yet more unhappy for they were prepossessed with strong ingagements of particular Interests and so were eyther not wise enough or not good enough for all This brought forth a third inconvenience the change of Protectorship and that change of Affaires and Interests an uncertaine good that brings forth a certaine evill for variety of Instruments and Interests move severall wayes and though the end be one the difference concerning the way many times doth as much hinder the Journey as so many blocks in the way The Protectorship was thrice changed the Kings Unkles had the first essay any one of them was bigg enough for one Kingdome but all of them together were too great to make one Protector The Duke of Lancaster would have done well alone if he had been alone and that work alone but he being somewhat ingaged with the Wickleiffists and so intangled with the Clergy and other restlesse spirits and drawne off by his private ayme at the Crowne of Castile saw this worke too much and so he warily withdrew himselfe leaving the Directory to a Committee of Lords a soveraine Plaister questionlesse where the times are whole but not for these distractions wherein even the Committee it selfe suffered its share Thus the breach is made the wider and for a cure of all the Government is committed into one hand wherein the Earle of Warwick acquitted himselfe well for he was wise enough to observe such as the people most honoured And thus passed over the two first yeares of the Kings Reigne The remainder of the Kings minority was rather in common repute then in true account For the King however young took little more from the Protector then he saw meet to collour his own commands with opinion of Regularity and so his will came to full strength before his wisdome budded Thus lifted up he sets himself above all interests of Parliament Protectors Councellors Unkles wise Men and Law leaving them all to be rules for those below And so long as the Kings desire is thus served he is content to be reputed a Minor and be as it were under protection of others though not under their direction and is content to continue thus untill his two and twentieth year Some might thinke him very moderate had hee been moderate but he forbears suing out his
Livery so long as he may live without care and spend without controll For by this time the humour of his great Grand-father budded in him he pawned his heart to young men of vast desires and some say so inordinately as he prostituted his chastitie unto them And it s no wonder if the Revenues of the Crowne are insufficient for such Masters Thi● the people soon felt and feared their own Free-holds for they are bound saith he not to see the Crowne deflowred for want of maintenance it s very true nor to see the Crowne deflowred of its maintenance A Parliament therefore is called in which diverse Lords associate and prepare Physick for the Kings lavish humour which being administred wrought for ten yeares after till it had purged him of his life and the Kingdome of their King It was an Act of Parliament that gave power to fourteen Lords and others to regulate the Profits and Revenues of the Crowne and to doe Justice to the People this was to continue for one whole yeare The Parasites no sooner found the effect hereof to their Cost but the King growes sicke of it and findes an Antidote to over-rule Acts of Parliament by Acts of Privy Councell declares this ill-favoured Commission voide and the Contrivers Advisers and Inforcers Traytors To make it more Majesticall he causeth the Judges to Subscribe this Order and so it becomes Law in repute This foundation thus laid he buildeth in hast an Impeachment of these Commissioners of high Treason and supposing that they would not readily stoope himselfe stoopes lower for he would put his Right to triall by battell which was already his owne by the judgement of the Masters of the Law For so they may be well called seeing they had thus Mastered it In this the King had the worst for he lost his Honour and himselfe God hath a care of common right even amongst Idolaters Then comes the Parliament of Wonders wherein the Kings Party are declared Traytors and the chiefe Judges with their Law judged by another Law The King not medled with thinks it high time to come out of his Minority and assumes the Government of the Kingdome and himselfe to himself being now three and twenty yeares of age old enough to have done well if he had cared for it But resolving to follow the way of his owne will at length it led him to his owne ruine onely for the present two things delayed it Viz. The Authority Wisedome and Moderation of his Unckles especially of the Duke of Lancaster now come out of Spain and the great affection which the King pretended to the Queen who had also gained a good opinion amongst the People The benevolent aspect of the People not for their owne advantage but for the Publick quiet procured many Parlies and interviewes between the King and People and many Lawes for the upholding of the Court and Government although both Warre Lawes Justice and Councells all are faint as all is faint in that man that hath once dismanned himself This he perceives well enough and therefore Peace he must have by any means The Queen dies himselfe being nigh eight and twenty yeares old takes a Creature like a Wife but in truth a Childe of eight yeares old and this is to get Peace with France It s no wonder if now he hunts after unlawfull game and that being ill taken brings all things out of order For abused Marriage never wants woe Civill men are now looked upon as severe Cators and his Unckles especially the Duke of Glocester with a jealous eye which accomplished his death in the conclusion The Dukes of Lancaster and Yorke forsake the Court Favorites step into their roomes The old way of the eleventh yeare is re-assumed Belknap and others are pardoned and made of the Cabinet The Pardon of the Earle of Arundell is adnulled contrary to the advise of the major part and the Arch Bishop the Earles brother is banished The Lords forsake the wilfull King still the Kings jealousie swells The Duke of Hertford is banished or rather by a hidden Providence sent out of the way for a further worke The Duke of Lancaster dies and with him all hope of moderation is gone for he was a wise Prince and the onely Cement that held the joynts of the Kingdome in correspondency And he was ill requited for all his Estate is seised upon The Duke of Hertford and his Party are looked upon by the People as Martyrs in the Common Cause and others as Royalists Extremities hasten on and Prerogative now upon the wing is towering above reach In full Parliament downe goes all the worke of the tenth and eleventh yeares Parliament which had never bin if that Parliament had continued by adjournment The King raiseth a Power which he calleth his Cuard of Cheshire men under the terror of this displaying rod the Parliament Kingdom are brought to Confession Cheshire for this service is made a Principality thus goes Counties up and Kingdoms down The Kings Conscience whispers a sad Message of dethroning and well it might be for he knew he had deserved it Against this danger he intrenches himself in an Act of Parliament That made it Treason To purpose and endeavor to depose the King or levy War against him or to withdraw his Homage hereof being attainted in Parliament And now he thought he was well guarded by Ingagement from the Parliament but he missed the right Conclusion for want of Logique For if the Parliament it self shall depose him it cannot be made a Traytor or attaint it selfe and then hath the King gain'd no more then a fals birth But the King was not thus quiet the sting of guilt still sticks within and for remedy he will unlaw the Law and gets it enacted that all Procurers of the Statute of 10. Richard the Second and the Commission and Procurers of the Kings assent thereto and hinderers of the Kings proceedings are adjudged Traitors All these reach onely the branches the root remains yet and may spring again and therefore in the last place have at the Parliament it self For by the same its further declared That the King is the sole Master of the Propositions for matters to be treated in Parliament and all gainsayers are Traitors Secondly That the King may dissolve the Parliament at his pleasure and all gainsayers are Traitors Thirdly That the Parliament may not proceed against the Kings Justices for offences by them committed in Parliament without the Kings consent and all gainsayers are Traitors These and the like Aphorismes once Voted by the Cheshire men assented unto by the Parliament with the Kings Fiat must passe for currant to the Judges and if by them confirmed or allowed will in the Kings opinion make it a Law for ever That the King and all Parliaments is Dominus fac primum and Dominus fac totum But the Judges remembred the tenth yeare and Belknaps intertainment and so dealt warily their opinion is thus
feminine Spirit which they sent over into England to be their Queen and in one Civill Warre shedding more English blood by the English Sword then they could formerly doe by all the men of France were revenged upon England to the full at the English mens own charge For what the English gain by the Sword is commonly lost by discourse A Kingdome is never more befooled then in the Marriage of their King if the Lady be great she is good enough though as Jezabell she will not either reverence her Husband obey her Lord and King nor regard his People And thus was this Kingdome scourged by a marriage for the sinne of the Wise men that building upon a false Foundation advised the King in the breach of Contract with the Earle of Arminiacks Daughter And thus the King also for that hearkning to such Councell he murthered the Duke of Glocester that had been to him a Father yeilded up his Power to his Queen A Masterlesse and proud Woman that made him like a broken Idol without use suffered a Recovery of his Crown and Scepter in the Parliament from his owne Issue to the Line of Yorke then renewing the Warre at his Queens beck lost what he had left of his Kingdome Countrey and Liberty and like the King that forgot the kindnesse of Jehojada lost his life by the hand of his Servant CHAP. XIV Of the Parliament during the Reignes of these Kings THe interest of the Parliament of England is never more Predominant then when Kings want Title or Age The first of these was the Case of Henry the Fourth immediately but of them all in relation to the pretended Law of the Crown but Henry the Sixth had the disadvantage of both whereof in its due place The pretended Law of the Crown of England is to hold by Inheritance with power to dispose of the same in such manner by such means and unto such persons as the King shall please To this it cannot be denied divers Kings had put in their claimes by devising their Crowne in their last Will but the successe must be attributed to some Power under God that must be the Executor when all is done and which must in Cases of Debate concerning Succession determine the matter by a Law best known to the Judge himselfe Not much unlike hereunto is the Case of Henry the Fourth who like a Bud putting up in the place of a fading Leafe dismounts his Predecessor First from the Peoples regard and after from his Throne which being empty some times he pretending the resignation of his Predecessor to him other whiles an obscure Title by descent his Conscience telling him all the while that it was the Sword that wrought the worke But when he comes to plead his Title to Forrain Princes by Protestation laying aside the mention of them all he justifies upon the unanimous consent of the Parliament and the People in his own onely Person And so before all the World confessed the Authority and power of the Parliament of England in disposing of the Crown in speciall Cases as a sufficient barr unto any pretended right that might arise from the House of Mortimar And yet because he never walks safely that hath an Enemy pursuing him still within reach he bethinks himself not sure enough unlesse his next Successors follow the dance upon the same foote to this end an Act of Parliament leades the tune whereby the Crowne is granted or confirmed to Henry the Fourth for life and intailed upon his Sonnes Thomas John and Humphrey by a Petition presented 5. Hen. 4. Thus Henry the Fourth to save his owne stake brought his Posterity into the like capacity with himselfe that they must be Kings or not subsist in the World if the House of Yorke prevailes and so he becomes secured against the House of Yorke treading on his heeles unlesse the Parliament of England shall eat their owne word However for the present the House of Lancaster hath the Crown intailed and the Inheritance is left in the Clouds to be revealed in due time For though this was the first president of this kinde yet was it not the last wherein the Parliament exercised a Power by Grant or Confirmation to direct the Law and Course of the Crown as they pleased The due consideration hereof will make the things that follow lesse strange For the Parliament according to occasion as the Supreame power of this Kingdome exercised Supreame Jurisdiction in order to the safety of the Kingdome as if no King had beene to be found in issuing forth Writs under the great Seale concluding of matters without the Royall assent treating of Peace with Forrain Nations and of other matters and determining their Resolves before discovery made to the King of their Councells making Ordinances and ruling by them 3 H. 6. n. 29. 2 H. 6. n. 27. 8 H. 6. n. 12. referring matters determinable in Parliament to be determined according to their directions Authoritate Parliamenti Confirming Peace made by the King protesting against Peace made without or against their consent making Ambassadours with power to ingage for the Kingdome making Generals of the Army Admiralls at Sea Chancellors Barons and Privy Councellors and giving them instructions 8 H. 4. n. 73. 76. 31. 5 H. 4. n. 57. 31 H. 6. n. 21. and binding them to observance upon Oath 11 H. 4. n. 19.39 Ordering the Person of the King denying his power of Judicature in Parliament and ordering his Houshold and Revenue besides many other particulars Now if such as these things were thus done not by one Parliament which possibly might be overwayed by Factions but by the course of a Series of Parliaments that mightily laboured against Faction and unworthy ends and aimes that man shal determin the same to be unjust or indiscreet should himself first be determined to be very just and exceeding wise Nor was the Parliament partiall in all this but being in a way of Reformation it set upon the work of reforming it selfe Some that are very zealous in the point of Arbitrary and absolute Government of Kings in this Nation and all in other amongst other grounds rest upon this one That an English King hath power to call Parliaments and dissolve them to make and unmake Members as he shal please I do easily grant that Kings have many Occasions and Opportunities to beguile their People yet can they do nothing as Kings but what of right they ought to doe They may call Parliaments but neither as often or seldome as they please if the Statute-Laws of this Realme might take place Nor if they could is that power necessarily and absolutely arising from Supremacy seeing it is well known that such power is betrusted by the Superiour States in other Nations to the Inferiour who dayly attend on publique Affaires and therefore can discern when the generall Conventions are most necessary As touching the dissolving of Parliaments against the wills of
have a Parliament wherein the People should have no more Religion then to beleive nor Learning then to understand his sense nor wisedome then to take heed of a Negative Vote But it befell otherwise for though it was called the Lack-learning Parliament yet had it well enough to discern the Clergies inside and Resolution enough to enter a second claime against the Clergies Temporalties and taught the King a Lesson That the least understanding Parliaments are not the best for his purpose For though the wisest Parliaments have the strongest sight and can see further then the King would have them yet they have also so much wisedome as to look to their own skins and commonly are not so venterous as to tell all the World what they know or to act too much of that which they doe understand But this Parliament whether wise or unwise spake loud of the Clergies superfluous Riches and the Kings wants are parallel'd therewith and that the Church-men may well spare enough to maintaine fifteen Earles fifteen hundred Knights six thousand two hundred Esquires and one hundred Hospitalls more then were in his Kingdome This was a strong temptation to a needy and couragious Prince but the Arch-Bishop was at his elbow the King tells the Commons that the Norman and French Cells were in his Predecessors time seized under this colour yet the Crowne was not the richer thereby he therefore resolves rather to add to then diminish any thing from the maintenance of the Clergy Thus as the King said he did though he made bold with the Keyes of Saint Peter for he could distinguish between his owne Clergy and the Romane The People are herewith put to silence yet harbour sad conceits of the Clergy against a future time which like a hidden fire are not onely preserved but increased by continuall occasions and more principally from the zeal of the Clergy now growing fiery hot against the Lollards For that not onely the People but the Nobles yea some of the Royall blood were not altogether estranged from this new old way whether it was sucked from their Grand-Father Duke John or from a Popular strain of which that House of Lancaster had much experience I determine not These were the Dukes of Bedford and Glocester Bedford was first at the Helme of Affaires at home whiles the King acted the Souldiers part in France as ill conceited of by the Clergy as they sleighted by him At a Convocation once assembled against the Lollards the Duke sent unto their Assembly his Dwarfe as a great Lollard though he was a little Man and he returned as he went even as Catholique as any of them all Non tam dispectus à Clero quam ipse Clerum despiciens atque eludens This and some other sleights the Clergy liked not they therefore finde a way to send him into France to be a Reserve to his Brother And in his roome steps forth Humphrey Duke of Glocester that was no lesse coole for the Romane way then he Henry the Fifth was not more hearty in Romes behalf for although he was loath to interrupt his Conquest abroad with contests at home yet he liked not of advancements from Rome insomuch as perceiving the Bishop of Winchester to aspire to a Cardinals Hat he said that he would as well lay aside his own Crowne as allow the Bishop to take the Hat Nor was he much trusted by the Clergy who were willing he should rather ingage in the Wars with France then minde the Proposalls of the Commons concerning the Clergies Temporalties which also was renued in the Parliament in his dayes Above all as the Lancastrian House loved to looke to its own so especially in relation to Rome they were the more jealous by how much it pretended upon them for its favour done to their House And therefore Henry the Fourth the most obleiged of all the rest looked to the Provisors more strictly then his Predecessors had and not only confirmed all the Statutes concerning the same already made but had also provided against Provisors of any annuall Office or Profit or of Bulls of Exemption from payment of Tythes or from Obedience Regular or Ordinary and made them all punishable within the Statute and further made all Licenses and Pardons contrary thereto granted by the King void against the Incumbent and gave damages to the Incumbent in such vexations for the former Lawes had saved the right to the true Patron both against Pope and King And thus the English Kings were Servants to the Church of England at the charges of Rome whiles the Popedome being now under a wasting and devouring Scisme was unable to help it selfe and so continued untill the time of Henry the Sixth at which time the Clergy of England got it selfe under the power and shadow of a Protector a kinde of Creature made up by a Pope and a King This was the Bishop of Winchester so great a Man both for Birth parts of Nature Riches Spirit and Place as none before him ever the like for he was both Cardinall Legate and Chancellour of England and had gotten to his aide the Bishop of Bathe to be Lord Treasurer of England Now comes the matter concerning Provisors once more to be revived First more craftily by collogueing with the Nobility who now had the sway in the Kings minority but they would none An answer is given by the King that he was too young to make alteration in matters of so high Concernment yet he promised moderation The Clergy are put to silence herewith and so continue till the King was six yeares elder and then with Money in one hand and a Petition in the other they renue their Suit but in a more subtill way For they would not pretend Ro●e but the English Churches liberties they would not move against the Statutes of Praemuniri but to have them explained it was not much they complained of for it was but that one word Otherwhere which say they the Judges of the Common Law expound too largely not onely against the Jurisdiction of the Holy Sea but against the Jurisdiction of the English Prelacy which they never intended in the passing of those Lawes Their Conclusion is therefore a Prayer That the King will please to allow the Jurisdiction of their Ecclesiasticall Courts and that Prohibitions in such Cases may be stopped But the King either perceiving that the Authority of English Prelacy was wholly dependent on the Sea of Rome and acted either under the shadow Legatine or at the best sought an Independent power of their own Or else the King doubting that the calling of one word of that Statute into question that had continued so long might indanger the whole Law into uncertainty declined the matter saving in the moderation of Prohibitions Thus the English Clergy are put to a retreat from their reserve at Rome all which they now well saw yet it was hard to wean them The Cardinall of Winchester was a
presumption and complaint of credit after it is entered is sufficient Record to ground proceedings in this Case to attache the Party to answer But by this Law a Triall is introduced that neither resteth upon any peremptory accusation or proofe of witnesse but meerly upon Inquisition upon the Oath and Conscience of the Party suspected which in the later dayes hath been called the triall upon the Oath Ex Officio for such was the triall allowed by the Canon in these times as appeares in the Constitutions of Otho and the Decrees of the Arch-Bishop Boniface by whom it was indeavoured to be obtruded upon the Laity about the times of Henry the Third or Edward the First but even the Clergy then withstood it as Lindwood confesseth And Otho in his very Constitution doth hold this forth by that Clause of his Nonobstante obtenta consuetudine Secondly this Law doth indeavour to introduce a new Judge with a power to Fine and Imprison according to discretion and a Prison allowed to him as his own peculier and yet the Writ De cautione admittenda still held its power to regulate that discretion as formerly it had done which by the way may render the power of this Law suspitious Thirdly the Clergy are not content to have the Estates and Liberties of the bodies of the People at their discretion but they must also have their lives although no Free-mans life could by the Fundamentall Lawes of this Kingdome come to question but by the judgement of his Peeres nor could the Clergy by their owne Canons interesse sanguine Viz. They cannot put any man to death but by this Law they may send any man to death by a Sentence as sure as death Tradatur potestati seculari And such a death not as the Civill Magistrate is wont to execute by a speedy parting of the Soul from the Body by losse of blood stop of breath or such like but the Clergy must have blood flesh bones and life and all even to the edge of nonentity it self or they are not satisfied And thus the Writ De comburendo Haeretico entered into the World True it is that some sparks of this fire are found in former times and Bracton toucheth upon such a Law in Case of a Clerk convict for Apostacy Primo degradetur post per manum Laicalem Comburatur which was indeed the Canon and that by his own Confession for it is grounded upon one Secundum quod accidit in the Synod at Oxford under Arch-Bishop Becket but that Case concerneth a Clerk who by his Profession hath put himselfe under the Law of the Canon and it was onely in Case of Apostacy himself being turned Jew and this also done upon a sudden pang of zeale and power of an Arch-Bishop that would know no Peere nor doe we finde any second to this President by the space of two hundred yeares next ensuing neither doth the Decree of Arch-Bishop Peckham who was not long after Becket treating about Apostacy in Lay-men mention any other punishment then that they are to be reclaimed Per censuras Ecclesiasticas nor yet that of Arch-Bishop Arundell amongst the Constitutions at Oxford not long before this Statute who treating about the crime of Heresie he layes the Penalty upon the forfeiture of goods with a Praesertim as if it were the Grand punishment And Lindwood in his glosse upon that place setting down the Censures against Heresie Hodie sunt saith he damnandi ad mortem as if it were otherwise but as yesterday Fourthly the next indeavour is to bring the Cognifance of all wholly to the Ecclesiasticall Court without further appeale for so the words concerning Conviction of Heresie are Whereupon credence shall be given to the Diocessan of the same place or his Ordinary in that behalfe These changes I say were indeavoured to be brought upon the Government of this Kingdome and yet the Law for all this suffered no change nor did the House of Commons however the name is thrust into the English Ordinary Print ever yeild unto the passing of the same but in the Parliament next ensuing complained thereof and protested they would not be bound by such Lawes whereto the House of Commons had not given their consent and this dashed the Law quite out of countenance although it holds the place still amongst the number for within foure yeares after the Clergy bring in another Bill of the same nature in generall though varying in some particulars but the same was again rejected All the strength therefore of this Law resteth upon the King and House of Lords ingaged by the Clergy to whom they trusted for their Religion for Book-learning was with them of small account and no lesse by the King who knew no better way to give them content that gave him so much as to set the Crowne upon his head nor to discharge his Royall word passed by the Earles of Northumberland and Westmerland in his behalf unto the Convocation Viz. That they were sent to declare the Kings good will to the Clergy and Church Liberties and that he was resolved to defend all the Liberties of the Church by his Kingly Power and to punish Hereticks and the Churches Enemies in such manner as the Clergy should thinke meete and therefore desired their dayly Prayers for his owne and the Kingdomes safety And yet for all this the People were not of this minde no small part of the Kingdome being overspread with these Opinions After Henry the Fourth comes Henry the Fifth and he also makes another assay the former opinions then knowne onely by the generall name of Heresie are now baptized by the new name of Lollardry and grown so overspreading that all the troubles of these times are still imputed to them It was indeed the Devills old and common trick thus to inrage earthly powers against these men although he be hereby but an instrument in the hand of the Cheif Builder that in laying a sure foundation doth as well ramme downe as raise up for the malice of these men made the People of God to multiply Henry the Fifth also published a Law to this same That all Persons in place of Government shall sweare to use their diligence to destroy all Heresies and Errors called Lollardries That all Lollards convict by the Clergy left to the seculer power according to the Lawes of Holy Church shall forfeit their Lands and Tenements to their Lords And the King to have the yeare and day and waste and all his Goods and Chattels If the Lord be the Ordinary the King shall have all No forfeiture to be till the Delinquent be dead They shall be found by Indictment before the Justices of the Peace This Indictment being found shall be sent to the Ordinary with the Prisoner The Indictment shall not be for Evidence but onely for Information These are the Principall things contained in this Law which by the manner of the Composure seemeth to be of an
Forrain and sudden invasion and attempts Thirdly the powers are not undefined but circumscribed 1. To Array such as are Armed so as they cannot assesse Armes upon such 2. To compell those of able Bodies and Estates to be Armed and those of able Estates and not able bodies to Arme such as are of able Bodies and not Estates but this must be Juxta facultates and salvo Statu 3. Whereas they straine themselves to make the Statute of Henry the Fourth and the Commission of Array to consist with the Statutes of 13 E. 1. 1 E. 3. and 25 E. 3. thereby they affirm so many more restrictions unto this power of Array as those Statutes are remediall in particular cases yet doe I not agree to their Glosses but leave them to the debate already published concerning the same Secondly as this power was not absolutely in the King so was it not originally from themselves because they had not the Legislative Power concerning the same but the same was ever and yet is in the Parliament hereof I shall note onely three particular instances First the Militia is a Posture that extendeth as well to Sea as Land That which concerneth the Sea is the Law of Marque and Reprisall granted to such of the People of this Nation as are pillaged by Sea by such as have the Kings Conduct or publique Truce And by this Law the Party pillaged had to recompence himself upon that man that had pillaged him or upon any other Subject of that Nation in case upon request made of the Magistrate in that Nation satisfaction be not given him for his wrong it was a Law made by the Parliament whereby the Chancellor had power to grant such Letters or Commission upon complaint to him made This was grounded upon the Statute of Magna Charta concerning Free Trade which had been prejudiced by the rigour of the Conservators of the Truce against the Kings Subjects although what was by them done was done in their own defence And by which means the Forrainers were become bold to transgress and the English fearfull in their own Charge and many laid aside their Trade by Sea and thereby the strength of the Kingdome was much impaired Nor is the Equity of this Law to be questioned for if the Magistrate upon complaint made grants not releif the offence becomes Publique and the Nation chargeable in nature of an Accessory after the Fact and so the next man liable to give satisfaction and to seek for releif at home The King then hath a power to grant Letters of Marque by Sea or Land and this power is granted by Parliament and this power is a limited power onely in particular cases in regard that many times these prove in nature of the first light skirmishes of a generall War Two other Instances yet remain concerning the Order and Government of the Souldiers in the Army the one concerning the Souldiers Pay Viz. That Captains shall not abate the Souldiers Wages but for their Cloathing under peril of Fine to the King The other concerning the Souldiers service That they shall not depart from their Colours without leave before the time of their Service be expired unlesse in case of sicknesse or other good cause testified and allowed by the Captain and such as shall doe otherwise shall suffer as Fellons Which Lawes could not have holden in force had they not been made by Parliament in respect that the Penalties concern the Estates and Lives of Men which are not to be invaded but by the Law of the Land so as both Captains and Souldiers as touching the Legislative power are not under the King in his Personall Capacity but under the Law of the Parliament Lastly as the rule of War was under the Legislative power of the Parliament so was the rule of Peace for whiles Henry the Sixth was in France which was in his tenth yeare from Saint Georges day till February following The Scots propound tearmes of Peace to the Duke of Glocester he being then Custos Regni which he referred to the Order of the Parliament by whom it was determined and the Peace concluded in the absence of the King and was holden as good and effectuall by both Kingdomes as if the King had been personally present in his full capacity CHAP. XXIII A Survey of the Reignes of Edward the Fourth Edward the Fifth and Richard the Third THe reign of Henry the Sixth was for the most part in the former parts of it like fire buried up in the ashes and in the later parts breaking out into a flame In the heat wherof the Duke of York after Fealty given by him to Henry the Sixth and dispensation gotten from the Pope to break his Faith lost his life and left his Sonne the Mark-grave to pursue his Title to the Crown which he claimed by Inheritance but more especially by Act of Parliament made upon the agreement between Henry the Sixth and his Father This was Edward the Fourth who neverthelesse reserved himself to the Election of the Lords and was by them received and commended to the Commons in the Feild by which meanes he gaining the Possession had also incouragement to maintain the same yet never held himself a King of full age so long as Henry the Sixth lived which was the one half of his reigne Nor did he though he held many Parliaments scarce reach higher then at reforming of Trade which was a Theame well pleasing to the People next unto their Peace which also the King carefully regarded For although he had been a Souldier of good experience and therewith successfull yet as one loath to trust too far either the constancy of the People of his own dominion or the fortune of War with his neighbouring Princes he did much by brave countenance and discourse and yet gain'd repute to the English for valour after the dishonorable times of Henry the sixth He had much to do with a wise King of France that knew how to lay out three or foure calme words at any time to save the adventure of his Peoples blood and make a shew of Mony to purchase the peaceable holding of that which was his only by force untill the winde proved more faire to bring all that continent under one head In his Government at home he met with many crosse gales occasioned principally by his owne rashnesse and neglect of the Earl of Warwicks approved freindship which he had turned into professed enmity And so weakned his own cause thereby that he was once under Water his Kingdome disposed of by a new intaile upon the Heires of Duke Clarence and so the Earle of Warwick remained constant to the House of York though this particular King was set aside Nor did he in all this gaine any thing but a Wife who though his subject and none of the greatest family neither brought any interest unto her Lord and Husband amongst forraine Princes brought neverthelesse a Pearle which was