of Eââlish men Do you think they will alter their mâners by shifting their Habitations That ãâã Blackamore will ever change his Skin by comâ into a colder Climate Let us look a little upon the first Discoveries ãâã their late grand Plot so often inculcated upon ãâã Nation by His Majesties many Royal Proclamatiââ and Speeches that no Loyal Spirits can any ãâã doubt of the Truth of it who give any deference deferencâ the Word of a King and we shall find there ãâã âain Design after our King's Murder to have rooted âut the Gentry of the Nation whose Lives should it ââems have been offered up as so many Sacrifices to âppease the injur'd Ghost of their Murder'd Prince âome of your Women perhaps they might have conâescended to have sav'd for their Lusts your little âhildren for Slaves the Poor and bâser sort for their âervants but the Men of Substance must in likelihood âave gone all to pot as Obstacles to their cruel inâânded Design And yet still 't is but a perhaps we ãâã not sure they would have spared any Nay raââer we are morally certain that all of any tolerable ãâã must have Died if the Deposition of Mr. Bedlow ãâã often credited remains yet of any value amongst ãâã from whose Attestation publickly sworn upon âath in Ireland's Tryal we find the extent of the âesign besides the subversion of the Government to ââve been the extirpating of the Protestant Religion ãâã that Degree which was alwaies concluded on in ãâã the Consults wherein he was that they would not ââve any Member of any Heretick in England that âould survive to tell in the Kingdom hereafter that âere was ever any such Religion in England as the ââotestant Religion If discovered and so frustrated âântrivances may not sufficiently warn you to beââre of the Jesuits Intentions to youward Consider âatters of Fact and see what hath already been ãâã in other places and so come from thinking what ãâã been done to what may be done and what ãâã should be done if some might have their ãâã minds and desires Cast a look or two upon âââemia that once flourishing Land under Wickliff's ââctrine Famous for the Martyrdom of John Huss ãâã Jerom of Prague the Courage of blind Zisca ãâã his valiant Souldiers and noted also for their âââerty of Chusing their Princes See now how much of the Bohemians Antient Liberty or Religiââ is yet remaining amongst them Enough of the pââctices and devices the Jesuits used to new ãâã the Nation after they had once reduc'd it by ãâã of Arms you may find in the History of the ãâã Persecution London Printed by B. A. John Walker But to return to King John whence I have ãâã gressed after his Resignation and Reassumption of ãâã Crown at the yearly Rent of 900 or 1000 ãâã Silver the Return of the Archbishop and the ãâã Exiles into the Land we read of the releasing ãâã annulling of the Interdiction which had lasted years odd months and days but it was not beâ that the King according to one of the Articles made restitution to the sufferers which the ãâã saith amounted in the whole to 18000â Marks would have thought after so much trouble the ãâã would have been weary of endeavouring after Aâââtrary Power But the Event may make us apt to ãâã that among other inducements to yield to the ãâã hard terms of Accommodation one mighâ some hope to domineer the better over the ãâã he was reconciled to the Clergy and so take a ãâã revenge upon such as would not ere while assist against the Pope For not long after the late ãâã we find mention made of so great ãâã between the King and his Lords that much ãâã were raised on either part One occasion alledgââ that the King would not hold Edward's Laws yet he had taken an Oath at the Return of Exil'd Clergy-men into England to call in all ãâã Laws and put in place of them the Law King Edward if Stow's Annals record the ãâã Another that the King would have Exil'd wiâââaw the Earl of Chester for some Advice he given him relating to his Vices which the other did not well digest The King's Party being then the stronger the Lords took the City of London for their Refuge and remained therein Though we read of much harm done this year in London by Fire and of the burning a great part of the Burrough of Southwark yet it seems the City was strong enough to become the Barons Bulwark against the inrag'd King's Ire And siding with them so inhanced the Barons fame that as Stow tells us all except a few went to the Barons side so that King John durst not peep out of Windsor Castle At length by the Prelates Mediation a Peace was made for a while and to establish it the firmer the King and the Lords soon after met with great strength on either side on Berham Down where a Charter was devis'd made and sealed by the King to the Barons content A.C. 1214. according to Falian's account Henry Fitz. Alwyn continued then Mayor of London Ralph Egland and Constantine le Josne being Sheriffs in this 14th year of K. John's Reign Yet in Stow we read of a Meeting appointed in a Meadow between Stains c Windsor where the King granted the Liberties without any difficulty the Charter whereof is dated June 16. An. Reg. 17. As for the loud and clamorous Declamations of such who tell us that the grand Charter of our Lives Liberties and Estates our Properties and Priviledges was gain'd at first by Rebellion and would thus slily as it were insinuate that it was and is retained by like unlawful waies and means We would desire them to give us better proofs for what they say than their own bare Asseverations which will not yet go for currant Coin in all Markets That Edward the Confessor's Laws were very acceptable to the generality of the Nation we have great reason to believe from their continued desire to retain them That William the first granted the use of them to the Nation is sufficiently instanced above That Henry the first used them ãâã likewise mentioned before for so affirms the Chronicle That King John himself accorded to them at hiâ coming to the Crown we may I doubt not reasosonably believe considering his Title and the Conteââ he was like to have about it If a Negative may be admitted an Argument in the case I do not remember that I have read of any difference between hiâ and his Lay-Barons about them till after that he was reconciled to the Pope by the resignation of hiâ Crown and performance of the other conditions enjoyned him But after the King 's giving away hiâ Crown and resuming it again upon a Foundatioâ wholly and altogether new I know not but he mighâ think all former obligations void and so would endeavour to have his Will of the Laity when he hop'd he had fixt the Clergy fast enough on his side by thâ new condescension
little or no saying in this matter and fearing their Cause they went into a Canon's house of St. Paul's where at that time John Mansell and others sent from the King tarryed the Assembling of the People and shewed them that they intended not any longer to plead with the K. but were contented to put themselves fully in the King's grace and mercy saving alwaies to themselves and all other Citizens their Liberty and Franchise of the City After which Agreement John Mansell with the others came into the Court of Folk-moot whereunto the people was rehearsed a fair and pleasant Tale promising to them that their Liberties should be wholly and inviolably preserved by the King with many other things to the great comfort of the common people And lastly it was asked of them whether the Law and Custom were such as is above rehearsed or no whereunto like undiscreet and unlearned people they answered and eryed Nay nay nay notwithstanding that the said Law and Custom had before-time been used time out of mind To this was neither Mayor nor Aldermen nor other of the great of the City that might impugn or make any reason for upholding their antient Laws or Customs And no wonder continues my Author Fabian though the King were thus heady or grievous to the City for by such evil disposed and malicious people as he had about him the Land was ill ruled and much mischief was used whereof ensued much sorrow after Then John Mansell called the Mayor and Aldermen before him and charged them to be at Westminster the morrow following to give attendance upon the King Upon the morrow the Mayor and Aldermen tarrying the King's coming in the great Hall at Westminster the King came into St. Stephen's Chappel where for a season he had a Council with his Lords after went into the Exchequer-Chamber and there sate him down and his Lords about him Anon after the Mayor and Aldermen were called into the said Chamber and soon after called by name and commanded to stand near the Bar. Then Henry Baa Justice said unto the Mayor and 7 Aldermen That for so much as by form of the King's Laws they were found culpable in certain Articles touching transgression against the King therefore the Court awarded that they should make fine and ransom after the discretion of the said Court But for that they had put themselves in the King's grace and mercy the King hath commanded the Fine to be put in respite that ye be not pained so grievously as ye have deserved After which Judgment gâven they kneeled down and then the Mayor with weeping Tears thanked the King for the bounty and goodness and besought him to be a good and gracious Lord to the City and unto them as his faithful Subjects Whereunto the King made no Answer but rose straight up and so went his way leaving them there Anon as the King was departed they were all arrested and kept there till they had found Surety and every Alderman of them discharg'd of his Ward and Office that they had within the City But shortly after they put in Sureties and so returned heavily to London Shortly after was William Fitz Richard by the K. Commandment made Mayor Thomas Fitz Thomas and William Grapsysgate Sheriffs After this day by day the Chamberlain was call'd to Account before John Mansell of all such Tolls as were gathered in the time of the Mayoralty of John Tâleshaâ and Ralph Richard Hardell there being present to hear the said Account divers of the Commonalty of the City but none oâ the Heads By which Account no default might be laid to any of the forenamed persons convict before the King By reason whereof divers of them were admitted to the King's favour shortly after and restor'd to their Officâs again but not without paying of money whereof the certainây is not known saith my Author What a broil was here What endeavours us'd to find faults to set the King at difference with his Loyal Citizens and keep them from Reconciliation A Bedroll of Crimes and Ostences devised made and formed and none to own it lâst they themselves should at laââ be punish'd for those wrong Accusâtions which they had laid to other mens charges and could not weâ prove What was this but to make divisions betweeâ the Commons and their Head Rulers To pretend tâ oblige the one and depress the other Divide anâ Reign was a Maxim put in use before ever Machiavââ was in being What pray now was all this for Was it not to weaken the City's Power To makâ the Rich appear Offenders and then seem to lay oblâgations upon them by pardoning what they were nâver realây and dâsignedly guiâty of Or else to ãâã Money out of their hands and yet persuade people that they were favourably dealâ with You may heââ see their actions were in a manner wire-drawn to bâ made offences and their Accounts sâârcht to pick ãâã somewhat to lay to their charge And yet how visiblâ were all the tricks and devices of ill men frustrated and sappointed the very saâe way whereby they though to have confirm'd and made good their malicious Dâsigns when after all their searches they were in sort compelâ'd to approve the others faultless wholââ doubtlâsâ ãâã their minds wills purposes and inâântions How hard a matter had it been for the aâcured clearly to have deseated ill mens suggestions ãâã not they themselves pav'd them the way by searching into their accounts where it seems no faults were to be found to make good their accusations Let those transactions be brought into open Court which before were wont to be done privately and then all the present Auditors are made Judges of the reasonableness of the proceedings Here were large imputations and yet the accused suffered to go at freedom and not clapt up till they were frightened into submission What! Could they get none to swear roundly against them Never an outlandish Evidence for love nor mony for fear favour nor affection then clap them up in Prison not letting them see the faces of their Accusers Why did not they search their houses seize upon their Trunks and Boxes and so rake into their private Writings to ferret out some Crimes out of them or else in defect thereof privily foist in something criminal and blameworthy and afterwards openly produce it and with full cry and âoud exclamations impose the belief thereof on their credulous Partizans as if really found upon them We need not stay for the revolution of Plato's year expecting former Transactions to be acted over again Are any of us such strangers in Jerusalem as not to know the things which have come to pass there in the latter days As the Heads of the City in this Richard Hardâll's Mayoralty had their share of troubles and afflâctions as hath been related above so the Commons were not without their care likewise For Wheat is said this year âo have been so scarce that it was sold at London
upon Summons the Barons had obtain'd their design but how would the change succeeding have been brought to pass so much to the Courts advantage and the other sides prejudice Where 's the politick Casuist that can here slit a haâ between loyal and disloyal deeds Obedience and Disobedience the duty of subjection and open refâsal thereof According to an Agreement there made in the said Octaves a Parliament was held at Westminster where met as Fabian hath left upon Record the King with his Lords Spiritual and Temporal and Commons of the Land to begin that Parliament Here was it enacted the King being present that he nor Edward his Son nor none of them should after that day grieve nor cause to be grieved the Earls of Leicester and Glocester the Barons Banerets or Knights the Citizens of London and Barons of the Five Ports nor any other Person oâ Persons of high or low Degree that was upon thâ Party of the said Earls for any matter of displeasure done against the King and his Son Edward ãâã any time before that day To uphold this the King 's Sworn before his Lords After that was shew'd and Read a Charter of Pardon concerning the said Cause and a confirmation of the Statutes of the Forrest with many other Acts and Statutes before granted by the King Here was an Act of Oblivion strong enough one would have thought to have indemnified the offending Parties but before the end of the Year we find the Tide quite turn'd through variance and difference arising between the Two Thiefs of the Barons Party and then the King's side prevailing Casheers what was done before Oaths held them not and another Parliament ââpeals and disanuls the former Pardon So that the ãâã Pardon'd Offendors soon became the reputed Guilty Prisoners upon the old Scores Cancell'd and forgiv'n as was thought a little before The longest Sword will make and mar Laws at pleasure let people say what they will This Party's Might commonly bears down what the other Party calls his Right Edward the King's Son having likewise Sworn to perform the promises which the King had before made in Parliament was deliver'd at liberty and the other Pledg his Cozen upon assurance made ââ abide in the King's Court and not depart without licence of the King and some of the Barons What care do the Barons seem here to have taken to âârengthen and confirm their Party against any future âââerclaps How sollicitous do they appear to have âeen to prevent an after-Reckoning and all Tendenâies thereunto Nay how conformable to them did the King and his Son shew themselves likewise âherein Witness the many Instruments and Bonds âade by them for the performance of Covenants and Pactions before agreed on And yet all was soon destroy'd and brought to none effect One of the ãâã Chiefs helping Penelope-like to unravel the Web they had been so long a Weaving The Ordering the former Statutes made at Oxford which had hitherto so fast united them was the occasion of dissention between the Two Potent Earls ââ Leicester and Glocester to the ruin of the Baron's Party the difference arose as Stow tells us betweeâ them for that Leicester not only kept the King anâ others as Prisoners but also took to himself the Revenues of the Kingdom which it seems should have been equally devided amongst them So that it waâ the Golden-Apple that seems to have occasion'd thââ so fatal Discord The King indeed and his Lords labour'd for an Union but it fell out well for the King's side and ill for the others that they succeeded not This happen'd between Easter and Whitsââtide In the Wââtsun-Week we hear of Edward thâ King's Son secretly departing from the Court at Hereford without Licence and associating himself wiââ the Earl of Glocester and other Lords at Chester froâ whence he hasts to Glocester breaking the Bridges aâ he went that he might not be follow'd till he had Assembled his Power The Earl of Leicester was toâ wife not to guess at his Intent and therefore in all haâ sends to his Son to Assemble his Forces Simon his Soâ with his Forces Assembled draws towards Winchestââ and was at first kept out by the Citizens because theâ knew not whether he came as the King's Friend anâ for that they had also receiv'd a Letter from Edwaââ to that purport But it was not long e're the Ciââ was yielded and then the Castle Besieged after thââ the City had been spoil'd and many of the Jeââ therein Inhabiting Slain They were so odious generally to the People that they should be sure to havâ their share to the purpose in the publick Calamity if the Commons might have their Will The Papistâ after all their discover'd Plots known Practices anâ destructive Principles are not in a vast degree much more hateful to the generality of the English Nation in these Days than where the griping Jews in those Elderly Times At Kenelworth the Baron's Party receiv'd the first ââow under this Simon where they were shamefully defeated by Edward and his Host and many Eminent Prisoners taken without the shedding of much Blood At Eâyshum in Worcestershire were the Barons discâmfited with such a total overthrow and the destruction of so many Men of Note on that side that âis no wonder that their Interest among the People so visibly decay'd for the future and in time was fully lost Soon after this Victory the King and his Son Edward met by whose Authority the Prisoners then in hold were released and many others accus'd and put in for them Not long after was held a Parliament at Winchester where by Authority of the same the Statutes and Ordinances before made at Oxford were Repealed and all Bonds and Writings before made by the King or any other Cancell'd and Broken and all such as had favor'd the Barons disinherited A Rout indeed A Rout first to the Men that would have had the Laws have been kept and then a Rout to the Laws themselves to Parliament Acts and Statutes So destroy first of all the Protestant Men and Women the Subjects of Religion and then the Protestant Religion falls of course What could it at that time avail the defeated Party to plead a former Obedience to the Power then Regnant since the present Powers were otherwise resolv'd If the Parliament in Being will have Obedience paid to a former Parliament esteem'd Treason who dare gainsay it Little boots it the poor weak Beast to cry the Bunch in his Forehead is no Horn when the more powerful Lion says it is After these Parliament Transactions we hear of the King 's reââming into his hands all grants before made and giveâ to any Person After his Sons Victory the King calls not a Parliament at Westminster least possibly it might have been over aw'd by the City of London but assembling it at a place far enough distant and things having there been carried according to the Courts intent and desire now have at London Accordingly
then thought unpardonable by the Londoners who in words and deeds espoused the Queen's Cause seis'd on the Tower of London and kept it for the Queens use and not long afterwards received her into their City with great Joy and Honour A demonstrative evidence in my opinion of the City's strength and power For if London when she pleas'd could maintain the King's peace in the midst of Arms as was shewn above so inviolably as that none dar'd in opposition to break it and afterwards in the very same age and within the compass of half a dozen years did actually assert the Qeens cause and assist her in her proceedings as was pretended for Reformation of the Realm tho the Consequence thereof was in truth the unfortunate Kings resignation what greater instance can there be to shew her great influence upon the whole Nation in those unsetled times London having so visibly appeared in favour of the Queen the Prince and his party and contributed so much towards this notable revolution of affairs we have no reason to think but that out of Common gratitude her Citizens were to be aboundantly rewarded and that they themselves out of self interest and natural Prudence would so well and wisely look to their own affairs as to make hay while the Sun shines to the procuring new grants and Graces and so accordingly we find the event For in the first year of Edward the third Fabian tells us he confirmed the Liberties and Franchizes of the City making the Major Chief Justice in all places of Judgment within the same next the King every Alderman that had been Major Justice of Peace in London and Midlesex and such as had not been Justice in his own Ward Granting them also the Fee-farm of London for three hundred pounds and that they should not be constrained to go out of the City to âo fight or defend the Land for any need A priviledge greater than what was claimed as their liberty in his Fathers days when unwilling to engage against the Queen and Prince they refused not to go out on condition of returning the same day as is related before But the most beneficial of all the grants was that the Franchises of the City should not be seized into the Kings hands but only for Treason or Rebellion done by the whole City It having before been a Common thing to have their Liberties seized on as hath been plainly manifested in the Precedent Relation on almost every petty disgust conceived by the Court against them were it but for the pretended offence of a particular Officer or for mony alledged to be owing by the City to some great ones at Court or some such like small trivial pretence But now at this time they took such care to have their Liberties setled and secured by this Royal Grant that it may be thought almost if not wholly a thing impossible for the City to forfeit her Charter and have it justly according to that grant taken from her The bringing of Southwark under the Rule of the City and the power allowed their Major to appoint such a Bailiff there as liked him best was a very advantagious favour at the same time by this King Edward bestowed on London but not comparable with the former grant which may most deservedly be esteemed Paramount to all others A particular Officer may offend and oftentimes does nay many may but for a City a whole City so great and glorious a City as London Traiterously to Rebel and so forfeit all her Liberties Priviledges and Franchises at one clap seems to me so great a contradiction as to imply little less than an Impossibility in Nature not to go a step or two higher This King being one of the most powerful Princes of his time and in the strength of his age very succesful in his Wars against the French King 't is not for us hastily to imagine there was any occasion given for so wise and good a King to contest with his Subjects much less with his Loyal Citizens We are rather to expect to hear of the City's Triumphs and glory the Joy and rejoyceing wherewith she often received her Victorious King returning Conquerour from France the frequent Justings Tiltings and Tournaments shewn thereat for his Recreation and entertainment the Wealth Riches and Ability of her head Officers whereof one to Londons great glory is said to have sumptuously feasted four Kings at once in the thirty first of this Kings Reign besides the famous Black Prince many Noble Knights and others to whom with the King he gave many Rich Gifts the splendor of the Citizens in general oâ publick occasions and the harmonious concord of all in their own private and particular concerns relating more especially to the Cities good order and Government This King may be supposed too great and too good either to create or to permit differences and discord at home He had wherewithal to exercise his Wisdom and valour abroad in forreign Countries and such success too in his Enterprizes as might make him both feared and beloved by his Subjects at one and the same time Yet notwithstanding such still was Londons power strength and resolution to maintain her Liberties that this Victorious Prince Conquerour over others having sent out Justices into the Shires to make enquiry about his Officers offences and delinquences and the City of London not suffering as Stow tells us any such Officers to sit as Justices in their City as Inquisitors of such matters contrary to their Liberties he thought good rather to appoint those Justices their Sessions in the Tower for Inquisition of the damages of the Londoners and they refusing unless conditionally to answer there and a tumult thereupon arising among the meaner sort claiming their Liberties he esteemed it greater prudence to wave the Justices sitting as to that place and forgive all offences than to enter into a contest with such powerful tho Loyal Subjects as the Londoners were and such undaunted assertors of their own rights priviledges franchises and liberties For as 't is plain the City was very potent so we may as certainly perhaps conclude the Citizens no less suspicious of any thing done under the shadow of this Kings Authority if but looking towards the least breach of their Priviledges as the Commons of England in general seem to have appeared jealous of their Common liberty when upon this Kings laying claim to the Kingdom of France they procured a Law whereby it was enacted that the King should not Rule England as King of France and so Subject them to the insolencies of a fellow-Subjects Deputyship Would you know what esteem and respect the house of Commons in this King's reign had for âhe City Look in Cotton's abridgment of the Records ân the Tower and there you may find the Commons âver and anon petitioning the King that the City âf London may enjoy all her Liberties and the King's ânswers generally to such petitions seem rather to ârant than
wind and turn it about to their interests and bend it to their own irregular Desires and Designs since that they lik'd not to have them confin'd within the limits and bounds thereof This manner of acting however by the by appears to me the most beaten Path to Destruction and the high way to the Actors unavoidable Ruin and I think I have reason History and Experience all on my side This the City seems well to have understood and therefore with Prudence chose rather to yield to the times for a season than presently to strive against the running stream and immediately to fall a rowing against high wind and Tide but as soon as ever the flowing waters began to Ebb and the tide was a turning the City Barge struck in with the returning waves and assisted to steer the Ship of the Common-wealth to a quite different Haven from that whither the Court was furiously driving her before And then for the most favourable of the Citizens to shew themselves but faint Regardless friends was far less beneficial to the desolate forsaken King than for others of them to appear earnest Enemies in so critical a Juncture was disadvantagious to this unfortunate Prince as he may well be term'd either for having none but ill Councellors and faithless Trencher-friends about him and hearkning so much to their pernitious and destructive advice or else for the defect of his Judgment in not discerning between their private self ends and his own special and particular interest viz. Impartiality in doing Justice to all States and Persons from the highest to the lowest squaring all his own actions by the known Rules of the Law of the Land to the pleasing of his people not by the compass of other mens unstable fancies and anomalous Plat-forms to the loss of his Subjects love and affection and the unhappy fate that attended him upon this his ill conduct when he was violently thrown out of the Chair of State into a profound Abyss of miseries and infelicities and irrecoverably cast out of a Regal Throne into an unavoidable Prison between which and his grave he had but few steps to make For we are to know that as in the tuming of fortunes wheel the spoke that is got upermost presently begins to decline and so runs downwards till it comes to be the under-most of all or like as Sysiphus stone forc'd up e'en almost to the very top of the Hill presently tumbles down again to the bottom with a swiftness and violence not to be stop't by the strength of art or nature so this Prince arriv'd in a manner to the heigth of his desires by the Caprice of fortune or rather by the over-ruling power of a superior Being was suddenly and unexpectedly beyond Recovery hurl'd down from the Grandeur of a Potent King into the lowest Station among Men the Confinement of a Prison and that too occasion'd by the very same way and means whereby he thought to have secur'd to himself amore fixt and setled enjoyment of his greatness as comes now of course to be shewn in manner following After the suppression of the opposite Party under the shadow of Law and Justice diffention happening between the two Dukes of Norfolk and Hereford both then great at Court to the mutual accusation of each other the King greedily lays hold on the opportunity and instead of permitting them according to the Custom of those times where clear proofs were wanting to make good their accusations by the Sword in a single Combat as had been also before appointed unadvisedly banishes them both the Land the first for ever and the latter for a term of years with this hard measure into the bargain that they should not sue for a release of their Judgments on pain of Treason whereby he made both his Enemies and the latter so much the more dangerous the nearer he stood Related to the Crown and the more inveterate in that the King had procur'd the Letters Pattents before granted him to sue by Attorney for Lands descended to him to be revok'd by Assent of Parliament and declar'd to be against Law and had afterwards upon his Father John of Gaunts death violently seis'd on all his Estate whereto Hereford was Heir Then amidst the murmurs of the People for misgovernment and ill guidance of the Realm away goes the King for Ireland with a puissant Army when he thought he had left all things secure in England by the advantage he had made of the last Parliament by engrossing whatever he pleased into his own hands by the tricks found out to raise Money of the Subject by Blanks c. and the Subsidy he had gain'd in Parliament during his Life upon the continuance whereof without molestation he openly declar'd his general Pardon should stand and no otherwise and managed his Arms therewith success enough but ill news out of England that the Duke of Hereford by his Fathers death Duke of Lancaster was landed in England under colour of claiming his Inheritance and rais'd people as he went alarm'd him and bad advice afterwards which detain'd him longer than his promise in Ireland so loath were his Counsellors to spare his company under the shelter of whose Person and presence lay their greatest hopes of protection quite ruin'd him For coming over and finding the Army gone away which the Earl of Salisbâry had rais'd against his coming and had newly voluntarily disbanded it self upon the Kings tarrying too long behind the Earl in Ireland his courage fail'd him and he trusting more to flight than fighting the treachery of his Principal Officers deceiv'd him and he himself also by soothing words and faiâ promises was decoy'd into the Duke of Lancaster's hands who soon secur'd him fast enough withoââ any intent to let him loose again in haste Now the King is in hold let us see how the Citizens behav'd themselves in this great Turn and Change of the Times They had in this Kings Nonage in his Grandfathers dayes appear'd the undaunted Assertors of his Right and Title and in the beginning of his Reign contributed much to his Security and Settlement on the THRONE But a new Generation being sprang up in Twenty Years space and their old Services at last so ill requited by new attempts on their Liberties by Inditements and blank-Charters instead of standing up with their Lives and Fortunes in the Kings Defence and Vindication they openly devoted themselves to anothers Service and became the known Favourers of that Party which assisted to Depose this unhappy Prince and set up in His Room the Duke of Lancaster under the Name and Title of Henry the Fourth As is provable both from Statute-Law viz. the Act made in the First of this New King to be seen in the Statute-Book Cap. 15. An. 1. H. 4. Where we find express mention of the good and lawful behaviour of the Mayor Sheriffs and Aldermen and all the Commonalty of the same City of London towards him and Stow's general Chronicle
Law to the Destruction of the Duke of Glâucester and the Earls of Arundel and Warwick at Shrewscury For that the King against his Promise procured the Duke of Ireland sundry Rebells about Cheshire where diverse Murders by him were committed For that the King against his own Promise and Pardon at the Solemn Procession apprehended the Duke of Gloucester and sent him to Callice there to be choked and murdered beheading the Earle of Arundel and banishing the Earl of Warwick and the Lord Cobham For that the Kings Retinue and rout gathered out of Cheshire about the apprehension of those Nobles committed diverse Murders Rapes and other Fellonies besides refusing to pay for their Victuals For that the King condemned the Nobles aforesaid for divers rodes made within the Realm contrary to his open Proclamation For that the King doubly Fined Men for their Pardons For that the King to oppress his whole subjects procured in his last Parliament that the Power thereof was committed to certain Persons For that the King being sworn to Minister right did notwithstanding enact in the last Parliament that no mediation should be made for the Duke of Lancaster contrary to his said Oath For that the Crown of England being freed from the Pope and all other forraign Power the King notwithstanding procured the Popes Excommunication on such as brake the last Parliament in derogation of the Crown Statutes and Laws of the Realm For that the King banished the Duke of Lancaster for 10 years without any Cause as the same King openly affirmed For that the King unlawfully revoked the Letters Patents made to the said Duke of Lancaster in An. 21. For that the King contrary to the Laws and will of the Justices suffered Sheriffs to continue longer than one year and placed such therein as were unfit For that the King repayed not to his Subjects debts of them borrowed For that the King in the time of Truce and Peace exacted great Subsidies and wasted the same about frivilous matters For that the King refused to execute the Laws Saying that the Laws were in his Mouth and Breast For that the King by procuring by Statutes that he might be free as any of his Progenitors did under colour thereof subvert Laws according to his Will For that the King procured Knights of the Shires to be made to serve his own will For that the King enforced Sheriffs to be Sworn to execute all Commandemens under the Great Seal Privy Seal or Signet contrary to their accustomed Oaths For that the King to wrack mony from his Subjects procured 17 several Shires to submit themselves to his Grace whereby great sums of mony were Levied For that the King being Sworn to observe the Liberties of the Church notwithstanding at his Voyage into Ireland enforced diverse Religious Persons to give Horse Armour and Carts For that the Justices for their good Councel given to the King were with evil Countenance and threats rewarded For that the King of his own Will in passing into Ireland carried with him the Treasures Reliques and other Jewels of the Realm which were used safely to be kept in the Kings own Coffers from all hazard and for that the same King cancelled and razed sundry Records For that the King by writing to Forreign Princes and to his own Subjects is reputed universally a most variable and dissembling man For that the King would commonly say among the Nobles that all Subjects Lives Lands and Goods were in his hands without any forfeiture For that the King suffered his Subjects to be condemned by Marshal-Law contrary to his Oath and the Laws of the Realm For that the Subjects being only bound by their Allegiance were yet driven to take certain New Oaths for serving the folly of the King For that the King by his private Letters would charge the Ecclesiastical Ministers in any new Canonical matter to stay contrary to his Oath For that the King by force in his Parliament banished the Arch Bishop of Canterbury without any good Ground For that the King by his last Will passed under the Great Seal and Privy Signet gave unto his Successors certain Money and Treasure upon Condition to perform all the Acts and Orders in the last Parliament which being ungodly and unlawful he meant as ungodlily to dy in For that the King in the 11th of his Reign in his Chappel in the Manour of Langley in the presence of the Duke of Lancaster and Yorke and others received the Sacrament of the Lords Body that he would never impeach the Duke of Gloucester his Uncle for any thing before done and yet to the Contrary procured him to be murdered For that the King most fraudulently and untruely against his own Oath Banished the Arch Bishop of Canterbury and wasted his Goods in which Article in private Conference between the said Arch Bishop the King in a manner prophesied and doubted that the like would happen of himself and thereupon shewed a special Token to the Arch Bishop That if he sent the same at any time that the Arch Bishop should look that the King would come to him These were the Imputations laid to his charge and that they were then thought true or at least not contradicted is self-Evident all seeming highly desirous of a Change and few dispos'd to espouse the depos'd Kings Cause and Interest so furious and violent was the Current of the Times as to bear away well nigh all before it That Parliament being so full of the new Kings Favourers and so empty of the old Kings true and cordial Friends that I remember to have read of but one viz. the Loyal Bishop of Carlisle who after a little Demur of a few dayes time upon a Motion made in Parliament about the disposal of King Richard stood up boldly and undauntedly for his old Lord and Master in the midst of his professed and declared Enemies and known Deserters His Speech as a rare Example of Fidelity giving us the very Quintessence of Loyalty I shall venture to set down out of Sir Richard Bakers Chronicle with the Consequents as follows My Lords The Matter now propounded is of marvellous Weight and Consequence wherein there are two Points chiefly to be considered The First whether King Richard be sufficiently put out of his Throne The Second whether the Duke of Lancaster be lawfully taken in For the First How can that be sufficiently done when there is no Power sufficient to do it The Parliament cannot for of the Parliament the King is the Head and can the Body put down the Head You will say but the Head may bow it self down and may the King resign It is true but what force is in that which is done by force And who knows not that King Richard's Resignation was no other But suppose he be sufficiently out yet how comes the Duke of Lancaster to be lawfully in If you say by Conquest you speak Treason For what Conquest without Arms And can a Subject take Arms
receive him with Demonstrations of great Joy and Gladness for his safe and happy arrival there The Habit of the Mayor Aldermen and Citizens were either Scarlet or Violet and his Reception was in great State and Pomp they meeting him in orderly Array without the City and so conveying him through it to St. Pauls Neither may we think him insensible of their Favours if Baker records the truth as indeed I am not able on any good grounds to contradict him when he says that the City of London was this King's Paradice nor provably consute the Reasons he gives for his Assertion viz. That what good Fortune soever befel him he thought he enjoy'd it not till he acquainted them with it And can we fancy he had not good Grounds and Inducements for this honourable Acknowledgment of their Kindness and Goodness shewn him by them besides the first Expressions thereof in the beginning of his Reign when he was so far from being well warm'd in his Seat that he was not yet enter'd upon the Throne by the Solemnity of a Coronation nor had taken possession of the Government with the usual Ceremonies and Customary Formalities Certain it is that I read in Fabian Shâriff of London in his days that he had considerable Sums of Money of the City more than once twice or thrice an Assistance as requisite often times as Men in Arms and not seldom more difficult for Princes to obtain There being idle men enough generally at all times ready to come in at the Sound of Trumpet or Drum if there be but an Assurance or Probability of good Pay which to compass is commonly a difficulty not so easily surmounted even by great Kings and Princes so scarce a Commodity is Gold and Silver Coin Neither do I find the City at any time complaining or opposing or joyning with his Enemies For notwithstanding his settlement on the Throne and his uniting the two Families into one by marrying Edward the Fourth's eldest Daughter he had a Lambert and a Perkin to disturb his Quiet and Repose about Title A Favour therefore doubtless this was not inconsiderable in those days For the City of London is known to have been able to do much had she been so inclined Whereof we may well believe the King was very sensible and so were the opposers of his peaceable tranquility were it only from this consideration that when in the Second of his Reign it was bleer'd about by his Enemies that the Earl of Warwick George Duke of Clarences Son was escap'd out of the Tower and a counterfeited Earl was provided to act the part of the true one to draw People to their Assistance which might have created no little trouble to the King and greatly endanger'd his Person and Dignity to disappoint and frustrate their Designs and fully lay open the Cheat of all Parties and Places of his Kingdom he chose London to shew therein the right Earl of Warwick to the People though the principal Scene of those Affairs were then laid in Ireland And the other side appear'd so fearful of the Effect thereof upon the Londoners and their Influence doubtless upon the rest of the Nation even Ireland it self though so far distant that to buoy up the Spirits of their own Party they thought it most effectual to report about the Island that that was a Counterfeit purposely train'd and taught by King Henry and shew'd by him in London to blind the Eyes of the Simple and Ignorant So sollicitous were both to encrease the number of their Adherents and draw the People of the Land to a belief of the honesty and sincerity of their Intentions and Equity of their Actions among whom the City of London is certainly the greatest Body fitly joyn'd together by good Laws and Constitutions greatly confirm'd by an orderly succession of her Magistrates and much strengthned by a long and large train of continual Successes But the City continued fix to the King's Interest and therefore the others Devices and Pretences work'd little or nothing upon the Citizens They were rather ready to rejoyce on all occasions for his victorious Success than pronâ to take part with his Enemies against him whereof they gave him sufficient Testimonies at several times and seasons when they had opportunity to express their Affections in a more free and open way at such glorious Solemnities as Coronations Installations publick Receptions and Royal and Princely Marriages 'T is confess'd that towards the latter end of this King's Reign some of her principal Officers her Mayors and Sheriffs were sore troubled and vext in the King's Courts and large Sums of Money demanded of them for things pretended to be done by them illegally in their Offices and such of them imprison'd as refus'd to pay those Arbitrary Fines as may be seen in Stow's Annals but these were Troubles only of particular Men and common also to many others of the King's Subjects when Empson and Dudley were got into Authority and to humour the old King 's covetous itch after Riches a Vice incident mostly to Old Age reviv'd old forgotten Laws and rais'd large Sums of Money upon Offences against Penal Statutes wherein they acted so exorbitantly and took such arbitrary illegal and unjust Ways many whereof Baker reckons up in his Chronicle to compass their Ends that they themselves at length were become the principal Grievances of the Nation and suffered accordingly in the beginning of the next King's Reign both of them by the hands of Justice being made to pay their Heads for satisfaction to the People and their Promoters most shamefully Pillory'd and Imprison'd So little did it avail them to pretend they put the Laws in Execution or to call themselves the King's Promoters or Informers King Henry the Eighth as soon as he came to the Crown more regarding the Commons Crys and the Complaints of his People than he valued the pretended Loyalty of such profligate Villains as had no other way to pick up a Livelihood than by raking it out of other Mens Miseries and Troubles This Prince in his youth was so much addicted to Pleasures and Pastimes fine Sights and Shews Masks Justs and Tournaments and in his elder years to Cruelty and Tyrannical Oppression that one might be apt to expect and perhaps with some colour of reason that little was to be found in London in the beginning of this King's Reign but Jollity Joy and Rejoycing gaudy Shews and pleasing Objects delightful to the Eye and grateful to Sense a King's Example commonly drawing along with it his Subjects Imitation and that in the latter end scarce any durst presume to make opposition to a Man of so domineering a Spirit as by his own death-bed Confession never spar'd Woman in his Lust nor Man in his Anger And yet notwithstanding we meet with under this Prince Instances of the City's Power Boldness and undaunted Resolution and of the King's Favour to the Citizens The last may haply be concluded even from the Effects of
Pistols when he comes furiously to the Village and calls as with Authority ãâã Guide to run along with him at his pleasure ãâã now some of you will scarce vouchsafe other ãâã rough answer or Awkward directions to the travââ stranger that civilly desires so small a thing at your ãâã Now some of you will scarce shew any ãâã either to your equals or betters but what would ãâã think of it to be made desist from your work ãâã shew obeysance at two or three furlongs distance ãâã those Hectoring Blades of the Country that expect ãâã demand it at your hands And yet some such ââing have I heard done What a wonderous pleaââng spectacle would this be in England where the âeanest little values the threats and meances of the ââeatest Gentleman on whom they have no depenâânce for work or maintainance or hopes to gain any ââing by him From the poor enflaved Peasants of France come ãâã to the Gentry of the Land and see how they âeep and cringe and croutch to the Nobles and ãâã humbly these must also behave themselves toâards their Arbitrary King And the King himââlf had not the success of his Arms rais'd him to a ââgher pitch then his Ancestors must have vail'd to ãâã tripple Crown and have receiv'd the Popes more ââperious Commands with a little more submission âould he have liv'd in security then now we believe ãâã does How will you my dear Countrymen bring ââur selves to disgest these compel'd humiliations âould any of these servile slavish submissions go âwn well with your free hearts Yet such if not âorse must you expect upon the introduction of Poââry into the Land Your Bodies your Souls your âstates your Posterity must then be subjected to Arââtrary Powers Though the dregs of the Popes ãâã might be possibly nauseous to some of your ââeasy stomachs yet it may be many of you could ãâã well enough contented with a refined Cassandrian ââpery the German Emperours Interim or some ââch motley model of Religion as the present French King had-contriv'd as I have read to have intrâduc'd into his Realms had his late Arms subdued ãâã Refractory Hollanders Nay for a good need ãâã Trent Faith might have went down with some ãâã less indifferents But what would you say to that ãâã refin'd slavery also which must in likelyhood folloâ your refin'd Popery How would you like to haâ your Priviledges Properties your free English Libeâty your lives estates and fortunes and all that 's ãâã and dear unto you to lie at other mens mercy in ãâã Power of such whom you have little reason to esteeâ your Friends and all this and much more if ãâã can be to be done by your own consents Hoâ well would this please you To have a Paris Parlââment French Councils and a bigotted domineeriââ Clergy that shall preach you up slavery from ãâã Pulpits and make you to tast the sweets of it in ãâã Courts When you must always speak well of âther Fryar be it only for fear And if you see ãâã Priests debauching your Wives or Daughters ãâã in distrust to your own Eye-sight you must not opââly profess to believe otherwise than that they ãâã blessing them nor so much as dare to mutter betwâââ your teeth unless you 'll run the danger of ãâã clapt up in the Inquisition for an Heretick or ãâ¦ã to the greetings of surly Mr. Paritor summonââ you to my Lord Bishops Court for defaming ãâã Clergy and raising a scandal upon the Church ãâã many of your Lands you hold for your own ãâã don't you know that much must return back to once destroy'd Covents if Popery prevails when ãâã shall be taught to believe that whatever is giveâ the Priests the Church is dedicated to God and not to be alienated without manifest sacriled How like ye from Freeholders to become ãâã to a Luxurious and lascivious multitude of Monks and Fryers full fed upon the sweat of your âabours and good for little else but to diminish your Estates and bastardise your Posterity Look into some of the Popish Collegiate Foundaâions and see whether you cannot find a fixt set alâowance appointed ad Purgandos Renes So that Reâainers Dependers Brewers Bakers and such like âere bound I have sometime heard to send their Maids and Daughters at set times to Physick these lazy âdle Drones Saturdays once a month I have heard âam'd other days it 's likely they could come fast ânough home to their Houses Many now adays âave consciences large enough to be dealing with âther mens but how would you bear it to see ââur own Wives Daughters and Kinswomen wholly ãâã the Devotion of the Pope's lustful unmarried Clerây Their Auricular Confession is as neat a Device ãâã command your Wives hearts their Honesties and âour Purses as those Indian Priests the Bramins lying âith the new married Bride the first night How âowerfully inclin'd the Popish Clergy are that way ãâã may learn from the Danes and Swedes whose âagistrates have found Guelding I have somewhere âad a more effectual way to keep them from comââg to disturb their Country than putting to death ãâã this is said to have been the Advice of a convertââ Nun. Such female Votaries being most likely ãâã able to know the Clergy's Constitution their ââblick Houses being set so near together in Popish ââuntries In some places you may find the Reliââous Men and Women as they call them under ãâã same Roof to their frequent cânverse Take your Kenning-glasses and view some of the best ãâã of ground in this Land and it 's much if you ãâã not find that the Covents of Men had their Nunâââies of Women situated near enough to have mutual converse one with another by secret passagâ under the Earth If you will not believe me as ãâã writing out of prejudice more than knowledge ãâã such as have liv'd amongst the Papists beyond ãâã under a Popish Government and they may chance ãâã tell you more of their manners of the Clergy's Poweâ and Laity's Subjection and the cruel Mercies of ãâã Bloody Inquisition Do you think that these Raâânous strangers will be more kind to you than ãâã their own Country-men That such as look upââ you but as Hereticks and so little better than ãâã Bastards Your Parents having not in their opinioâ been rightly Married because not according to ãâã Constitution of their Church who think themselââ highly injur'd by you in your keeping the Abbâ Lands from reverting to their antient Use and ãâã building anew the Old Religious Houses destroyâ in your Fore-fathers days who already gnash upââ you with their Teeth in hopes of a future ãâã over you and have had I know not how many ãâã Projects and Contrivances to destroy you Body ãâã Soul in prosecution whereof so many of their Bââthren in Iniquity have already lost their Lives ãâã your hands That such should be thought by ãâã Friends to England and it's Laws That such ãâã Phantasies should enter into the hearts
proâises not being very commonly reputed to bind the ãâã party when the conditions required are not performed by the other Whatever the true occasioâ was London we find the place where this turn ãâã first publickly declared by proclaiming Henry Kiââ throughout the City Oct. 20. so considerable was ââven the reputed favour of the Citizens Lewis aboââ there indeed afterwards a while and the Barous ãâã his side but his strength so diminished in a littââ time that he was glad at last to take Money and ãâã away upon composition even in the 1st year of thâ King or beginning of the 2d This K. Hen. being the Son of such a Father whoâ practices too much betrayed his Principles and ãâã in so troublesom a time as his Fathers contest ãâã the Clergy we may be apt to believe he had a ãâã of his Fathers malady So full of troubles do we ãâã his Reign such complaints of the Government suââ amendments endeavoured and reformations maââ one while by the peaceable Councils of the Parâââment another while by the compulsive power ãâã the Barons Swords all which we may impute ââther to his own natural inbred disposition or else the over-ruling advices of ill Ministers so ãâã working upon the Kings Good-nature as upon sligââ pretences to make his power serve their own Interâââ to carry on their corrupt arbitrary designs So ââny were the ups and downs risings and falls changââ and turns of Fortune in these times such variabââness and mutability of Councils in affairs and the ãâã of London so much concerned in most of the cââsiderable Actions then on foot now in the Kinâ favour as soon again out of it one while enjoyâââ their ancient Priviledges and Customs another ãâã deprived of their Liberties and their Franchises ãâã upon slight occasions and anon again restored all with addition of new grants that I find it cââvenient through much of this Kings Reign to ãâã Annals after my Author In the 3d of this King is mention made of a Parââament kept at London In the 4th were Proclamaââons made in London and through the Land that all âtrangers should depart out of the Land except such ãâã came with Merchandize the intent hereof is said ââ be wholly to rid the Land of such strangers as posââst Castles in it contrary to the Kings Will and Pleaââre This year also was the King Crowned the 2d ââme at Westminster In the 6th was detected a Conââiracy within London which the King is said to have ââken so grievously that he was minded to have ârown down the City Walls till considering that it âas only a design of some of the Rascality and not ãâã the Rulers he assuaged his displeasure taken aââinst the City Robert Serle was then Mayor Rich. âânger Ioseus ãâã Iosne Sheriffs An. Reg. 7. in a Counâââ kept at London Stow tells us the King was reââired by the Peers Spiritual and Temporal to conâââm the Liberties for which the War was made aââinst his Father and he had sworn to observe at the ââparture of Lâwis out of England whereupon the ãâã commanded the Sheriffs to enquire by the ãâã of Twelve lawful men what were the Liâââties in England in his Grand-fathers time and ãâã the Inquisition so made up to London Hence ãâã we observe that England had Liberties and ââghts of their own before the Barons War in ãâã Iohn's days and therefore seem injuriousââ upbraided as if they got them first by Rebelliââ The good Government of England which as a ââdern Author words it was beâore like the Law Nature only written in the hearts of men came âpon obtaining the 2 Charters to be exprest in ââchment and remains a Record in writing though ââse Charters gave us no more than what was our ãâã before The 8th is noted for the grant made to the King by his Barony in Parliament of the Warâ and Marriage of their Heirs A good advantage somâtimes for the King to fix Noble mens Estates in sucâ Families as he best pleased A. R. 9. A Fifteenth was granted to the King to ãâã him in his right beyond the Seas and he by confirming the great Charter granted to the Barons anâ People their rights The 11th year is of note foâ many beneficial Grants made to London by the King The Sheriffwick of London and Middlesex was let ãâã farm to the Sheriffs of London for 300 l. yearly Oâ Feb. 18. was granted that all Wears in Thames shoulâ be pluckt up and destroyed for ever On March 1ââ the King granted by his Charter ensealed that thâ Citizens of London should pass Toll-free through thâ Land and upon any Citizen's being constrained ãâã pay Toll in any place of England the Sheriffs ãâã impowered to attach any man of that place cominâ to London with his goods and to keep and with-hoââ till the Citizens were restored all such Moneys ãâã from them with costs and damages Aug. 18. ãâã granted to the Citizens Warren that is free liberââ of Hunting within a certain circuit about Londââ Yet notwithstanding we read in another Author this years History of the Kings compelling the Lââdoners to lay him down a large sum of Money bâsides the 15th part of their moveables because ãâã sooth they had given Lewis who came to their aidâ K. John's days with an Army 5000 Marks at his ââparture out of England It may be the King ãâã them some of these Priviledges which cost him ââthing to induce them to give down their Money ãâã more willingly and not too much to displease theâ whose power was so well known in those days ãâã afterward experienced to some mens cost Roger ãâã Mayor Stephen Bockerel and Henry Cobham Sheriââ this year and also the next viz. 12. when the Franâhises and Liberties of the City were by the King âonfirmed and to each of the Sheriffs was granted to âave 2 Clerks 2 Officers to the Citizens that âhey should have and use a common Seal This year ãâã read that the King in a Council held at Oxford âroclaimed that being of age he would rule himself ãâã pleasure and forthwith cancelled the Charters of âiberties as granted in his Nonage Whereupon it ââllowed says my Author that whoso would enjoy ãâã Liberties before granted must renew their Charâârs of the Kings new Seal at a price awarded But ãâã Barons shortly after declared to the King that ââcept he would restore the Charter lately cancelled ââey would compel him by the Sword Such brisk âssertors were they it seems resolved to be of ââeir Liberties On the 13th while the Bishop of âondon was at high Mass in St. Pauls happened sudâenly such dark mists of Clouds and such a Tempest ãâã Thunder and Lightening that the People got out ãâã the Church and left the Bishop there in great âar with but a small attendance For all the many ãâã Papists make of their Mass and the wonderââl power and vertue they would fain persuade us to ââlieve there is in it it seems then
Thomas Weyland Adam Stretton and others who being by the Kings order Examined and found guilty of the Trespasses laid to their Charge were âither out-law'd and lost their goods or else long âmprisoned and deeply Fin'd A large Catalogue âf them and their Fines are to be seen in Stows ãâã whence 't is observable how suddainly vengeânce over-takes Oppressors let them be never so Rich High and Mighty in Office Power or Authority as soon as ever the Kings mind is inspir'd from above to inspect their actions and punish their crimes Remarkable is the 19th Year for the Jews Banishment which we find bought of thâ King by the Commons at the price of a Fifteen In the 21st year we hear of a Parliament held at London and of the King of Scot's coming thither with divers of his Lords The punishment inflicted on three men for rescuing a Prisoner from an Officer belonging to the Sheriffs of London by striking off their right hands at the wrist in Cheapside is noted for one of this years actions Hence let us leap to the 24th year and there among thaâ years deeds we find mention made of a new subsidy levied by the King upon Wool going out oâ England Fels and Hides for his War with thâ French King of his Commanding the Mony before granted by the Clergy towards the defence oâ the Holy Land to be brought into his Treasury upon the Report he had from Rome of Pope Boniface the 8ths manners of the grant he got of thâ Clergy of half their Spiritual and Temporal Lands from a Benefice of 20 Marks and upwards to bâ paid in three years And of the Tax he had also granted him by the Lay-fee viz. the Tenth penny of their movables to be paid in two years time If any one be desirous to certifie himself whaâ Relation Scotland stood in towards England foâ many ages before let him read through the Relation of this years actions in Fabian's Chronicle and there he may be satisfied if it will conduce to his satisfaction to find that Scotland even in Elder times in a sort depended on England and waâ so far from giving Laws or an Example and Patern thereto that it's Nobles were fain to submit themselves to the King of England's Judgmenâ and decree and do him Homage and Fealty in effecâ by the submission of their King whom King Edward had appointed and set over them Memoâable is the six and twentieth year for that thereân the Londoners obtain'd of King Edward newây come from beyond Sea into England and so to Winchester a grant of their Liberties and Franchises which had in some part been kept from them by âhe term of twelve years and more so that they âgain chose a Major of themselves whereas in âhe aforesaid time their Custos or Guardian was appointed by the King or by such as the King would assign But we are to understand by the Chronicle that this was not redeem'd without a great Sum of money Some Writers it seems fixing it at three thousand marks As this King had many Wars especially with Scotland which put him to great charges and had much money granted him by his Subjects so he ceased not to devise other ways to raise more and get what was denied him For as much as divers men âichly benefic'd in the Land refus'd to aid him with their Goods as others had and for that end had purchased from the Pope an Inhibition that they and their goods should be free from the King's Taxes he put them this year out of his protection a strain of State policy beyond some other Kings and seis'd their Temporalties permitting them to enjoy their Spiritualties till they agreed with him Though this was a warlike Prince and oft successful in his undertakings yet the Clergy's power so over-top't the Laity's that he chose rather to make use of his Wits than his Arms in dealing with them So have I read in William the Second's days how when his Unkle being both a Bishop and an Earl grew troublesome to him he seis'd upon the Earl and clapt him in hold whereby he caught and revenged himself on the Bishop too without openly pretending to meddle with a Clergy Man An offence esteem'd piacular in those days to such an height of Pride were the Popish Clergy grown An other practice of King Edward was his suddain Condemning certain Coines of Mony call'd Pollards Crocardes and Rosaries in his twenty seventh year and causing them to be brought to a new Coynage to his great advantage as testifies the Historian Among others may be also numbred that Inquisition he caus'd to be made throughout the Land in the twenty eighth year which was after nam'd Trailbaston This we find made upon Officers as Majors Sheriffs Bayliffs Escheators and many others who had misborn themselves in their Offices and had us'd Extortion or treated the people otherwise than was according to the order of their Offices So vigilant appeared this Prince and careful of his people that they might not be abused nor oppressed by their fellow Subjects when got into power under pretence of being his Majesties Officers a thing we know common enough in the world In the twenty eighth year we have mention made of the City of London's Splendor and Magnificence upon the account of their receiving the new Queen Margaret Sister to the French King Thus runs my Authors short Relation hereof The Citizens to the number of six hundred Rode in one Livery of Red and White with the Cognizance of divers Misteries broidered upon their sleeves and received her four Miles without the City and so conveyed her through the City which then was garnished and hanged with Tapestry and Arras and other Cloths of Silk and Riches in most goodly wise unto Westminster This is the year wherein Fabian makes the first mention of Pierce of Gaviston in his Chronicle upon Occasion of the Bishop of Chesters complaining to the King of him his Eldest Son Edward and others for breaking the Bishops Park and riotously destroying the Game therein For this was the aforesaid Edward and his Accomplices Imprisoned So that under this famous King the very next Heir apparent scap'd not the Lash of the Law when he had offended even to an actual Imprisonment so far were men in those days from asserting him to be above the Law and not Lyable to condign punishment because the next Heir Afterwards the King Banished the aforesaid Gaviston out of England for fear lest he should debauch his Son But this Banishment was after his death annulled by his Son Edward when King to the great trouble and vexation of the Land afterwards The twenty ninth may be esteemed not unworthy of remark for the Kings giving to Edward his Son the Principality of Wales whereunto he likewis'd joyn'd the Earldom of Cornwal newly Vacant and return'd to the Crown In the 33d year we read of the taking arraigning drawing hanging and quartering of William Waleys who of an unknown
esteemed most amiable and counted highly powerful since she is to be admired for the goodness and greatness under which comprehend the large Riches Power and Spirit of particular Citizens incorporated into Her For the first let me instance in the commendable diligence of her Mayor Adam Baume who upon a very great scarcity of Corn in the fifteenth of this King providently took care to have Corn brought to Lââdon from forreign Parts to the relief of the whole Realm and add hereunto the Charity of the Aldermen who for the furtherance of so good a Work laid out each of them a sum of mony in those days very considerable to the same purpose and bestow'd the Corn thus procur'd in convenient places where the Poor might buy at an appointed price and such as had no ready mony upon Surety to pay the year following besides the common Act of the Mayor and Citizens in taking two thousand Marks out of the Orphans Chest in Guildhall for the same intent In Proof of the later viz. The Greatness Riches Power and Spirit of particular Citizens I challenge all the Cities in the world besides to shew me such another Example as that of John Philpot Citizen of London the Citizens Orator to this King in the beginning of his Reign who in the second year observing the young Kings inability the Nobles neglect and the oppressions of the poor Commons voluntarily hir'd Souldiers with his own mony rig'd out a Fleet at his own charge and hazarded his own Person to defend the Realm from Pirates Robbers and incursions of Enemies and therewith successfully took in a little time Mercer the Scot with all his Ships which he had before violently taken from Scarborow and fifteen Spanish Ships besides laden with much Riches which came to his Aid Can Rome her self shew me a like Parallel As for the Fabij they were a whole Family among the Patricians and Crassus himself a great Magistrate in the heigth of that Common-wealths Grandeur amidst Equals and Inferiors whereas this publick-spirited Person liv'd still a Subject under a limited Monarchy none of the greatest nor the strongest then in the World This noble Act some would have thought should have deserved great praise and commendation and so it had among the Common People but among the great Lords and Earls it met with Reproach and Detraction as being a manifest reproof of their carelesness and negligence and he himself was endanger'd thereby they speaking openly against it as done unlawfully without the Councel of the King and his Realm though his design could not be denyed to have been very honest in the general Had he suffered for that unpresidented Act because it was deficient in some formalities required by Law the Statesmen of the times therein instrumental without all peradventure had appeared as odious in the Eyes of the Commons as some of the chief Episcopal Clergy-men in a Protestant Country within the Memory of Man would have made themselves obnoxious to the Peoples Censure should they have publickly burnt Vindiciae Pietatis i. e. a Vindication of Godliness from the imputation of folly and fancy which I have heard intimated as if thought of because it wanted such an Imprimatur as the Law demanded and was writ possibly by an Author not altogether Episcopal in his declared Judgment But to pass on If such were the superemient and supererogating Acts of particular Citizens so many Ages ago to what an height of Wealth Greatness and splendor must we needs think the City to have arriv'd at this day some Centuries of years since that time If ten thousand Pounds was a Mayors Estate heretofore we may give a shrew'd guess at the Cities advancement and encrease in Riches since now that the same is made the limited sum for the Citizens to swear themselves not worth who desire to avoid the chargeable Honour and Honourable charge of the Shrievalry Nay to go a step or two further now adays we find her Sheriffs Revenue commonly reputed at double the value and others of her Citizens thought able to number their thousands by scores What if I had also added that some are esteem'd so wealthy as not to know an end of their Riches Certainly such if any must needs come under the denomination of men vastly rich in worldly goods So that this glorious and Triumphant City seems in many things able to vy with if not out-vy the Quondam Mistress of the World Rome her self She exceeds her in Antiquity as being founded in Fabian's Compute above four hundred years before her and hath this advantage of her now that whereas Rome is confest and acknowledged to be in the wane of her power and Greatness both as to her Civil and Ecclesiastical Authority London still continues on the rising hand Rome 't is visible hath suffer'd a considerable diminution as to her former extent and Jurisdiction in both capacities whether she be lookt upon as once head of the world or now pretended head of the Church but London plainly appears to be dayly getting ground both in Fame and Reputation as well as building And whereto she may come in time belongs to a Prophet not an Historian to declare She is already become the Fam'd Metropolis of this our little World and Rome was but Empress in a greater Neither was she anear so influential over the greatest part of that how much soever thereof she had under her Dominion as London is known to be at present over all ours Having thus shewn the influence this Honourable City had upon the Commons of this Land in Peace and amidst tumultuous disorders and the great respect both King and Nobles in Conjunction had for her I should now proceed to disengage my self of an obligation I presume lying on me from part of a promise before made to declare the esteem the Lords when singly consider'd had of her strength and power But before I pass on more immediately thereto I crave leave to observe the great variety and difference in Parliamentary transactions and proceedings under this King within the compass of whose Reign we find but two years on Record viz the nineteenth and twenty second wherein there was not a Parliament called and assembled in one place or other by his Authority sometimes oftner and so those Acts of Edward the third were exactly kept for eighteen years running wherein it is ordained and established that a Parliament shall be holden once every year and more often if need be which being omitted but one year in twenty one and not observed in the twenty second we may easily think it prov'd fatal to the unfortunate King that in the next Parliament he should be depos'd by his own Subjects and the Crown set upon anothers head And is it any wonder to see things so injurious and unjust sometimes done in National Assemblies when in a vein of contradiction they make Ordinances so diametrically opposite each to other as was done in this Kings time For we find parties
the cries of the wounded in our streets A Miraculous effect of the Cities influence For what parts of the Land are so inconsiderate to oppose when London is engag'd and resolv'd Former Examples may teach them future wisdom These having been the necessary preparatives in sixty one on Saint Georges day April the 23. comes the Kings Coronation the fairest day except the Preceding in which he made his Cavalcade through London the Nation enjoy'd both before and after if the supplementers Observation be well grounded notwithstanding it began to Thunder and Lighten very smartly towards the end of Dinner time and soon after that another meeting of King Lords and Commons at Westminster whither the Kings Writs had Summoned them to make a New Parliament the former Assembly having been dissolv'd the December before by his Majesties Order and Command How acceptable the Actions of that Assembly were to City and Country hath been hinted before and the concurrence of the King when restor'd was not wanting to Authorize their proceedings yet this new Assembly notwithstanding thinking the manner of it's Assembling not to be drawn into Example and that therewas some defect as to the necessary point of Legality in the Statutes then made or at least desirous to remove all doubts fears and scruples about them would not let several of those Acts pass without being formally ratified and confirm'd anew by it's own Authority And therefore consequently not trusting to the receiv'd opinion of the dissolution of the Parliament of forty by the late Kings Death nor relying on the House of Commons Act to dissolve themselves in fifty nine nor the dissolution of the Lords and Commons in sixty another Declaration was made in the point in these word To the end that no Man bereafter may be misled into any seditious or unquiet demeanor out of an opinion that the Parliament begun and held at Westminster upon the third day of November in the year of our Lord one thousand six hundred and forty is yet in being which is undoubtedly dissolved and determined and so is hereby Declared and Adjudged to be fully Dissolved and Determined And it was further Enacted by the same Authority That if any Person or Persons at any time after the four and twentieth day of June in the year of our Lord one thousand six hundred sixty and one shall Malitiously and Advisedly by Writing Printing Preaching or other Speaking Express Publish Vtter Declare or affirm that the Parliament begun at Westminster upon the third day of November in the year of our Lârd one thousand six hundred and forty is not yet dissolved or is not yet determined or that it ought to be in being or hath yet any continuance or Existence that then every such Person and Persons so as aforesaid offending shall incur the danger and penalty of a Premunire mentioned in a Statute made in the sixteenth year of the Reign of King Richard the second Thus then were all disputes upon this point effectually stil'd and suppress'd by this Authority and Command of King Lords and Commons and the greatness of the penalty incur'd by the person offending which amounts to no less than to be put out of the Kings Protection and have his Lands and Tenements Goods and Chattels forfeited to the King and his Body Attach'd if to be found and brought before the King and his Council there to Answer the premises or that process be made against him by Praemunire facias and if return'd non est inventus than to be Outlaw'd Next I proceed to observe that 't was Petitioning and addressing that prepar'd the way for His Majesties Restauration and therefore doubtless the remembrance thereof should be always grateful and acceptable to the Loyal Such preparatories to great turns and changes being alwaies preferrable to the other rougher methods of drawn Swords and loaded Pistols which are the general effects of Civil Broils and Commotions while these are the rational results of Wisdom and Prudence With the King was that part of the English Clergy likewise restor'd which appropriates to it self the name of the Church of England A Term much gloried in by many as if none but themselves were the constitutive parts thereof and which some now adays pretend freer from Ambiguity than the more general Name of Protestants What we understand by that Term we know very well and are not asham'd thereof Yet by the way I don't think but 't is as lyable to exceptions where Cavils take place as the other title of Protestants so much of late turn'd into ridicule by some few pretenders to wit and sense above the vulgar For if by Church we understand barely an Assembly of Men met together in one place then doubtless without any incongruity it may be applied to many a civil meeting of Men together about their own private concerns If by Church we mean a society of Men conjoyn'd in Spiritual duties or the Ordinances of Divine Worship then I hope it will be no Solecism in common Speech to affirm many of the Dissenters meetings may reasonably lay claim to the Name And if a due Celebration of the Sacraments will make a Church why then may not the Denomination as well belong to some private Conventicles as to the publick Oratories If it should denote only the Association of many distinct Assemblies under the same Ecclesiastical Government what should hinder the Presbiterians from enjoying the Title in those places where they are allowed to exercise their power in Classical Provincial or National Synods Which Power they once exercis'd in England publickly within the Memory of Man But if the Law of the Land makes the difference and the established Government of the Country in Ecclesiastical affairs as with us in England then I am apt to beleive this Expression the Church of England is not without it's Ambiguities and may be a denomination comprehensive of Men of as many different modes and forms as some would fain have us think the word Protestant admits of Heretofore at the first planting of the Gospel in this Isle among the Britains we may call it the British Church When Austin the Monk came in bringing with him the Customs and Ceremonies of the Church of Rome and introduc'd them among the converted Saxons then we may term it the Romish Church When the Monks and Fryers like the Frogs in Egypt had over-spread the whole face of the Land then we may give it the Epithite of Monkish In succeeding Generations when Popery was arriv'd to its height we may name it the Popish Church In King Edward the sixth days it may properly be called Reformed Under the Marian Persecution 't was certainly Popish Queen Elizabeth brought back the Reformed Religion under an Episcopal Government and therefore I venture to give it the Name of the Reformed Episcopal Church A little before the late Wars when the Hierarchy was arriv'd at its highest pitch of Pomp and Grandeur by the Laudean principles and practises It was certainly