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A61091 The history and fate of sacrilege discover'd by examples of scripture, of heathens, and of Christians; from the beginning of the world continually to this day / by Sir Henry Spelman ... Spelman, Henry, Sir, 1564?-1641. 1698 (1698) Wing S4927; ESTC R16984 116,597 303

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terrible Fire broke out of an House and spreading suddenly over a great part of the Town the whole Company was disperst and only the Monks left to end the Office begun The Funeral notwithstanding proceeded afterwards in great Solemnity the Bishops and Abbots of Normandy attending it But when the Mass was done and that the Bishop of Ebroscen at the end of his Sermon had desired all that were present to pray for the dead Prince and charitably to forgive him if he had offended any of them one Anselm Fitz-Arthur rising up said aloud The Ground whereon ye stand was the floor of my Father's House and the Man for whom ye make Intercession took it violently from him while he was Duke of Normandy and founded this House upon it I now therefore claim my own and forbid him that took it away by violence to 〈◊〉 covered with my Earth or to be buried 〈◊〉 my Inheritance The Bishops and Nobility hearing this and understanding it to be true by the Testimony of others presently compounded with the Party in fair manner giving him 60 s. in Hand for the place of Burial and promising a just Satisfaction for the rest for which he received afterwards a 100 l. in Silver by consent of Henry the Conqueror's Son This Blur being thus wiped away they proceeded to put the Corps into the Tomb or Coffin prepared by the Mason whereupon another followed very loathsome for it being too short and strait as they strove violently to thrust the Corps into it the fat Belly not being Boweled burst in pieces and vapoured forth so horrible a savour as the smoak of Frankincense and other Aromaticks ascending plentifully from the Censers prevail'd not to suppress it but both Priest and Company were driven tumultuously to dispatch the Business and get them gone Thus much of the Disasters touching the Person of the Conqueror To which may be added that his very Death proceeded from a violent Accident happening unto him in the Sacking of Medant where the heat and heaviness of his Armour and the extream clamor upon his Soldiers wrought as was reported a Dissolution of his Entrails à ruina intestinorum ejus liquefacta saith Gemeticensis for tho' he liv'd a while after yet he languish'd till his Death But note by the way that he who had in his Life-time destroy'd so many Churches and Burying-places being dead although he were so great a King yet he wanted the Office of his Children Friends and Servants to carry him to Church or to take care of his Burial that being carried thither by others the very Fire wherewith he had devoured certain Churches interrupted his Passage that being come to the Church he that had put so many by their places of Burial was now put by his own And lastly that when the place of his Burial was obtain'd for Money it happened fatally that it was too strait to receive him as tho' the Earth of the Church which he had so grievously injured were unwilling to open her Mouth to entertain him But after all difficulties Did he not rest quiet at last Reason would he should for the Grave is Asilum Requiei the Sanctuary of Rest and he did enjoy it for many Ages Yet the Bishop of Bajeux in the Year 1542. opened his Tomb and brought to light his Epitaph hidden in it Graven upon a Gilded-plate of Brass But in the Year 1562. certain French Soldiers with some English that under the Conduct of the Chastillon took the City of Caen and fell to spoiling of Churches there did barbarously break down and deface the Monument of this great King and as tho' the Malus Genius of the Churches which himself had destroy'd still pursued him with Revenge did take out his Bones and cast them away Verst p. 184. What befel these Soldiers that thus rifled Churches appeareth not obscurity and oblivion do conceal them But the lamentable end of the Chastillon himself that suffered this Outrage is very notorious in the Massacre of Paris To come to his Posterity his Sons were four all of them at times in War amongst themselves Robert the eldest deprived of his Birth-right the Crown of England first by his Brother William then by his Brother Henry who also took from him his Dutchy of Normandy put out his Eyes and kept him cruelly in Prison till the Day of his Death His only Son Richard hunting in the New-Forest was slain in the Life of his Father by an Arrow shot casually as Florentius Wigorneinsis reporteth Others name him Henry and say he was hanged there like Absalom by the Hair of the Head Be it one or both the Death was violent and in the New-Forest But thus Robert died without Issue nothing prospering with him as Stow noteth after his Father Cursed him Richard second Son of the Conqueror Duke of Beorne as Stow saith died also in the same Forest in the fifteenth Year of his Father upon a pernicious Blast that happened on him but Gemeticensis lib. 11. c. 9. saith with a blow of a Tree William Rufus the third Son was contaminate as well with his own as his Fathers Sacrilege for he would part with no Bishoprick that came into his Hands without Money for it by reason whereof he had lying upon his Hand for want of Chapmen thirteen Bishopricks at the time of his Death He was also slain in the same Forest An. with an Arrow out of the Quiver of God shot casually by Sir Walter Tyrell and as Florentius reporteth in the very self-same place where a Church did stand till the Conqueror destroy'd it He also died without Issue Gemeticens lib. 7. cap. 9. Henry the fourth Son being King Hen. I. abstain'd as I imagine Hunting in the New-Forest but God met with him in another Corner for having but two Sons William legitimate and Richard natural they were in the fifteenth Year of his Reign both drowned with other of the Nobility coming out of France and himself dying afterward without Issue Male in the Year 1135. gave a period to this Norman Family Here I must observe as elsewhere I have done that about the very same point of time viz. 68 Years wherein God cut off the Issue of Nebuchadnezzar and gave his Kingdom to another Nation after he had invaded the holy Things of the Temple About the very same point of time I say after the Conqueror had made this Spoil of Churches did God cut off his Issue Male and gave his Kingdom to another Nation not of Normandy but Bloys Inter An. 1061. An. 1070. Vrsus Abbot was made Sheriff of Worcester by William the Conqueror and building a Castle in Worcester near the Monastery cut a part of the Church-yard into the Dike of his Castle which Aldred the Arch-Bishop of York seeing said to him Hatest thou Urse have thou God's curse unless thou takest down this Castle and know assuredly that thy Posterity shall not long inherit this Ground of St. Mary ' s. He foretold
the meanest of the People to Shop-keepers Taverners Taylors Tradesmen Burghers Brewers Grasiers and it may be supposed that as Constantine the Great seeing the inconvenience of the multitude of Comites of his time distinguished them as Eusebius reporteth into three degrees making the latter far inferior to the former so may it one day come to pass among these of our times and it shall not want some precedent of our own to the like purpose Vide Glossarium in voc Comes pag. 109. IV. What hath happened to the Crown it self It now remaineth to shew how the Lands themselves thus pulled from the Church have thriven with the Crown and in the Hands of the King his Heirs and Successors truly no otherwise than the Archbishop I spake of so long since foretold For they have melted and dropt away from the Crown like Snow yet herein that Snow leaves moisture to enrich the Ground but those nothing save dry and fruitless Coffers for now they are all gone in a manner and little to speak of remaining for them to the Treasury for my own part I think the Crown the happier that they are gone but very unhappy in their manner of going for as Sampson going out of Gaza carried with him the Gates the Bars and Posts of the City leaving it thereby exposed to Enemies weak and undefenced so those Lands going from the Crown have carried away with them the very Crown-Lands themselves which were in former times the glorious Gates of Regal Magnificence the present and ready Bars of Security at all Necessities and like immoveable Posts or Hercules Pillars in all the transmigrations of Crown and Kingdom had to our Time 1000 Years and upward remained fixed and amor ... to the Scepter These I say are in effect all gone since the Dissolution the new Piece hath rent away the old Garment and the Title of terra Regis within Dooms-day Book was generally the Targett in every County is now a Blank I fear in most of them But his Majesty hath a great Fee-farm reserved out of the greatest part of both of them 40000 l. a Year they say out of the Crown Lands and 60000 l. out of the Church Lands I confess it makes a goodly sound yet is it but froth in respect of the solid Land which is deemed to be more than ten times if not twenty times as much and this being but succus redditus a sick and languishing Rent will grow daily as our Rents of Assess have already done to be of lesser worth as the price of Lands and Commodities increase and rise higher but I hear there is ... thousand pounds a Year of the Crown-lands gone without any Reservation at all and above ... thousand likewise of the Church Lands and to tell the truth which my self do well know a great proportion of the Fee-farm Rents themselves are likewise aliened already but mihi Cynthius aurem vellit I must launch no further V. What happened to the whole Kingdom generally What the whole Body of the Kingdom hath suffered since these Acts of Confiscation of the Monasteries and their Churches is very remarkable let the Monks and Friers shift as they deserv'd the good if you will and the bad together my purpose is not to defend their Iniquities the thing I lament is that the Wheat perish'd with the Darnel things of good and pious Institution with those that abused and perverted them by reason whereof the Service of God was not only grievously wounded and bleedeth at this day but infinite Works of Charity whereby the Poor were universally reliev'd thro' the Kingdon were utterly cut off and extinguish'd many thousand masterless Servants turn'd loose into the World and many thousand of poor People which were constantly fed clad and nourished by the Monasteries now like young Ravens seek their Meat at God Every Monastery according to their Ability had an Ambery greater or little for the daily relief of the Poor about them Every principal Monastery an Hospital commonly for Travellers and an Infirmary which we now call a Spittle for the sick and diseased Persons with Officers and Attendants to take care of them Gentlmen and others having Children without means of Maintenance had them here brought up and provided for which course in some Countries and namely in Pomerland as I hear is still observed tho' Monks and Friers be abandoned These and such other Miseries falling upon the meaner sort of People drove them into so many Rebellions as we spake of and rung such loud peals in the King's Ears that on his Death-bed he gave back the Spittle of St. Bartholomew's in Smithfield lately valued saith Stow at 308 l. 6 s. 7 d. and the Church of the Gray-Friers valued at 32 l. 19 s. 7 d. with other Churches and 500 Marks a Year added to it to be united and called Christ Church founded by King Henry 8. and to be Hospitals for relieving the Poor the Bishop of Rochester declaring his Bounty at Paul's Cross on the 3d of Jan. and on the 28th day following the King died viz the 28 Jan. This touching the Poor VI. What happened to private Owners of the Monasteries particularly I turn now to the richer sort and shall not need to speak of the Clergy whose irreparable Misery Piers Ploughman foresaw so many Ages before saying That a King should come that should give the Abbat of Abingdon such a blow as incurable should be the Wound thereof Their Misery and Wrack is so notorious as it needs no Pen to decypher it nor will I speak of the loss that the Lay-men our Grandfathers had by this means in their right of Founders and Patronage Meantenures Rents-services Pensions Corrodies and many other Duties and Privileges whereof some were saved by the Statutes yet by little and little all in effect worn out and gone Those I say I speak not of for that they are Wounds grown up and forgotten but of one instead of all that immortal and incurable Wound which every day bleedeth more than other given to us and our Posterity by the infinite number of Tenures by Knights service in capite either newly created upon granting out of these Monasteries and Lands or daily raised by double Ignoramus in every Town almost of the Kingdom For as the Abbies had Lands commonly scattered abroad in every of them in some greater or lesser quantity according to the Ability of their Benefactors so the Leprosie of this Tenure comes thereby as generally to be scatter'd thro' the Kingdom And whereas before that time very few did hold on that manner besides the Nobility and principal Gentlemen that were owners of great Lordships and Possessions which from time to time descended intirely to their Heirs and were not broken out into small parcels amongst inferiour Tenents and mean Purchasers Now by reason that those Abby Lands are minced into such infinite numbers of little Quillets and thereby privily sown like the Tares in the Parable almost in every
the Inhabitants about Conven Greg. Turo Hist. lib. 7. c. 35. This Author as Sigebertus saith was made Bishop of Tours in the Year 571. is much Honour'd generally for his Life Gravity and Fidelity yet must I note that he hath deliver'd this Story somewhat differingly in his Book De Gloriâ Mart. lib. 1. c. 105. though to the same effect Memory in all Men being sometime stronger sometime weaker There he saith that the Soldiers could not of long time and with much labour make the Church Doors take fire and that at last they were fain to use the help of Hatchets and to chop them in pieces that being entered they took both the things that were there and slew all the People that were fled thither for safety That this was not long unpunished for some were rapt away by the Devil some drowned in the River Garumna many lying in the cold got divers Diseases in divers parts that vexed them grievously For my self saith he did see in the Territory of Tours many of them that were Partners in his Wickedness grievously tormented even to the loss of this present Life with intolerable Pains Bar. 476. 4. Chilperic the greatest Man with Sigebert King of Mees or Austrasia claimeth wrongfully a Town from Franco Bishop of Aquis pretending that it belong'd to the publick Revenue and judicially before the King and other Judges doth recover it with Three hundred Crowns aureos Damages The Bishop in great anguish of Mind goeth to the Church and falling down at the Tomb of St. Metrias Patron of the Church prayeth for Vengeance and threatneth the Saint that there should be neither Lights nor Singing in that Church until he were revenged of his Enemy and the Things restored that were taken away from it so wrongfully And laying Thorns upon the Tomb he shut the Church Door laying others there also for that was a Type that the place was forsaken Presently hereupon Chilperic that had done this wrong to the Church falleth sick of a Fever and continueth so for a whole Year eating little and drinking little save Water in the heat of his Fit but perplexed in his Mind and Sighing much yet Relented not in that he had done In the mean time all the Hair both of his Beard and Head came wholly off and all his Head became bare and naked Then he bethinks him of the wrong he had done to the Church and restoreth the Town with Six hundred Crowns for the Three hundred he had received hoping so to recover his Health by the means of the Saint but dy'd notwithstanding Greg. Turon De Glor. confes ca. 71. Bar. An. 579. 15. This happened in the time of King Sigebert who was this Year murdered by the practice of his Brothers Wife Fredegundis Ruecolenus with a Power of the Cenomanians wasteth all about the City Tours so that the Houses and Hospital of the Church were without hope of Sustenance He demandeth also of the Church-men there that they should deliver unto him some that had taken Sanctuary in the Church and threatneth to fire all if they refused St. Gregory of Tours being then Bishop there and that writ this Relation with his own Hand goeth to the Church and praying for aid Beati auxilia flagitamus a Woman that had twelve Years been contracted with the Palsie was made streight But Ruecolenus himself being now come to the other side of the River was presently strucken with the King 's Evil and with the Disease of King Herod and the fiftieth Day after dy'd all swollen of the Dropsie This Greg. Turon himself as I find reporteth De Mirac S. Mart. lib. c. 17. Baron 579. 18. Certain Servants or Officers of Egbright the third King of Kent after Ethelbert had done great Injury to a Noble Woman called Domneva the Mother of St. Mildred in Recompence whereof the King promised upon his Honour to give her whatsoever she would ask of him She begged upon this so much Ground of him to build an Abbey on as a tame Deer that she had nourished would run over at a Breath The King had presently granted it but that one of his Council named Timor standing by blamed his inconsideration that would upon the uncertain Course of a Deer depart with any part of so good a Soil But presently saith the Author William Thorne a Monk of St. Augustin's the Earth open'd and swallowed him up alive in Memory whereof the place till this time was call'd Timor's Lease It may be the Monk hath aggravated the matter and that Mr. Lambard justly doth count it Fabulous but it seems some notable Misfortune followed upon Timor hindring in this manner the propagation of Religion in the beginning of our Church Yet no learned Man I think doubteth but that in the first Conversion of Heathen People God was pleased to shew some Miracles upon sacrilegious Impediments The Story goes on that the King moved with the Event granted Domneva's Petition and that the Hind being put forth run the space of Forty eight Plough-lands before it ceas'd In which Precinct this Lady by the King's help builded the Monastery for Nuns called Minister-Abbey in Tenet Lambard Itin. in Tenet pag. 99. Egfrid King of Northumberland sendeth an Army into Ireland under the Conduct of Bert and wasting miserably that harmless Nation which then was Friend to the English spared neither Churches nor Monasteries The Inhabitants resisted as they could but rested not to call upon God with continual Curses for Revenge And tho' those that be accursed cannot inherit the Kingdom of God yet it is to be thought that those that are justly cursed for their Iniquity that the Vengeance of God doth therefore fall the sooner upon them For this same King this next Year after in a Voyage against the Picts was drawn into streights and both himself and most of his Army slain And in the eleventh Year of King Ino saith Huntington the Earl Berutus felt the Curses of the Irish People whose Church he had destroyed as his Master had done before For as King Egfrid entring into the Land of the Picts was there slain so he entring it also to revenge his Masters Death was likewise slain by them Osred King of Northumberland being but eight Years old when he began to reign and Reigning but eleven Years even thus young broke the Monasteries and deflower'd the Nuns with much other Wickedness for which the just Hand of God being upon him as Bonifacius Archbishop of Mentz and other Bishops assembled after in a German Council do testifie by their Epistle to Aethelbald he was murder'd by his Kinsmen Kenred and Osrick and his Kingdom Usurped by Osrick contrary to Osred's meaning who had Decreed it to Ceolwulfe Brother of his Father as Beda reporteth lib. 5. ca. 24. who saith farther that his whole Reign abounded with so many Crosses of Fortune that no Man knew either what to write of them or what end they would have Vid. Epis.
excommunicated the Earl who little regarded it The Earl so dieth the Bishop cometh into England and reneweth his Suit to Earl William his Son and Heir obtaining to have the King his Mediator but prevail'd not for Earl William and his Brethren answer'd That their Father did the Bishop no wrong having gotten the Mannors by right of War The Bishop in the agony of his Spirit reneweth the Curse against their Father and them and said That the Lord had cast it grievously upon Earl William as is written in the Psalm In a Generation his Name shall be put out and his Sons shall be Vagabonds as touching the Blessing promis'd by the Lord of Encrease and multiply Earl William the Father at the time of his Death and Burial which was in the New Temple at London 17. Kal. Apr. 1219. and 4 Hen. 3. left 5 Sons and as many Daughters Earl William the eldest Son first married Alice the Daughter and Heir of Baldwin Earl of Albermarle c. After Eleanor Daughter of King John and died without Issue 6. Apr. 1231. 15 Hen. 3. Earl Richard the second Brother succeeded he married the Lady Gervasia and was slain in Ireland 18 Hen. 3. leaving no Issue Earl Gilbert the 3d Brother succeeded He married Margaret Daughter of William King of Scots and was kill'd by his own Horse at a Tornement at Hartford 21 Hen. 3. 1241. leaving no Issue Earl Walter the fourth Brother succeeded He married Margaret Daughter and Co-heir of Robert Lord Quiney and died at London 6. Dec. 1245. 30 Hen. 3. or as others report the 24. Nov. and was buried at Tinterne leaving no Issue Earl Anselm the youngest was at the death of his Brother Walter Dean of Salisbury but admitted to be Earl of Pembroke and Marshal and in haste married Maud the Daughter of Humphrey de Bohun Earl of Hereford that he yet at last might propagate the most noble Family But Non est consilium contra Dominum for he died within 18 or 24 days after his Brother before he was actually possess'd of his County Thus according to the Malediction of the Bishop the Name of those great Earls Marshal was utterly extinct all the five Brethren being married and dying Childless within 15 Years Matt. Par. An. 1219 1245. p. 292 665 alibi King Edw. 1. in the zeal of his Religion his Father yet living took the Cross upon him and went to assist the Christians in the Wars of Jerusalem The Pope in recompence of his Charges granted unto him in the second Year of his Reign he being return'd the tenth part of all Ecclesiastical Benefices of the Kingdom for one Year and the like to his Brother Edmond for another But afterwards the King forgetting his old Devotion in the 11th Year of his Reign seiz'd all the Treasure of the Tenths collected for that purpose and laid up in divers places of the Kingdom and breaking open the Locks caus'd it to be brought unto him and employ'd it to his own use Stow. This taste of things separate to God drew him on to a further Appetite In the 23d Year of his Reign he took into his hands all the Priories Aliens throughout the Kingdom committing them as Charles Martel of old had done in France to Officers under him and allowing every Monk 18d a Week retain'd the rest for the charge of his War as he did also the Pensions going out of those Houses to the greater Monasteries beyond the Seas Yet obtain'd he further in the same Parliament of the Clergy and Religious Persons a Subsidy of half their Goods to the value of 100000l whereof the Abby of Bury paid 655 l. 11d q. Stow ib. p. 316. King Ed. l. being in great want by his subduing Scotland about the end of the 23th Year of his Reign caused all the Monasteries of England to be search'd and the Money found in them to be brought to London Wals. pa. 65. Cax l. 7. c. 39. Shortly after in the 24th Year of his Reign at a Parliament at St. Edmundsbury he required a Subsidy which the Laity granted But the Clergy pretending that Pope Boniface at the same time had forbidden upon pain of Excommunication that either Secular Princes should impose Tallages upon the Church-men or that Church-men should pay any they refus'd to supply the King's Necessity and having day to advise better on the matter till the next Parliament at London shortly after they persisted in the same mind Whereupon the King put them out of his Protection so that being robb'd and spoil'd by lewd persons without remedy to redeem the King's Favour the Archbishop of York and many of the Bishops laid down a fifth part of all their Goods in their Churches and some by other courses satisfy'd the King's desire and so recover'd his Protection But all the Monasteries within the Province of Canterbury were seiz'd into the King's hands and Wardens appointed in them to minister to the Monks and Religious Persons therein only what must be had of necessity taking all other Monies and Surplusage to the King's use So that the Abbots and Priors were glad to follow the Court and to repair their Error with the fourth part of their Goods The Archbishop of Canterbury after all this fearing the Pope's Excommunication continu'd in his refusal lost all he had was forsaken of his Servants forbidden to be receiv'd either in any Monastery or without and rested in the House of a poor Man only with one Priest and one Clerk How these Courses were censur'd in foro coeli is not in me to judge nor will I pry into the Ark of God's Secrets But see what followeth in the Story King Edward having with great Triumph subdu'd Scotland and taken the King Prisoner did at this present peaceably enjoy that Kingdom and govern'd it by his own Officers But e're three Months came to an end Wil. Wallis began such a Rebellion there as put all in hazard and in fine it was so reviv'd by Robert le Bruce the King 's natural Subject that at length he overthrew the King's Armies slew and beat out his Officers and without all recovery gain'd the Kingdom to himself and his Posterity King Edward attempting the recovery died at the entrance of Scotland His Son Edward II. pursuing his Father's intent with one of the greatest Armies that ever was raised by the English was miserably beaten and put to flight hardly escaping in his own person All his Life after full of Tumult not only his Nobles but his very Wife his Enemy abandoned of his Subjects turn'd out of his Kingdom imprison'd and traiterously murther'd In all which the Curse which his Father upon his Death-bed laid upon him if he should break the Precepts he gave him had no doubt a cooperation for he observ'd none of them Touching the pulling of Lands from the Church all have not always been of one mind For tho' the makers of the Statute of Mortmaine did truly think that the
Clergy had so disproportionable a share by way of excess in the Lands of the Kingdom yet when in 17 Edw. II. it came to the point that the Order of the Templars for their wickedness was overthrown the Parliament then wherein many of those no doubt that made the Statute of Mortmain were present would not give the Lands and Possessions of the Templars to the King or the Lords of whom they were holden but ordain'd that they should go to the Order of the Hospital of St. John's of Jerusalem then lately erected for the defence of Christendom and the Christian Religion Edward le Bruce brother to Robert le Bruce King of Scots invadeth the North parts of Ireland with 6000 Men and accompanied with many great persons of the Nobility conquer'd the Earldom of Ulster gave the English many overthrows and prevail'd so victoriously that he caus'd himself to be crown'd King of Ireland His Soldiers in the mean time burn Churches and Abbies with the People whom they found in the same sparing neither Man Woman nor Child And most wickedly entring into other Churches spoil'd and defac'd the same of all such Tombs Monuments Plate Copies and other Ornaments as they found there He thus prevailing and the Irish much revolting to him the Archbishop of Armagh blesseth and encourageth the English Army against him Whereupon they joyn'd battle overthrew the whole Power of the Scots slew 2000 of their Men and amongst them this their King Edward le Bruce himself King Edw. III. to begin his Wars with France in An. 1337. taketh all the Treasure that was laid up in the Churches throughout England for the defence of the Holy Land Speed p. 190. And whereas there were anciently in England many Cells and Houses of Religion 110 they were counted and more belonging to greater Monasteries beyond the Seas fraught with Aliens and Strangers especially French-men and those of the Orders of Clunis and Cistertien King Edward III. at his entry into his French Wars An. 1337 Regni 12. partly fearing that they might hold intelligence with his Enemies but seeking chiefly to have their Wealth toward the payment of his Soldiers confiscated their Goods and Possessions letting their Priories and Lands to farm for Rent and selling some of them right out to others of his Subjects Yet like a Noble and Religious Prince touch'd with remorse when the Wars were ended viz. An. 1361 regni 35. he granted them all save those few that he had put away back again unto them by his Letters Patents as freely as they had formerly enjoy'd them And divers of those that were purchas'd by his Subjects were by them new-founded and given back to Religious Uses This act of the King 's was a precedent of singular Piety yet was it but a lame Offering not an Holocaust He gave back the Possessions but he retain'd the Profits which he had taken for 23 Years Speed p. 211. King John whom they so much condemn did more than this if he had done it as willingly He restor'd the Lands with the Damages But let not this good King want the charitable Commendation due unto his Piety though having dipt his Hands in this We be driven by the course of our Argument to observe what after befell to him and his Off-spring There be some things saith ... are sweet in the Mouth but bitter in the Belly pleasant at the beginning but woful in the end If these Priories and their Churches were of that nature the sequel verifies the Proverb The middle part of the King's Life was most fortunate and victorious yea all the while that these things were in his Hands even as if God had bless'd him as he did Obed-Edom 1 Sam. 6. 10. whilst the Ark was in his House and had the King then dy'd he had been a most glorious pattern of earthly Felicity But the Wheel turn'd and his Oriental Fortunes became Occidental The Peace he had concluded with France for the solace of his Age brake out again into an unfortunate War Many of his Subjects there rebell Gascony in effect is lost Afflictions at home fall upon him in sequence his Son Lionel Duke of Clarence dieth without Issue-male and when he had greatest need of his renowned Son the Prince of Wales miracle of Chivalry and the Anchor of his Kingdom him even then did God take from him his Court and Nobles discontented and in Faction himself and all things much misgovern'd by his Son the Duke of Lancaster and others of that part who by the Parliament are therefore remov'd from him and by him recall'd notwithstanding to the grief of all the Kingdom Thus he dieth leaving his unweildy Scepters to the feeble Arms of a Child of Eleven Years old King Richard II. whose lamentable History for the honour of Kings is best unspoken of But so unfortunate he was among his other Calamities that he was not only deposed by his unnatural Subjects but imprison'd and murther'd dying without Issue and leaving an Usurper possessor of his Kingdoms which kindled such Fuel of Dissention as consum'd almost all the Royal Line and Ancient Nobility of the Kingdom by the Civil War between the Houses of York and Lancaster To return to the Restitution made by King Edw. III. of the Priories-Alien An Historian termeth it A rare Example of a just King it being seldom seen that Princes let go any thing whereon they have once fasten'd But this King having made a Door in this manner into the freedom and possession of the Church all the Power he had either ordinarily or by Prerogative could not now so shut it up but that this Precedent would for ever after be a Key to open it at the pleasure of Posterity which was well seen not long after For in the Parliament An. 9. of King Richard II. The Knights and Burgesses with some of the Nobility being in a great rage as John Stow saith against the Clergy for that William Courtney the Archbishop would not suffer them to be charged in Subsidy by the Laity exhibited a Petition to the King that the Temporalities might be taken from them saying That they were grown to such Pride that it was Charity and Alms to take them from them to compell them thereby to be more meek and humble And so near the Parliament-men thought themselves the point of their desire that one promised himself thus much of this Monastery another so much of another Monastery And I heard saith Tho. Walsingham one of the Knights deeply swear that of the Abbey of St. Albans he would have a thousand Marks by the Year of the Temporalities But the King hearing the inordinate crying out on the one side and the just defence on the other deny'd his consent and commanded the Bill to be cancell'd Stow p. 479. Two valiant Esquires John Shakel and Robert Hauley having taken the Earl of Dene Prisoner at the Battel of Nazers in Spain and receiv'd his Son Hostage for performing Conditions between
which we omit The said Monasteries were given to the King by authority of divers Acts of Parliament but no provision was herein made for the said Project or any part thereof Only ad favendum populum these Possessions were given to the King his Heirs and Successors to do and use therewith his and their own Wills To the Pleasure of Almighty God and the Honour and Profit of the Realm Now observe the Catastrophe In the same Parliament of 32. Henry VIII when the great and opulent Priory of St. Johns of Jerusalem was given to the King he demanded and had a Subsidy both of the Clergy and Laity and the like he had in 34. Henry VIII and in 37. Henry VIII he had another Subsidy And since the dissolution of the said Monasteries he exacted divers Loans and against Law receiv'd the same Thus the great Judge the Lord Coke doth severely censure the ill-doings under Henry VIII and sheweth that notwithstanding the infinite Wealth in Money Lands and other Riches which came to the King by the dissolutions yet the People were burthen'd with more Taxes Subsidies and Loans than ever in former Times That it fully appeareth that as the goodly pretences to free the People from Subsidies and several Payments were but empty and vain pretences only ad favendum populum to deceive and abuse the People So in our late long Parliament many publick Projects and Pretences were propos'd and the Presbyterian party were zealous to advance the Throne of Christ and the Tribunal of Christ with all his holy Ordinances in full force as their Language did propose it But it was quickly discover'd that no such Matters were truly intended but only the Land of the Church must be taken to maintain Armies to bring in the Scots-Highlanders Red-shanks Goths and Vandals to subvert the King his Crown and Dignity and in the end to take all the Crown-lands and to divide them amongst the Soldiers and others at their pleasures But the dismal Events and tragical Mischiefs that have happen'd might have been foreseen and prevented but that most Men are ignorant of our own Histories and Chronicles as well as of foreign Histories and Examples wherein they might easily have observ'd the fearfull ends that have follow'd upon the like doings both in our own Kingdoms and other neighbouring Nations as France Germany and Bohemia especially within these last forty Years For as Solomon saith There is no new thing under the Sun For the like hath happen'd often both at home and abroad but that Men will take no warning by any Examples but persist in their wicked and sacrilegious Attempts tho' in the end they bring confusion and destruction upon themselves Whereas it is said that when Henry V. suppress'd the Priories Aliens a good part of their Lands was given to other Religious Houses both by that King and his Son Henry VI. who bestow'd a great part of those Lands upon Colleges in the Universities it is true but in our Reformation there is no such care taken to convert any part of the Church-lands to pious and publick Uses but the Cormorants devour all They spake also of maintaining many Hospitals for relieving of maim'd Soldiers in our present time there is an infinite Number of maim'd Soldiers but no Hospitals provided for them whereas they should have provided some good Number and withall an hundred Bedlams to entertain pious zealous and outragious Puritans who have lost their Wits and Senses and are become extremely mad with distemper'd Zeal as the Anabaptists and Fifth-Monarchy-men Quakers and the rest of the Rabble Humfrey Duke of Glocester coming to the Parliament at St. Edmundsbury and lodging there in a place as Leland saith sacred to our Saviour he was by the Lord John Beaumont then High-Constable of England the Duke of Buckingham the Duke of Somerset and others arrested of High-Treason suggested and being kept in Ward in the same place was the Night following viz. 24. Febr. cruelly murther'd by De la Pole Duke of Suffolk Some judg'd him to have been strangled some to have a hot Spit thrust up his Fundament some to be smother'd between two Feather-beds But all indifferent Persons saith Hall might well understand that he died some violent Death Being found dead in his Bed his Body was shewed to the Lords and Commons as though he had died of a Palsie or Imposthume which others do publish But it falleth out that this Lord John Vicount Beaumont and the Duke of Buckingham were both slain in the Battle of Northampton 38. Henry VI. The Duke of Somerset taken Prisoner at the Battle of Exham An. 1462. and there beheaded The Duke of Suffolk being banisht the Land was in passing the Seas surpriz'd by a Ship of the Duke of Exeter's and brought back to Dover-Road where in a Cock-boat at the Commandment of the Captain his Head was stricken off and both Head and Body left on the Shore CHAP. VII Of the great Sacrilege and Spoil of Church-lands committed by Henry VIII His promise to employ the Lands to the advancement of Learning Religion and Relief of the Poor The preamble of the Statute 27. Henry VIII to that purpose which is omitted in the printed Statutes The neglect of that Promise The great increase of Lands and Wealth that came to the King by the Dissolution Quadruple to the Crown-lands The Accidents which happen'd to the King and his Posterity to the Agents under him as the Lord Cromwell and others to the Crown and the whole Kingdom and to the new Owners of the Lands A View of the Parliaments that passed the Acts of the 27 and 31 of Henry VIII and of the Lords that voted in them and what happened to them and their Families The Names of the Lords in the 27 of Henry VIII omitted in the Record but those of the 31 Henry VIII are remaining being most the same Men. The Names of the Lords Spiritual in those Parliaments and the great Spoil of Libraries and Books The Names of the Lords Temporal in those Parliaments with the Misfortunes in their Families and Dignity abated What hath happened to the Crown it self by the loss of Crown-lands What hath happened to the Kingdom in general and the great Injury done to the Poor The Mischief of the Tenure of Knights-service in Capite which by Act is to be reserved upon all Church-lands that pass from the Crown The ancient Original of Wardship from the Goths and Lombards the abuse of it amongst us The prediction of Egebred an old Hermite The unfortunate Calamities of the Palsgrave and other Princes of Germany by invading the Patrimony of the Church How carefull the Heathens were not to misuse the things consecrated to their Gods King James's Letter to the University of Oxon about Impropriations I Am now come off the Rivers into the Ocean of Iniquity and Sacrilege where whole thousands of Churches and Chappels dedicated to the Service of God in the same manner that
the rest are which remain to us at this day together with the Monasteries and other Houses of Religion and intended Piety were by King Henry VIII in a temper of indignation against the Clergy of that time mingled with insatiable Avarice sacked and rased as by an Enemy It is true the Parliament did give them to him but so unwillingly as I have heard that when the Bill had stuck long in the lower House and could get no passage he commanded the Commons to attend him in the Forenoon in his Gallery where he let them wait till late in the Afternoon and then coming out of his Chamber walking a turn or two amongst them and looking angrily on them first on one side then on the other at last I hear saith he that my Bill will not pass but I will have it pass or I will have some of your Heads and without other Rhetorick or Perswasion returned to his Chamber Enough was said the Bill passed and all was given him as he desired First In the 27th Year of his Reign all Monasteries c. not having 200 l. per Annum in Revenue then in Anno 31 all the rest through the Kingdom in An. 32. cap. 24. the Hospitals and Hospital Churches of St. Johns of Jerusalem in England and Ireland with their Lands and Appurtenances and in Anno 37. cap. 4. all Colleges Free-Chapels Chauntries Hospitals Fraternities and Stipendiary-Priests made to have continuance for ever being contributary to the payment of First-fruits Tenths c. what should have been next God knows Bishopricks I suppose and Cathedral-Churches which had been long assailed in the time of R. II. H. IV. and H. V. but the next Year was the time of his account to Almighty God which as it is said he passed in great penitency for his Sins It is to be observed that the Parliament did give all these to the King yet did they not ordain them to be demolished or employed to any irreligious Uses leaving it more to the conscience and piety of the King who in a Speech to the Parliament promised to perform the Trust wherein he saith I cannot a little rejoyce when I consider the perfect truth and confidence which you have put in me in my good doings and just proceedings for you without my desire and request have committed to my order and disposition all Chauntries Colleges and Hospitals and other places specified in a certain Act firmly trusting that I will order them to the Glory of God and the Profit of the Common-wealth Surely if I contrary to your expectation should suffer the Ministers of the Churches to decay or Learning which is so great a Jewel to be minished or the poor and miserable to be unrelieved you might well say that I being put in such a special Trust as I am in this Case were no trusty Friend to you nor charitable to my Emne-Christen neither a lover of the publick Wealth nor yet one that feared God to whom account must be rendred of all our doings doubt not I pray you but your expectation shall be served more godly and goodly than you will wish or desire as hereafter you shall plainly perceive So that the King hereby doth not only confess the Trust committed to him by the Parliament in the same Manner that the Act assigns it viz. to be for the Glory of God and the Profit of the Common-wealth but he descendeth also into the particulars of the Truth as namely for the maintenance of the Ministers and Advancement of Learning and Provision for the Poor So likewise in the Statute 27. Henry VIII c. 28. the Preamble doth expresly ordain that the Lands Houses and Revenues should be converted to better Uses as appears fully in the Preamble which because it is omitted in the printed Edition of the Statutes shall here follow out of the Record For as much as manifest Sins c. vid. Monast. Angl. T. 1. p. But notwithstanding these fair Pretences and Projects little was performed for Desolation presently followed this Dissolution the Ax and the Mattock ruined almost all the Chief and most magnificent Ornaments of the Kingdom viz. 376 of the lesser Monasteries 645 of the greater sort 90 Colleges 110 Religious Hospitals 2374 Chantries and Free-Chapels All these Religious Houses Churches Colleges and Hospitals being about 3500 little and great in the whole did amount to an inestimable Summ especially if their Rents be accounted as they are now improved in these days Among this Multitude it is needless to speak of the great Church of St. Mary in Bulloign who upon the taking of that Town in Anno 1544 he caused to be pulled down and a Mount to be raised in the place thereof for planting of Ordinances to annoy a Siege I will not be so bold as to father that which followed upon this that preceded but the Analogy of my Discourse and the Course of this History do lead me to relate what happened after this 1 to the King himself 2 to his Children and Posterity 3 to them that were Agents in the business 4 to the Crown it self 5 to the whole Kingdom generally 6 to private Owners of these Monasteries particularly 1. First Then touching the King himself The Revenue that came to him in ten Years space was more if I mistake it not than Quadruple that of the Crown-lands besides a Magazine of Treasure raised out of the Money Place Jewels Ornaments and Implements of Churches Monasteries and Houses with their Goods State and Cattle First-fruits and Tenths given by the Parliament in the 26th of his Reign Together with a Subsidy Tenth and Fifteenth from the Laity at the same time To which I may add the incomparable Wealth of Cardinal Wolsey a little before confiscated also to the King and a large Summ raised by Knight-hood in the 25th of this Reign A Man may justly wonder how such an Ocean of Wealth should come to be exhausted in so short a time of Peace But God's blessing as it seemeth was not upon it for within four Years after he had received all this and had ruined and sacked 376 of the Monasteries and brought their Substance to his Treasury besides all the goodly Revenues of his Crown he was drawn so dry that the Parliament in the 31st was constrained by his importunity to supply his wants with the Residue of all the Monasteries of the Kingdom 645 great ones and illustrious with all their Wealth and Prince-like Possessions Yet even then was not this King so sufficiently furnished for building of a few Block-houses for defence of the Coast but the next year after he must have another Subsidy of 4 Fifteens to bear out his Charges And least it should be too little all the Houses Lands and Goods of the Knights of St. John at Jerusalem both in England and Ireland Had not Ireland come thus in my way I had forgotten it but to increase the Floods of this Sea all the Monasteries of Ireland likewise
flowed into it by Act of Parliament the next year following being the 33d of his Reign to the Number one and other of But as the Red-sea by the miraculous Hand of God was once dried up so was this Sea of Wealth by the wastfull Hand of this Prince immediately so dried up as the very next year viz. Regni 34. the Parliament was drawn again to grant him a great Subsidy for in the Statute-book it is so stiled and this not serving his turn he was yet driven not only to enhance his Gold and Silver-money in Anno 36 but against the Honour of a Prince to coin base Money and when all this served not his turn in the very same year to exact a Benevolence of his Subjects to their grievous Discontent Perceiving therefore that nothing could fill the gulf of his effusion and that there was now a just cause of great expence by reason of his Wars at Bulloign and in France they granted him in the 37th Year 2 Subsidies at once and four Fifteens and for a Corollary all the Colleges Free-Chapels Chantries Hospitals c. before-mentioned in Number 2374. upon confidence that he should dispose them as he promised solemnly in the Parliament to the Glory of God who in truth for ought that I can hear had little part thereof The next year was his fatal Period otherwise it was much to be feared that Deans and Chapters if not Bishopricks which have been long levelled at had been his next design for he took a very good Say of them by exchanging Lands with them before the Dissolution giving them rackt Lands and small things for goodly Manners and Lordships and also Impropriations for their solid Patrimony in finable Lands like the exchange that Palamedes made with Glaucus much thereby encreasing his own Revenues as he took 72 from York besides other Lands Tenements Advowsons Patronages c. in the 37th of his Reign which are mentioned particularly in the Statute 37. Henry VIII cap. 16. He took also 30 and above as I remember in the 27th Year from the Bishop of Norwich whom he left not that I can learn one Foot of the goodly Possessions of his Church save the Palace at Norwich and how many I know not in the 37th Year also from the Bishop of London I speak not of his prodigal Hand in the Blood of his Subjects which no doubt much alienated the Hearts of them from him But God in these eleven Years space visited him with 5 or 6 Rebellions In Lincolnshire Anno 28 and 3 one after another in Yorkshire Anno 33 one in Somersetshire Anno 29 and again in Yorkshire Anno 33. And though Rebellions and Insurrections are not to be defended yet they discover unto us what the displeasure and dislike was of the common People for spoiling the Revenues of the Church whereby they were great losers the Clergy being mercifull Landlords and bountifull Benefactors to all Men by their great Hospitality and Works of Charity Thus much touching his own Fortunes accompanying the Wealth and Treasure gotten by him as we have declared by confiscating the Monasteries wherein the prophetical Speech that the Archbishop of Canterbury used in the Parliament 6. Henry IV. seemeth performed That the King should not be one farthing the richer the next Year following II. What happened to the King's Children and Posterity Touching his Children and Posterity after the time that he entered into these Courses he had two Sons and three Daughters whereof one of each kind died Infants the other three succeeding in the Crown without Posterity His base Son the Duke of Richmond died also without Issue and as the Issue of Nebuchodonosor was extinct and his Kingdom given to another Nation the 68th Year after he had rifled the Temple of Jerusalem and taken away the holy Vessels so about the same period that King Henry VIII began to sack the Monasteries with their Churches and things dedicated to God was his whole Issue extinct Male and Female base and legitimate and his Kingdom transferred to another Nation and therein to another Royal Family which is now His Majesty's singular happiness that had no hand in the like depredation of the Monasteries and Churches of that Kingdom there committed by the tumultuous if not rebellious Subjects Contrary as it seems to the good liking of our late Sovereign King James who as is reported said that if he had found the Monasteries standing he would not have pulled them down not meaning to continue them in their superstitious Uses but to employ them as Chorah's censers to some godly purposes Wherein most piously he declared himself both in restoring as I hear some Bishopricks and divers Appropriations in Scotland and also by moving the Universities of England to do the like as by his gracious Letter doth appear which shall here following be expressed in the end So his Grandfather King James the 4th of Scotland when he was solicited by Sir Ralph Sadler then Embassador from King Henry to augment his Estate by taking into his Hands the Abbies James refus'd saying What need I take them into mine Hands when I may have any thing I require of them And if there be Abuses in them I will reform them for there be a great many good Which was a wise answer and if King Henry had done the like here he might have had an immense and ample Revenue out of the Monasteries and old Bishopricks while they enjoyed their Lands being a third part of the Kingdom as appears by Doomsday-Book by way of First-fruits Tenths Pensions and Corrodies yearly that he should never have needed at any time to ask one Subsidy of his Subjects To return where we left off having spoken of the extinguishment of the Issue of King Henry whereof the immortally renown'd Princess Queen Elizabeth was the golden period Let us cast our Eyes upon the principal Agents and Contrivers of this Business III. What happen'd to the Principal Agents The Lord Cromwel was conceived to be the principal mover and prosecutor thereof both before and in the Parliament of 27 and 37 Hen. VIII and for his good service impenso impendendo upon the 18th of April before the beginning of the Parliament of 31 which was on the last of the Month he was created Earl of Essex and his Son Gregory made Lord Cromwell yet e're the Year was past from the end of the Parliament of 31 he fell wholly into the King's Displeasure and in July 32 he was attainted and beheaded professing at his Death that he had been seduc'd and dy'd a Catholick His Son Gregory Lord Cromwell being as I said made a Baron in the life time of his Father and invested with divers great Possessions of the Church supported that new risen Family from utter ruine but his Grandchild Edward Lord Cromwell wasting the whole Inheritance sold the head of his Barony Oukham in Rutlandshire and exchanging some of the rest all that remained with the E. of Devonshire for
Man's Inheritance very few not having their Tenure certain from the King by Patent can assure themselves to be free from this Calamity The truth is that originally none held in Capite but Peers of the Realm who were therefore called the King's Barons and such as by this their Tenure as appears by the Council of Clarendon 10 Hen. 2. had the privilege to sit in the King's House and to hear and judge all Causes brought before the King and to be of his great Council And tho' afterwards the meaner of them were neglected yet King John was tied by his great Charter to call them all to Parliament where the Knights of the Shires in that respect have their place at this day I am too prone you see to run out of my way into this Discourse but to hold me nearer to my Center I cannot but admire what mov'd the Parliament in 27 Henry 8. cap. 27. to enact that a Tenure in Capite by Knights Service should be reserv'd to the King upon their granting out of their Abbies and their Lands as tho' it were some singular benefit to the Commonwealth It may be they conceiv'd that according to the Project of the Parliament at Leicester in 2 Hen. 5. that the King should thereby have a perpetual means to support a standing Army or to have it ready whensoever need required and so ease the Subject of all Military Contribution O how far was that great School of Wisdom deceived or what hath that Art of theirs produc'd other than as if some Scholars had bound their Masters for to whip them soundly and I suppose they have had their fill of it long e're this time But these Tenures by being by this means multiply'd in such excessive manner the Kings former Officers that before could span their Business with their Hand could not now fathom this with both their Arms. The greater Harvest must have greater Barns and more Labourers and therefore in 32 Hen. 8. cap. 46. and 33 Hen. 8. cap. 22. and 39. the Court now called of Wards and Liveries with the Orders Officers and Ministers thereto belonging was erected What is thereby fallen upon the Subject I need not relate heavy Experience makes it generally known and generally felt one while by Wardship and Marriage another while by suing out Livery and Ouster se main by Pardons of Alienation Concealments Intrusions respite of Homage and other Calamities accompanying this Tenure almost innumerable consuming the Fruit of the Wards Lands for many Years and as sometimes I have seen for many Ages the Grandfathers Fathers and Sons Inheritance militant together in this Court the Mother equally lamenting the Death of her Husband and the Captivity of her Child the Confiscation of his Lands for the 3d part of his Age and the Ransom of his Person before he can enter into the World the Family oftentimes so ruin'd and impoverish'd as if at last it recover yet it stands tottering and lame for a long time after Marriage is honourable and instituted by God in Paradise do you think that a Man by the Word of God may be compelled to pay for a Licence to marry I doubt the Schoolmen would not so determine it nor did any civil or moral Nation of old admit it the Custom rose from the barbarous Goths and Lo●gobards and yet I confess not without reason as the Genius of their Nation did then lead them and by their Example all others where they conquered It was an impious manner of those times to hold Malice and Enmity one Family against another and against their Friends and Alliances from one Generation to another our Ancestors called it deadly feude the Feudists feudam and Tacitus in his time noteth it of Germans saying Inimicitias mutuo ponunt suscipiunt It was therefore of urgent necessity that the Lord should be well assur'd that his Tenant married not unto any Family that might be either in feud with him or in alliance with them that were and to prevent that danger as appears by the Charter of Hen. 1. cap. 4. the Lord would have him bound not to marry without his consent for which in the beginning the Tenant gave his Lord some small matter as munus honorarium but from thence it grew afterwards to Nundinaria gratissima And as Bondmen used to pay to their Lords Chiefage for their Marriage so the Tenants by Knights Service which in the Feudal Law is called Feudum nobile is likewise subject to this brand of Servitude and more grievously in some respect But I reverence the Law I live under and hath been so long receiv'd and practis'd all I aim at is only to shew in the course of my Argument the Evils that have either fallen newly upon us or been encreased since the Confiscation of the Churches and Church-patrimony which if it be not offensive I may say doth seem to be foretold 800 Years since by one Egelzedus an Hermit who assigned three Causes of those Evils viz. First Effusion of Blood 2ly Drunkenness and 3ly Contempt of the House of God telling us farther That we should know the time of the fulfilling this Prophecy by the various fashions and mutability of Apparel that should be in use the very ear-mark of the Age we live in How this Contempt of the House of God worketh upon the Sacrilegious Instruments thereof is to be seen in the Particulars before recited to which if I should run higher into former Ages or further from home in other Countries I might tire you with thousands of Examples But for a Conclusion mark this by the way that as England hath not been faulty alone in this kind of Transgression so other Nations offending in like manner have likewise tasted of the same Corrections or others like them Scotland after the rasing of their Monasteries hath had the Royal Throne removed from them and placed in another Kingdom The Low-Countries harrassed with a continued War of 60 Years and more The Palsgrave beaten out of his own Dominions and living now with his Royal Wife and Children in lamentable Exile to which may be added as concurring with the usual Infelicity of meddling with Church Lands that the Palsgrave having attained the Crown of Bohemia and seizing the Ecclesiastical Livings there for maintenance of his Wars as the Report goes he was presently cast out both of that Kingdom and of his other Inheritance Having mentioned this unfortunate Prince I must add also another accident that befell him in this kind The State of the Low Countries while he lived in Exile among them gave unto him as a place of Recreation the Abby of Regutian near Vtrecht where intending a sumptuous Building he drew out thereof such Materials of Stone and Timber as might be usefull to his new Designs and making a Store-house of the Abby-Church laid them up there to be in readiness It chanc'd that the truly noble Lord Craven returning out of Italy where my Son was very happily fallen into his Company