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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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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
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
neverthelesse in that interim three Parliaments had been holden one by the Duke of Bedford and two by the Duke of Glocester in the last of which this Law was made And in truth if wee looke upon this title of the Kingdomes Guardianship in its bare lineaments without lights and shadows it will appeare little better then a Crown of feathers worne onely for bravery and in nothing adding to the real ability of the governing part of this Nation Neither were the persons of these Magnificoes so wel deserving nor did the Nation expect any such matter from them Edward the first was a wise King and yet in his absence chose Edward the second to hold that place he being then not above fourteen yeares of age afterwards Edward the seconds Queen and the Lords of her party were wise enough in their way and yet they chose Edward the third to be the Custos regni then not fourteen yeares old his Father in the meane time being neither absent from the Kingdome nor deposed but onely dismissed from acting in the adminstration of the Government Edward the third follows the same example he first makes his Brother John of Eltham Custos regni and this he did at two several times once when he was but eleven yeares old afterwards when hee was about fourteene Then he made his Sonne the Black Prince upon severall occasions three times Lord Warden of the Kingdome once he being about nine yeares old and againe when he was eleven yeares old and once when about fourteen yeares old Lastly Edward the third appointed his son Lionell Duke Clarence unto this place of Custos regni when as he was scarce eight years old all which will appeare upon the comparing their ages with the severall Rolls of 25 E 1. and 3 5 12 14 16 19 E 3. If therefore the worke of a Custos regni be such as may be as wel done by the infants of Kings as by the wisest Councellor or most valiant man it is in my opinion manifest that the place is of little other use to this Common-wealth then to serve as attire to a comely Person to make it seeme more faire because it is in fashion nor doth it advance the vallue of a King one graine above what his personall endowments doe deserve Hitherto of the title and power the next consideration will be of the original Fountain from whence it is derived wherein the presidents are cleare and plaine that ordinarily they are the next and immediate ofspring of Kings if they be present whithin the foure seas to be by them enabled by Letters Patents or Commission But whether present or absent the Parliament when it sate did ever peruse their authority and if it saw need changed inlarged or abridged both it and them Thus was the Duke of Glocester made Lord Warden in the time of Henry the fifth he being then in France in the roome of the Duke of Bedford the like also in Henry the sixths time when as the King was young for then the Parliament made the Duke of Bedford Lord Warden and added unto that title the title of Protector Afterward at the Dukes going over into France they committed that Service to the Duke of Glocester if I forget not the nature of the Roll during the Duke of Bedfords absence and with a Salvo of his right Nor unlike hereunto was the course that was taken by the Parliament in these sullen later times of Henry the sixth whereof more hereafter in the next Paragraph Lastly the limitation of this high power and title is different according to the occasion for the Guardianship of the Kingdome by common intendment is to endure no longer then the King is absent from the helme either by voluntary deserting the worke or imployment in forrain parts though united they be under the Government of the same King together with this Nation such as are these parts of France and Ireland and Scotland then under the English fee This is apparent from the nature of that statute of Henry the fifth formerly mentioned for if there was need to provide by that Statute that the Kings Arrivall and Personall Presence should not dissolve the Parliament assembled by the authority of the Custos regni then doth it imply that the personall presence of the King by and upon his Arrivall had otherwise determined the Parliament and that authority whereby it sate But the presidents are more cleare all of them generally running in these or the like words In absentia Regis or Quamdiu Rex fuerit in partibus transmarinis It is also to be granted that the Kings will is many times subjoyned thereunto as if it were in him to displace them and place others in his absence yet doe I finde no president of any such nature without the concurrence of the Lords or Parliament and yet that the Parliament hath ordered such things without his consent For when Richard the First passing to the Holy Land had left the Bishop of Ely to execute that place during his absence in remote parts the Lords finding the Bishop unfaithfull in his Charge excluded him both from that place and Kingdome and made the Kings Brother John Lord Warden in his stead But in the Case of the Protectorship which supposeth disability in the Person of the King the same by common intendment is to continue during the Kings disability and therefore in the Case of Henry the Sixth it was determined that the Protectorship doth Ipso Facto cease at the Kings Coronation because thereby the King is supposed able to govern although in later times it hath not so beene holden For Kings have been capable of that Ceremony as soon as of the Title and yet commonly are supposed to be under the rule of necessity of Protectorship till they be fourteen years of age or as the Case may be longer For although Henry the Sixth was once thought ripe when he was eight yeares old yet in the issue he proved scarce ripe for the Crowne at his two and twentieth yeare Neverthelesse the default of Age is not the onely incapacity of Kings they have infirmities as other men yea more dangerous then any other man which though an unpleasant tune it be to harp upon yet it is a Theame that Nations sometimes are inforced to ruminate upon when God will give them Kings in his wrath and those also over to their own lusts in his anger In such Cases therefore this Nation sometimes have fled to the refuge of a Protector and seldome it is that they can determine for how long When Henry the Sixth was above thirty yeares old Richard Duke of Yorke was made Protector and Defendor of the Realme and of the Church It was done if the Record saith true by the King himselfe Autoritate Parliamenti It was further provided by the Parliament that though this was to continue Quamdiu Regi placuerit yet the Duke should hold that place till the Kings Sonne Edward should come
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
therefore safe if not necessary that every eye should be open and Counsells ready for every Occasion A law at length is agreed upon that A Parliament shall be holden once every yeare or more if need be But in thirty yeares the power of this Law is wasted out of minde and the evill reviving revives also the Statute and yet they had thirteen or fourteen Parliaments in thirty yeares space and not above three or but once foure yeares distance of time between any two of them in Succession This was the sense of the Members of the Houses in their meeting but at home they had homely conceits and it s found no lesse difficult to bring them to the meeting then to continue the meeting according to the Law being either loath to adventure their thoughts into the troublesome affaires of the Publique or their Persons to expence and hazard But the Publique must be served and therefore an Act of Parliament is made That all such Members as decline their appearance at the Parliament after Summons made shall be amerced and the Sheriffes likewise that shall neglect return of Summons And the Statute implyeth that it was no Introduction of a new Law but a reviving of former Law now or lately difused or a Custome now out of Custome And to take away all Objection in point of charges and expences another Law was made to establish the assessments and levying of their Wages upon the Lands that anciently were chargeable therewith in whose hands soever the same shall come I shall conclude with this that the Parliament though like a Garment it sometimes covers the goodly feature and proportion of a well composed body yet it keepes the same warme and as a Sheild is first in all dangers and meets with many a knock which the body feels not This is their worke and reward It s true that in the wearing it is felt heavy but it is the easier born if it be duely considered that it is better to be so clothed then to be naked CHAP. III. Of the Privy Councell and condition of the Lords THe later must make way for the former for according to their Personall esteeme in their own Countries such is their Authority at the Board in joynt Councells And it was one point of happinesse in a sad time of Warre that all men looked one way The Lords were much addicted to the Feild and could doe much with Edward the Third who was a brave Leader and more with the People who had bin so long time used to the rough trade of Souldiery that they loved not to be at home about matters of Husbandry wherein they had so little experience And having so fair a Garland in their eye as France it s no wonder if Domestick designes seemed meaner or more dangerous Thus did God doe England a good turn although it was made for the present thereby neither so rich or populous as it might have bin in a time of Peace This French Heate wasted many a tumultuous Spirit and Innobled the Fame of the King and Lords not onely abroade but won them much Honour and Repute of those that remained at home and so by congregating Homogenealls and severing Heterogenealls rendered the body of the People more Univecall which tended much to the settling of the joynts of this distracted Nation A timely birth hereof doubtlesse was the peaceable entry of Richard the Second upon the Throne and quiet sitting there whiles as yet he was but a Childe the Princes of the blood many and they of generous Active and daring Spirits yet doe we not meete with a whisper in Story of any turbulent or aspiring humor in them or the People during those tenderer times of that Kings reigne But after that he came to know more in himselfe then was to be found and to outreare his abilities having some of the Lords ready at his elbow to help him these changed the Kings course although the generall part of that Noble Band kept still their Array and retaining the body of the People in due composure thereby declared themselves to be the Kings Friends though the others were Richards Favorites so as he was fain to stoop to occasion and submit to be a King that would have otherwise beene more or lesse And thus the Lords were become Supporters to the Crown Studds to the Throne and a Reserve to the People against the violent motions of an unbridled minde in their King who seeing them so united and indeavouring to break them into parties to obtain his desire lost both it and himselfe It is a degree of cleanly modesty to impute the miscarriages of unruly Kings to their Councell For however during their minority Councellors are more rightly Officers of State yet when Kings will be their owne Men their Councellors are no other then the breath of the Kings owne breast and by which a King may be more truely discerned then any man by his bosome Friends Edward the Third was a man of a publique Spirit and had a Councell suitable to his aime Richard the Second a man that desired what him pleased would have what he desired and a Councell he had that served him in all for God answers the desires of mens hearts in Judgement as well as in Mercy and a sore judgement it is both to King and People when the corrupt desires of the King are backed by a flattering Councell It must be granted that the Privy Councell of Kings hath been an old ginne of State that at a sudden lift could doe much to the furthering of the present Estate of publique Affaires Neverthelesse through the Riot of Kings their Designes generally tended to make more worke for the Parliament then to dispatch to doe much rather then well like workes for sale rather then for Master-peice and sometimes to undermine yea to outface the Parliament it selfe like some unruly servants that will put away their owne Masters Nor can it otherwise be expected unlesse the Kings elected ones be turned into the Parliaments Committee or that constant annuall Inquisition by Parliament be made into their Actions for occasionall inquiries breed ill blood though no attainder be nor are they easily undertaken whereas constancy in such Cases makes the worst to be resolved but into a matter of common course The naturall and originall power of the Privy Councell is very obscure because there are severall Degrees of them that occasionally have beene used all of whom may deserve the name of Privy Councell in regard of the Parliament which is the most publique Councell of all the rest and alwayes hath a generall interest in all Causes in the Kingdome The first of these is that which was called The Grand Councell of the King which as I thinke was not the House of Lords who are called by Summons and were onely to attend during the Parliament but a body made up of them and other wise men of his owne retinue and of this it seems
there was a constant body framed that were sworn to that service for some in these times were sworne both of the Grand Councell and the Privy Councell and so entered upon Record The second of these Councells was also a great Councell and probably greater then the other but this was called onely upon occasion and consisted of all sorts like a Parliament yet was none An example whereof we have in the Ordinances concerning the Staple which at the first were made by the King Prelates Dukes Earles Lords and great Men of the Kingdome one out of every County Citty and Burrough called together for that end their results were but as in point of triall for sixe moneths space and then were turned into Statute-Law by the Parliament These two are Magna Concilia yet without power further then as for advise because they had no ancient foundation nor constant continuance Another Councell remaineth more private then the other of more continuall use though not so Legally founded and this is called the Kings Privy Councell not taking up a whole House but onely a Chamber or a Table signifying rather communication of Advice then power of Judicature which more properly is in Banco And yet the power of this grew as virile and royall as it would acknowledge no Peere but the Parliament and usurped the representative of it as that had bin of the whole Kingdome The ambition thereof hath ever bin great and in this most notoriously evident that as it had swallowed up the grand Councell of Lords it seldome can endure the mention of a Parliament but when Kings or Affairs are too rugged for their owne touch The platform of their power you may behold in this their Oath 1. That well and lawfully they shall councell the King according to their best care and power and keep well and lawfully his Councels 2. That none of them shall accuse each other of any thing which he had spoken in councell 3. And that their lawfull Power Aid and Councell they shall with their utmost diligence apply to the Kings rights 4. And the Crowne to guard and maintaine save and to keepe off from it where they can without doing wrong 5. And where they shall know of the things belonging to the Crowne or the rights of the King to be concealed intruded upon or substracted they shall reveale the same to the King 6. And they shall enlarge the Crowne so far as lawfully they may and shall not accouncell the King in decreasing the rights of the Crowne so farre as they lawfully may 7. And they shall let for no man neither for love nor hate nor for peace nor strife to doe their utmost as far as they can or doe understand unto every man in every Estate Right and Reason and in Judgement and doing right shall spare none neither for riches nor poverty 8. And shall take of no man without the Kings leave unlesse meat or drinke in their journey 9. And if they be bound by Oath formerly taken so as they cannot performe this without breaking that they shall informe the King and hereafter shall take no such Oathes without the Kings consent first had All which in a shorter summe sounds in effect that they must be faithfull Councellors to the Kings Person and also to his Crowne not to decrease the true Rights but to inlarge them yet all must be done lawfully And secondly that they shall doe right in Judgement to take no Fees nor any other Oath in prejudice of this The first of these concerne the Publique onely at a distance and yet the point of increasing and diminishing of the Crowne in the sixth Section is captious and may sound as if there is a Legall enlarging of the Crowne whereof he that takes the Oath is to judge A matter which onely and properly concerns the Parliament to order and determine or else farewell all liberty of the People of England The second concerneth immediately the King in his politique capacity but trencheth upon all the Laws of the Kingdome in the executive power and all the motions in the whole Kingdome either of Peace or Warre following in the reare either immediately or mediately are under this notion interested into the transaction of the Privy Councell to debate and determine the Kings judgement therein unlesse it will determine alone And how easie a thing it is for such as have power of determining the Action by the Law to slip into the determining of a Law upon the Action and so to rule by Proclamation experience taught succeeding times sufficiently Neverthelesse these times wherein Parliaments were every moment upon the wing and kept this Noble Band in awe by taking them into their Cognisance placing and displacing some or all of them directing and binding them by Oath as they saw occasion of which the Records are full and plentifull I say these times thus constituted added yet further incouragement to them by giving them powers by Statute-Law over and beyond what by ancient Custome they had obtained The King and Councell of Lords had anciently a power of Jurisdiction that hath bin in the first part of this discourse already observed yet it s very probable that it was not any select company of Lords but the whole Association for it s granted by all that they had originally a Principall hand in the jurisdiction And its hard to conceive how any private number should catch such a power if not by usurpation But the manner of acquiring is lesse materiall the principall consideration resteth upon the quality of this Jurisdiction For it is evident that much difference hath bin both concerning the place and manner of exercising this Authority In generall It must be granted that all Pleas Coram Rege were grounded upon Writs first purchased and returnable either in Banco or in Camera or in Cancellaria And no difference at all will be concerning the Jurisdiction in Banco for that was by the Course of the Common Law and the people held it one of their liberties to have one known course of Law for determining matters of right and wrong As touching these Pleas which were holden by Writs returnable in Camera they were properly said to be Coram Rege Consilio whose meeting was in the Councell Chamber in those dayes called the Star-Chamber For other returns of Writs in the Star-Chamber doe not we finde but such as were in Camera nor Prohibitions from thence but under the notion of the Kings Councell and this Camera as I said was the place of the joynt meeting of the Councell as well of those of the Chancery and Benches as of those that attended upon matters of State Now the influence of Society in point of Judicature principally aspected upon some Pleas belonging to the Crowne although even these also properly were determinable in the Kings Bench nor can I observe any rule to bound the powers of these two Judicatories but this that the Councell Table
shall be imprisoned untill he shall satisfie the Defendant of his damages And furthermore shall make Fine and Ransome to the King But because that the Defendant many times held his advantage even to extremity this course lasted not long but a new Law was made which put the power of awarding damages in such cases into the Chancellor to doe according to his discretion And thus the Chancery obtained power to award damages which they never had formerly and the Chancellor a Precedency both in the Chancery and of the Councell in the Court of Starre-Chamber and in many cases in the Exchequer by the first he had a power in matters of meum and tuum by the last in matters Mei and Regis and by the other in matters Mei and Regni A considerable man certainly he was in the motions of Government but how much more if he be made Arch Bishop of Canterbury Cardinall and Legate è Latere or Arch Bishop Lord Treasurer and Legate è Latere as these dayes had divers times seen Extraordinary advancements bestowed upon the Nobility brings Honour to the Throne but if they be not men of noted worth and uprightnesse they make the Scepter stoope by stirring up of envy in the Nobility and indignation from the People For seldome is it seene that Advancements are fed from the Crowne though they be bred from thence but either maintained by new supplies from the Peoples purses or the ruine or decay of some Offices more ancient then themselves or both And such was the condition of the Chancellor he sucked fat from beneath and blood and Spirits from the Grand chiefe Justiciar of England and so reduced that Honourable Potentate unto the Degree of chiefe Justice of the Kings Bench leaving scarcely unto him the name or title of Lord. One thing more remaineth touching the election or nomination of this Great man At the first he was no better then a Register or the Kings remembrancer or Secretary having also the Honour to advise the King in such matters as came within the circuite of the Writings in his custody and questionlesse Eo usque its sutable to all the reason in the World that he should be of the Kings sole Nomination and Election But when it befalls that in stead of advising the King his word is taken to be the rule and a Judicatory power put upon that and unto this is superadded that Honourable trust of keeping and governing the great Seale of the Kingdome with the continuall growing power occasionally conferred upon him by the Parliament He is now become no more the Kings Remembrancer but the Lord Chancellor of England and Supreame Officer of State And it seemes but reasonable that he should hold his place by publique Election as well as the Grand Justiciar whose Plumes he borrowed and other Grand Officers of State did before him For he that will have his Servant to worke for another must give the other that Honour of Electing him thereto nor was this laid aside or forgotten by these times but a claim was put in for the Election or allowance of this principall Officer amongst others the Parliament obtaining a judgement in the case by the Kings Confession and so the thing is left to the judgement of future Ages Viz. Whether a King that can do no man wrong can dissemble the Royall Assent in Parliament or declare himselfe Legally in that manner by Proclamation CHAP. V. Of Admiralls Court. THis is a third Court that maintained the Kings judicatory power in a different way from that which is commonly called the Common law and by many is therefore supposed to advance the Kings Prerogative but upon mistaken grounds It is very true that the way is different from the common rode both in its originall and in the course of proceedings nor could it other be considering the condition of the Nations and the People of the same interested in common traffique The people thus interested as much differed from the other sort of dry men if they may be so called as Sea from Land and are in nature but as march men of severall Nations that must consenter in some third way for the maintenance of commerce for peace sake and to the end that no Nation may be under any other Law then its owne The condition of the Nations in the times when civillized government began to settle amongst them was to be under the Roman Emperours who having setled one Law in the generall grounds throughout all Nations made the Sea likewise to serve under one rule which should float up and downe with it that men might know upon what tearmes they held their owne wheresoever they went and upon what tearmes to part with it for their best advantage in its originall therefore this Law may be called Imperial and likewise in the process because it was directed in one way of triall and by one law which had its first birth from the Imperiall power and probably it had not been for the common benefit of Europe to have been otherwise at other time or by other directories formed Neverthelesse this became no Gemm of Prerogative to the English Crowne for if England did comply with forraine Natives for its owne benefit it being an Iland full of the Sea and in the common rode from the most parts of Europe that border upon the Sea and of delight in Merchandise it is but sutable to it selfe and it did so comply as it saved the maine Stake by voluntary entertaining those Laws without being imposed upon by Imperiall power for the Saxons came into this Kingdome a free People and so for ought yet appeareth to me continueth to this day I say that in those first times they did take into the consideration of Parliament the regulating of the fluctuating motions of Sea-laws nor were they then or after properly imposed by the Kings Edict For though it were granted that Richard the first reduced the Sea-laws in the Isle of Oleron yet that the same should be done without advise of Parliament in his returne from the holy Land is to me a riddle considering what Histories doe hold forth concerning of his returne through Germany nor can that be good evidence to intitle Kings of England to a power to make and alter Laws according to their private pleasure and interest Nor doth that Record mentioned in the Institutes warrant any such matter but rather on the contrary groundeth the complaint upon laws statutes Franchises and Customes Estabilished and that this Estabilishment was by the King and the Councell This Law was of a double nature according to the Law of the Land one part concerning the Pleas of the Crowne and the other between party and party for properly the Kings authority in the Admiralty is but an authority of Judicature according to Laws established which both for processe and sentence are different from the Common Law as much as the two Elements do differ yet not different in
b. fol. 7. a. which is a word of a vast extent serving rather to amaze mens apprehensions then to inlighten them and therefore the Reporter did well not to trouble himself or the Reader in the clearing or proof thereof but left the Point rather to be beleived then understood nor shall I in the Negative for God himself can have no other Legiance from an English man then absolute Legiance and Kings being as other men subject to erre especially in this Point of Prerogative are much rather subject thereto being misled by such Doctrines as these are The Scripture determines this Point and cuts the knot in sunder The third property of English Legiance which the Reporter insisteth upon is that it is indefinite which he explaineth to be Proprium quarto modo so as it is both Universall and Immutable fol. 5. b. fol. 12. and neither defined by Time Place or Person As touching the Time and Person the Reporter inlarged not at all therefore I shall onely leave the Reader to chew upon the Point supposing himself in the first times of Edward the Fourth when Henry the Sixth was then alive and let him resolve to which of them his Legiance had been due considering them both in their naturall Capacity as the Reporter would have it But as touching the Place it s reported that English Legiance is not onely due from an English man to an English King in England but in all places of the Kings Dominion though otherwise Forrain as to the power of the Law of England yea saith the Reporter as farre as the Kings power of Protection doth extend And yet this had not been enough if the Premises be granted for if this Legiance whereof we speake be absolute and omni soli semper then is it due to the King from an English man ubivis Gentium Neverthelesse to take the Reporter in a moderate sense it is worth consideration whether English Legiance in the dayes of Edward the Third extended as far as the Kings power of Protection when as he had the Crown of France in a Forrain right to that of England In this the Reporter is extreamly Positive upon many grounds which he insisteth upon First he saith that Verus and Fidelis are qualities of the minde and cannot be circumscribed within the predicament of Vbi and upon this ground he might conclude that this Legiance is due to the King from an English man all the world over as well as in all the Kings Dominions but concerning the ground it may be denied for though simply in it selfe considered as a notion Verity or Fidelity are not circumscribed in place yet being qualities of the soul and that being in the body in relation thereunto it may be in the predicament of Vbi for where ever that Body and Soul is there is Faith and Truth according to its modell which though not absolute and indefinite yet if according to the Lawes of the place wherein the man is he is truely said to be Verus Fidelis Secondly the Reporter argueth that the Kings Protection is not Locall or included within the bounds of England therefore also is not the Legiance for Protectio trahit Legiantiam Legiantia Protectionem Had this reason been formed into a Syllogisme it had appeared lesse valuable for the Protection of an English King qua talis of an English man is locall and included within the bounds of the Kingdome But if the same King be also King of France or Duke of Aquitane and an English man shall travell into those parts he is still under the same Kings Protection yet not as King of England but as King of France or Duke of Aquitane otherwise let the party be of France or Aquitane or England all is one he must be whether French or English under an unlimitted absolute Protection without regard had to the Customes or Lawes of the place yea contrary to them which I beleive the Reporter never intended to affirme Thirdly the Reporter falleth upon the matter in Fact and tells us that the King of England did many times De facto grant Protections to Persons in places out of the English Confines and it will not be denied But never was any absolute and indefinite Protection so granted for the Protection extends to defence from injury and all injury is to be expounded and judged according to the Lawes of the place Nor doe any the Presidents vouched by the Reporter clear that the King of England did grant as King of England Protection to any English man in any parts of the Kings Dominion beyond the Seas which was not qualified according to the Lawes and Customes of that place especially it being apparent that an English King may hold Dominion in Forrain parts in Legiance under a Forrain King as Edward the Third held the Dutchy of Guien and therefore cannot grant absolute Protection in such place nor receive absolute Legiance from any person there being Fourthly the Reporter saith that the King of England hath power to command his Subjects of England to goe with him in his Warres as well without the Realm of England as within the same therefore the Legiance of an English man to his King is indefinite and not locall or circumscribed by place or within the Kingdome of England Although the first of these be granted yet will not the inference hold for possibly this may arise from the constitution of a Positive Law and not from naturall or absolute Legiance nor doth any authority by him cited justifie any such Legiance But I cannot agree the first for it is not true that the King hath any such power from his own Personall interest nor doe the authoritie of former Ages warrant any such matter for a fuller disquisition whereof I shall refer the Reader to the eleventh Chapter ensuing because the Whole matter concerning the Militia commeth there to be handled in course Fifthly to close up all the rest the Reporter brings The Testimony of the Judges of the Common Law out of the Testimony of Hengham wherein an Action was brought by a French woman against an English man who refused to answer because the Plaintiffe was a French Woman and not of the Legiance or Faith of England This was disallowed by the Judges because Legiance and Faith was referred to England and not to the King Thereupon the Defendant averred that the Plaintiffe is not of the Legiance of England nor of the Faith of the King And upon this Plea thus amended the Plaintiffe gave over her Action The Reporter from hence observeth that Faith and Legiance is referred to the King indefinitely and generally and therefore it is so due to him The reason might have had more force had the Object of Allegiance or the nature thereof been the point in question but neither of them comming to debate and Allegiance being subjected to England and Faith to the King I see not what more can be concluded from hence but that Allegiance
Chancellor hath his Conscience the Arch-Bishop brings Religion the Judges bring Law so as its probable nothing will be done but according to Justice Conscience Religion and Law a very faire mixture but that there was a Treasurer in the Case yet the successe answered not expectation the Persons offended were many times inferiour and their estates not great the Offenders more meane and of desperate fortunes for great men were too wise to try this new way or to tast of their entertainment Therefore within nine yeares the Judges of Assize are betrusted with all and that Court so continued for as many yeares more and then the King marked out one Crime amongst the rest for his owne tooth belonging to the great men onely for they onely are able to commit the Crime and to give recompence sutable to the Kings Appetite It is giving of Liveries and Retainders a sore evill in the eyes of a jealous King tending to draw the inferiour sort to honour and admire and be of the suit of those of the greater sort and then beware the Crown These therefore must be tried before the King himself and his Councell that he may know whom he is to feare and of whom to take heed And herewith is a strange power given to summon upon a meere Suspition To proceed without information To examine the Defendant upon Oath and make him his own Accuser To punish according to discretion by fine and Imprisonment and thus the King and his Councell have gotten a power under colour of Liveries and Retainders to bring the whole Kingdome to be of their Livery or else they can suspect whom they please apprehend whom they suspect put him presently to the rack of confession and so into prison till he hath satisfied both displeasure and jealousie and covetousnesse it self Never was England before now in so low a degree of thraldome bound under a double knot of self-accusing and arbitrary Censure and this out-reached not onely in matters meerly civill tending to the common Peace but was intruded also into matters Ecclesiasticall in order to the Peace of the Church All bound unto the good behaviour both in Body and Soul under perill of losse of all that a man hath deare to him in this World The plot of all this was first laid by Henry the seventh and was followed by Henry the eighth who put that into practise which his Father had in designe being led thereto by such a skilfull Guid as Cardinall Woolsie was who though of meane Birth yet of a Spirit above a King and equall to the Popedome strained the string of Prerogative to its utmost heighth and then taught the King to play thereon which he did after his blunt manner till his dying day And thus though the Clergy are brought a Peg lower and the Nobility advanced higher yet was it the pollicy of these Kings to make them all of their own Livery and Retaindership to keep them in an upper region looking on the poore Commons at a distance far below and well it was for the Commons thus to be till the influence of these blazing Stars grew cooler CHAP. XXXII Of the Militia IT may fall within the verge of opinion that the guilty Title of Henry the seventh to the Crowne of England galled his minde with jealousie the greatest part of his Reigne Whether it were that he had not declared himself so fully upon his Title by his Wife or that as yet he feared some unknown Plantagenet would arise and put his Crown to the question This made him skilfull in the point of Fortification wherein he likewise spent the greatest part of his Reigne not so much by force of Armes for he cared not much for that noise well knowing that Peace is the safer condition for a King that comes in by power but principally by way of gaining Concessions and acknowledgment from the Subjects a Musick that he much delighted to heare well knowing it would conclude those amongst them that knew too much and instruct them that knew too little and so in time he should passe for currant amongst them all It was no hard matter for the King to accomplish this the greater part of the Kingdome being pre-ingaged unto his Title and of them many depending upon him for livelyhood if he failed they must look to loose all But the present occasion urged more importantly the Title to the Crown was already put to the question by the pretentions of one that named himself Duke of Yorke And it s now high time for the Law to declare it self to direct the People in such a Case What shall the People do where Might overcomes Right or if dayes come like those of Henry the sixth wherein the Subjects should be between two millstones of one King in Title and another King in possession for whom must they take up Armes if for Edward the fourth then are they Traitors to Henry the sixth if for Henry the sixth then are they Traitors to Edward the fourth and so now if for Henry the seventh then they may be Traitors to the Duke of Yorke if for the Duke of Yorke then are they Traitors to Henry the seventh For though the Duke of Yorke was said to be but a contrivance of the House of Burgundy yet a great part both of the great men and others were of another opinion and the King himself was not very certaine of his condition for the space of six years thereby This puts the Title of allegiance and that power of the Militia to the touch at length both King and Parliament come to one Conclusion consisting of three particulars First that the King for the time being whether by right or wrong ought to have the Subjects Allegiance like to that of the wise Councellor of that brave King of Israell Whom the Lord and his People and all the men of Israell chuse his will I be And this is not onely declared by the expresse words in the Preface of the Law but also by the Kings own practise for he discharged such as aided him against Richard the third then King by pardon by Parliament but such as aided him being King by declaration of the Law Secondly that this Allegiance draweth therewith ingagement for the defence of that King and Kingdome Thirdly that the discharge of this Service whereto the Subjects are bound by allegiance ought not to be imputed unto them as Treason Nor shall any person be impeached or attainted therefore the first and the last of these need no dispute The second is more worthy of consideration in the particular words set downe in the Statute Viz. That the Subjects are to serve their Prince in his Warres 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 Battell Wherein two things are to be considered the Service and the time or occasion The Service is to serve the Prince
would pick and chuse and prohibite the Kings Bench as they pleased and to that end would order Originalls out of the Chancery as they thought most meet for it is observed by Fleta that the Kings Bench hath no Jurisdiction of it selfe but by speciall Warrant that is to say by Originall Writs returned thither Neverthelesse it may seeme that such Crimes as are contrary to common honesty or the publique profit or peace in a more exemplary way then ordinary and therefore may be called Crimina laesi Regni or against the State These I say might more properly belong to the subline Judicature of the Councell Table as knowing better how far the publique State was interested or indammaged in such Cases then the other Judges that were experienced onely in ordinary matters of a more private concernment To recite the particular Cases upon record concerning racing of Records Forgeries and other crimes of falshood conspiracies combinations to abate and levell the prices of Commodities Ryots and such like will be superfluous In all which and others of that Cognisance the Sentence exceeded not Fine and Imprisonment or ransome Neither yet were the Common Pleas so rural but the Councel Table could rellish them also and digest them well enough and therefore did not stick to prohibite the Courts of Common Law under colour of a strange maxime That it is neither just nor honest for a man to be sued at the Common Law for a matter depending before the King and his Councell No though the Court of Common Law had the precedency and therefore although the right of Tithes being depending at the Common Law the Arch-Bishop in opposition to the jurisdiction sueth before the Kings Councell and the proceedings at the Law are thereby stayed and no wonder for the Councell Table challenged to hold the ballance of all Courts of Law within their owne Order and so if any doubt concerning the Jurisdiction depended the Councell Table gave the word and all stooped thereto But enough of the Subject matter the manner followes a new form of Processe is taken up that the Common Law and ancient Custome never knew and which grew so noisome to the People that complaints are made thereof as of common greivance and remedies are thereto applyed by the Lawes of these times For whereas by the Grand Charter nothing could be done in Judgement but according to the Lawes of the Land and in affirmance thereof a Law was made in these times that no Accusation nor Attachment nor forejudging of Life or Member nor seisure of Lands Tenements Goods or Chattels should be against the form of the Grand Charter and Law of the Land the course of affaires grew so stale that amongst other innovations a trick of a new kind of triall is brought forth by suggestions upon Articles exhibited against any man before the Councell Table and thereupon issued forth Attachments against the party complained of by meanes whereof and other courses for they could also sequester much vexation arose unto the People Hereunto upon complaints multiplied a remediall Law is made whereby it is Enacted that all such suggests made shall be carried to the Chancellor Treasurer and the Kings Grand Councell and the Informer shall finde surety to prosecute with effect and to incurre the like penalty intended for the Defendant if the Plaintiffes proofes be not compleat and then the Processe of Law shall issue forth and the Defendant shall not be taken against the form of the great Charter that is he shall not be taken untill first the fault appear upon Record by Presentment or by due Processe or by originall Writ according to the Ancient Law of the Kingdome Either therefore the Privy Councell had no power to hold any Pleas at all or else no power of triall The first of these was concluded in open Parliament and the second as good as so for if the first then the second will come on undeniably But suppose all this be given up yet was this Liberty to hold Pleas so qualified that the person could not be touched till the thing did appear by Inquisition and then in a Legal way such proceedings was had upon suggestion made against the City of London in Henry the Thirds time for one of the Judges was first sent into the City to finde the suggestion by a Jury and then the Lord Maior appeared before the Lords and traversed the matter and in a manner appealed or rather demanded to be tryed according to the custome of the City And the like course doe we finde observed in our Law Reports of these times in a Case concerning the price of Wooll by a false Report The foote of the whole account will be this That the work of Judicature of the Privy Councell in these times in Cases of Crimes was to receive Articles and award Inquisitions and after return in nature of a Grand Inquest to recover Traverse and to order triall at the Common Law and upon Verdict returned to Fine and Ransome In other Cases either of right or equity in matters of private property they were determined either by Judges of the Bench or Chancery although possibly the suite was Coram Concilio for that all the said Judges were of the Kings Councell And yet as I dare not affirme so I cannot deny but it might also be possible that some matters especially these of a greater consequence either in their own nature or in regard of the persons whom they concerned were determined by the major Vote of the whole Councell in a prudentiall or rather Arbitrary way But this was Invita minerva and used so rarely as the Path is growne out of view saving some few footsteps here and there remaining which shew that the Grand Councell of Lords had been there CHAP. IV. Of the Chancerie IT is the birth of the Kings Power in Judicature and may deserve the name of the first born For though it had no better Title in these later times then Officium because amongst other of the Kings Escripts it formed Writs remediall for such as had received wrong yet even by that work it was in repute for so much skill in the Law of the Land that by the consent of all it was as well able to advise a remedy as to advise the Complainants where to have it and yet it had one adventage further that it was an Office of remembrance to the King who is a Person of great trust in the Law and gave such credit to all Acts done before him as being entred into the remembrance became of the highest nature of Record against which no Plea did lie Amongst these matters of debt and contract coming into the account this Office taking notice of the Record tooke Cognisance of the thing and for the executing thereof and thus in these and such like Cases granted Judiciall Writs and so found out a way of Judicature to as many Causes as
thus the Parliament of England tells all the World that they hold themselves compleat without the Clergy and to all intents and purposes sufficient to conclude matters concerning the Church without their Concurrence Thus began the Mewing time of Prelacy and the principall Feather of their wings to fall away having now flourished in England nigh eight hundred years and had future Ages pursued the flight as it was begun these Lordings might have beaten the Aire without making any speedy way or great work saving the noise A third step yet was made further in order to the reducing of the power of the Popedome in England but which stumbled most immediatly upon the greatnes of the Prelates For it was the condition of the Spirituall Powers besides their height of Calling to be set in high Places so as their Title was from Heaven but their Possessions were from men whereby they gained Lordship Authority and Power by way of Appendix to their Spirituall Dignities This Addition however it might please them yet it for a long time ere now had been occasion of such murmur and grudge in the Commons against the Clergy as though it advanced the Clergy for the present yet it treasured up a back reconing for these men and made them lyable to the displeasure of the Laity by seisure of their great places when as otherwayes their Ecclesiasticall Dignities had been beyond their reach And of this these times begin now to speak louder then ever not onely by complaints made in Parliament by the People but also by the Lords and Commons in Parliament to the King that the Kingdome had been now long and too long time governed by the Clergy to the disherison of the Crown and therefore prayed that the principall Offices of the Kingdome might henceforth be executed by the Laity and thus the stir arose between the Lords Temporall and Spirituall each prevayling or loosing ground as they had occasion to lay the way open for them The Duke of Lancaster being still upon the upper ground that as little regarded the Popes Curse as the Clergy loved him But the worst or rather the best is yet behinde Outward Power and Honourable places are but undersetters or props to this Gourd of Prelacy that might prove no lesse prejudiciall by creeping upon the ground then by perking upward For so long as Error abideth in the Commons Truth can have little security amongst Princes although it cannot be denyed but it s a good signe of a clear morning when the Sun rising glorieth upon the top of the Mountains God gives Commission therefore to a Worme to smite this Gourd in the roote and so at once both Prelate and Pope doe wither by undermining This was Wickleife that had the double Honour of Learning in Humane and Divine Mysteries the latter of which had for many yeares passed obscurely as it were in a twilight amongst the meaner sort who had no Indowments to hold it forth amongst the throng of learned or great men of the World And though the newes thereof did sound much of Holynesse and Devotion Theames unmeet to be propounded to an Age scarce Civillized Yet because divers of them were more immediately reflecting upon the Policy of the Church wherein all the greater sort of the Churchmen were much concerned but the Pope above all the rest the accesse of all the matter was made thereby more easie to the Consideration of the great Lords and Princes in the Kingdome who out of principles of State were more deeply ingaged against the Pope then others of their ranke formerly had been Duke John of Gant led the way in this Act and had a party amongst the Nobility that had never red the Canon Law These held forth Wickleife and his Learning to the World and Edward the Third himself savoured it well enough but in his old Age desiring his ease was contented to looke on whiles his Lords Temporall and Spirituall played their Prize yet giving his plaudite rather to his Sonne then his Spirituall Fathers as if led by Principles of Nature rather then Religion This was the blossoming part of the Wickleifists but the principall strength was from beneath where the roots spread and fastned exceedingly especially in the South and Eastern parts of this Kingdome To tell of the Vsurpations of the Clergy the Idolatry of their costly Worship the vanity of their Curses c. was exceeding welcome newes to an oppressed multitude especially where these things were rightly understood The Issue soon manifested it selfe to the World no Parliament passed without reflections at Prelates Rome or some such thing and not onely the persons and practices of these men but even their Lawes and Canons were begun to be had in contempt and their missives sleighted And thus these men pretending Patronage both from Right drawn from Heaven and derived from men faile in their Evidence unlesse the people doe still beleive more then they are able to understand No marvell if Rome be now rouzed and that sort of men that formerly were Wolves in Sheeps clothing become now red and fiery Dragons taking up a new course of Establishing their Power by Persecution This was a way of Power indeed but it s a touchy thing to have to doe with fire least it gets too high It is therefore holden a point of discretion by the Prelates not to meddle with the Lords or the Common People the former were too great the later too many the one sort would not heare the other would not understand The Teachers therefore being the Velites at them they give fire Wickleife their Leader comes on bravely and notwithstanding they all made at him he routes them and in despite of them all comes off fairely and dies in his bed by the course of Nature Then an Ordinance is levelled at the rest of the Teachers This was made of an old Canon the nature whereof was to this purpose That upon complaint of the Bishop the Kings Writt shall be granted to apprehend Preachers of Heresies Errours and matters of Slander tending to Discord and Discention betweene the States of this Realme with their Factors and Abbettors and to imprison them till they be acquitted according to the Law of the Church This Law for such it yet appears gives occasion to consider of these particulers Viz. The Crime the Delinquents the manner of Inquisition and the penalty For the first not to trouble my way with Debate about the right of liberty of Preaching the matter in Fact was that men did publiquely Preach without Authority matters of Theology tending as it s said to sow discord and dissention so as they are under consideration censure of the Church-Men and Canon Law in one regard and of the Lawes of the Kingdome and Civill Magistrate as disturbers of the Peace on the other side and thus the Subjects liberty is cast into a mysterious cloudy and doubtfull posture by matters of Opinion Secondly the Persons Delinquent are
or more or in what place the same be settled untill the Manufacture was grown to some stature and then the place became Litigious The benefit of Exportation pretended much interest in the settling thereof beyond the Sea but in truth it was another matter of State for when it was beyond sea it was a moveable Engine to Convey the Kings pleasure or displeasure as the King pleased for it was a great benefit to the Countrey or place where ever it settled or else it moved or stayed according to the inclination of the people where it was either for Warre or Peace But on the contrary the Interest of the People began to interpose strongly and for these Causes the Parliament likewise intermed●ed in the place and thus the Scene is altered some times it s beyond the Seas in one place or in another sometimes in England In Edward the Thirds time we finde it sometimes at Calis sometimes in England In Richard the Seconds time we finde it again beyond the Seas at Middleburgh thence removed to Calis and after into England where at length the People understood themselves so well that the Parliament settled the same it being found to burdensome for the Manufactures to travell t● the Staple beyond the Seas for the Commodity that grew at their owne doores besides the inhancing of the price by reason of the carriage which falling also upon the Manufactures must needs tend to the damage of the whole Kingdome This was one way indeed and yet possibly another might have been found for if a Computation had been made of the main Stock and a Staple settled within the Kingdom for that and the overplus exported to a Staple beyond the Sea it might have proved no lesse commodious and more complying It is very true that there are many that call for the liberty of the People that every man may sell his own Commodity as he pleases and it were well that men would consider themselves as well in their Relations as in their own Personall respects for if every man were independent his liberty would be in like manner independent but so long as any man is a Member of a Common-wealth his liberty must likewise depend upon the good of the Common-wealth and if it be not good for the Nation that every man should sell his owne Commodity as he pleaseth he may claim the liberty as a Free man but not as an English man nor is that liberty just so long as his Countrey hath an interest in his Commodity for its safety and welfare as in his own person I doe not assert the manner of buying the Staple Commodities by Merchants of the Staple to sell the same again in kinde for their private advantage divers limitations must concur to save it from an unlawfull ingrossing nor doth it appear to me that the Staplers in these times used such course or were other then meer Officers for the regulating of the Staple in nature of a Court of Piepouders belonging to some Faire or Market Neverthelesse I conjecture that it may well be made evident from Principles of State that Mart Markets and Staples of Commodities that are of the proper Ofspring of this Nation are as necessary to Trade as Conduits are to places that want water The seventh and last means that was set on foot in these times for the advance of Trade was the regulating of the Mint and the current of Money This is the life and soule of Trade for though exchange of Commodities may doe much yet it cannot be for all because it is not the lot of all to have exchangeable Commodities nor to work for Apparell and Victuall Now in the managing of this tricke of Money two things are principally looked unto First that the Money be good and currant Secondly that it should be plentifull As touching the excellency of the Money severall Rules were made as against imbasing of Money against Forrain Money not made currant against counterfeit and false Money For according to the goodnesse of the Money so will the Trade be more or lesse for the Merchant will rather loose in the price of his Commodity in Money then in exchange for other Commodity because the vallue thereof is lesse certain and the Transportation more chargeable Secondly as touching the plentie of Money that is as necessary to the advance of the Trade as of the goodness of it for according to the plenty thereof will be the plenty of the Manufactures because Handy-crafts men having no Commodities but their labour cannot work for exchange nor can exchange supply Rents and maintenance to the greater sort of people To this end therefore it is provided against melting of Money and Exportation of Silver and Gold And yet to incourage or not discourage Importation of Silver and Gold liberty was given to every man to Export so much as they did Import provided that what they carry away must be of the new stamp or Minted in this Nation By this means Bullion came in with probability that much thereof would remain in the Nation in liew of Commodities exported or if not the greater part yet at least the Mint gained and that was some benefit to the Nation Thirdly for the fuller currence of the Money the Mint was established in severall parts of this Kingdome according to the ancient custome and this was advantageous both to the Mint and to the stocke of Money in the Kingdome This establishment was with this difference that though the Mint was settled by the Parliament yet the Exchange was left to the Directory of the King and his Councell because the Exchange is an uncertain thing subject to sudden alteration in other Nations and its necessary that in this Countrey it be as suddenly ballanced with the Exchange in other Countreyes or in a short time the Nation may receive extreame damage In regard whereof and many other sudden exigencies in Trade it seemeth to me convenient That a particular Councell were established for continuall influence into all parts of these Dominions to take into consideration the quantity of the Staple Commodities necessary to be retained as a Stock at home for the use of the People and the Manufactures and accordingly to ballance the Trade of Exportation and Importation by opening and inlarging or shutting and straitning the Streame as occasion doth require And lastly to watch the course of the Exchange in Forrain Parts and to parallell the course thereof in this Land thereto For otherwise the Publique must necessarily suffer so long as Private men seeke their own particular interests onely in their course of Trade CHAP. VIII Of Legiance and Treason with some Considerations upon Calvins Case AS times change manners so doe manners change Lawes For it s the wisedome of a State when it cannot over-rule occasion to pursue and turn it to the best issue it can Multitude of Lawes therefore are not so much a sore to the People as a Symptome of a
the severall Counties had formerly the power but were found to savour too much of Neighbourhood and Alliance the leading of the work therefore is now committed to the Judges at Westminster and the other made onely Associates to them But above all the Courts of Sheriffes Coroners and Leets were now grown soure with Age having attained courses by common Practice differing from Oppression onely in name and yet were the times so unhappy as by these courses they had obtained fovour and respect amongst the great men and so gained more power from above to abuse them below These men loved to be Commissioners of Oier and Terminer and having learned how to make capitall offences pecuniary found such sweetnesse as they used not to be weary of their places though the Countrey grew weary of them and therefore disliking uncertainties in such matters of benefit they cannot rest till they obtaine more certaine settlement in their places some for yeares others for life and some for ever The disease thus contracted by degrees the cure must be accordingly first the Sherifwicks much dismembred to please the Court Favorites and fill the Kings privy purse and all raised to the utmost penny of the full and beyond the just vallue A Law is made to restore the severall Hundreds and Wepentakes to the Sheriffs and their Counties and all of them are reduced to the old rent and it is likewise provided that none shal execute that place in County or Hundred who shall not then have sufficient Lands in that County to answer dammages for injustice by them done And that no Sheriff shall serve in that place above one yeare and then not to be chosen againe for that service till three yeares be past which later clause was only a medium taken up for the present occasion in regard that men of ability became very rare in these times especially in some of the Counties The election of the Sheriff is likewise not to be forgotten for though the Counties had the election of Coroners in regard they looked that no man should come nigh their blood but whom they trusted yet the Sheriffe came not so nigh their skinne nor yet so nigh their freeholds as anciently they had done for that their power in judicature was much abated and so not worthy of so high regard yet in respect he was still to be a Minister of justice and his place valuable more then formerly it was holden convenient that such as had the cheife power of judicature at Westminster Viz. the Chancellor Treasurer Cheife Baron and the two cheife Justices should nominate the man that should be their Servant and in the Parliament neverthelesse interposed in that Election as often as they saw cause Secondly as touching Causes criminall which more ordinarily come within the Cognisance of these Courts They generally held the same regard in the eye of Law in these times that they had done formerly neverthelesse in two crimes these times wrought diversly urging the edge of Law against the one and abating it as to the other The later of these is commonly called Petit Treason which is a murder destructive to the Common-wealth in an inferiour degree and at a further distance because it is destructive to that Legiance by which Families doe consist and of whom Kingdomes are derived In former times it extended unto the Legiance between Lord and Tenant and Parents and Children but by this Law of 25. E. 3. it is reduced to the Legiance onely of Man and Wife Master and Servant Clerk and his Ordinary the last of which was now lately taken up and might have beene as well laid aside as divers others were but that in these times much is to be yeilded to the power of the Prelacy who loved to raise the power of the Ordinary to an extraordinary pitch that themselves might be the more considerable This reducing of Treason into a narrower ground made the Regiment of Fellonies to swell A hard thing it was in a Warring time for men to conceit themselves well drest untill they were compleatly armed Some used it for a Complement and amongst others honest men had as good cause to use it as some that were ill affected had a bad and of the last sort some did aime at private revenge though many aimed against the Publique quiet But however the intentions of men thus harnessed might be different the lookes of them all are so soure that its hard to know a man for Peace from a man for Warre And therefore the People were now so greedy after Peace as they are ready to magnifie or multiply all Postures of Armed men into the worst fashion being well assured that the readiest way to keep themselves from the hurt of such men is to have none of them at all But Edward the Third had more need of them then so and will therefore allow men to ride Armed but not to Troope together to rob kill or imprison any man and if any Person did otherwise it should be Fellony or Trespasse but not high Treason All this was in favour to the People and yet it was not all for when Mercy groweth profuse it becomes cruelty Murder is very incident to times of Warre yet is an Enemy to the Peace of so high a nature that though the Kings pardon may doe much yet both King and People declare it an impardonable crime by the Common Law and that the Kings Prerogative shall not extend so farre as to Pardon the same This justice done to the party dead was a mercy to them that were alive a means to save blood by blood-shed and not so much by the Kings Grant as by his Release One thing more in these cases of blood the people obtained of the King which they had not so much by Release as by Grant and that was the taking away of Englishire an ancient Badge of the Imperiall Power of the Danes over the Saxons and which had either continued through the desidiousnesse of the Saxons in the times of Edward the Confessor unto the Normans time or by them taken up again and continued untill these times that Edward the Third was so farre desirous to declare his readinesse to maintaine the Liberties of the people as to be willing to restore them where they failed and in particular tooke away the manner of Presentment of Englishire blotting out the Title and Clause concerning it out of the Articles of inquiry for the Judges Itinerant And thus whether Native or Forrainer all men are now made in death equall and one Law serves all alike Next unto blood these times grew more sensible of Ravishments then former times had done For though they had determined a severe Penalty against so foule a Crime and made it in the nature of Fellony capitall which was enough to have scared any man from such attempts yet for the proof of the matter in Fact much rested upon the will of the Woman which for
Clergy gave their Vote if not the first vote and therefore certainly did neither beleeve nor honor that infallible Chaire as their owne Mother nor did they beare her yoake further then their owne benefit and reason of State did require for though the immediate benefit of this Law did descend upon the Prelacy yet it also much concerned the interest both of the honor and benefit of the Nation that the Clergy should not be at the Popes pleasure to tax and assesse as he thought good Secondly Henry the fifth added unto the Prelacy some kinde of increase both of Honour and Power Viz. To visit Hospitalls that were not of the Kings owne foundation and to reforme abuses there for the Patrons either had no Power to punish or will or care to reform them and thus upon the point although they lost a right yet they gained ease Thirdly the same King confirmed by a Statute unto Ordinaries the Cognisance of accompts of Executors for their Testators Estates which formerly was granted by the Canon Law but they wanted power to execute and a right to have and receive In all these the Clergy or Prelacy were the immediate gainers In as many other things the People were made gainers and yet the Clergy were no loosers otherwise then like the Kite that prey which was none of their owne First they refused formerly to grant copies of Libells either thereby to hinder the course of Prohibitions or to make the copies the more dear and Mony more Cheap with them Henry the fifth finding this a greivance to the People passeth a Law that all Ordinaries shall grant the copies of Libells at such time as by Law they are grantable Secondly as the Probate of Wills had anciently belonged to the Ordinary by the Canon Law and formerly also confirmed to them by the Parliament so it also regulated and setled the Fees for such Service But the Clergy having been ever under the nouriture of their Mother Rome that loved to exceed they likewise accounted it their liberty to take what they could get but the nigher they come to ingage with Kings in their government according to Law the more reformed they grow Formerly Edward the third had setled their Fees but they would not hold to the rule now the Law is redoubled by Henry the fifth with a penalty of treble dammages against delinquents Furthermore the very Preists could not containe their Paternosters Requiems Masses and such wares they had ingrossed and set thereof what price they pleased The Market was risen to that height that Edward the third undertooke to set a rate upon those commodities but that also would not hold long Henry the fifth he sets a certaine Stipend somewhat more then Edward the third had done and yet lesse then the Preists had formerly Lastly some Lawes were made wherein the Common-wealth gained and the Church were loosers First whereas the Church-men formerly held all holy things proper and peculiar to their owne Cognisance especially such as concerned the worship of God the Parliament now began to be bold with that and never asked leave It had now for a long time even since the Saxon times been the unhappy condition of this Church of England amongst others to decay continually in Piety and right devotion but through the light that now revived and Gods goodnesse it in these times came to passe that the People did entertain some sense of their duty towards God more then formerly and begin to quarrell the abuses done to the Lords day in the manner of the keeping thereof London hath the honor for beginning this reformation by an Act of their Common Councell The Parliament within seven yeares after that ingage the whole Kingdome in that service though therewith also are adjoyned other holy Feasts then holden And all Faires and Markets are injoyned to cease on that day under paine of forfeiture of Goods exposed to sale excepting Victuall and excepting the foure Sundayes in Harvest And thus though places had their consecration allowed by the Parliament and immunity from trading in Faires and Markets by the space of 160. yeares before this time yet that time which God by his owne Law had reserved to his owne selfe never came under regard to be allowed till now and yet not by the motion of the Clergy nor by their furtherance for by their thrusting in the holy dayes they made them equal with the Lords day and in Harvest time superiour by preserving them in force when as the Lords dayes were set aside So God had somewhat of these men but the Pope more Secondly as the Church-men lost in the former so the Prelacy in this that follows The Prelates had long since obtained the triall of Bastardy and therein could straine themselves so far as to put the Case of inheritance into danger where the point otherwise was cleare enough and this grew to that height that it indangered the disinheriting of the heires of the Earle of Kent It is therefore now provided that before the Ordinary in such Cases Proceed to triall Proclamations shall be made in Chancery to summon all pretenders of Interests or Titles to come before the Ordinary to make their Allegations and all trials of Bastardy otherwise made shall be voide so as whatever the Canon did the Parliament would not trust to the Ordinaries Summons nor allow of their power in any other manner then the Parliament thought meet One thing more remaineth wherin the true Church of Christ seemed to lose and yet gained and the Clergy joyning with the King seemed to gain and yet lost this was the point of worship which had long stumbled the mindes of the People and was now growne to that strength that nothing but an Act of Parliament can keep it under This opinion concerning worship was at the first so young that it was not yet baptized with any proper name but called Opinion contrary to the Church determinations or Catholique faith And against this the Clergy now stormed more then ever formerly because it was grown to such a height as if it meaned to over-top theirs To this end they procure an Act to passe That all Preachers Teachers Writers Schoolemasters Favorers or notoriously defamed Persons for the maintenance of such opinions shall be upon conviction before the Ordinarie according to the Canons imprisoned in the Diocessans Prison Fined according to the Diocessans discretion If upon Conviction he shall not abjure or shall relapse he shall be delivered unto the Seculer Power and be burned And that Preachers without Licence of the Diocessan should be restrained Concerning which Law I shall first shew what change in the Lawes of this Kingdome was endeavoured and what was really effected First it is an undeniable ground that no Free-man can be put to answer before any Judge but upon Presentment or other matter of Record foregoing and by due Processe of Law and yet it hath been ruled that strong
concerned or not concerned what they conclude they must maintain Vi Clavibus although in right his Prerogative is above theirs Now by the Statute the Kings Vote is asserted and a Negative Vote restored and himself made as well Head of the Convocation as the Church nothing can passe there without his Concurrence nor come to the Consideration of the Parliament without his pleasure and thus the King hath a double Vote in every Church Ordinance One as in the Parliament to passe the same as an Act of Parliament of which I conceive the Opinion of that Honourable Judge is to be understood the other as a Member of the Convocation to passe their advices to the Parliament and therefore he might either sit in person amongst them or by his Vicar as Henry the Eighth did by the Lord Cromwell By the First the whole Kingdome was ingaged By the Second the Convocation onely and that as a Court onely and not the representative of the Clergy because as they had a Spirituall relation so also they had the Common right of Free-men and therefore could not be bound without the Common consent of the Free-men Thirdly as their power of Convention and power in Vote so their Originall right of Law making suffered a change formerly they depended wholly upon a Divine right which some settled Originally in the Pope others in the Prelacy and some in the Clergy But now they sit by a derivative power from the Act of Parliament from which as from their Head they receive life and power Fourthly they suffered some change in the very work of their Convention for though formerly they claimed power to meddle onely with Ecclesiasticall matters yet that Notion was ambiguous and they could many times explicate it more largely then naturally It is not to be denied but the matters concerning the Service and Worship of God are of Spirituall consideration but that such should be so strictly deemed to lie in the way of Church-men onely is to bring all Spirits within the Verge of Ecclesiasticall Jurisdiction and to leave the Civill power to rule onely dead Carkases much lesse can any other thing which by prescription hath not been of Ecclesiasticall Cognisance be called Spirituall But to come to particulars because generalls edifie not The Convocation claimed formerly power as Originally from it self to impose rules for government upon Church-men and Church-Officers and upon the Laity so far as extended to their Service of God And also to charge the Estates of the Clergy and concerning Matrimoniall and Testamentary Causes They claimed also a power to determine Doctrine and Heresies Yet De Facto divers of these they never acted in that right wherein they claimed to hold Cognisance First as touching the charging of the Estates of the Clergy If it was for the Kings Service they were ever summoned by the Kings Writt yet was not their Act binding immediately upon the passing of the Vote till the Parliament confirmed the same and therefore the old form of granting of Dismes was Per Clerum Communitatem as by the pleading in the Abbot of Walthams Case appears for without their concurrence they had no power to charge any Free-man nor to levy the same but by their Church Censures which would stand them in no stead And in this the Convocation suffered no alteration either in right or power by the change thus wrought by Henry the Eighth Secondly as touching imposing Lawes upon the Laity in points of Worship and Doctrine its evident though they claimed such power they had it not for when all is done they were contented at length to get the Support of the Statute-Lawes of this Kingdome as may appear in the particular Lawes concerning the Lords Day and proceedings against Heretiques setling the Popedome in the time of the great Scisme c. But now all Title of claim is quite taken from them and all is left in the Supream Legislative power of this Nation as formerly hath been already manifested Thirdly as touching Matrimoniall causes their former power of making Lawes concerning them and Testamentary causes is now absolutely taken away onely concerning Matrimoniall matters they had so much of the Judicatory power concerning the same put upon them as might well serve the Kings own turn and that was for determining the matter between himself and the Lady Katharine Dowager depending before Arch-bishop Cranmer For the King supposed the Pope a party and therefore meaned not that he should be his Judge And thus though the Clergy had acknowledged the King to be their Supream Head yet in this he was content to acknowledge their Supremacy above him to judge between himself and his Queen and in other matters concerning himself So as upon the whole matter the Convocation were gainers in some things in other things they were onely loosers of that which was none of their owne CHAP. XXX Of the power of the Clergy in their Ordinary Jurisdiction THose Spirits are truely degenerate that being sensible of misery cannot stir up desires of change although the way thereto lies open before them and this shewes the nature of the Romish yoke that it lay upon the Spirits of Men did intoxicate and make them drunk with their condition otherwise the Usurpations Oppressions Extortions and Incroachments of the Popedome upon the Bishops Sphear and the People under their charge could never have provoked such complaynings amongst all sorts in severall Ages from time to time And now that Henry the Eighth undertakes to set them free so as they would acknowledge his Supremacy they all are struck dumb till a Premuniri taught them to speak and so were scared into a better condition then they would have had and into a more absolute Estate of Jurisdiction then they received from their Predecessors The Pope had now usurped a power supra ordinary over all Appeals gained the definitive Sentence to the Roman See and had holden this power by the space of foure hundred years and the King finding the root of all the mischeif to his Crown from abroad springing from that Principle meaned not to dispute the point with the Casuists but by one Statute took away all Appeals to Rome and determined Appeals from the Bishops Court in the Arch-Bishops Court and the Appeals from the Arch-Bishops Commissary in the Court of Audience So as though in the Kings own Case the Convocation had the last blow yet in matters concerning the Subjects the Arch-Bishop was either more worthy or more willing with that trust For though the Convocation might have as well determined all as well as the Pope yet for dispatch sake of a multitude of Appeals now depending at Rome and to prevent long attendance on the Convocation that now had much to doe in matters of more publick nature the utmost Appeal in such Cases is made Provinciall This whether priviledge or prejudice the Ecclesiasticall Causes gained above the Civill whose definitive Sentence was reserved to the