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A57919 Historical collections of private passages of state Weighty matters in law. Remarkable proceedings in five Parliaments. Beginning the sixteenth year of King James, anno 1618. And ending the fifth year of King Charls, anno 1629. Digested in order of time, and now published by John Rushworth of Lincolns-Inn, Esq; Rushworth, John, 1612?-1690. 1659 (1659) Wing R2316A; ESTC R219757 913,878 804

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thereupon their Lordships will be pleased to take care that the Grand-Iury men either by Evidence or their own Knowledge indict them which are not already indicted before the end of the Assises and that their Lordships admit no Traverse unless the Persons convicted have first yeilded their bodies into the custody of the Sheriff as their Lordships know well all the Iudges with one voice resolved the Law to be 3 That there be special care taken of Schoolmasters and Teachers of any kinde who are Popish that they be presented and proceeded against 4. That their Lordships give knowledge to the Counties where they sit that the married Women who are Popish Recusants convicted by the Law ought to be committed to the Common-Goal without Bail unless their husbands redeem their liberty by the constant payment of 10 l. a moneth and that it must be executed Your Lordships ready to be commanded ROB. HEATH Inner-Temple Mar. 7. 1625. The Commons proceeded in the Examination of Grievances and had a Report made unto them That the reason wherefore our Merchants Ships and Goods were seised in France was by reason of Sir Iames Bagg Vice-Admiral for Cornwal and other mens dealings towards the French in seising upon their goods in several Ports in England and particularly the seising of the Ship called the Peter of New-haven and brought into Plymouth by order from the Lord Duke after the King and Council had ordered this Ship to be restored upon a just Claim and that the Court of Admiralty had also released her That till this action the French did not begin to seise any English Goods or Ships That twenty and three bags of silver and eight bags of gold were by Sir Francis Steward delivered to the Lord Duke the Duke having notice hereof said he would justifie the stay of the Ship by order from the King The Council of War appointed to manage the business for the relief of the Palatinate were called into the House of Commons and this Question was propounded unto them Whether their Advice was followed which they gave for the four Ends mentioned in the Act of Parliament 21 Iacobi for which the moneys given by that Act were to issue Lord Carey Earl of Totnes and Lord Brook desired to be excused from answering the Lord Vere said He had been much absent in the Low-Countries and could say little the Lord Grandison said that since Iuly last they had seldom met Sir Robert Mansel and Sir Iohn Oyle desired a Copy of the Question and that they might all confer together before they gave Answer to a Question of this Concernment Afterwards the same persons except the Lord Vere were called in again who gave unsatisfactory answers when they were pressed to deal clearly and fully in the business It was answered by some of them That they conceived by the Act of Parliament they were bound to make no other Answer then what they had done Others desired before they answered that they might have the Kings consent first That obtained and a special Order of the House requiring an Answer Sir Robert Mansel declared his readiness to give a cleer and full Account While matters were thus debated Mr Secretary Cook delivered a Message from the King to the Commons declaring his Majesties occasion for Supply This Message was strengthened by a Conference which the Lords desired with the Commons where William Earl of Pembrook represented the Affairs of Christendom how they stood before the breach of the Treaties with Spain and how at that present shewing That the condition of the Palatinate was nothing bettered That Count Mansfiels Army was raised for the diversion of the League Catholick in Germany That the King of Denmark had thereupon engaged himself to stand or fall in this Quarrel in case of Supplies That the Swedes were forward and lastly That his Majesty had made a strict Alliance with the Hollander upon these terms That they shall bear a fourth part of the expence of our Navy and onely have a fourth part of the spoils the Lands and Cities conquered to be the Kings The fruits of all rich advantages will be lost if a speedy Assistance be not resolved on The Commons not thinking fit to take into consideration the matter of Supply at present call for a Report from the Committee appointed to consider of the Causes and Remedies of Evils which being made by Mr Wandesford it was resolved That the Diminution of the Kingdom in strength and honor is a general Evil which we suffer under a second the increase and countenancing of Papists a third the not guarding of the narrow Seas a fourth Plurality of Offices in one hand a fifth sales of Honors and places of Judicature a sixth delivery up of Ships to the French a Seventh misimployment of three Subsidies and three fifteens c. And they further ordered That the Duke whom these Misdemenors especially reflected on have notice that the Commons House intend suddenly to resume the debate of these things and Mr Clement Cook said openly That it were better to die by an Enemy then to suffer at home The Lords at that time more readily complying with the Kings desires appointed a Committee to consider of the safety and defence of the Kingdom in general and particularly of the safeguard of the Seas the store of Ammunition and Arms and all things incident thereunto and of strengthening the Forts for this the King gave them thanks and desired them to proceed with alacrity The Committee of Lords made haste and reported their advice to the House That one Fleet be presently set to Sea against the King of Spain to annoy him and to prevent the Invasion of this Kingdom That another be set out to defend our own Coasts and the Merchants from Pirats and that consideration be had of maintaining the Armies under the King of Denmark and Count Mansfield but the House would give no opinion thereupon till they had Conference with the House of Commons which was desired upon this occasion To which Message the Commons onely returned this Answer That they desire to have a good correspondency with their Lordships and will be ever carefull of the safety and defence of the Kingdom and maintain their own priviledges as is fitting and immediately proceed with the debate concerning the Duke which was a little interrupted as well by a Letter of the Kings to the Speaker as by a Message delivered by Sir Richard Weston touching Supply King Charles to the Speaker Trusty and Welbeloved c. HAving assembled the Parliament early in the beginning of the year for the more timely help and advice of our People in our great and important Affairs and having of late not onely by Message but also of our self put our House of Commons in minde of our pressing occasions and of the present Estate of Christendom wherein they have equal interest with us as well in respect of their own former engagements
from his Majesties Son in Law whereby he putteth himself solely to his Majesties advice and pleasure for his Submission as you will perceive by the Copy of the Letter it self which I here send your Lordship wherein though there be many things impertinent yet of that point you may make good use for the accomplishment of the business wherein I have written to the Spanish Ambassador to use his Means and Credit likewise which I assure my self he will effectually do especially seeing the impediments are taken away by Count Mansfields Composition and the Conformity of his Majesties Son in Law to this Submission For the Money your Lordship hath so seasonably laid forth his Majesty will see you shall sustain no loss holding it very unconscionable you should suffer by the care of his Service which you have shewed so much to his contentment to the great joy of your Lordships faithful Servant Geo. Buckingham Having given this Accompt of his employment with the Emperor he humbly craveth leave to make it known in what sort before this his employment he endeavored to serve the Prince Palatine and his Cause which will best appear by his Majesties own Testimony upon the going of Sir Francis Nethersole to the Prince Palatine at which time his Majesty being out of his Royal and just heart desirous to do a faithful Servant right commanded Sir Francis Nethersole to let the Prince Palatine understand how good a Servant the said Earl had been unto him and how Active in his Affairs as will best appear by a Dispatch of Sir Francis Nethersole written all with his own hand to Sir George Calvert dated in Prague August 11. 1620 and sent by his late Majesty to the said Earl for his comfort being as followeth Right Honorable THat you may be the better assured that I have neither forgotten nor neglected the Commandments received from his Majesty by your Honor you will be pleased to have the patience to hear me report what I said to this King upon the delivery of my Lord Deputies Letters to his Majesty which was That the King my Master whose Iustice is so renowned over the World did use to shew it in nothing more then in vindicating his Servants from wrongfull Opinions whereof he knew noble hearts more sensible then of Injuries done to their Persons or Fortunes That out of his Royal Disposition his Majesty having found my Lord Digby mistaken by some of his own people at home by occasion of his being by him employed in the Affairs with Spain having thereupon conceived a jealousie that the same noble Lord might be also misreported hitherto his Majesties hands in that respect gave me a particular commandment to assure his Majesty he had not a more truly affectionate Servant in England And for proof thereof to let his Majesty understand That whereas the Baron of Doncaster now his Majesties Ambassador for England had since his coming hither obtained but three great Boons for his Majesties service viz. The Loan of Money from the King of Denmark the Contribution in England of the City and Countries and the sending Ambassadors to the contrary parties that my Lord Digby had been the first propounder of all those to the King my Master before his Majesties Ambassador or any other of his servants in England although his Lordship were contented that others who were but set on should carry away the thanks and prayers because his Lordship being known to be the first mover therein might possibly weaken the credit he hath in Spain and to render himself the more valuable to serve both his own Master and his Majesty in which respect I humbly prayed his Majesty to keep this to himself By which testimony it may appear as the said Earl conceiveth how he the said Earl bestowed himself before his Ambassage and in his said Ambassage with his said late Majesties approbation thereof Now he humbly craveth leave to give your Lordships accompt how he proceeded after his return from the Emperors Court Assoon as he came into England he discovered unto his Majesty and the Lords of the Councel in what great wants he had left the Forces in the Palatinate and sollicited the present sending away of money thereupon Thirty thousand pound was borrowed of Sir Peter Vanlore Sir Baptist Hicks and Sir William Cortine and presently sent unto the Palatinate besides the Ten thousand pounds which he lent for which he paid the interest out of his Purse for six moneths having also given not long before Five hundred pounds by way of benevolence to the service of the said Palatinate Now in the interim betwixt his return from the English Coasts which was in November 1621 and his going into Spain in May 1622 he first gave his Accompt as aforesaid of his Ambassage to both Houses of Parliament and moved them as effectually as was possible for the supplying of his Majesty and that the money might wholly be imployed for the Succor of the Palatinate The Parliament being dissolved he sollicited with great care and industry the setling of some Course for the supplying of the Palatinate and his Majesty was perswaded to maintain Eight thousand Foot and Sixteen hundred Horse under his own Standard and at his own purse in the Palatinate to establish a certain course for due payment of the said Army The Lord Chichester was upon the said Earls motion sent for out of Ireland and the said Earl by his Majesties command took order for his Dispatch In this estate the said Earl left his Affairs at his departure towards Spain in May 1622 nothing doubting but that all things would have effectually constantly been pursued according to the order which was setled and resolved on at his departure At his arrival at the Court of Spain he presently proceeded according to his Instructions pressing the business of the Palatinate as effectually as he could and faithfully labored and effected from time to time as far as to the point of Negotiation all particulars that were given him in charge as it will appear by his late Majesties Letters upon every particular occasion and if by the accidents of War for that Summer the Marquess of Baden the Count Mansfield and the Duke of Brunswick received each of them an overthrow the ordering of whose Affairs his Majesty so far complained of to his Son-in-law as to give order for the withdrawing of his Forces as will appear by his Majesties Letters on the third of Iune 1622 and also by his Letters unto Sir Horace Vere and the Lord of Chichester of the same date if there were not a speedy redress if by any of those accidents those businesses have miscarried the said Earl hopes he shall not be liable to the blame it having no relation to him or to his imployment having so far and so honestly with his best affections imployed his care and utmost services in the businesses as his Majesty was pleased by many several Letters upon several Actions to signifie
to convey them to the Treasury of the Navy If the truth be according to the Privy-seal they are to be added to the former Total as parcel of his own gain If according to that allegation it may prove a president of greater damage to the King then the money is worth for by this way his Majesty hath no means by matter of Record to charge the Treasurer of the Navy with these sums and may lose the benefit of the Act of Parliament 13 Eliz. whereby Accomptants Lands are made liable to the paiment of their Debts to the King and in many cases may be sold for his Majesties satisfaction The Treasurer of the Navy is a worthy man but if he should die the King loseth the benefit The fourth point of this branch is That he hath caused so great a mixture and confusion between the Kings Estate and his own that they cannot be distinguished by the Records and Entries which ought to be kept for the safety of his Majesties Treasure and indempnity of the Subject This is proved in divers instances whereof the last alleaged is one and others follow By the wisdom of the Law in the constitution of the Exchequer there be three Guards set upon the Kings Treasure and Accompts The first is a legal Impignoration whereby the Estates personal and real of the Accomptants are made liable to be sold for the discharge of their Debts which I mentioned before The second an apt Controlment over every Office by which the King relies not upon the industry and honesty of any one man but if he fail in either it may be discovered by some other sworne to take notice of it and either to correct his Errors or amend his Faults The third is a durable Evidence and Certainty not for the present time only but for perpetuity because the King can neither receive or pay but by Record All these Guards have been broken by the Duke both in the Cases next before recited and in these which follow The Custom of the Exchequer is the Law of the Kingdom for so much as concerneth the Kings Revenue Every breach of a Law by a particular offence is punishable but such an offence as this being destructive of the Law itself is of a far higher nature The fifth point of this second branch is concerning two Privy-seals of Release the one 16 the other 20 Iac. whereby this Duke is discharged of divers sums secretly received to his Majesties use but by vertue of these Releases to be converted to the support of his own Estate The proof hereof is referred to the Privy-seals themselves From which he made one observation of the subtilty he used to winde himself into the possession of the Kings money and to get that by cunning steps and degrees which peradventure he could not have obtained at once A good Master will trust a Servant with a greater sum that is out of his purse then he would bestow upon him being in his purse and yet after it is out of his hands may be drawn more easily to make a Release then at first to have made a Free gift This is a proper instance to be added to the proof of the point of mingling his own Estate with the Kings and of the same kind be other particulars mentioned in the Schedule though not expressed in the Charge as Twenty thousand pounds received in Composition for the Earl of M. his Fine which cannot be discovered whether part or all be converted to the Dukes benefit and yet it appears by a Privy-seal to be cleerly intended to the Kings own service for the Houshold and Wardrobe till by the Dukes practice it was diverted into this close and by-way Another instance in this is His endeavor to get the money which should be made of Prize-goods into his own hands And for this purpose he first labored to procure that his man Gabriel Marsh might receive it and when it was thought fit some Partner should be joined with him trial was made of divers but none of any credit would undertake the Charge with such a Consort And the Commons have reason to think there was good cause of this refusal for he is so ill an Accomptant that he confessed in their House being examined that by authority from the Duke he received divers bags of gold and silver out of the S. Peter of Newhaven which he never told When this practice of imploying his own man would take no effect then he procured a Commission from Sir William Russell who is indeed without exception an able and worthy Officer but that is not enough for the Kings security For howsoever he was to receive the money it was to be disbursed by and to the Dukes warrant and profit Which Clause hath been altered since this was questioned in Parliament and now it is to be issued from an immediate Warrant from his Majesty But as it was before it may be noted as an incroachment upon the Office of my Lord Treasurer whereby he might make a more easie way to some sinister end of his own so that upon the matter Sir William was but a safeguard of the money for the Duke himself And this I must note of some guilt in the very act of it The last point upon this whole Charge was a reduction of the value of the Land together with the mony into one totall and to that purpose he rated the Land being valued at a reasonable value at forty years purchase for although some of it was sold for thirty yet a great part was worth more then a hundred years purchase so as forty years is conceived to be an easy Medium at this rate 3035 l. amounteth to 121400 l. which being added to the total of the mony received 162995 l. both together make the sum of 284395 l. besides the Forrest of Leyfeild and besides the profit made out of the thirds of Strangers goods and the Moyetie of the profit made out of the Customes of Ireland This is a great sum in it self but much greater by many Circumstances if we look upon the time past never so much came into any private mans hands out of the publique purse if we respect the time present the King never had so much want never so many forreign occasions important and expensive the Subjects never have given greater supplies and yet those supplies unable to furnish these expences But as the Circumstances make the sum greater so there be other Circumstances which make it less if it be compared with the inestimable gain he hath made by the sale of Honors and Offices and by projects hurtfull to the State both of England and Ireland or if it be compared to his profusion it will appear but a little sum All these gifts and other ways of profit notwithstanding he confest before both Houses of Parliament that he was indebted 100000 l. If this be true how can we hope to satisfie his prodigality if false how can we hope to satisfie
in Parliament The Right Honorable Vicount Dunbar Deputy Justice in Oyer to the Earl of Rutland from Trent Northward and a Commissioner of Sewers and a Deputy Lieutenant within the East-Riding of Yorkshire his Lordship is presented to be a Popish Recusant and his Indictment removed into the Kings-Bench and his Wife Mother and the greatest part of his Family are Popish Recusants and some of them convicted William Lord Eury in Commission for the Sewers in the East-Riding a convict Popish Recusant Henry Lord Abergaveney John Lord Tenham Edward Lord Wotton in Commission for Sewers justly suspected for Popery Henry Lord Morley Commissioner of Sewers in Com. Lanc. himself suspected and his wife a Recusant Iohn Lord Mordant Commissioner of the Peace Sewers and Subsidie in Com. Northampton Iohn Lord St Iohn of Basing Captain of Lidley Castle in Com. Southampton indicted for a Popish Recusant Em. Lord Scroop Lord President of his Majesties Council in the North Lord Lieutenant of the County and City of York Com. Eborac Ville Kingston super Hull presented the last time and continuing still to give suspition of his ill-affection in Religion 1. By never coming to the Cathedral Church upon those dayes wherein former Presidents have been accustomed 2. By never receiving the Sacrament upon Common dayes as other Presidents were accustomed but publickly departing out of the Church with his servants upon those dayes when the rest of the Council Lord Major and Aldermen do receive 3. By never or very seldom repairing to the Fasts but often publickly riding abroad with his Hawkes on those dayes 4. By causing such as are known to be firm on those dayes in the Religion established to be left out of Commission which is instanced in Henry Alured Esquire by his Lordships procurement put out of the Commission of Sewers or else by keeping them from executing their places which is instanced in Dr. Hudson Doctor in Divinity to whom his Lorship hath refused to give the Oath being appointed 5. By putting divers other ill-affected persons in Commission of the Council of Oyer and Terminer and of the Sewers and into other Places of Trust contrary to his Majesties gracious Answer to the late Parliament 6. In October last 1625. being certified of divers Spanish ships of War upon the Coasts of Scarborough his Lordship went thither and took with him the Lord Dunbar Sir Thomas Metham and William Alford and lay at the house of the Lord Eury whom he knew to be a convict Recusant and did notwithstanding refuse to disarm him although he had received Letters from the Lords of the Council to that effect and did likewise refuse to shew the Commissioners who were to be imployed for disarming of Popish Recusants the original Letters of the Privy-Council or to deliver them any Copies as they desired and as his Predecessors in that place were wont to do 7. By giving Order to the Lord Dunbar Sir William Wetham and Sir William Alford to view the Forts and Store of Munition in the Town of Kingston upon Hull who made one Kerton a convict Recusant and suspected to be a Priest their Clerk in that service 8. By denying to accept a Plea tendred according to the Law by Sir William Hilliard Defendant against Isabel Simpson Plaintiff in an Action of Trover that she was a convict Popish Recusant and forcing him to pay costs 9. By the great increase of Recusants since his Lordships coming to that Government in Ianuary 1619. It appearing by the Records of the Sessions that there are in the East-Riding onely One thousand six hundred and seventy more convicted then were before which is conceived to be an effect of his favor and countenance towards them William Langdale Esquire convict of Popish Recusancy Iordan Metham Henry Holm Michael Partington Esquires George Creswell Thomas Danby Commissioners of the Sewers and put in Commission by procurement of the Lord Scroop Lord President of the North and who have all Popish Recusants to their wives Ralph Bridgeman a Non-Communicant Nicholas Girlington whose wife comes seldom to Church Sir Marmaduke Wycel Knight and Baronet presented the last Parliament his wife being a convict Popish Recusant and still continuing so Sir Thomas Metham Knight Deputy Lieutenant made by the Lord Scroop in Commission of the Council of the North and of Oyer and Terminer and other Commissions of Trust all by procurement of the same Lord President since the Kings Answer never known to have received the Communion his two onely Daughters brought up to be Popish and one of them lately married to Thomas Doleman Esquire a Popish Recusant Anthony Vicount Montague in Commission of the Sewers in Com. Sussex his Lorship a Recusant Papist Sir William Wray Knight Deputy Lieutenant Colonel to a Regiment his wife a Recusant Sir Edw. Musgrave Sir Tho. Lampleigh Justices of Peace and Quorum Sir Thomas Savage Deputy Lieutenant and Justice of Peace his wife and children Recusants Sir Richard Egerton a Non-Communicant Thomas Savage Esquire a Deputy Lieutenant a Recusant and his wife indicted and presented William Whitmore Commissioner of the Subsidy his wife and children Recusants Sir Hugh Beeston Commissioner of the Subsidy his Daughter and many of his Servants Recusants Sir William Massie Commissioner for the Subsidy his Lady indicted for Recusancy and his children Papists Sir William Courtney Knight Vice-Warden of the Stannery and Deputy Lieutenant a Popish Recusant Sir Thomas Ridley Knight Justice of the Peace his wife a Popish Recusant and eldest son Sir Ralph Conyers Knight Justice of Peace his wife a Popish Recusant Iames Lawson Esquire a Justice of Peace and one of the Captains of the Trained-band his children Popish Recusants and servants Non-Communicants Sir Iohn Shelley Knight and Baronet a Recusant William Scot Esq a Recusant Iohn Finch Esquire not convict but comes not to Church in Commission of the Sewers These are all convicted Recusants or suspected of Popery Sir William Mollineux Deputy Lieutenant and Justice of Peace his wife a Recusant Sir Richard Honghton Knight Deputy Lieutenant his wife and some of his daughters Recusants Sir William Norris Captain of the general Forces and Justice of Peace a Recusant Sir Gilbert Ireland Justice of Peace a Recusant Iames Anderton Esquire Justice of Peace and one of his Majesties Receivers his wife a Non-Communicant his son and heir a great Recusant and himself suspected Edward Rigby Esquire Clerk of the Crown Justice of Peace himself a good Communicant but his wife and daughters Popish Recusants Edward Criswell Esquire Justice of Peace his wife a Popish Recusant Iohn Parker Gentleman Muster-Master for the County suspected for a Popish Recusant George Ireland Esquire Justice of Peace his wife a Popish Recusant Iohn Preston Esquire Bow-bearer for his Majesty in Westmorland Forest a Recusant Thomas Covill Esquire Jaylor Justice of Peace and Quorum his Daughter a Recusant married Sir Cuthbert Halsal Justice of Peace his wife a Recusant Richard Sherborn Esquire Justice of Peace himself
end will be only rapine and ruine of all is worthy a prudent and preventing care I have thus far delivered with that freedom you pleased to admit such Difficulties as I have taken up amongst the Multitude as may arrest if not remove Impediments to any Supply in Parliament Which how to facilitate may better become the care of your Judgments then my Ignorance Only I could wish to remove away a personal distaste of my Lord Duke of Buckingham amongst the people He might be pleased if there be a necessity of a Parliament to appear first Adviser thereunto and of the satisfaction it shall please his Majesty of grace to give at such time to his people which I would wish to be grounded by president of his best and fortunate Progenitors And which I conceive will satisfie the desires and hopes of all if it may appear in some sort to be drawn down from him to the people by the zealous care industry that my Lord of Buckingham hath of the publick unity and content By which there is no doubt but he may remain not only secure from any further quarrel with them but merit a happy memory amongst them of a zealous Patriot For to expiate the passion of the people at such times with sacrifice of any of his Majesties Servants I have found it as in Ed. 2. Rich. 2. Hen. 6. no less fatal to the Master then to the Ministers in the end These and such like Considerations being represented to the King Ian. 29. A Resolution is taken at the Council-Table to call a Parliament to meet the 17. of March following And now Warrants are sent according to a preceding Order made in this moneth to all parts to release the Imprisoned Gentry and confined Gentlemen for the business of the Loan-money And as fast as Writs came to the Counties and Boroughs to choose Members for Parliament those Gentlemen who suffered for the Loan were chiefly in the Peoples eye to be elected to serve for them in the ensuing Parliament to present their Grievances and assert their Liberties The Names of the Gentry who about the time that Writs issued out for a Parliament were released out of Restraint and Confinement appear by the ensuing Order and List. At Whitehall Present The Kings Majesty Lord Treasurer Lord President Lord Admiral Lord Steward Lord Chamberlain Earl of Suffolk Earl of Dorset Earl of Salisbury Earl of Morton Lord Viscount Conway Lord Bishop of Durham Lord B. Bath and Wells Mr. Treasurer Mr. Comptroller Master of the Wards Mr. Secretary Cook Mr. Chancellor of the Exchequer Mr. Chancellor of the Duchy IT is this day Ordered by His Majesty being present in Council That the several persons hereunder written shall from henceforth be discharged and set at liberty from any Restraint heretofore put upon them by His Majesties Commandment And hereof all Sheriffs and other Officers are to take notice Knights Sir Iohn Strangewayes Sir Thomas Grantham Sir William Armin Sir William Massam Sir William Wilmore Sir Erasmus Drailon Sir Edward Aiscough Sir Nathanael Barnardiston Sir Robert Poyntz Sir Beacham St. Iohn Sir Oliver Luke Sir Maurice Berkley Sir Thomas Wentworth Sir Iohn Wray Sir William Constable Sir Iohn Hotham Sir Iohn Pickering Sir Francis Barrington Sir William Chancey Esquires William Anderson Terringham Norwood Iohn Trigonwell Thomas Godfrey Richard Knightley Thomas Nicholas Iohn Hampden George Ratcliffe Iohn Dulton Henry Pool Nathanael Coxwell Robert Hatley Thomas Elmes Gent. Thomas Wood Iohn Wilkinson William Allen Thomas Holyhead All these remained confined to several Counties Knights Sir Walter Earl Sir Thomas Darnell Sir Harbotle Grimston Esquire George Catesby Londoners Edward Hooker George Basset Londoners Iames Wooldrond Londoners Henry Sanders Londoners All Prisoners in the Fleet. Knights Sir Iohn Corbet Sir Iohn Elliot Esquire William Coriton Londoners Iohn Stevens Thomas Deacon Iohn Potter In the Gate-house Knight Sir Iohn Heveningham Londoners Samuel Vassal William Angel In the Marshalsey Londoners William Savage Mathanael Manesty In the New-Prison Londoners Robert Lever Iohn Peacock Edward Ridge Iohn Oclabery Andrew Stone William Spurstow Roger Hughes Iohn Pope Iames Bunch Thomas Garris Iames Waldron Iohn Bennet Ambrose Aylot Thomas Sharp Thomas Totham Augustine Brabrook Robert Payne Edward Talston Iohn Whiting Thomas Webb Iohn Ferry All in the Custody of a Messenger Orders issued also from the Council to the Lord Major and Aldermen of London To use moderation in the demanding of the Loan-money from those of the City of London who deferred paiment And now Archbishop Abbot the Earl of Bristol and the Bishop of Lincoln notwithstanding the cloud they were under are had in consideration by the King and Council and Writs are ordered to be sent unto them to sit in the House of Peers the ensuing Parliament After the Writs of Summons went forth the King gave direction for a Commission to raise monies by Impositions in nature of an Excise to be levied throughout the Nation to pass under the Great Seal And at the same time ordered the Lord Treasurer to pay Thirty thousand pounds to Philip Burlemac a Dutch Merchant in London to be by him returned over into the Low-Countries by Bill of Exchange unto Sir William Balfour and Iohn Dalbier for the raising of a Thousand Horse with Arms both for Horse and Foot The supposed intent of which German Horse was as was then feared to inforce the Excise which was then setting on foot The Council also had then under consideration the Levying of Ship-money upon the Counties to raise the King a Revenue that way But now that a Parliament was called the Council held it unfit and unseasonable to debate these matters any further at that time A little before the Parliament assembled a Society of Recusants was taken in Clerkenwell Divers of them were found to be Jesuites and the House wherein they were taken was designed to be a Colledge of that Order Among their Papers was found a Copy of this Letter written to their Father Rector at Bruxels discovering their Designs upon this State and their Judgment of the temper thereof with a Conjecture of the success of the ensuing Parliament Father Rector LEt not the damp of Astonishment seise upon your ardent and zealous soul in apprehending the sudden and unexpected Calling of a Parliament We have not opposed but rather furthered it So that we hope as much in this Parliament as ever we feared any in Queen Elizabeth's days You must know the Council is engaged to assist the King by way of Prerogative in case the Parliamentary way should fail You shall see this Parliament will resemble the Pelican which takes a pleasure to dig out with her beak her own bowels The Election of Knights and Burgesses hath been in such confusion of apparent Faction as that which we were wont to procure heretofore with much art and industry when the Spanish Match was in Treaty now breaks out naturally as a botch or boil and
well-beloved Sir VVilliam Balfoure Knight and Iohn Dolbier Esquire or either of them for levying and providing certain numbers of Horses with Armes for Horse and Foot to be brought over into this Kingdome for our service viz. for the levying and transporting of one thousand Horse fifteen thousand pounds for five thousand Muskets five thousand Corslets and five thousand Pikes ten thousand five hundred pounds and for one thousand Curaseers compleat two hundred Corslets and Carbines four thousand five hundred pounds amounting in the whole to the said summe of thirty thousand pounds And this our letter shall be your sufficient warrant and discharge in this behalf Given under our Privy Seal at our Palace of Westminster the 30th of Ianuary in the third year of our Reign Iune the seventh the King came to the Lords House and the House of Commons were sent for And the Lord Keeper presented the humble Petition of both Houses and said MAy it please your most excellent Majesty the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and Commons in Parliament assembled taking into consideration that the good intelligence between your Majesty and your people doth much depend upon your Majesties answer unto their Petition of Right formerly presented With unanimous consent do now become most humble Suitors unto your Majesty that you would be pleased to give a clear and satisfactory answer thereunto in full Parliament Whereunto the King replyed The answer I have already given you was made with so good deliberation and approved by the judgements of so many wise men that I could not have imagined but it should have given you full satisfaction But to avoid all ambiguous interpretations and to shew you there is no doublenesse in my meaning I am willing to pleasure you as well in words as in substance read your Petition and you shall have an answer that I am sure will please you The Petition was read and this answer was returned Soit droit fait come il est desire C. R. This I am sure said his Majesty is full yet no more then I granted you in my first Answer for the meaning of that was to confirm your liberties knowing according to your own Protestations that ye neither meane nor can hurt my Prerogative And I assure you my Maxime is That the Peoples Liberties strengthen the Kings Prerogative and the Kings Prerogative is to defend the Peoples Liberties You see how ready I have shewed my self to satisfie your demands so that I have done my part Wherefore if this Parliament have not a happy conclusion the sin is yours I am free from it Whereupon the Commons returned to their own House with unspeakable joy and resolved so to proceed as to expresse their thankfulnesse and now frequent mention was made of proceeding with the Bill of subsidies of sending the Bills which were ready to the Lords of perfecting the Bill of Tunnage and Poundage and Sir Iohn Strange●●ies also expressed his joy at the answer and further added Let us perfect our Remonstrance King Iames was wont to say He kn●w that by Parliaments which otherwise he could never have known After the granting of the Petition of Right the House ordered that the Grand Committees for Religion Trade Grievances and Courts of Justice to sit no longer but that the House proceed only in the consideration of Grievances of most moment And first they fell upon the Commission for Excise and sent to the Lord Keeper for the same who returned answer that he received Warrant at the Councel Table for the sealing thereof and when it was Sealed he carried it back to the Councel Table The Commission being sent it was read in the House viz. CHarles By the Grace of God King of England Scotland France and Ireland Defender of the Faith c. To Sir Thomas Coventry Knight Lord Keeper of the Great Seale of England To James Earl of Malburg Lord High Treasurer or England Henry Earl of Manchester Lord President of our Councel Edward Earl of Worcester Lord Keeper of our Privy Seal George Duke of Buckingham Lord high Admiral of England William E. of Pembrook Lord Steward of Our Houshold Philip Earl of Mountgomery Lord Chamberlain of Our Houshold Theophilus Earl of Suffolk Edward Earl of Dorset William Earl of Salisbury Thomas Earl of Exeter John Earl of Bridgwater James Earl of Carlisle Henry Earl of Holland William Earl of Denbigh George Earl of Totnes Sir George Hay Kt. Lord Chancellor of Scotland William Earl of Morton Thomas Earl of Kelley Thomas Earl of Mellers Edward Uiscount Conway one of our principal Secretaries of State Edward Uiscount Wimbleton Oliver Uiscount Grandison Henry Falkland Lord Deputy of Ireland To the Lord Bp. of Winchester Wil. Lord Bp. of Bath and Wells Fulk Lo. Brook Dudley Ash Lord Carlton Uice Chamberlain of Our Houshold Sir Thomas Edmonds Treasurer of our Houshold Sir John Savil Controler of Our Houshold Sir Robert Nanton Master of the Court of Wards Sir John Cook one of the principal Secretaries of State Sir Richard Weston Chancellour and under Treasurer of our Exchequer Julius Caesar Master of the Rolls and Sir Humphrey May Kt. Chancellour of Our Dutchy of Lancaster Greeting Whereas the pres●nt Conjuncture of the general affairs of Christendom and our own particular interest in giving assistance unto our oppressed Allies and for providing for the defence and safety of our own Dominions and People do call upon Us to neglect nothing that may conduce to those good ends And because Monies the principal sin●ws of War and one of the first and chiefest movers in all great Preparations and Actions are necessary to be provided in the first place and We are carefull the same may be raised by such ways as may best stand with the State of Our Kingdoms and Subjects and yet may answer the pressing occasions of the present times We therefore out of the experience We have had and for the trust we repose in your wisdoms fidelities and dutifull care of your service And for the experience we have of all great Causes concerning us and our State both as they have relation to Foraine parts abroad and as to our Common-wealth and People at home Ye being persons called by us to be of Our Privy Councel have thought sit amongst those great and important matters which so much concern us in the first and chiefest place to recommend this to your special care and diligence And we do hereby authorise and appoint and strictly will and require you that speedily and seriously you enter into consideration of all the best and speediest ways and means ye can for raising of Monies for the most Important occasions aforesaid UUhich without extreamest hazard to Us our Dominions and People and to our Friends and Allies can admit of no long delay the same to be done by Impositions or oth●rwise as in your wisdoms and best Iudgments ye shall find to be most convenient in a case of this inevitable necessity wherein Form ●nd
a great downfal and may serve I hope in it self for an expiation of my faults Therefore if Mercy and Mitigation be in your Lordships power and no way cross your ends Why should I not hope of your favor and commiseration Your Lordships will be pleased to behold your cheif pattern the King our Soveraign a King of incomparable Clemency and whose heart is instructable for Wisdom and Goodness And your Lordships will remember there sate not these Hundred years before a Prince in your House and never such a Prince whose presence deserveth to be made memorable by Records and Acts mixt of Mercy and Iustice. Your selves are either Nobles and compassion ever beateth in the Veins of Noble Blood or Reverend Prelates who are the Servants of him that would not break the bruised Reed or quench the smoaking Flax. You all sit upon a high stage and therefore cannot but be sensible of the change of humane conditions and of the fall of any from high place Neither will your Lordships forget that there are Vitia temporis as well as Vitia hominis and the beginning of Reformation hath the contrary power to the Pool of Bethesda for that had strength to cure him onely that was first cast in and this hath strength to hurt him onely that is first cast in and for my part I wish it may stay there and go no further Lastly I assure my self your Lordships have a noble feeling of me as a member of your own Body and one that in this very Session had some taste of your loving affections which I hope was not a lightning before the death of them but rather a spark of that grace which now in the conclusion will more appear And therefore my humble suit to your Lordships is That my penitent Submission may be my Sentence the loss of my Seal my punishment and that your Lordships would recommend me to his Majesties Grace and Pardon for all that is past Gods holy Spirit be among you The Parliament not satisfied with this general Acknowledgment do require the Chancellor either to confess the particulars of the Charge or they would descend to proof against him Hereupon he came to an express and plain Acknowledgment even to confess his Servants receipt of a dozen of Buttons as a gift in a Cause depending before him and put himself upon their Lordships Mercy And he further said That he was never noted for an avaritious man and the Apostle saith Coveteousness is the root of all evil and hoped their Lordships did finde him in a state of Grace for that in all particular charges against him there were few or none that were not almost two years old Whereas those that have the habit of corruption do commonly wax worse and worse and for his estate it was so mean and poor That his care was now cheifly to satisfie his Debts The Lords afterwards pronounced him guilty of the Charge exhibited against him and in the presence of the Commons gave Sentence That he should undergo Fine and Ransome and be made incapable to bear office c. This Learned Peer eminent over the Christian World for his many Writings extant in Print was known to be no admirer of Money yet had the unhappiness to be defiled therewith He treasured up nothing either for himself or his family for he both lived and died in debt he was over indulgent to his Servants and connived at their takings and their ways betrayed him to that error they were profuse and expensive and had at command what ever he was master of The gifts taken were for the most part for interlocutory Orders his Decrees were generally made with so much Equity that though gifts rendred him suspected for injustice yet never any Decree made by him was reversed as unjust as it hath been observed by some knowing in our Laws About the same time Sir Henry Yelverton was accused by the Commons who by charging him rendred him the less offender and he thereby had the opportunity to speak that at the Bar which he durst not say in the Tower where he was yet a prisoner upon a late Sentence in the Star-Chamber for passing some Clauses in the City Charter when he was Attorney General not agreeable to His Majesties Warrant The matter charged against him by the Commons was for committing divers persons for not entring into Bonds to restrain their own Trades That he signed Dormant Warrants having no Authority for the same That he advised the Patents of Gold and Silver Thred to be resumed into the Kings hands conceiving the same to be a Monopoly and advised the Patentces to proceed by Contract with the King That Four thousand Quo Warranto's were granted by him touching the Patents of Inns and but two to come to trial That he commenced divers Suits in the Exchequer touching the Gold and Silver Thred but did not prosecute the same Which Charge being read unto him he said He thought himself happy in the midst of His Majesties disfavor that His Majesty was pleased to cast the Grace upon him as to send him to this Honorable House That Innocence hath her present Answer but Wisdom requires time Therefore he made it his humble suit for time to give his further Answer adding withal That the cheif Complaint against him was concerning the two Patents of Gold and Silver Thred Inns and Osteries He said That if he deserved well of His Majesty it was in that matter That the King and Subjects were more abused by that Patent then by any other and that he suffered at that day for opposing that Patent as he took it The King being informed of this passage in his Speech came in person to the House of Peers took notice thereof saying It seemed strange unto him that Sir Henry Yelverton should be questioned here upon any thing save the Patent of Gold and Silver Thred For His Majesty did not conceive that any matter was complained of against him touching the Inns and Osteries whereof he was also examined Touching which Patent Mompesson had made complaint to His Majesty that Yelverton refused to send any Proces of Quo Warranto against a multitude of Innkeepers and His Majesty accepted Yelvertons modest Answer That he misliked those proceedings against his Subjects His Majesty to clear himself did lay open the many former just mislikes which he had against Sir Henry and his gentle proceedings against him for the same And when His Majesty intended to question him Buckingham Lord Admiral besought him not to think of any private wrongs done to his Lordship His Majesty added That in the Examination of the business touching the Charter of London Yelverton had first justified himself by His Majesties Warrant and that by that Warrant he might have given away all London from him yet at length he made a good Submission in the beginning but in the end he said he had not wronged His Majesty in his Prerogative And sith that now Yelverton doth tax His
Majesty that he suffered for his good service done His Majesty requires the Lords who are able to do him Justice to punish Yelverton for his slander Sir Henry Yelverton coming shortly after before the Lords gave his particular Answer to each particular charge in serie temporis and spake moreover as followeth I Cannot but present my self this day before Your Highness and my Lords with much fear with more grief for I am compassed with so many terrors from His Majesty as I might well hide my head with Adam His Lordships meaning Buckingham displeasure wounds me more then the conscience of any these facts yet had I rather die then the Commonwealth should so much as receive a scrach from me I that in none of my actions feared that great man on whom they viz. Sir Edward Villers and Sir Giles Mompesson did depend much less would I fear them who were but his shadow But my most Noble Lords knowing that my Lord of Buckingham was ever at His Majesties hand ready upon every occasion to hew me down out of the honest fear of a Servant not to offend so gracious a Master as His Majesty hath ever been to me I did commit them videlicet the Silkmen And speaking concerning the Patent of Inns he said I cannot herein but bemoan my unhappiness that in the last cause laboring by all lawful means to advance the honest profit of His Majesty and in this with the sight almost of my own ruine to preserve His Majesties honor and the quiet of the people I am yet drawn in question as if I had equally dishonored His Majesty in both When Sir Giles saw I would not be wooed to offend His Majesty in his direction I received a Message by Mr. Emmerson sent me from Sir Giles That I would run my self upon the Rocks and that I should not hold my place long if I did thus withstand the Patent of Inns or to this effect Soon after came Sir Giles himself and like an Herauld at Arms told me to this effect He had a Message to tell me from the Lord of Buckingham that I should not hold my place a moneth if I did not conform my self in better measure to the Patent of Inns for my Lord had obtained it by his Favor and would maintain it by his Power How could I but startle at this Message for I saw here was a great assuming of power to himself to place and displace an Officer I saw my self cast upon two main Rocks either treacherously to forsake the standing His Majesty had set me in or else to indanger my self by a by blow and so hazard my Fortune I humbly beseech your Lordships Nature will struggle when she sees her place and means of living thus assaulted for now it was come to this Whither I would obey His Majesty or my Lord if Sir Giles spake true Yet I resolved in this to be as stubborn as Mordecai not to stoop or pass those gracious Bounds His Majesty had prescribed me Soon after I found the Message in part made good for all the profits almost of my place were diverted from me and turned into an unusual Channel to one of my Lords Worthies That I retained little more then the name of Attorney It became so fatal and so penal that it became almost the loss of a Suit to come to me My place was but as the seat of Winds and Tempests Howbeit I dare say if my Lord of Buchingham had but read the Articles exhibited in this place against Hugh Spencer and had known the danger of placing 〈◊〉 displacing Officers about a King he would not have pursued me with such bitterness But my opposing my Lord in this Patent of Inns in the Patent of Ale-houses in the Irish Customs and in Sir Robert Nantons Deputation of his place in the Court of Wards These have bin my overthrow and for these I suffer at this day in my Estate and Fortune not meaning to say I take it but as I know and for my humble oppositions to his Lordship above Twenty thousand pounds The King hearing of this Speech commanded the Lord Treasurer to acquaint the House of Lords That he understood that Yelverton being called before them the other day as a Delinquent answered not as a Delinquent but as a Judge or accuser of a Member of that House the Lord of Buckingham saying He suffered for the Patent of Inns or to that effect That he was so far from excusing or extenuating of his Offence the last day here that he hath aggravated the same Wherefore His Majesties pleasure is That himself will be judge of what concerns His Majesty for that which concerns the Lord of Buckingham his Lordship hath besought His Majesty that that might be left to the House and so His Majesty leaves that wholly to their Lordships The Lords made an humble Return to His Majesty That forasmuch as he was once pleased to make their House Judge of those words formerly spoken by Sir Henry Yelverton which touched His Majesties Honor that His Majesty will be pleased not to resume the same out of their hands but so far to tender the Priviledges of their House as to continue his first resolution which afterwards the King condescended unto The Lords first examining Emerson who varied in the matter he was examined about proceeded to Sentence Sir Henry Yelverton not upon the Charge exhibited against him by the Commons but for the words spoken by the by and declared That the said Sir Henry Yelverton for his Speeches uttered here in the Court which do touch the Kings Majesty his Honor shall be fined to the King in Ten thousand Marks be imprisoned during the Kings pleasure and make a Submission unto His Majesty And for the scandal committed in these words of his against the Lord Marquess of Buckingham That he should pay him Five thousand Marks and make his Submission As soon as the Judgment was pronounced against him the Lord Marquess of Buckingham stood up and did freely remit him the said Five thousand marks for which Sir Henry humbly thanked his Lordship and the House of Peers agreed to move His Majesty to mitigate Sir Henry Yelvertons Fine and the Prince his Highness offered to move His Majesty therein which accordingly was done and Sir Henry was set at liberty the Duke reconciled to him he afterwards preferred to be a Judge and was esteemed a man Valde eruditus in Lege But the Treaties with the Emperor and the King of Spain were much disrelished Gondomar had raised the peoples fury and was reviled and assaulted in London streets Whereupon the day following the Privy Council commanded the Recorder of London to be careful in the strict Examination of an Insolent and Barbarous affront offered to the Spanish Ambassador and his people for which the King would have exemplary Justice done And forasmuch as His Majesty was informed that there was a fellow already apprehended though not for casting stones or threatning
Temporalty with the Judges opinions 35. An Act for the Kings General Pardon Private Acts. 36. An Act for the Confirmation of Wadham-Colledge in Oxon and the Possessions thereof 37. An Act for the Naturalizing of Philip Burlemacchi 38. An Act for the Naturalizing of Giles Vandeput 39. An Act to enable William Earl of Hereford and Sir Francis Seymor Knight to sell Lands for the paiments of Debts and establishing other Lands 40. An Act for the Naturalizing of Sir Robert Anstrother Sir George Abercromy Knights and Iohn Cragge Doctor of Physick 41. An Act to confirm the Copiholders Estates of Stepney and Hackney according to a Decree in Chancery between the Lord of the Manor and the said Copiholders 42. An Act to confirm an assurance of Lands sold by Sir Thomas Beaumont Knight and his wife to Sir Thomas Cheek Knight 43. An Act to erect a Free-school and Alms-house and House of Correction in Lincolnshire 44. An Act to enable Martin Calthorp to sell Lands for preferment of younger Children and paiment of Debts 45. An Act for setling the Manor of Goodneston and other Lands of Sir Edward Ingram Knight 46. An Act to enable Dame Alice Dudley wife of Sir Robert Dudley Knight to assure the Manor of Killingworth and other Lands to Prince Charls 47. An Act to confirm an Exchange of Lands between Prince Charls and Sir Lewis Watson Knight and Baronet 48. An Act for the setling of the Lands of Anthony Vicount Montague for paiment of his Debts and raising of Portions 49. An Act to enable Sir Richard Lumley Knight to sell Lands for the paiment of his Debts and preferment of Children 50. An Act to confirm a Decree in Chancery made by the consent of the Lord of Painswick in Com. Glouc. and his Customary Tenants there 51. An Act for the Naturalization of Sir Francis Steward Knight Walter Steward James Maxwell William Car and Iames Levingston Esquires 52. An Act for the Naturalization of Iohn Young Doctor of Divinity 53. An Act for the Naturalizing of Iane Murrey Widow and William Murrey Esquire 54. An Act to make good a Conveyance of Little Munden made from Sir Peter Vanlore Knight and Sir Charls Caesar Knight unto Edmond Woodhall Esquire and his heirs 55. An Act to enable Vincent Low to sell Lands for paiment of his Debts 56. An Act to enable Toby Palyvicine to sell Lands for the paiment of Debts and preferment of Children 57. An Act for Naturalizing of Sir Robert Car Knight 58. An Act to confirm the Manor of New-Langport and Seavans and other Lands late being the Inheritance of Sir Henry James Knight in a Premunire convicted unto Martin Lumley Lord Mayor of London Alice Woodriff widow and Edward Cropley c. 59. An Act for Naturalizing of Sir Stephen Leisure 60. An Act for Naturalizing of Iames Marquis of Hamilton 61. An Act for Naturalizing of Sir William Anstrother Knight Doctor Balcanqual and Patrick Abercromy 62. An Act to confirm the Sale of Lands made by Sir Edward Heron Knight unto Bevel Moulsworth Esquire and to enable the said Sir Edward to sell other Lands for paiment of Debts and to settle other Lands upon Robert and Edward Heron. 63. An Act for the Naturalizing of Abigal Little and William Little her son 64. An Act for the etablishing of Lands upon Iohn Mohun Esquire son of Sir Rowland Mohun Knight and Baronet according to the Agreements made between them 65. An Act to enable Edward Alco●k to fell the Manor of Rampton and other Lands 66. An Act to explain a Statute made Anno 13 Eliz. for assuring of Eighty two pounds ten shillings per annum to the Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield for ever out of Manors and Lands thereby assured to Edmund Fisher and his heirs 67. An Act for the establishing of Three Lectures in Divinity according to the Will of Thomas Wettenhall Esquire 68. An Act for the repairing of the River running to Colchester and paving of the Town there 69. An Act to enable Francis Clerk Knight to sell Lands for the paiment of Debts and raising of Portions 70. An Act for altering of Gavelkind-Lands being late the Lands of Thomas Potter Esquire Sir George Rivers Knight and Sir Iohn Rivers Baronet and to settle the Inheritance of them upon Sir Iohn Rivors and his heirs 71. An Act to make the Lands of Thomas Earl of Middlesex subject to the paiment of his Debts 72. An Act for the Sale of the Manor of Abbots-Hall late the Possessions of Sir Iames Pointz deceased that the Monies thereby raised may be distributed amongst his Creditors according to his Last Will. 73. An Act for the Naturalizing of Elizabeth Vere and Mary Vere the Daughters of Sir Horatio Vere Knight This Summer Four Regiments of Foot were raised for the service of the United Provinces to be imployed against the Emperor under the Command of four Noble Colonels the Earls of Oxford Essex and Southampton and the Lord Willougby The Town of Frankendal having been sequestred into the hands of the Archduchess Isabella Clara Eugenia Infanta of Spain for the term of Eighteen moneths and that time now growing to an end being to expire about the middle of October next The King commanded those Lords and others that were Commissioners in that Treaty between his Majesty and the Archduchess to assemble and deliberate what was fit to be done concerning the remanding receiving and ordering of that Town The Commissioners unanimously were of opinion That it was fit for his Majesty both in Honor and Interest to remand it and according to the Capitulation to place therein a Garrison of Fifteen hundred Foot and Two hundred Horse with sufficient Victuals for six moneths and a sufficient quantity of all Munition The Infanta having accorded in the Treaty to give them a passage through the King of Spain's Low-Countries The King approved and resolved to follow the Advice and gave Order to the Council of War to consider and discuss the manner of demanding the Town and the way and means of raising the men and conducting them thither and of maintaining and supplying the Garrison with Munition and all things necessary On the day that Frankendal was to be redelivered Spinola with his Forces marcheth out of the Town and finding none of the King of Great Britains Forces ready to enter it instantly re-enters and takes possession pulls down the King of England's Arms and sets up the King of Spain's Yet did the Noble Spaniard leave standing the Monument of two Brothers fighting and stout Enemies of theirs in opposition of whose valor the Spaniard had gained much honor but overcame them at last The Monument is standing in the Dutch Church in Frankendal upon a fair Tomb with this Inscription In beatissimam memoriam Dom. Generosi Gulielmi Fairfax Anglo-Britanni Honoratissimi Domini Thomae Fairfax de Denton in Com. Ebor. Equitis Aurati filii Cohortis Anglicani Ducis insignis Qui annis natus circiter XXVI post animi plurima edita
attended by all the Servants in Ordinary The day following the Privy-Counsellors to the late King with all the Lords Spiritual and Temporal then about London were in the Council Chamber at Whitehall by Eight of the Clock in the morning ready to go together and present themselves to his Majesty but there came in the mean a Commandment from the King by the Lord Conway and Sir Albertus Morton Principal Secretaries of State to the deceased King that the Lord Keeper of the Great-Seal should be sworn of his Majesties Privy-Council and that he should give the Oath to the Lord President by whom all the rest of the late Kings Council should be sworn Counsellors to his present Majesty The Lord Keeper of the great Seal the Lord President the Lord Arch-bishop of Canterbury the Lord Treasurer of England the Lord Privy-Seal the Duke of Buckingham Lord Admiral of England the Earl of Pembrook Lord Chamberlain the Earl of Montgomery the Earl of Kellye the Earl of Arundel Earl Marshal of England the Lord Viscount Grandison the Lord Conwey the Lord Brook Mr Treasurer Mr Comptroller the Master of the Wards Mr Secretary Morton Mr Chancellor of the Exchequer and the Master of the Rolls were this day sworn accordingly the Lord Keeper did take an Oath apart as Lord Keeper of the Great Seal the Lord Treasurer as Lord Treasurer of England the Lord President as Lord President of the Kings Privy-Council and the Lord Conwey and Sir Albertus Norton as principal Secretaries of State the Lords which were not of his Majesties Privy-Council repaired by themselves to St Iames's and presented themselves to the King and kissed his hand The Council sat immediately and advised of the most important and pressing matters to be offered to the King for his present service and resolved upon these particulars That a Commission be granted to authorize the Great-Seal Privy-Seal and Signet till new ones be prepared also Commissions for authorizng of Judges Justices of Peace Sheriffs and other such Officers for Government that there be a general Proclamation for continuation of Proceedings preservation of Peace and administration of Justice that Letters be prepared for the Ambassadors with foreign Princes to authorize their services to the King that special Messengers be sent unto foreign Princes that the like Proclamations to those of England be sent into Scotland that Commissions be renewed into Ireland to the Deputy and Officers there that the Mint for Coyning of money go on and all things be mannaged by the Officers as then they stood till the Kings pleasure be further known that a Parliament be summoned when the King shall appoint that the Kings pleasure be known concerning the time of his Fathers Funeral and where the Corps shall rest in the mean time as also the time of his Majesties Coronation This being done the whole Council attended the King at St Iames's where the Lord Keeper in the name of all the rest presented their humble thanks that it had pleased his Majesty to have affiance in those that had been Counsellors to his Father to receive them all to be of his Privy-Council the Lord President represented to the King the matters before mentioned which the King allowed and gave order that those of them which required speed should be put in execution and most of the powers he signed presently And first because by the death of the late King the Authorities and powers of the greatest number of Offices and places of Government did cease and fail by the failing of the Soveraign Person from whom the same were derived a Proclamation issued forth signifying his Majesties pleasure that all persons whatsoever who at the decease of the late King were invested in any Office or Place of Government Civil or Martial within the Realms of England and Ireland and namely Presidents Lieutenants Vice-Presidents Judges Justices Sheriffs Deputy Lieutenants Commissaries of Musters Justices of Peace shall continue in their several Offices till his Majesties pleasure were further known In another Proclamation of the same date the King took notice of his Fathers death and that he being his onely Son and undoubted Heir is invested and established in the Crown Imperial of this Realm and all other his Majesties Realms Dominions and Countries with all the Royalties Preeminencies Stiles Names Titles and Dignities to the same belonging and he declared That as he for his part shall by Gods grace shew himself a most benign and gracious Soveraign Lord to all his good Subjects in all their lawfull Suits and Causes so he mistrusteth not but that they on their parts will shew themselves unto him their natural Liege Lord most loving faithfull and obedient Subjects The Council resolved to move the King that his Fathers Funeral might be solemnized within five weeks and within a few dayes after the Ceremonial Nuptials in France and before the Parliament began in England These Resolves the Lord President represented unto the King who accepted of the advices and said he would follow them Moreover he summoned a Parliament to begin the seventeeth of May but by the advice of his Privy-Council Prorogued it to the one and thirtieth of May afterwards to the thirteenth of Iune and then to the eighteenth of the same moneth which Prorogations were occasioned by the Kings going to Dover to receive the Queen April 23. The Body and Herse of King Iames was brought from Theobalds to London being conducted by the Officers of the Guard of the Body all in Mourning every one having a Torch and attended by all the Lords of the Court and great numbers of other persons of quality and was placed in Denmark-House in the Hall of the deceased Queen Anne The seventh of May was the day of Burial the Body and Herse were taken from the said Hall of State and brought in great Pompe and Solemnity to Westminster where the Kings of England use to be interred The new King to shew his Piety towards his deceased Father was content to dispense with Majesty he followed in the Rear having at his right hand the Earl of Arundel at his left the Earl of Pembrook both Knights of the Garter his Train was born up by twelve Peers of the Realm So King Iames who lived in Peace and assumed the title of Peace-maker was peaceably laid in his Grave in the Abby at Westminster King Charles in his Fathers life time was linked to the Duke of Buckingham and now continued to receive him into an admired intimacy and dearness making him Partaker of all his Counsels and Cares and Chief Conductor of his Affairs an Example rare in this Nation to be the Favorite of two succeding Princes The Publick State of Religion and the steering of Church-matters had an early inspection and consultation in the Cabinet Council Bishop Laud who in King Iame's life time had delivered to the Duke a little book about Doctrinal Puritanism now also delivered to the Duke a
lending of the Ships and received fair Answers from them both But the King sent an express and strict Order to Pennington requiring him without delay to put his former Command in Execution for the consigning of the Ship called the Vantguard with all her furniture into the hands of the Marquess D' Effiat assuring the Officers of the Ships that he would provide for their Indempnity and further commanding him to require the Seven Merchants Ships in his name to put themselves into the Service of the French King and in case of backwardness or refusal to use all means to compel them thereunto even to their sinking Upon this Pennington went back to Deep and put the Vantguard into the absolute Power and Command of the French King to be employed in his Service at pleasure and commanded the rest of the Fleet to the like Surrender At the first the Captains Masters and owners refused to yield weighed Anchor and were making away but when Pennington shot they came in again but Sir Ferdinando Gorge came away with the Ship called the Neptune The Companies unanimously declined the Service and quitted the Ships all but one Man who was a Gunner and Pennington hasted to Oxford where the Parliament was Reassembled but as was voiced was there concealed till the Parliament was dissolved On the First of August the Parliament Reassembled at Oxford whether the news of the Ships lent to the French against the besieged Rochellers did quickly flie and exasperate the spirit of that great Assembly against the Duke of Buckingham The Grievances insisted upon were the mis-spending of the Publick Treasure the neglect of guarding the Seas insomuch that the Turks had leisure to land in the Western parts and carry away the Subjects Captives The Commons appointed a Committee to consider of secret Affairs and to examine the Disbursements of the Three Subsidies and the Three Fifteens given to King Iames for the Recovery of the Palatinate and they prepared to assault the Duke Also Mr. Richard Montague was summoned to appear according to the Condition of his Bond and a Committee was appointed to proceed in the further Examination of that business Mr. Montagues Cause was recommended to the Duke by the Bishops of Rochester Oxford and St. Davids as the Cause of the Church of England They shew that some of the Opinions which offended many were no other then the resolved Doctrine of this Church and some of them are curious Points disputed in the Schools and to be left to the liberty of Learned Men to abound in their own sense it being the great fault of the Council of Trent to require a Subscription to School Opinions and the approved Moderation of the Church of England to refuse the apparent Dangers and Errors of the Church of Rome but not to be over-busie with Scholastical Niceties Moreover in the present case they alleage that in the time of Henry the Eighth when the Clergy submitted to the Kings Supremacy the Submission was so resolved That in case of any difference in the Church the King and the Bishops were to determine the Matter in a National Synod and if any other Judge in Matters of Doctrine be now allowed we depart from the Ordinance of Christ and the continual practice of the Church Herewithal they intimated That if the Church be once brought down below her self even Majesty it self with soon be impeached They say further That King Iames in his rare wisdom and judgment approved all the Opinions in this Book and that most of the contrary Opinions were debated at Lambeth and ready to be published but were suppressed by Queen Elizabeth and so continued till of late they received countenance at the Synod of Dort which was a Synod of another Nation and to us no ways binding till received by Publick Authority And they affirm boldly That they cannot conceive what use there can be of Civil Government in the Common-wealth or of External Ministry in the Church if such fatal Opinions as some are which are opposite to those delivered by Mr. Montague be publickly taught and maintained Such was the Opinion of these forenamed Bishops but others of Eminent Learning were of a different Judgment At Oxford in a late Divinity Disputation held upon this Question Whether a Regenerate Man may totally and finally fall from Grace The Opponent urging the Appeal to Caesar the Doctor of the Chair handled the Appellator very roughly saying He was a meer Grammarian a Man that studied Phrases more then Matter That he understood neither Articles nor Homilies or at least perverted both That he attributed he knew not what vertue to the sign of the Cross Dignus Cruce qui asserit and concluded with an Admonition to the Juniors That they should be wary of reading that and the like Books On the Fourth of August the Lords and Commons were commanded to attend his Majesty in Christs-Church Hall in Oxford where he spake unto them in manner following MY Lords and you of the Commons We all remember that from your Desires and Advice my Father now with God brake off those two Treaties with Spain that were then in hand Well you then foresaw that as well for regaining my dispossessed Brothers Inheritance as home defence a War was likely to succeed and that as your Councils had led my Father into it so your assistance in a Parliamentary-way to pursue it should not be wanting That aid you gave him by Advice was for succor of his Allies the guarding of Ireland and the home part supply of Munition preparing and setting forth of his Navy A Council you thought of and appointed for the War and Treasurers for issuing of the Moneys And to begin this Work of your Advice you gave Three Subsidies and as many Fifteens which with speed were levied and by direction of that Council of War in which the preparation of this Navy was not the least disbursed It pleased God at the entrance of this Preparation by your Advice begun to call my Father to his Mercy whereby I entred as well to the care of your Design as his Crown I did not then as Princes do of Custom and Formality Reassemble you but that by your further Advice and Aid I might be able to proceed in that which by your Counsels my Father was engaged in Your love to me and forwardness to further those Affairs you expressed by a Grant of Two Subsidies yet ungathered although I must assure you by my self and others upon credit taken up and aforehand disbursed and far short as yet to set forth that Navy now preparing as I have lately the estimate of those of care and who are still employed about it whose particular of all expences about this preparation shall be given you when you please to take an accompt of it His Majesty having ended his Speech commanded the Lord Conway and Sir Iohn Cook more particularly to declare the present state of Affairs which
the Council That both the English and Dutch Ships designed to block up Dunkirk whilst our Fleet was gone to Spain were dispersed by a sudden storm and that Two and twenty Ships of Dunkirk Men of War having Four thousand Land-soldiers were at liberty to rove up and down and do mischief at Sea Hereupon the Council by their Letters to the Lords Lieutenants of the Counties upon the Seacoasts required that the Trained-Bands be in readiness with compleat Armor and other Furniture to march upon all Alarms to what place soever the necessary defence thereof shall require Also upon intelligence that these Two and Twenty Dunkirkers intended to land their Four thousand men in Ireland in case their design failed as to England Letters were expedited to the Lord Deputy of Ireland to guard those Sea-coasts for that it were alike mischievous if they should land in either Kingdom In the beginning of October the Fleet consisting of Eighty Ships great and small the Anne-Royal a Ship of Twelve hundred Tun being Admiral put forth from Plimouth for the Coasts of Spain with these Regiments aboard the Fleet according as we find it mentioned in an old List viz. The Duke of Buckingham's The Lord Wimbleton's Sir William St. Leger's Serjeant-Major-General and Colonel Burrough's Regiments were shipped in the Admirals Squadron which carried 2093 Seamen and 4032 Land-soldiers The Lord Valentia's Regiment The Earl of Essex's and Colonel Harwood's were shipped in the Vice-Admirals Squadron carrying 1765 Seamen and 3008 Land-soldiers The Earl of Essex was Vice-Admiral and commanded this Squadron Sir Charls Rich his Regiment Sir Edward Conway's and Colonel Regiments were shipped in the Rear-Admirals Squadron carrying 1833 Mariners 2998 Soldiers The Fleet after four days sail was encountred with a furious storm which so dissipated the Ships that of Fourscore no less then Fifty were missing for seven days Afterwards they all came together upon the Coasts of Spain where they found a Conquest ready the Spanish Shipping in the Bay of Cadez the taking whereof was granted feasible and easie and would have satisfied the Voyage both in point of honor and profit This was either neglected or attempted preposterously Then the Army landed and Sir Iohn Burroughs took a Fort from the Spaniard but the Soldiers finding good store of Spanish Wines abused themselves and hazarded the ruine of all had the Enemy known in what condition they were notwithstanding all Commands to the contrary So they were presently shipp'd again and the General putting to Sea intended to wait about Twenty days for the Plate-Fleet which was daily expected from the West-Indies But the evil condition of his Men by reason of a general Contagion enforced him to abandon the hopes of this great Prize So the English having effected nothing returned home with dishonor in November following It gave no small occasion of clamor That a Fleet so well provided and manned should land their men in an Enemies Country and return without some honorable Action But where the fault lay hath not been yet adjudged neither was any ever punished for failing in that duty The General for some time was not admitted into the Kings presence and some of the Colonels of his Army accused him and some Seamen aggravated the Accusation The General was examined before the Council and laid the fault on others in the Fleet who let the King of Spain's Ships pass without fighting them according to Order They on the other hand said they had no Order from their General to fight Thus was there fending and proving which contributed little to salve the dishonor which the Nation sustained by this unprofitable and ill-managed Design Upon the Fleets return to Plimouth in December and Consideration of the present use of the Soldiers therein imployed a Proclamation issued forth to command that no Soldiers of the Fleet should depart from their Colours or be discharged of their Service till the King shall signifie his pleasure how and when he will use their further Service So the Forces that returned from Cades were kept on foot and dispersed into several parts of the Kingdom There was also a strict Commandment That no Subject of this Realm of England shall have intercourse of Trade with any of the Dominions of the King of Spain or the Arch-Dutches of Flanders upon pain of Confiscation both of Ships and Goods that shall be found upon Voyage of Trade into any of the said Dominions Moreover in regard of the Subjects apparent danger and the encouragement of the Enemies of this State by putting Ships to Sea being weakly manned and ill furnished the King ordained that none should set forth any Ship or Pinnace of the burthen of Threescore Tuns or upwards unless they furnish the same with serviceable Muskets and Bandaliers sufficient for the arming of half the number of persons that sail therein together with a quantity of Ammunition answerable to the length of their intended Voyage Furthermore for the instructing and exercising of the Trained-Bands as well Officers as Soldiers by men experienced in Military Exercises The King gave Commandment that divers Low-Countrey Soldiers should be assigned to the several Counties and that the Trained-Bands should be ready at the times appointed for their Direction in their Postures and use of Arms. The Plague still continuing in London and Westminster and the places near adjoyning the King to prevent a general infection had adjourned a part of Michaelmas Term from the Utas thereof to the Fourth Return and afterwards to the Fifth and then the residue of the Term from the City of Westminster as also the Receipt of the Revenue from Richmond to the Town of Reading in Berkshire In which Term a Commission issued forth under the Great Seal for executing the Laws against Recusants according to the Petition of the late Parliament which was read in all the Courts of Judicature at Reading Which Commission together with Pricking of Sir Edward Cook and certain other Gentlemen Sheriffs who had appeared the last Parliament against the Duke and being Sheriffs could not be chosen Parliament-men gave occasion of discourse and hopes of a new Parliament At Hampton Court in December following this ensuing Order was made WHereas Four Articles concerning the Oath used to be taken by the High Sheriffs of Counties were this day presented unto the Board unto which Articles Sir Edward Cook Knight at this present High Sheriff of the County of Bucks Did upon tender of the Oath unto him take Exceptions and sent his Exceptions and the Reasons thereof in writing to Mr. Attorny General who by direction of the Board did attend all the Iudges of England to receive their Advice thereupon and the said Iudges having advised thereof did with one unanimous consent Resolve and so Report to the Lord Keeper That they found no cause to alter the said Oath but onely in one of the said Articles hereafter mentioned It is thereupon this day Ordered by their
Lordships according to the unanimous Advice of all the Iudges of England and his Majesties pleasure signified therein That the First Article propounded viz. You shall do all your pain and diligence to destroy and make to cease all manner of Heresies and Errors commonly called Lollaries within in your Bayliwick from time to time to all your power and assist and be helping to all Ordinaries and Commissioners of the Holy Church and favor and maintain them as oftentimes as you shall be required shall be left out in the Oath to be given to Sir Edward Cook and shall ever hereafter be left out in all Oaths to be given to the High Sheriffs of Counties hereafter And their Lordships do likewise Order according to the unanimous Advice of all the Iudges of England That the other thrée Articles doubted of shall stand in the said Oath to be ministred to the said Sir Edward Cook and to all other High Sheriffs as heretofore hath béen accustomed and that the Lord Keeper do give order to such Officers and Clerks in the Court of Chancery to whom it appertained to make out the Oath for the time to come according to present Order The expectation of a Parliament gave encouragement to the Bishop of Lincoln who yet retained the name of Lord Keeper notwithstanding his Sequestration several moneths before from the presence of the King the Council Table and the custody of the Seal to make an Address to his Majesty for a favorable interpretation of his actions But his carriage towards the Duke at the Parliament at Oxford was fresh in memory where the Bishop told the Duke in Christ-Church upon the Dukes rebuking him for siding against him That he was engaged with William Earl of Pembroke to labor the Redress of the Peoples Grievances and was resolved to stand upon his own Legs If that be your resolution said the Duke Look you stand fast and so they parted and shortly after that he was sequestred though the Seal was not disposed from him till the Thirtieth of October at which time it was given to Sir Thomas Coventry at Hampton-Court who was that day sworn of the Privy Council and sate there and sealed some Writs and afterwards came to the Term at Reading and sate there as Lord Keeper and heard Causes The King being pressed with his own Necessities and the Cry of the Nation against the Fruitless Voyage of Cadiz summoned a Parliament to meet in February and before the time of meeting his Majesty enjoyned the Archbishops and Bishops in both Provinces to proceed against Popish Recusants by Excommunication and other Censures of the Church and not to omit any lawful means of bringing them to Publick Justice especially he recommended to their vigilant care the unmasking and repressing of those who were not professed Papists yet disaffected to the true Religion and kept close their evil and dangerous affection and by secret means and slights did encourage and advance the growth of Popery This Command was seconded by a Proclamation requiring That all Convicted Papists should according to the Laws of this Realm remain confined to their dwelling places or within five miles thereof unless upon special Licences first obtained in Cases necessary Immediately before the Parliament Bishop Laud procured the Duke of Buckingham to sound the King concerning the Cause Books and Tenets of Mr. Richard Montague and understanding by what the Duke collected That the King had determined within himself to leave him to a Tryal in Parliament he said I seem to see a Cloud arising and threatning the Church of England God for his Mercy dissipate it About the same time the King declared his purpose to celebrate the Solemnity of his Coronation on Candlemas-day at the Palace of Westminster and required all persons who by reason of their Offices and Tenures were bound to perform any Duties at the Solemnitie to give their attendance and to be furnished in all respects answerable to an action of so high State according to their places and dignities Wherefore by a Commission under the Great Seal of England Sir Thomas Coventry Lord Keeper of the Great Seal Iames Lord Say High Treasurer of England Edward Earl of Worcester Keeper of the Privy Seal Thomas Earl of Arundel and Surrey Earl Marshal of England William Earl of Pembroke Lord High Chamberlain Edward Earl of Dorset and Sir Randol Crew Cheif Justice of the Common Pleas were authorised to receive and determine the Claims exhibited by any Person concerning Services to be performed at the approaching Coronation And the more to credit the Solemnity the King resolving to make certain of his Servants and other Subjects in regard of their Birth good Service and other Qualities Knights of the Bath Authorised Thomas Earl of Arundel and Surrey and Earl Marshal of England William Earl of Pembroke Lord Chamberlain to perform in his Majesties Name and behalf all the Rites and Ceremonies belonging thereto At the same time Writs were directed to all Sheriffs in the Realm of England and Dominions of Wales commanding them to make Proclamation That all such as had Forty pounds a year or more of Lands or Revenues in their own hands or the hands of Feoffees for their use for the space of Three years and are not yet Knights do at their perils prepare to present themselves in his Majesties Presence by the One and thirtieth of Ianuary to receive the Order of Knighthood Upon the asswaging of the great Pestilence through the Mercy and Goodness of God in withdrawing and almost removing the Scourge the King by His Royal Authority ordained a Publick and General Thanksgiving to be celebrated upon the Nine and twentieth of Ianuary being the Lords day in the Cities of London and Westminster and the places adjacent and on the Nineteenth of February in all other places of the Kingdom the manner and form whereof was prescribed by a Book composed by the Bishops according to his Majesties special Direction The Contagion ceasing the restraint enjoyned to the Citizens of London from resorting to Fairs for a time was taken off The number of those that died this year within and without the Walls of the City of London and in the Liberties and Nine out Parishes from the Sixteenth of December 24. to the Fifteenth of December 25. Was in Total Fifty four thousand two hundred sixty and five whereof of the Plague Thirty five thousand four hundred and seventeen On Candlemas-day King Charls was Crowned Bishop Laud had the cheif hand in compiling the Form of the Coronation and had the honor to perform this Solemnity instead of the late Lord Keeper Williams who through the Kings disfavor was sequestred from this Service which belonged to his place as he was Dean of Westminster Mr. Iohn Cosens as Master of the Ecclesiastical Ceremonies kneeled behinde the Bishop when the Prayers were read and directed the Quire when to answer The Ceremony in going to and all the
his gracious acceptance of his service as in his Letters of November 24. 1622. written as followeth Viz. Your Dispatches are in all points so full and in them we receive so good satisfaction as in this we shall not need to inlarge any further but onely tell you we are well pleased with this diligent and discreet imployment of your endeavors and all that concerneth our service so are we likewise with the whole proceedings of our Ambassador Sir Walter Aston Thus we bid you heartily farewel Newmarke● Novemb. 24 1622. And afterwards his Majesty was likewise pleased in his Letters of 8 Ianuary 1622. a little before our gracious Soveraign Lord the King then Prince his coming into Spain Viz. as followeth Concerning that knotty and unfortunate Affair of the Palatinate to say the truth as things stand I know not what you could have done more then you have done already And whereas it is objected the Palatinate should be lost by the hopes he the said Earl gave by his Letters out of Spain it is an Objection of impossibility for there was nothing left but Mainheim and Frankendale when his first Letters out of Spain could possibly come to his late Majesties hands for he did not begin to Negotiate that business until August 1622. and about that time Heidelberg and all but Mainheim and Frankendale was lost and Mainheim he had saved by his industry had it not been so suddenly delivered as is by his Majesty acknowledged by Letters of 24 November 1622. written thus Viz. And howsoever the Order given to the Infanta for the relief of Mainheim arrived too late and after the Town was yielded to Tilly yet must we acknowledge it to be a good effect of your Negotiation and an Argument of that Kings sincere and sound intention And Frankendale being by the said Earls means once saved was again the second time saved meerly by the said Earls industry and procuring a Letter from the King of Spain dated the second of February 1623. whereupon followed the Treaty of Sequestration which hath since continued And he the said Earl was so far from hindring Succors by any Letter or Counsel of his that he was the Sollicitor and in great part the procurer of most of the Succors that had been sent thither as is formerly set down And when his Royal Majesty that now is and the Duke of Buckingham arrived at the Court of Spain they found the Business of the Palatinate in so fair a way that the Spanish Ministers told them the King should give his late Majesty a Blank in which we might frame our own Conditions and the same he confirmeth unto us now and the like touching this Blank was likewise acknowledged by the Duke of Buckingham in his Speech in Parliament after the return of his Majesty out of Spain And it will appear by the Testimony of Sir Walter Aston and by his and the said Earls Dispatches that the said Earl wanted not industry and zeal in the business insomuch as the last Answer the said Earl procured herein from the King of Spain was fuller then he the said Earl was ordered by his late Majesties latest Letters to insist upon So as by that which hath been alledged the said Earl hopeth your Lordships will be satisfied not onely that he wanted neither will nor industry but that he hath with all true zeal and affection and with his own means faithfully served their Majesties and the Prince Palatine in this Cause And for assurance in that Affair he had all that could be between Christian Princes and if in the said Assurances there hath been any deceit as by the said Article is intimated which he never knew nor believed he referred it to God to punish their wickedness For betwixt Princes there can be no greater Tye then their Words their Hands and Seals all which he procured in that behalf and both the said Earl and Sir Walter Aston were so confident that the business would be ended to his late Majesties satisfaction that in a joynt Dispatch to his late Majesty of 24 November 1623. after his now Majesties return into England they wrote as followeth Viz. We hope that your Majesty may according to your desire signified to me the Earl of Bristol by the Letters of October 8 give to your Majesties Royal Daughter this Christmas the comfortable news of the near expiring of her great troubles and sufferings as unto the Prince your Son the congratulation of being arrived to a most excellent Princess And having thus given your Lordships an Accompt of his Proceedings touching the Palatinate he will by your Lordships good favors proceed to the other part of that Charge concerning the Marriage And first touching his hopes and assurances that he is charged to have given to his late Majesty and Ministers of State here in England of the Spaniards real proceedings in the said Match when he said he knew they never meant it He saith he never gave any hopes of their proceedings but such and the very same that were first given to him without adding or diminishing neither could he have done otherwise either with honesty or safety And he further saith That the hopes he gave were not upon any Intelligence but as well in that of the Match as the other of the Palatinate his Advertisements were grounded upon all the Assurances both of Words and Writing that could possibly pass between Christians as will be made evidently appear by his Dispatch of 9 September 1623 which he humbly desires may be read if the length of it may not displease The substance being to shew all the Engagements and Promises of the King of Spain that he really intended the Match And the causes why the Conde Olivares pretended to the Duke of Buckingham that the Match was not formerly meant was onely thereby to free himself from Treating any longer with the said Earl to the end that he might treat for larger Conditions in point of Religion with the said Duke The said Conde Olivares taking advantage of having the Person of his Majesty then Prince in his hands And with this Dispatch the said Earl acquainted his Majesty that now is in Spain before he sent it And by this Dispatch the Earl doubteth not but that it will appear to this Honorable Court that whilest the Treating of this business was in hand he proceeded in that not onely with care and industry but with some measure of vigilancy And for clearing an Objection that hath been alleadged that the Match was never meant before the Dukes coming into Spain nor after the Earl craveth leave to set down some few Reasons of many which caused him to believe that the said Match was and had been really meant and that it was so conceived by both their Majesties and the King of Spain and their Ministers on both sides For first The Duke of Buckingham certified his late Majesty that the business of the Marriage was brought to a happy Conclusion whereupon
things better yet certainly the state and condition of the several parts for which we serve their dispositions and inclinations their apprehensions their fears and jealousies are best known unto us and here I pray your Lordships to give me leave to use the Figure called Reticentia that is to insinuate and intimate more then I mean to speak Our chief and principal end in this Parliament is to make up all Rents and Breaches between the King and his Subjects to draw them and knit them together from that distance whereof the world abroad takes too much notice to work a perfect union and reconciliation how unproperly and unapt at this time this Addition will be in respect of this end we cannot but foresee and therefore shun it and do resolve that it is neither agreeable to the Persons of such Counsellors of whom we are nor answerable to that Love and Duty which we owe to his Majesty to hazard an end of such unspeakable consequence upon the admittance of this Addition into our Petition whereof as we have shewed the omission at this time can by no means harm the Kings Prerogative the expression may produce manifold inconveniences and therefore since this admittance of your Lordships Addition into our Petition is incoherent and incompatible with the body of the same since there is no necessary use of it for the saving of the Kings Prerogative since the moderation of our Petition deserveth your Lordships cheerful conjunction with us since this Addition is unseasonable for the time and inconvenient in respect of the place where your Lordships would have it inserted and lastly may prove a disservice to his Majesty I conclude with a most affectionate Prayer to your Lordships to conclude with the House of Commons in presenting this Petition to his Sacred Majesty as it is without this Addition Monday 26. of May The Lord Keeper made this Speech at a Conference Gentlemen YE that are Knights Citizens and Burgesses of the House of Commons I have many times this Parliament by Command from my Lords declared the great zeal and affection which my Lords have to maintain and nourish the good Concurrence and Correspondency which hath hitherto continued between both Houses that there might be a happy issue in this great business for the common good of the King and Kingdom Now that which I have to say this day from my Lords is to let you know this fair proceeding is not a profession of words onely but really and indeed concerning the Petition which hath been long in agitation as the weight of the cause required since the last Conference my Lords have taken it into their serious and instant consideration and at length are faln upon a Resolution which I am to acquaint you with The Lords have unanimously agreed with you in omnibus and have voted that they will joyn with you in your Petition with the onely alterations of the word means to be put in stead of the word pretext and for the word unlawful to be put out and in place thereof to adde not warrantable by the Laws and Statutes of the Realm which two alterations your selves consented unto So that concerning this business there remains nothing now but that ye having the Petition in your hands will if ye have not already vote it as they have done and so prepare it for his Majesty and my Lords will take order that the King be moved for a speedy access to present the same to his Majesty And after some pause he said There rests one thing which my Lords have commanded me to adde that in regard this Petition toucheth upon certain Charges raised by the Lords Lieutenants and other Persons many times for good use for the service and safety of the Kingdom That ye take it into your Care and Consideration and to provide a Law for assessing of such Charges as the occasion of the time shall require The Lords and Commons being thus happily accorded the Petition with the aforesaid amendments was read in the House two several times together Then it was Voted upon question and that it should be ingrossed and read the third time and the House to sit in the afternoon till it was ingrossed and read and ordered to be presented to the King to which there was not a negative Vote And the Bill of Subsidie was also read the second time and committed Wednesday 28 May the Lords and Commons had a Conference about the maner of delivery of the Petition and Sir Edward Cook reported That their Lordships were agreed that no Addition or Preface be used to the King but that the Petition be preferred to his Majesty by command of the Lords and Commons and his Majesty be desired that to the content of his People he would be pleased to give his gracious Answer in full Parliament About this time Mr. Rouse brought in a Charge against Doctor Ed. Manwaring which some days after was seconded with a Declaration Mr. Speaker I Am to deliver from the Committee a Charge against Mr. Manwaring a Preacher in Divinity but a man so Criminous that he hath turned his Titles into Accusations for the better they are the worse is he that dishonors them Here is a great Charge that lies upon him it is great in it self and great because it hath many great Charges in it Serpens qui serpentem devorat fit draco his Charge having digested many Charges into it becomes a Monster of Charges The main and great one is this Plot and Practise to alter and subvert the Frame and Fabrick of this Estate and Commonwealth This is the great one and it hath others in it that gives it more light To this end 1. He labors to infuse into the Conscience of his Majesty the perswasion of a power not bounding it self with Laws which King James of famous Memory calls in his Speech to the Parliament Tyranny yea Tyranny accompanied with Perjury 2. He endeavors to perswade the Conscience of the Subjects that they are bound to obey Commands illegal yea he damns them for not obeying them 3. He robs the Subjects of the propriety of their Goods 4. He brands them that will not lose this propriety with most scandalous Speeches and odious Titles to make them both hateful to Prince and People so to set a division between the Head and the Members and between the Members themselves 5. To the same end not much unlike to Faux and his fellows he seeks to blow up Parliaments and Parliamentary Powers The fifth being duly viewed will appear to be so many Charges and they make up all the great and main Charge a mischievous Plot to alter and subvert the frame and government of this State and Common-wealth And now though you may be sure that Mr. Manwaring leaves us no propriety in our Goods yet he hath an absolute propriety in this Charge here himself making up his own Charge Here he read several Passages out of his Book and then
the security of the River wherefore the Regiments then remaining in several of the States Garrison Towns which were reformed out of four Regiments under the Command of Sir Charles Morgan and supposed to consist of two thousand men were designed for this employment But in regard that by the capitulations at the rendring of Stoade these souldiers were first to touch in England before they could engage in War against the Emperour they were appointed to come to Harwitch and to saile thence to Luck●●a● under the command of their former General and by reason of the absence of the English Fleet upon the service of Rotchel the States and the Prince of Orange were desired to accommodate them with Ships of convoy in crossing the Seas But a while after the King considering that the six months wherein that Regiment was bound not to serve against the Emperour were near expiring and the Winter approaching which by foul weather and contrary winds might expose both men and Ships to great danger in their crossing the Seas to England and cause unnecessary charge commanded Sir Charles Morgan to forbear to touch at Harwitch but to shape his course by the nearest straightest way from Holland to Luckstat and to stay at the place of imbarquing so many days as with the time which will be taken up in their passage may accomplish the full six months Moreover these Reformed Regiments brought from Stoade being found upon their mustering fourteen hundred the King made a supply of six hundred more by borrowing six or eight men out of every Company serving in the States pay under the conduct of the Lord Vere the season of the year not permitting to rely upon new recruits from England for which he engaged his royal word to the States and the Prince of Orange that for every man they lent him he would send them two as soon as his forces return from Rochel Touching the Horse levied in Germany and intended as was said to be transported into England about the last Session of Parliament the Privy Councel now wrote to Dalbeere upon certain overtures made by the King of Sweden and the Duke of Savoy to receive them into their pay and service that he might dispose of the said Cavalry to those Princes being his Majesties friends and Allies with condition that his Majesty be no further charged with their pay transportation or entertainment in any manner whatsoever After the death of the Duke the King seemed to take none to favour so much as Dr. Laud Bishop of London to whom he sent many gracious messages and also writ unto him with his own hand the which contained much grace and favour and immediately afterwards none became so intimate with his Majesty as the said Bishop BY Orders from the Bishop there were then entred in the Docket Book several Conge D'esliers and Royal assents for Dr. May to be Bishop of Bath and Wells for Doctor Corbet to be Bishop of Oxford and for Samuel Harsenet then Bishop of Norwitch to be Arch-Bishop of York In the University of Oxford Bishop Laud bore the sway The Lord Chancellour VVilliam Earl of Pembrook commiting his power into his hands And this year he framed the Statutes for the reducing and limiting the free Election of Proctors which before as himself said were Factious and Tumultuary to the several Colledges by course The meeting of the Parliament appointed to be the 20. of Octob. was by Proclamation the first day of that moneth Prorogued to the 20. of Ianu. following VVhilst Felton remained a Prisoner at London great was the resort of people to see the man who had committed so bold a murder others came to understand what were the Motives and Inducements thereunto to which the man for the most part answered That he did acknowledge the Fact and condemned himself for the doing thereof Yet withall confessed he had long looked upon the Duke as an evil Instrument in the Common-wealth and that he was convinced thereof by the Remonstrance of Parliament VVhich considerations together with the instigation of the Evil One who is always ready to put sinfull motions into speedy Actions induced him to do that which he did He was a person of a little Stature of a stout and revengeful spirit who having once received an injury from a Gentleman he cut off a piece of his little finger and sent it with a challenge to the Gentleman to fight with him thereby to let him know that he valued not the exposing of his whole body to hazard so he might but have an opportunity to be revenged Afterwards Felton was called before the Councel where he confessed much of what is before mentioned concerning his Inducement to the Murder the Councel much pressed him to confesse who set him on work to do such a bloody act and if the Puritans had no hand therein he denyed they had and so he did to the last that no person whatsoever knew any thing of his intentions or purpose to kill the Duke that he revealed it to none living Dr. Laud Bishop of London being then at the Councel Table told him if he would not confess he must go to the rack Felton replyed if it must be so he could not tell whom he might nominate in the extremity of torture and if what he should say then must go for truth he could not tell whether his Lordship meaning the Bishop of London or which of their Lordships he might name for torture might draw unexpected things from him after this he was asked no more questions but sent back to prison The Council then fell into Debate whether by the Law of the Land they could justifie the putting him to the Rack The King being at Councel said before any such thing be done let the advice or the Judges be had therein whether it be Legal or no and afterwards his Majesty the 13. of Novemb. 4. Car. propounded the question to Sr. Tho. Richardson Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas to be propounded to all the Justices Viz. Felton now a prisoner in the Tower having confessed that he had killed the Duke of Buckingham and said he was induced to this partly for private displeasure and partly by reason of a Remonstrance in Parliament having also read some Books which he said defended that it was lawful to kill an Enemy to the Republique the question therefore is whether by the Law he might not be Racked and whether there were any Law against it for said the King if it might be done by Law he would not use his Prerogative in this Point and having put this Question to the Lord chief Justice the King commanded him to demand the resolution of all the Judges First the Justices of Serjeants Inn in Chancery Lane did meet and agree that the King may not in this case put the party to the Rack And the fourteenth of November all the Justices being assembled at Serjeants Inn in Fleetstreet
Laud look to thy self be assured thy life is sought as thou art the fountain of wickedness repent of thy monstrous sins before thou be taken out of the world and assure they self neither God nor the world can endure such a vile Counsellor or whisperer to live The other was as bad against the L. Treasurer Weston The King purposing to proceed against the Members of the House of Commons who were committed to Prison by him in the Star-Chamber caused certain Questions to be proposed to the Judges upon the 25 of April WHereupon all the Judges met at Sergeants-Inne by command from his Majesty where Mr. Atturney proposed certain Questions concerning the offences of some of the Parliament-men committed to the Tower and other prisons at which time one Question was proposed and resolved viz. That the Statute of 4 H. 8.8 intituled An Act concerning Richard Strode was a particular Act of a Parliament and extended onely to Richard Strode and to those persons that had joyned with him to prefer a Bill to the House of Commons concerning Tynners And although the Act be private and extendeth to them alone yet it was no more then all other Parliament-men by priviledge of house ought to have viz. Freedom of speech concerning those matters debated in Parliament by a Parliamentary course The rest of the Questions Mr. Atturney was wished to set down in writing against another day Upon Munday following all the Judges met again and then Mr. Atturney proposed these Questions 1. Whether if any Subject hath received probable Information of any Treason or treacherous attempt or intention against the King or State that Subject ought not to make known to the King or his Majesties Commissioners when thereunto he shall be required what Information he hath received and the grounds thereof to the end the King being truly informed may prevent the danger And if the said Subject in such Case shall refuse to be examined or to answer the Questions which shall be demanded of him for further inquiry and discovery of the truth whether it be not a high contempt in him punishable in the Star-Chamber as an offence against the general Iustice and Government of the Kingdom Sol. The resolution and answer of all the Justices That it is an offence punishable as aforesaid so that this do not concern himself but another nor draw him to danger of Treason or contempt by his answer 2. Whether it be a good answer or excuse being thus interrogated and refusing to answer to say That he was a Parliament-man when he received this Information and that he spake thereof in the Parliament-house and therefore the Parliament being now ended he refused to answer to any such Questions but in the Parliament-house and not in any other place Sol. To this the Judges by advise privately to Mr. Atturney gave this Answer That this excuse being in Nature of a Plea and an errour in judgement was not punishable until he were over-ruled in an orderly manner to make another answer and whether the party were brought in Ore tenus or by Information for this Plea he was not to be punished 3. Whether a Parliament-man committing an offence against the King or Council not in a Parliament way might after the Parliament ended he punished or not Sol. All the Judges una voce answered He might if he be not punished for it in Parliament for the Parliament shall not give priviledge to any contra morem Parliamentarium to exceed the bounds and limits of his place duty And all agreed That regularly he cannot be compelled out of Parliament to answer things done in Parliament in a Parliamentary course but it is otherwise where things are done exorbitantly for those are not the Acts of a Court. 4. Whether if one Parliament-man alone shall resolve or two or three shall covertly conspire to raise false slanders and rumours against the Lords of the Council and Iudges not with intent to question them in a Legal course or in a Parliamentary way but to blast them and to bring them to hatred of the people and the Government in contempt be punishable in the Star-Chamber after the Parliament is ended Sol. The Judges resolve that the same was punishable out of Parliament as an offence exorbitant committed in Parliament beyond the office and besides the duty of a Parliament-man There was another Question put by Mr. Atturney viz. Whether if a man in Parliament by way of digression and not upon any occasion arising concerning the same in Parliament shall say The Lords of the Council and the Judges had agreed to trample upon the Liberty of the Subject and the priviledges of Parliament he were punishable or not The Judges desired to be spared to make any answer thereunto because it concerned themselves in particular The next day Mr. Atturny put the Judges another Case It is demanded of a Parliament-man being called Ore tenus before the Court of Star-Chamber being charged that he did not submit himself to examination for such things as did concern the King and the Government of the State and were affirmed to be done by a third person and not by himself if he confess his hand to that refusal and make his excuse and plead because he had priviledg of Parliament Whether the Court will not over-rule this plea as erronious and that he ought to make a further answer It is the justest way for the King and the party not to proceed Ore tenus because it being a point in Law it is fit to hear Counsel before it be over-ruled and upon an Ore tenus by the Rules of Star-Chamber Counsel ought not to be admitted and that it would not be for the Honor of the King nor the safety of the subject to proceed in that manner Pasca 5 Car. upon a Habeas Corpus of this Court to bring the body of William Stroud Esq with the cause of his imprisonment to the Marshal of the Kings Bench It was returned in this manner That Mr. William Stroud was committed under my custody by vertue of a certain Warrant under the hands of twelve of the Lords of the Privy-Council of the King the tenor of which Warrant followeth in these words YOu are to take knowledge that it is his Majesties pleasure and commandment that you take into your custody the Body of William Stroud Esq and keep him close prisoner till you shall receive other order either from his Majesty or this Board for so doing this shall be your Warrant Dated this 2 of April 1629. And the direction of the Warrant was To the Marshal of the Kings Bench or his Deputy He is also detained in prison by vertue of a Warrant under his Majesties hand the tenor of which Warrant followeth in these words C.R. WHereas you have in your custody the Body of William Stroud Esq by Warrant of Our Lords of our Privy-Council by Our special Command you are to take notice that this
commitment was for notable contempts by him committed against Our Self and Our Government and for stirring up sedition against Us for which you are to detain him in your custody and to keep him close prisoner until Our pleasure be further known concerning his deliverance Given at Greenwich the 7 of May 1629. in the 5 yeer of Our Reign The direction being To the Marshal of Our Bench for the time being hae sunt causae captionis detentionis praedicti Gulielmi Stroud And upon another Habeas Corpus to the Marshal of the Houshold to have the Body of Walter Long Esq in Court it was returned according as the Return of Mr. Stroud was Mr. Ask of the Inner-Temple of Counsel for Mr. Stroud and Mr. Mason of Lincolns-Inn of Counsel for Mr. Long argued against the insufficiency of the Return which with the Arguments of the Kings Counsel we here forbear to mention lest it be too great a diversion to the Reader from the Historical part yet those and other Arguments we have nevertheless postponed at the end of this first Volume for the benefit of the Students of the Law which course as to Arguments in Law wherein the Prerogative of the one hand and Liberty and Propertie of the other hand are concerned we purpose to observe in our next and other Volumes as matter of that nature falls out in series of Time The seventh of May an Information was ex●ibited in the Star-Chamber which because it is a remarkable Proceeding we give you here at large Iovis Septimo die Maii Anno Quinto Ca. R. To the Kings most excellent Majesty HUmbly sheweth and informeth unto Your most excellent Majesty Sir Robert Heath Knight Your Majesties Attorney General for and on Your Majesties behalf That whereas by the Ancient and Fundamental Laws of this Kingdom the high Court of Parliament consisteth of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal in the Lords House and of the Knights Citizens and Burgesses in the Commons House of Parliament and those two Houses thus composed do together make up that great and honourable Body whereof Your most excellent Majesty as the supreme Soveraign is the head and whereas the Power of summoning and assembling of Parliaments and of continuing proroguing adjourning and dissolving thereof within this Realm at Your good pleasure is the undoubted Right of your Majesty and the Liberty and Freedom of Speech which the Members of the said Houses of Parliament have according to the Priviledges of those several Houses to debate consult and determine of those things which are propounded amongst them is and ever hath been and ought to be limited and regulated within the bounds of Moderation and Modesty and of that Duty which Subjects owe to their Soveraign and whereas Your Majesty for many weighty Causes and for the general Good and Defence of the Church and State of this Your Kingdom lately summoned a Parliament to be holden at Your City of Westminster the seventeenth day of March in the third year of Your Majesties Reign which continued from thence by prorogation until the twentieth day of Ianuary last from which day until the twenty fifth day of February following the said Houses continued sitting And although the great part of the House of Commons being zealous of the Common Good did endeavour to have effected those good things for which they were called thither yet between the said twentieth day of Ianuary and the said twenty fifth day of February by the malevolent Disposition of some ill-affected Members of the said House sundry Diversions and Interruptions were there made and many Jealousies there unjustly raised and nourished to the disturbance of those orderly and Parliament proceedings which ought to have been in so grave a Council During which time of the said last meeting in Parliament as aforesaid so it is may it please your most excellent Majesty that Sir Iohn Elliot Knight then and all the time of the said Parliament being one of the Members of the said Commons House wickedly and malitiously intending under a feigned Colour and Pretence of debating the necessary Affairs of the present estate to lay a scandal and unjust Aspersion upon the right honorable the Lords and others of your Majesties most honourable Privy-Council and upon the reverend Judges and your Counsel learned and as much as in him lay to bring them into the hatred and ill opinion of the people after the said twentieth day of Ianuary and before the said twenty fifth day of February last did openly and publickly in the said House of Commons falsly and malitiously affirm That your Majesties Privy-Council all your Judges and your Counsel learned had conspired together to trample under their feet the Liberties of the said Subjects of this Realm and the priviledges of that House And further so it is may it please your most excellent Majesty that when your Majesty upon the twenty fifth day of February had by Sir Iohn Finch Knight then Speaker of the said house of Commons signified your Royal pleasure to the said house that the said house of Commons should be instantly adjourned until the second day of March then following he the said Sir Iohn Elliot and Denzil Holles Esquire Benjamin Valantine Gent. Walter Longe Esquire William Corriton Esquire William Strode Esquire Iohn Selden Esquire Sir Miles Hobert and Sir Peter Hayman Knights all Members at that time of the said Commons house conceiving with themselves that your Majesty being justly provoked thereto would speedily dissolve that Parliament They the said Sir Iohn Elliot Denzil Holles Benjamin Valentine Walter Longe William Corriton William Strode Iohn Selden Sir Miles Hobert and Sir Peter Hayman and every of them by unlawful Confederacie and Combination between them in that behalf before had did malitiously resolve agree and conspire how and by what means before that Parliament should be dissolved they might raise such false and scandalous rumours against your Majesties Government and your Counsellours of Estate attending your person that thereby as much as in them lyeth they might disturb the happy Government of this Kingdom by and under your Majesty interrupt the course of traffique and trade discourage your Merchants and raise Jealousies and Suspitions in the hearts of your people that the Sincerity of the true Religion professed and established in this Kingdom was neglected and in pursuance of this their Resolution and Confidence aforesaid the said Sir Iohn Elliot with the privitie and consent of the said Denzil Holles and all other the said confederates did prepare a paper or writing wherein he had written or caused to be written divers false and scandalous Assertions touching your Majesties Government and touching the persons of divers of your Privy-Council which he and they resolved and conspired and agreed should be delivered into the said house of Commons and there publickly read to the wicked and seditious intents and purposes aforesaid and not with any purpose or opinion that those things that were therein contained if
sustained and undergone by him for his service done to the Common-wealth in the Parliament of tertio Caroli Resolved c. That the sum of five thousand pounds shall be assigned for the dammages losses sufferings and imprisonment sustained and undergone by Mr. Strode late a member of this House deceased for service done by him to the Common-wealth in the Parliament of tertio Caroli Resolved c. That Mr. Benjamin Valentine shall have the sum of five thousand pounds paid unto him for the dammages losses sufferings and imprisonments sustained and undergone by him for his service done to the Common-wealth in the Parliament of tertio Caroli Resolved c. That the sum of five hundred pounds shall be bestowed and disposed of for the erecting a Monument to Sir Miles Hobert a Member of the Parliament of tertio Caroli in memory of his sufferings for his service to the Common-wealth in that Parliament of tertio Caroli Resolved c. That Mr. Samuel Vassell shall have the sum of ten thousand four hundred forty five pounds twelve shillings two pence paid him for his losses and dammages sustained for denying to pay Tunnage and Poundage not granted by Act of Parliament in pursuance and obedience to a Declaration and Vote of this House Resolved c. That this House doth declare that they will in due time take Mr. Vassell into further consideration for his imprisonment and personall sufferings Ordered That it be recommitted to the Committee who brought in this Report to consider how the severall sums of mony this day ordered to be paid for dammages to the severall Members and others before named for their sufferings in the service of the Common-wealth may be raised FINIS AN INDEX Alphabetically digested relating to the Principal Persons and Matters contained in this Book A. ABbot Archbishop his advice concerning the Palatinate War p. 12 In disgrace at Court p. 61. his Letter to the King against Toleration of Popery p. 85. Still in disfavor p. 435. A Commission to sequester him ●b his Narrative at large containing the true cause of his being sequestred from p. 438. to 461. His Speech concerning the Petition of Right p. 552 Abbot Doctor p. 62 Acts passed in Parliament p. 152 195 644 Alford Master p. 568 Allured Master his Letter to the Duke p. 91. Another concerning the Duke p. 621 Ambassadors private Instructions p. 18 Anhault Prince made General of the Bohemians p. 14 Arminians p. 62 111 177 180 181 479 Arundel Earl p. 368 c. Ashley Serjeant questioned for words p. 552 Aston Sir Walter p. 14 60 106 107 113 114 Le Assembli des notables c. p. 691. And p. 14. Appendix Aske Mr. His Argument for Master Stroud p. 18. Appendix B. BAcon Lord Chancellor p. 28 29 31 162 Barkley Serjeant his Argument against Mr. Stroud Appendix p. 21 Barkshire Earl p. 376 Barons of the Exchequer sent unto about Merchants g●ods p. 666 667 Beecher Sir William p. 430 Bethlem Gabor assists the Bohemians p. 12 Bohemians vide Palatinate Book of Bounty prohibited p. 417 Bramston Serjeant upon the Habeas Corpus p. 463 Bristol vide Digby Buckingham writes unto Gundamor of King James dissatisfaction about the Palatines War p. 16. Goes with the Prince into Spain p. 76. Made Duke p. 78. A Letter sent to him from Mr. Allured p. 91. His Narrative to both Houses of Parliament p. 119. The truth thereof attested by the Prince p. 16. The Popes Letter to him p. 80. His head demanded by the Spanish Ambassador p. 126. The Duke is justified of both Houses ibid. And by King James who called him his disciple p. 127. Is accused again by the Spanish Ambassador p. 144 Renders an account in Parliament of the Fleet p. 190. And also speaks on his own behalf p. 191. Queries in Parliament concerning the Duke p. 221. Sir John Elliot concerning the Duke p. 224. The Kings Speech on behalf of the Duke p. 225. Lord Keeper to the same purpose p. 227. The Duke explains the Kings and the Lord Keepers Speech in Parliament p. 229. And renders an account of his Negotiation in the Low Countreys and elswhere p. 231. Is vindicated by the Lord Conway p. 235. The Commons present a Remonstrance against him p. 247. Private advice given him p. 250. The Dukes answer to a Message from the Commons p. 251. Articles exhibited against him by Bristol p. 266. The Kings Message on behalf of the Duke against Bristol p. 270. Impeached by the Commons p. 307. managed at a Conference by Eight Members p. 306 307 308 c. Private suggestions on behalf of the Duke p. 360. The Kings Speech on his behalf p. 361. A Message from the Commons against him p. 361. His Speech against them p. 367. Sir Dudley Carlton concerning him p. 362 363. Dissatisfied at the release of Sir John Elliot p. 365. Sir John Elliots explanation concerning him p. 366. Is chosen Chancellor of Cambridge p. 375. His Letter to that University p. 377. The Kings Letter on his behalf p. 378. His Speech in Parliament before he gave in his Answer p. 379. His Plea and Answer to the Impeachment p. 380 c. The King prefers an Information against him in Star-Chamber p. 417. Sets sail with the Fleet p. 429. Lands his Army at the Isle of Rhee p. 430. And had a hot encounter with the French p. 431. Omits to take in the little Fort ibid. Lays siege to the Cittadel at St. Martins ibid. Retreats with the Army from Rhee p. 469. Declared cause of all grievances p. 615. Desires to clear himself concerning some words supposed to be spoken by him p. 639. And charges one Melvin for speaking words against him ibid. Is slain at Portsmouth p. 647. The King receives news of his Death ibid. Burlacy Sir John p. 15 Burroughs Captain p. 15 40 Burroughs Sir John slain at Rhee p. 200 C. CAlthrop Mr. p. 464. Appendix 49 Carlile Earl p. 173 Carlton Sir Dudley p. 76.362 363 Carmarthen Mr. his Answer about Customs p. 668 Cautionary Towns in the Netherlands delivered up p. 3 Chambers Mr. questioned at the Council and committed p. 651. Brings his Habeas Corpus ibid. is bailed p. 652. his Goods seised on for not paying of Customs p. 653. A Writ of Replevin denied him ibid. Proceedings in Star-Chamber against him p. 680. His Sentence p. 681. His submission tendred p. 682. His refusal thereof p. 683. His Plea in the Exchequer against the jurisdiction of the Court of Star-Chamber ibid. Brought upon Habeas Corpus p. 686. His Petition to the long Parliament p. 687. His Death p. 689 Charls Prince his Letter to Philip the Fourth of Spain about the Match p. 59. Goes disguised into Spain p. 76. Had a sight of the Princess Henrietta Maria as the passed through France ibid. His reception and entertainment in Spain p. 77. Endeavors used to make him change his Religion p. 78. The Popes Letter to him ibid. His Answer thereunto p. 82. Swears to
in writing against the Sermon Bishop Laud is employed to Answer these Objections King Iames was a long time offended with Bishop Laud. He was advance by Bishop Williams Bishops of Durham and Bathe sworn of the Privy Council Mr. Murrey brings the Answer to the Archbishops Objections The Archbishop is not suff●red to see the Writing but Mr. Murrey reads it Sibthorps Sermons Licenced by the Bishop of London Mr. Selden The Duke presseth his Majesty to have the Archbishop sent away before he set to Sea The Archbishop commanded to withdraw The Lord Conway tells the Archbishop the reason why he is commanded to retire The Archbishop writes to the Lord Conway to know if his Majesty will give him his choice of two houses to retire to The Lord Conway 's Answer The reason why the Duke was thought to be offended with the Archbishop The Archbishop accustomed to Hospitality King Iames injoyned the Archbishop to live like an Archbishop The Duke was not pleased that Sir Dudley Diggs frequented the Archbishops house The Archbishop was Tutor to Sir Dudley Digs at Oxford The Duke was offended that Sir Thomas Wentworth frequented the Archbishops House The Archbishop commanded to meddle no more in the High Commission Commendations of the High Commission Court The High Commissioners chargeable to the Archbishop The Archbishops infirmity permitted him not to come to the Star-chamber or Council-Table The Archbishops observation concerning the rise of the Duke Various Reports concerning the Army at Rhee A further Supply preparing for Rhee and to be conveyed thither by the Earl of Holland The Citadel at Rhee relieved Sir Iohn Burroughs slain Toras sends intelligence to the King of France The Rochellers at last declare for England A Treaty for Surrender between the Duke and Toras The Citadel reliev'd again A Retreat resolved on Sobiez against it The Citadel stormed The Army retreats The Enemy engageth the Rear of the Army Several opinions concerning this Expedition to Rhe. The misfortune of Rhee-Expedition causeth a clamor in the Nation A List of Arrearages for freight of ships and Sea-mens wages Anne-Royal Repulse Assurance Nonsuch Waltspite Adventure Triumph Victory S. George S. Andrew Rainbow Vantguard Red-Lion S. Esperite Gard-Land Convecline Antelop Entrance Sir Robert Cotton's Advice touching the present state of affairs A resolution to call a Parliament Order of the Council to set at liberty the Gentry imprisoned for the Loan-money A Parliament summoned A Commission for Impo●itions Thirty thousand pounds paid to Burlemach to be returned by Bill of Exchange to raise Forein Forces Recusants taken at Clerkenwell A Letter from a Jesuite concerning the ensuing Parliament The King's Speech at the opening of the Parliament The Lord Keepers Speech Sir Iohn Finch being chosen Speaker made this Speech to his Majesty The Speech without doors Grand Committees setled Petition for a fast Debates touching Grievances Sir Francis Seimour Sir Thomas Wentworth Sir Benjamin Rudyard acts the part of a Moderator Sir Edward Cook Mr Secretary Cook Sir Robert Philips * Sibthorp and Manwaring * Sommersetshire * Scots Secretary Cook moves for Supply for his Majesty In Clerkenwel Thursday March 15. Mr Secretary Cook tenders Propositions touching Supply The House turned into a Committee Habeas Corpus and the Liberty of the Subject debated Mr Creswel Sir Robert Philips Sir Edward Cook Judge Whitlock in justification of the Proceedings in the Upper-Bench upon the Habeas Corpus Judge Doderidge the like Mr Hackwel resumes the Debate of the Habeas Corpus Mr Selden Judge Andersons Reports Sir Edward Cook Resolves touching the Subjects liberty in his Person The Kings Propositions to the House of Commons touching Supply A Conference between the Lords and Commons managed by Secretary Cook against Recusants The Lord Keepers Speech at the presenting a Petition from both Houses against Recusants The Kings Answer to the Petition 1. Article 2. Article 3. Article 4. Article 5. Article 6. Article 7. Article 8. Article Debates touching his Majesties propositions Sir Francis Seimor Sir Nath. Rich. Secr. Cook Sir John Elliot Sir Ed. Cook Sir Thomas Wentworth Sir Henry Martin The House waves c. Mr. Selden Sir T. Hobby Sir Peter Hayman about forein imployment Mr. Hackwel Sir E. Cook Sir Thomas Wentworth Sir John Elliot The King sends a Message to the House of S● Cook touching some words said to be spoken by the Duke Debates on the Message Friday 4 April Secretary brings another Message from the King Mr. Pym. 5. Subsidies resolved on Mr. Secretary Cook report the Kings acceptance of five Subsidies The Duke of Buckinghams Speech at the Councel Table thereupon It is ill taken by Sir John Elliot that the Dukes name was intermingled with the Kings by Secretary Cook Sir Dudly Diggs begins the Conference by way of Introduction Mr. Littleton Mr. Selden Sir Edward Cook 1. Obj. Answ. 2. Obj. Answ. His Majesties Message for non-recess The Message not approved Sir Ro. Phillips Sir E. Cook Sec. Cook to expedite Subsidies Sir Dudly Diggs Sir Thomas Wentworth Mr. Secret Cook delivereth another Message concerning Supply Sir Rob. Phillips Secr. Cook Mr. Wandesford Sir Humphry May. Mr. Speakers Speech to the King at the delivery of the Petition for billeting of Soldiers The Petition concerning billeting of Soldiers Martial Law debated Serj. Ashley questioned for some words Archbishops Speech at a Conference concerning the Petition of Right Propositions tendred to the Commons by the Lords touching the Petition of Right Sir Dudley Diggs replies to this Speech The Lord Keepers Speech to both Houses concerning supply by the Kings command Sir Ben. Rudyards Speech concerning that motion A Committee ordered to draw up a Bill in order to the Petition of Right Mr. Secretary Cook brings a Message to relye on the Kings Word Sir Thomas Wentworth The King gives notice to both Houses that he intends shortly to end this Session Sir John Elliot The Speakers Speech to the King in answer to several Messages His Majesties answer to the Speakers Speech Mr. Secretary Cook brings another Message to relie on the Kings Words Sir John Elliot Sir E. Cook Lord Keepers Speech communicating a Letter from the King His Majesties Letter The Lords Proposition at a Conference about an addition to the Petition of Right The Lords addition to the Petition of Right Mr. Alford Mr. Pimme Mr. Hackwell Sir Ed. Cook Sir Thomas Wentworth Mr. Noy Mr. Selden Mr. Glanviles Speech at a Committee of both Houses concerning Soveraign Power Sir Henry Martins Speech as to the rational part of the matter of the Conference The Lords and Commons agreed touching the Petition of Right Mr. Rouse against Dr. Ed. Manwaring 9. Hen. 3.29 28. Ed. 3.3 37. Ed. 3.18 38. Ed. 3.9 42. Ed. 3.3 17. Ric. 2.6 25. Ed. 3.9 9. Hen. 3.29 25. Ed. 3.4 28. Ed. 3.3 The Petition The Answer debated Sir Jo. Elliots Speech in the laying open of grievances Some against the recapitulating of Grievances Exceptions to Sir John Elliots Speech More exceptions Sir
Edward Cook A Message from the King to the House of Commons to end the Sessions Mr. Pyms Speech at the delivery of the charge against Dr. Manwaring ●udgement given against Dr. Manwawaring Dr. Manwaings submissions Another Message from the King Sir Robert Phillips Sir John Elliot Sir Dudly Diggs Sir Nathan Rich. The Commons declare that no undutiful Speech hath been spoken Mr. Wandesford Sir Edw. Cook declares the Duke the cause of all our miseries Mr. Seldens advice for a Declaration against the Duke Several heads agreed on for a Remonstrance A Message from the King by the Speak●r Another Message from the King to the Commons A Message from his Majesty t● the house of Lords The Kings Message g●ves the Commons more hope then formerly Burlemack called into the House The Petition of both Houses to his Majesty for a further Answer to the Petition of right His Majesties second Answer to the Petition of right All Grand Committees to cease Sir Edward Cooks Observations upon the said Commission Sir Edward Cook mannageth the Conference between both Houses concerning the Commission F●resh Debate in the House against the Duke Sir Iohn Elliot Sir Henry Martin Sir Benjamin Rudyard Sir Thomas Jermin Dr. Lamb killed A Letter to the City about Dr. Lambs Death Dr. Neal Dr. Laud suspected for Atminians Mr. Selden The Commons Remonstrance against the Duke The Speaker appointed to deliver the Remonstrance Order in Star-Chamber concerning the Duke The Duke desires to clear himself concerning some words The Comission for Excise cancelled Mr. Selden concerning Tunnage and Poundage The Commons Remonstrance of Tunnage and Poundage Mr. Noy The K. ends this Session in person and declares the reason Dr. Manwarings Sermon supp●essed by Proclamation A Proclamation and commissi●n concerning composition with Recusants A Proclamation against the B●shop of Calcedon Romish Priests to be sent to Wisbitch Jesuites taken at Clerkenwell or acted to be proceeded against Order to search what Recusants are about London Sir Richard Weston and Bishop Laud advanced Mr. Montague advanced and his Apello Caesarem called in Preaching and Writing pro con about unnecessary questions prohibited A pardon granted to Dr. Manwaring Dr. Montague Rochel close besieged and relief designed The Duke slain Dr. Montague consecrated Bishop Rochel again attempted to be relieved but in vain The sad condition of Rochel at the surrender Defects in the relief of Rochel questioned Outrages committed by souldiers Advertisement of forreign designes The King of Denmark assisted with forces The German House disposed of Dr. Laud in ●avour with the King Conge d'es●ier for certain Bishops The meeting of the Parliament adjourned to Jan. 20. Great resort to Felton in prison Felton examined before the Council Threatned to be Racked The Judges opinions taken therein Merchants committed about Customs Merchants summonned to the Councel Table Mr. Chambers brought up with a Habeas Corpus and bailed Lords of the Councel dissatisfied with his bailing Felton brought to trial Confesseth the Fact Tenders his hand to be cut off Hung in chains Mr. Vassals goods seised on for denying Customes Information p●eserved against him Mr. Vassals plea to the Information Mr. Chambers goods seised on for not paying customes A Replevin sued ou● And superseaded Mr. Rolls a Merchant Private consultations about the ensuing Parliament The Parliament meets they enquire whether the Petition of Right be enrolled What were the violations of the Subjects Liberties since the last Parliament Sir Robert Philips Speech concerning that matter The matter was referred to a Committee The Kings Speech to both Houses in the Banqueting House The K. sends a Message to the House of Commons speedily to take Tunnag● Poundage in to consideration But the Commons resolv● to proceed in matters of Religion Mr. Rous Speech ●oncerning Religion A Report from the Comm●tee for Religion The Remonstrance concerning Religion sent back by the King Precedency again given to Religion before Tunnage and Poundage Mr. Pyms speech concerning Religion Message by Secretary Cook about Tunnage and Poundage Sir Tho. Edm●nds Mr. Corriton An Answer resolved to be given to the Kings messages Sir Iohn Eliot concerning Religion The Commons enter into a Vow Both Houses Petition the King for a fast His Majesties Answer The Commons Declaration to the King to give precedency to Religion His Majesties Answer to the Commons Declaration Debate about the Kings D●claration concerning disputes about Religion Mr. Rolls sitting in Parliament was called forth and served with a Subpaenâ Debate concerning the same The mistake of the Subpaenâ cleared A report from the Committee for Tunnage and Poundage Committee mee● ag●n upon Tunnage and Poundage Mr. Noy concerning Tunnage and Poundage Barons of the Exchequer sent unto about staying the delivery of Merchants goods The Barons Answer Not satisfactory A report concerning pardons to Dr. Manwaring Mr. Montague c. Mr. Cromwel against the Bishop of Winchester A complaint of the no● licensing of Books against Popery Mr. Selden concerning Printing Debates about increase of Popery Secretary Cook concerning the Priests arraigned at Newgate Mr. Long a Justice of peace examined Sir Robert Heath his answer concerning the prosecution of the Priests A Fast. Mr. Dawes answer to the Commons Mr Carmarthens answer Mr. Selden The House in a Committee about the Customers answer Mr. Noy Message by Secretary Cook from the King about the Customers Order by the King and Council concelning the Costomers The Kings Commission to the Customers c. Resolve concerning Mr. Rolls Debates Sir Iohn Ellyots Speech against particular persons * Lord Weston afterwards died a Papist The Speaker refuses to put the Question Mr. Seldens Speech thereupon The Speaker again refuseth to put the Question Protestation in Parliament propounded whilst the Speaker was held in his chair The King sends the Usher of the Lords House Warrants to apprehend several Members of Parliament The Kings Speech at the Dissolution of the Parliament Libels cast abroad Members examined before the Lords of the Council 5 Caroli Anno 1629. Questions propounded to the Judges concerning the imprisoned Members Answer Mr. Stroud and Mr. Long brought upon a Habeas Corpus An Information in Star-Chamber against the Members Ro. Heath Hu Davenport Ro. Bartley Heneage Finch William Hudson An Information in Star Chamber against Sir Io. Elliot c. Proceedings in Star-Chamber against Mr. Chambers His Answer His Sentence A submission tendred His refusal Places of Scripture mentioned by him Isa. 29.21 Ecclus. 11.7 8 John 7.51 Act. 26.2 Exod. 23.6 Deut. 16.19 Mich. 2.1 2. Ezek. 45.9 and 46.8 Eccles. 5.8 London His Plea in the Exchequer H. 3.9 E. 1.3 H. 3.9 E. 3.5 t H. 7.3 H. 8.21 1629. 16 Iune London Order in the Exchequer Mr. Chambers brought by a Habeas Corpus His Petition to the Parliament His death Mr. Selden brought upon a Habeas Corpus A letter from the King to the Judges Another Letter L' Assembli des Notables A Letter to the Judges The King confers with some of them Motion to bail the prisoners An Information exhibited in the Kings Bench against vir Iohn Elliot c. The Plea of Sir Iohn Elliot Mr Long 's Case in the Star-Chamber Arguments concerning Sir Iohn Elliot Lord Chief Justice Hide Justice Whitlock Judgment Judgment pronounced The Kings Declaration of the causes which moved him to dissolve the last Parliament * Here are the passages concerning the Members deportment in the House mentioned in this Declaration which we ●orbear to repeat in regard the same are at large expressed in the Information in the Star-chamber before mentioned A Proposition presented to the King how to keep in awe this nation First to have a Fortresse in every considerable Town Secondly To cause high-waies to be made through such Townes Thirdly To choose the Souldiers of such Fortresses no Inhabitants of the place 4. To let none passe through such places without a Ticket 5. To have the names of all lodgers taken by Inkeepers The expence of these Forts To impose an oath on the Subjects Meanes ●o increase the King's revenewes 1 To demand a Decima of mens estates 2 To buy out all Leases upon the Crown-Lands 3 To take the Salt into his Majesties own hands 4 To demand a rate for Sealing the weights every yeare 5 To demand an Impost for Wools. 6 To put a Tax upon every Lawyers Fee 7 To put a Tax upon Inns and Victualling-houses for a License 8 To put a Tax upon all Car●le Flesh and Horses sold in the Market 9 To put a Tax upon all Lands alienated 10 To demand a rate upon all Offices in his Majestie 's grant 11 To reduce his Majesties Houshold to Board wages 12 To demand a rate for license to eat Lacticinia 13 To take an imposition upon the Catholicks lands At the Prince his marriage to make Earls in Principi to pay for it And Barons to be made Earls To make 200 rich men Titulate and they to pay for the Titles To make Gentlemen of low quality and rich Farmers Esquires Mr. Stroud Esq brought to the Kings-Bench-Bar upon a Habeas Corpus Also Walter Long Esq. Mr. Mason of Lincolns-Inn his Argument for Mr. Long. Serjeant Barckley his Argument against Stroud and Long. Serjeant Davenport's Argument against Stroud and Long Mr. Littleton's Argument for Mr. Selden See Fortoscue f. 115. the which was not cited there never Sedition Strife or Murmur is heard Sir Rob. Heath the Kings Atturney Generall his Argument against Mr. Selden An Information exhibited in the King's Bench against Sir Iohn Eliot and others Mr. Mason's Argument for Sir John Eliot Mr. Calibrop's Argument for Mr. Valentine Camden's Brit. 449. 1. Object 2. Object 3. Object 4. Object 5. Object 6. Object 7. Object 8. Object Sir Rob. Heaths Argument against Sir John Elliot 1 Car 16 Jac. 1618. 1 Car. 1625.
see his Children dispossessed of their Hereditary Rights and hopes his Son in Law will make Overtures of Peace which if slighted by the Emperor he will not lose the season to prepare for the defence of the Palatinate But if his Son will not hearken to his advice he shall be inforced to leave him to his proper Counsels Notwithstanding this open wary and tender proceeding with all care and patience to observe the Spanish humors our State Ministers that were most addicted to Spain discerned their trifling with us which they did not spare to censure and resolved to use a freer Language yet still discovered a willingness to wait their further leisure for the English Patience seemed invincible In the mean time the Privy Council having an eye to the support of the Palatinate began the raising of Moneys by way of free gift and directed Letters of the tenor following to divers Earls Viscounts Bishops and Barons the same Letter being sent to each respectively YOu may formerly have heard how the Palatinate being the ancient Heritage of the Count Palatine his Majesties Son in Law and to discend to his Majesties Grand-children is now invaded by a Foreign Enemy many principal Towns are surprised a great part of the Countrey in the possession of strangers and the inhabitants forced to take an Oath against their Natural Prince Whereupon his Majesty out of considerations of Nature Honor and State hath declared himself in the course of an Auxiliary War for the defence and recovery of the same the occasion being so weighty and pressing hath moved his Majesty by the general advice of us his Council to think of some course for provision of that nature as may serve as well to the maintenance and preserving of the present succors already sent as for the reinforcing them out of those Countries as the occasion of the War shall require And for that the swiftness of the occasion would not permit a supply by other means for the present so readily as was needful we have all concurred to begin with our selves in offer of a voluntary gift unto his Majesty for the advancement of the present occasion nothing doubting but that your Lordship being a Peer of the Kingdom will chearfully and readily follow the example of us begun And if there were much alacrity and readiness found in the Nobility and others to contribute at the motion of his Majesties Sons Ambassador at what time the Palatinate was not invaded neither had his Majesty declared himself you will much more and in a better proportion do it now these two weighty Motives do concur and so nothing doubting of your Lordships readiness herein we bid c. To the Marquess of Winchester To the Earl of Cumberland To the Earl of Darby To the Earl of Northumberland c. Also a Letter of the same form was written to the Lord Major of London But the short Reign of King Frederick was near its period The Imperial Forces under Bavaria Buquoy and D. Balthazar advance towards Prague and the Bohemians quit their Garrisons to make their Army the more compleat Yet neither Count Mansfield nor the English Forces were there On the Eighth day of November being the Lords day both Armies met for the fatal decision of the great Controversie The Bohemians stood upon the advantage-ground betwixt the Imperialists and Prague But the Enemy breaking through scattered and ruined their whole Army and pursued the Victory The King and Queen surprised with this Discomfiture among a wavering people in a City not very defensible were constrained to ●lie the next morning Diminution of Honor was added to the Calamity of this Prince because he suffered his Soldiers to mutiny for Pay when he had a mass of Money by him which was left behind to augment the Enemies Conquest Neither was Anhalt the General a fit person for the high trust reposed in him who not long after the Defeat sought and obtained the Emperors favor and was made one of his Generals to debel the Protestant cause and party But Count Mansfield whom Anhalt slighted and closed not with him to bring him up to this Fight made good his fidelity and with his Flying Army became a continual vexation to the Emperor harasing his Countries and forcing Contribution King Iames upon the news of the Palsgrave's overthrow and upon a Narration of the state of Affairs in those parts made unto His Majesty by the Earls of Oxford and Essex newly returned from the Palatinate was pleased to call a full Council together to consider of this great and weighty affair The Order ensuing relates the particulars At the Court at Whitehall Jan. 13. 1620. Present Lord Archbishop of Canterbury Lord Chancellor Lord Treasurer Lord Privy Seal Lord Steward Lord M. Hamilton Lord Chamberlain Earl of Arundel Earl of Kelly Lord V. Doncaster Lord V. Falkland Lord Carew Lord Digby Mr. Treasurer Mr. Secr. Naunton Mr. Secr. Calvert Mr. Chanc. of the Exchequer Master of the Rolls Master of the Wards HIs Majesty being resolved to make some Royal preparations for the Recovery and Protection of the Palatinate being the antient Inheritance of his Majesties Son in law and Grandchildren did in his high wisdom think méet to appoint some persons of knowledge and experience in the Wars to consider of and give their Advice in such Propositions as shall be made unto them by the Board for the better expediting of that service To which purpose the Earl of Oxford and the Earl of Essex the Earl of Leicester the Lord Uiscount Wilmot the Lord Danvers the Lord Calfield Sir Edward Cecyl Sir Richard Harrison Knights and Captain Danbingham were called to the Table and made acquainted with His Majesties pleasure That they or any Five or more of them together with Sir Horace Vere and Sir Edw. Conway Knights if they return into England while this Committee doth continue shall undertake this service and have their méetings and assemblies in the whole Council-chamber here in Whitehall touching the affairs above-mentioned And that for their better assistance they call unto them such others of experience whose advice and opinion they shall think fit to make use of in their several Consultations upon such things as shall be so referred unto them from the Board Which they are to prosecute without intermission or delay And they shall make Report of their Opinions which is to be done in writing under Five of their hands at least The Particulars offered to their Consideration are these First What proportion or number of men as well Horse as Foot with Munition Victuals Shipping and Treasure will be sufficient for that Enterprise And secondly By what time it will be meet that their Forces be in readiness And where the Arms Munition and Victuals may best be provided with such other Circumstances as are incident to any of these Heads For the better direction herein Mr. Secretaries will acquaint them with such Intelligences as they have received touching the
the Ambassadors person as some are said to have done yet for using railing speeches against him calling him Divel or words to that purpose it was His Majesties pleasure that that fellow without any further delay on the morrow in the forenoon be publickly and sharply whipt thorow London beginning at Algate and so through the streets along by the place where the affront was offered towards Fleetstreet and so to Temple-Bar without any manner of favor The people were enraged at Gondomar through a perswasion that he abused the King and State to advance the designs of Spain By means of his power with the King he had transported Ordinance and other warlike Provisions to furnish the Spanish Arsenals and it was believed that he underhand wrought the sending of Sir Rob. Mansel into the Mediterranean Sea to fall upon the Pirates of Algier The Merchants of this Kingdom by them much infested being also induced to move for this Expedition wherein the English fleet performed gallantly and advancing within the reach of Cannon and small shot which from the Land showred like Hail upon them fired the Pirates ships within their own Harbor Nevertheless hereby our Strength was diverted our Treasure exhausted and the Spanish fleet and Merchants secured from those Robbers and Spain left at liberty to assist in subduing the Palatinate In the mean while our Kings Affairs in Germany notwithstanding the many Complaints grew more and more desperate In Bohemia the Emperor having well nigh subdued and setled the Country proceeded to the Tryal and Execution of the Authors of the late Commotions some were condemned to perpetual imprisonment and others to death and the Heads of many eminent persons were fixt on the Towers in Prague and their bodies quartered After this the Emperor began both in Austria and Hungaria to imprison divers that assisted the Bohemians and caused Proces to be made against them The Marquess of Iagerndorfe who stirred in the County of Glatsburgh and raised forces by Commission from the Elector Palatine published Letters against the Executions in Bohemia as cruel and barbarous The Emperor put forth an Answer and said That the Marquess published those things maliciously forasmuch as in Bohemia was the Original sedition and the head that infected the members That some few persons Authors of the troubles not in hatred of their Religion but for their Rebellion have been punished by the hand of Justice And he declared further That the like exemplary Justice should not be done in other places but that the Articles of the Peace should be observed By this time the Parliament having sate about four moneths King Iames was desirous to give them a time of vacancie The Lord Treasurer by the Kings command declared unto the Houses That his Majesty by the advice of his Privy Council thought fit to adjourn the Parliament lest the season of the year by the continual concourse of people should cause Infection Also that the Lieutenans and Justices might be in the Country And the Adjournment keeping the Parliament still in being was better then Proroguing That his Majesty had already redressed corruption in Courts of Justice and by his Proclamation called in the Patents of Inns of Osteries and of Gold and Silver-Thread and cherished the Bill against Informers and Monopolies The Commons were troubled at this Message and desired a Conference with the Lords and moved them to petition the King to forbear the Adjournment The King takes notice of it and the Treasurer acquainted the Lords that a Petition of this nature could not be pleasing to his Majesty it seeming to derogate from his Prerogative who alone hath power to call adjourn and determine Parliaments The Commons at a further Conference declared their hearty sorrow and passionate grief at the Kings resolution which they said cut off the performance of what they had consulted and promised for the Publique weal. The Lords sitting in their Robes the King came and made a Speech takes notice of his Message to both Houses and gave their Lordships thanks for obeying the same and acknowledging his power to call adjourn and dissolve Parliaments and for refusing to join with the Commons in the Petition for Non-adjournment And whereas some had given out that no good had been done this Parliament He put them in mind that the two Patents grievous to the Commonwealth were called in and that the Parliament had censured the Offenders for an example to all ages And if they desired it he offered them eight or ten days longer sitting to expedite Bills but said that at the request of the Commons he would not grant it The Lords had a Conference with the Commons after which they moved the King to continue their sitting for fourteen days which was granted and the Commons were satisfied with the resolution of Adjournment A Committee of both Houses afterwards attending the King he told them how ill he took it that the Commons should dispute his reasons of Adjournment all power being in him alone to call adjourn prorogue and dissolve Parliaments And on Iune 4. he declared for an Adjournment till November following And that he will in the mean time of his own authority redress Grievances And his Majesty as General Bishop of the Land did offer his prayers to God for both the Houses and admonished them That when they go into the Country they give his people a good accompt and satisfaction both as to the Proceedings and to the Adjournment of the Parliament The House of Commons immediately before their recess taking to heart the miseries of the Palatinate resolved that the drawing back in so good a Cause should not be charged on their slackness And thereupon drew up this following Declaration with an universal consent THe Commons assembled in Parliament taking into most serious consideration the present state of the Kings Children abroad and the generally afflicted estate of the true Professors of the same Christian Religion professed by the Church of England in Foreign parts And being touched with a true sense and fellow féeling of their distresses as Members of the same Body do with unanimous consent in the name of themselves and the whole body of the Kingdom whom they represent declare unto his most excellent Majesty and to the whole World their hearty grief and sorrow for the same and do not only join with them in their humble and devout prayers unto Almighty God 〈◊〉 protect his true Church and to avert the dangers now threatned but also with one heart and voice do solemnly protest That if His Maies●●● pious endeavors by Treaty to procure their peace and safety shall not take that good effect which is desired in Treaty Wherefore they humbly beseech His Majesty not to suffer any longer delay That then upon signification of His Majesties pleasure in Parliament they shall be ready to the utmost of their powers both with their lives and fortunes to assist him so as that by the Divine
received but a slender return of the Lord Digby's Embassie to the Emperor for the restoring of the Elector Palatine But the Emperors full meaning in the business may be found at large in his own Letter to Don Baltazar de Zuniga a prime Councellor of State in Spain to be by him represented to the King his Master to this effect THat beholding the admirable providence of God over him he is bound to use that most notable Victory to the honor of God and the extirpation of all Seditions and Factions which are nourished chiefly among the Calvinists lest that Iudgment which the Prophet threatned the King of Israel should fall upon him Because thou hast dismissed a man worthy of death thy soul shall be for his soul. The Palatine keeps now in Holland not only exiled from the Kingdom which he rashly attempted but despoiled almost of all his own Territories expecting as it were the last cast of Fortune whom if by an impious kind of commiseration and his subtile petitioning he shall be perswaded to restore and nourish in his bosom as a trodden half-living snake what can he expect less then a deadly sting from him who in regard of his guilt can never be faithful but will alway gape for occasions to free himself from his fears and the genius of whose sect will make him an Enemy or an unsound Friend to the House of Austria and all other Catholick Princes Wherefore firmly casting in his minde that the Palatine cannot be restored He hath freely offered the Electorate to the Duke of Bavaria a most eager Defender of the Catholick cause by which means the Empire will always remain in the hand of Catholicks and so by consequence in the House of Austria And in so doing he shall take away all hope from the Palatine and those that sollicite so importunately for his restitution And it is to be hoped that the Lutheran Princes especially the Duke of Saxony will not so far disallow this translation as to take up Arms seeing Charls the Fifth upon a far lighter cause deprived John Frederick Duke of Saxony of the Electorate and conferred it on Maurice this Dukes great Uncle Besides no less is the Lutherans hatred of the Calvinists then of the Catholicks Such were the effects which the Kings Treating had wrought with the Emperor The Parliament that was to meet November the Fourteenth the King by Proclamation adjourned to the Eighth of February and expressed the cause to be the unseasonableness of the time of the year But this long Recess was shortned and the King declared That upon Important Reasons he had altered his former Resolutions and did adjourn it for no longer time then from the Fourteenth to the Twentieth of this instant November Upon which day it Reassembled and the King being absent by reason of his indisposition in health commanded a Message to be delivered to both Houses by the Lord Keeper the Lord Digby and the Lord Treasurer In the first place he acquainted the Two Houses with His Majesties indisposition of health which was the occasion of his absence at the opening of the Parliament yet he could not say he was absent so long as he was represented by a Son who was as dear to the Kingdom as to His Majesty As to the occasion of calling the Parliament by way of Antecedent he took notice of several effects of His Majesties gracious care over the Nation since the last Recess of the Parliament in His Majesties answering several Petitions concerning Trade Importation of Bullion Conservation of Coyn in the Land and prohibiting the Transportation of Iron Ordinance and that His Majesty by His Proclamation reformed Thirty six or thirty seven several matters complained of as Publick Grievances all of them without the least Trucking or Merchandising with the People a thing usual in former times He further said That His Majesty did principally fix the occasion of the calling a Parliament upon the Declaration Recorded and divulged far and near by the Representative Communalty of this Kingdom to assist His Majesty to carry on the War to recover the Palatinate yet withal his Lordship gave an account how His Majesty was since the last Parliament encouraged to travel a little longer in his pious endeavors to procure a peace by way of Treaty and that the Lord Digby was sent Ambassador upon that occasion and since returned but not with such success as was to be hoped for He minded both Houses of one Heroical Act of His Majesties since the last Parliament in the advancement of Forty thousand pounds to keep together a Body of an Army in the Lower Palatinate which otherwise had been dissolved before this Parliament could be assembled And that unless the Parliament take further resolution and imitate rather Ancient then Modern principles and be expeditious in what they do the Army in the Palatinate will fall to the ground And lastly Told them that His Majesty did resolve that this Parliament should continue till seven or eight days before the Festivals and to be renewed again the eighth of Februa●● to continue for the Enacting of Laws and Perioding of things of Reformation as long as the necessity of the State shall require the same After the Lord Keeper had done the Lord Digby having received a Command from His Majesty to that purpose gave a brief account of his Negotiation with the Archduke about the Treaty of Peace how the Archduke consented thereunto and writ accordingly to the Emperor and the King of Spain of his proceedings who also writ to Spinola for a Cessation of Arms the Archduke having the Command of the Spanish forces in Germany but the Duke of Bavaria would not consent thereunto and the Lord Digby informed the two Houses that by the carriage of the Duke of Bavaria and by other circumstances he did evidently discover That from the beginning that Duke affected to get unto himself the Palatinate and the Title of Elector He further declared That if Count Mansfield was not speedily supplied he could not keep his Army together Then he gave an account how bravely Sir Horatio Vere had behaved himself in the Palatinate and that by his wisdom and valor there was kept from the enemy Heidelburg Mainheim and Frankendale the last of which places had then endured a moneths siege He also spoke Honorably of Capt. Burroughs and concluded That the fittest Redress was to furnish and keep up the Army already there which must be done by supplies of Money and more Forces must be prepared against the next Spring that we may have there an Army of our own for the strengthning of the Palatinate and encouragement of the Princes of the Union Then the Lord Treasurer spake and acquainted both Houses how empty the Kings Coffers were and how he had assisted the Palatine and Princes of the Union with great sums which had exhausted his Treasure and that His Majesty was much in debt Nevertheless though the King
of England And that the arduous and urgent affairs concerning the King State and Defence of the Realm and of the Church of England and the maintenance and making of Laws and redress of mischiefs and grievances which daily happen within this Realm are proper subjects and matter of Councel and Debate in Parliament And that in the handling and procéeding of those businesses every Member of the House of Parliament hath and of right ought to have freedom of spéech to propound treat reason and bring to conclusion the same And that the Commons in Parliament have like liberty and fréedom to treat of these matters in such order as in their judgments shall seem fittest And that every Member of the said House hath like freedom from all Impeachment Imprisonment and molestation other then by Censure of the House it self for or concerning any speaking reasoning or declaring of any matter or matters touching the Parliament or Parliament-business And that if any of the said Members be complained of and questioned for any thing done or said in Parliament the same is to be shewed to the King by the advice and assent of all the Commons assembled in Parliament before the King gave credence to any private information But how the King was moved by the Protestation of the House of Commons will appear by this Memorial Whitehall Decemb. 30. 1621. HIs most Excellent Majesty coming this day to the Council the Prince his Highness and all the Lords and others of His Majesties Privy Council sitting about him and all the Iudges then in London which were six in number there attending upon His Majesty the Clerk of the Commons House of Parliament was called for and commanded to produce his Iournal-book wherein was noted and Entries made of most passages that were in the Commons House of Parliament and amongst other things there was written down the form of a Protestation concerning sundry Liberties Priviledges and Franchises of Parliament with which form of Protestation His Majesty was justly offended Nevertheless His Majesty in a most gracious manner there expressed That he never meant to deny that House of Commons any lawful Priviledges that ever they had enjoyed but whatsoever Priviledges or Liberties they had by any Law or Statute the same should be inviolably preserved unto them and whatsoever Priviledges they enjoyed by Custom or uncontrolled and lawful president His Majesty would be careful to preserve But this Protestation of the Commons House so contrived and carried as it was His Majesty thought fit to be razed out of all Memorials and utterly to be annihilated both in respect of the manner by which it was gained and the matter therein contained For the manner of getting it First in respect of the time For after such time as His Majesty out of his Princely grace and to take away all mistakings had directed his Letters to Secretary Calvert dated at Royston 16 Decembris and therein had so explained himself in the point of maintaining the priviledges of the House of Commons as that most of the said House rested fully satisfied and freed from any scruple of having their liberties impeached And after that by His Majesties Letters directed to the Speaker dated 18 December being Tuesday His Majesty at the humble suit of the House of Commons condescended to make this Méeting a Session before Christmas and for that purpose had assigned Saturday following Now upon this very Tuesday and while the Messengers from the House of Commons were with His Majesty at Theobalds to return thanks unto His Majesty and therewith an excuse from them not to make it a Session in respect of the strait of time whereunto they were driven which deferment His Majesty admitted of at their desires and thereupon gave order for the adjournment of the Parliament until the Eight of February next which was the first day formerly appointed by His Majesty for the méeting together of the Parliament And whilst their messengers were with His Majesty and had received a gracious Answer to return unto their House even that afternoon a Committee was procured to be made for taking their Liberties into consideration And this afternoon a Protestation was made to whom appears not concerning their Liberties and at six a clock at night by candle-light the same Protestation was brought into the House by the Committee and at that time of night it was called upon to be put to the Question there not being the third part of the House then present whereas in all matters of weight their usual custom is to put nothing of importance to the Question till the House be full And at this time many of them that were present expected the Question would have been deferred to another day and a fuller House and some then present stood up to have spoken to it but could not be seen nor heard in that darkness and confusion Now for the matter of the Protestation it is penned in such ambiguous and general words as may serve for future Times to invade most of Rights and Prerogatives annexed to the Imperial Crown the claim of some priviledges being grounded upon the words of the Writ for assembling the Parliament wherein some words viz. Arduis Regni are cunningly mentioned but the word quibusdam which restraineth the generality to such particular Cases as His Majesty pleaseth to consult with them upon is purposely omitted These things considered His Majesty did this present day in full assembly of his Council and in the presence of the Iudges declare the said Protestation to be invalid annulled void and of no effect And did further manu sua propria take the said Protestation out of the Iournal-book of the Clerk of the Commons House of Parliament and commanded an Act of Council to be made thereupon and this Act to be entred in the Register of Council-causes On the Sixth of Ianuary the King by Proclamation dissolved the Parliament shewing that the assembling continuing and dissolving of Parliaments doth so peculiarly belong unto him that he needs not give an accompt thereof unto any Yet he thought fit to declare That in this Dissolution he had the advice and uniform consent of his whole Council And that some particular Members of the House of Commons took inordinate liberty not only to treat of his high Prerogatives and sundry things not fitting to be argued in Parliament but also to speak with less respect to Foreign Princes That they spent the time in disputing Priviledges descanting upon the words and syllables of his Letters and Messages And that these Evil-tempered spirits sowed tares among the corn and by their cunning devices have imposed upon him a necessity of discontinuing this present Parliament without putting unto it the name or period of a Session And lastly he declared That though the Parliament be broken off yet he intended to govern well and shall be glad to lay hold on the first occasion to call a Parliament again at convenient time The King was
Potentissimo Principi ac Domino Philippo Quarto c. SErenissime Potentissime P. Frater Consanguinee Amice Charissime Quum aliquot abhinc annis pro affinitate nostra arctiori totiusque orbis Christiani bono deliberatio suscepta fuerit de Matrimonio inter Charissimum silium nostrum Carolum P. Walliae Illustrissimam Infantem Dominam Mariam Serenitatis vestrae sororem natu minorem contrahendo quod superstite adhuc R. Philippo Tertio felicissimae memoriae Patre vestro eo per gradus devectum erat ut ille si non expirasset hoc multo antehac consummatum iri spes esset nunc denuo Serenitatem vestram interpellandam duximus jam tandem ut velit operi bene inchoato fastigium imponere expectato deliberationes praeteritas exitu coronare Matura jam filii aetas filii Unici rerumque temporum ratio conjugem videntur efflagitare nobisque in senectutis limine constitutis felicissimus illuceret dies quo cernere liceret posterorum etiam amicitiam optato hoc affinitatis foedere constrictam Misimus itaque ad Serenitatem vestram Legatum nostrum Extraordinarium Praenobilem virum Iohannem Digbeum Baronem de Sherbone Consiliar●um Vice-Camerarium nostrum jam olim de hac affinitate Domus Austriacae honore bene meritum cui una cum Legato nostro Ordinario quicquid reliquum est hujus Negotii tractandum transigendum absolvendumque Commisimus Quicquid illis illic videbitur ratum hic habituri Utinam etiam vestre Serenitatis bonitate levaretur aliquando altera illa nostra de Palatinatu Sollicitudo de ●ilia genero insontibus eorum liberis ex avito jam extorribus Patrimonio Quam vellemus vestiae Potissimum Serenitati beneficium hoc in solidum debere cujus tot modo experti sumus ea in re Amicissima Officia Non nos unquam capiet tantae benevolentiae oblivio Posterisque Haereditarium studebimus relinquere amorem illum quo vestram Serenitatem memoriae optimae Patrem semper sumus amplexi semper amplexuri Unum hoc superest ut si quid aliud in re quacunque proposuerit Legatus hic noster eam ei fidem adhibere ac si nos praesentes essemus dignetur Serenitas vestra Quam Deus Optimus Maximus perpetuo incolumem conservet Serenitatis vestrae Frater Amantissimus Jacobus R. Dat. è Regia nostra Theobald 14 Die Martii An. Dom. 1621. Iames c. To the most Serene and most Potent Prince and Lord Philip the Fourth c. MOst Serene and Potent Prince Kinsman and Wel-beloved Friend Forasmuch as some years ago for our nearer Alliance and the good of the whole Christian World we had resolved to make a Marriage between our Wel-beloved Son Charls Prince of Wales and the most Illustrious Infanta the Lady Mary your Serenities yongest Sister which in the life time of your Father King Philip the Third of most happy memory was so far advanced That if he had not died it had been brought to perfection long ere now We have therefore thought good to Treat now again with your Serenity that at length you would put a period to a work so well begun and crown our by-past Deliberations with an expected issue The age of our Son arived now to maturity and he our onely Son besides the condition of the times and our affairs doth require him to marry And we being at the brink of old age it would rejoyce us to see the day wherein our Posterities Friendship should be bound up in this most desired Bond of Affinity We have therefore sent unto your Serenity our Extraordinary Ambassador the Right Honorable the Lord Digby Baron of Sherborne our Counsellor and Vice-Chamberlain who has formerly deserved well of this Alliance and the honor of the House of Austria unto whom together with our Ordinary Ambassador we have intrusted the remainder of this business to be treated transacted and finished and shall be ready to ratifie and approve here what ever they shall agree upon We wish likewise that your Serenity out of your goodness would ease our other care touching the Palatinate which concerns our Daughter and Son in Law and their innocent Children banished from their Ancestors Inheritance How gladly would we ow this good turn solely to your Serenity who have already done us so many friendly offices in that business No Oblivion shall ever blot out of our minde the acknowledgment of so great a favor and we will endeavor to transmit to our Posterity that Hereditary good will wherewith we have ever affected your Serenity and your Royal Father of most worthy memory and shall ever affect you One thing remains That if this our Ambassador shall propose any other matter touching what business soever your Serenity will be pleased to give him Credence as if we our self were present The most gracious and great God ever preserve your Serenity in safety Your Serenities most Loving Brother J. R. Given at our Pallace of Theobalds 14 March 1621. Prince Charls to the King of Spain MOst Serene and Potent Prince and wel-beloved Kinsman some years ago our most Serene Parents begun to treat about a Match between us and the most Serene our dearly beloved Princess the Lady Mary your Majesties most honored Sister The condition and success of which affair and treaty our most Serene and Honored Lord and Father out of his Fatherly affection towards us was pleased upon all occasions so much the more willingly to impart unto us by how much greater propension and apparent signs of true affection he discovered in us thereunto For which cause the Baron Digby his Majesties Vice-Chamberlain and Extraordinary Ambassador and one of our Privy Chamber being now bound for Spain with most ample Instructions to bring unto an happy issue that which was prosperously begun advanced before your most gracious Father our Uncle of happy memory departed this life We thought it no less becoming us by these our Letters most affectionately to salute your Majesty who if you shall perswade your self that we highly esteem of your affection as we ought to do and that by a most near bond of affinity we desire to have it inlarged and confirmed towards us that very perswasion will not a little adde to the measure of our love It remains that we intreat your Majesty to give full credit to such further Proposals as the Baron Digby shall make in our name In the mean time we will hope for such a success of the principal business as may give us occasion to use a more familiar stile hereafter in our Letters as an argument of a nearer relation which if it shall happen this will also follow That we shall most readily embrace all occasions whereby to evidence unto your Majesty the progress and increase of our affection as well towards your self as your most Serene Sister The most great and good God preserve your Majesty long in safety Your Majesties
most loving Kinsman C. P. Given at Our Palace of Saint Iames 14 Martii 1621. To the Right Honorable the Lord Balthazar of Zuniga Right Honorable and Wel-beloved Friend BEcause we have divers times been informed by your Friends of your singular propension and zeal towards our Affairs we neither will nor ought to leave you unsaluted at this time you have so well deserved of us But it will be no small accession of your good will if you continue as you have begun to promote by your assistance our concernments with his Majesty our Welbeloved Brother which by what way it may best be done our Ambassador the Baron John Digby will be able to direct you to whom we have intrusted the residue of that matter And if during his residence there he may make use of your singular Humanity and Favor with the King in his Negotiation it will be most acceptable to us and render us who were by your deservings already forward to oblige you most forward for the future to deserve well of you which we shall most willingly testifie as occasion offers not onely in word but in deed J. R. Given at our Palace of Theobalds March 14. 1621. Sir Walter Aston the Leiger Ambassador had managed that Treaty by directions received from Digby and now Digby remained at large in it and had communication of the Passages from him The Spaniards proceed in the Match with a very formal appearance for at this very time the Emperors Ambassador in Spain had discoursed of a Marriage between his Masters Son and the Infanta but was presently answered That the Kings hands were tied by a Treaty on foot with the King of Great Brittain and in this particular they seemed as said the English Agent to deal above board In the mean time the Privy Council by the Kings Commandment consulted about the raising of Moneys to defend the Palatinate They appointed the Keeper of the Records in the Tower to search for all such writings as concerned the Levies of Men at the Publick charge of the Countrey from the time of King Edward the Third until this present Likewise they directed Letters of the tenor following to the Justices of the Courts at Westminster and to the Barons of the Exchequer WHat endeavors his Majesty hath used by Treaty and by all fair and amiable ways to recover the patrimony of his Children in Germany now for the most part withholden from them by force is not unknown unto all his loving ●ubjects since his Majesty was pleased to communicate to them in Parliament his whole proceedings in that business Of which Treaty being of late frustrate he was inforced to take other resolutions namely to recover that by the Sword which by other means he saw no likelihood to compass For which purpose it was expected by his Majesty that his people in Parliament would in a cause so nearly concerning his and his Childrens interest have chearfully contributed thereunto But the same unfortunately failing his Ma●esty 〈◊〉 constrained in a case of so great necessity to try the dutiful affections of his ●●ing Subjects in another way as his Predecessors have done in former times by propounding unto them a voluntary contribution And therefore as your selves have already given a liberal and worthy example which his Majesty doth take in very gratious part so his pleasure is and we do accordingly hereby authorise and require your Lordships as well to countenance and assist the service by your best means in your next Circuits in the several Counties where you hold General Assizes as also now presently with all convenient expedition to call before you all the Officers and Attorneys belonging to any his Majesties Courts of Iustice and also all such others of the Houses and Societies of Court or that otherwise have dependence upon the Law as are meet to be treated withal in this kinde and have not already contributed and to move them to joyn willingly in this contribution in some good measure answerable to that your selves and others have done before us according to their means and fortunes Wherein his Majesty doubteth not but beside the interest of his Children and his own Crown and Dignity the Religion professed by his Majesty and happily flourishing under him within this Kingdom having a great part in the success of this business will be a special motive to incite and perswade them thereunto Nevertheless if any persons shall out of obstinacy or disaffection refuse to contribute herein proportionably to their Estates and Means you are to certifie their names unto this Board And so recommending this service to your best care and endeavor and praying you to return unto us Notes of the names of such as shall contribute and of the sums offered by them We bid c. Letters to the same effect were directed to the High Sheriffs and Justices of Peace of the several Counties and to the Majors and Bailiffs of every City and Town-Corporate within the Kingdom requiring them to summon all of known Abilities within their Jurisdictions and to move them to a chearful contribution according to their Means and Fortunes in some good measure answerable to what others well-affected had done before them And to make choice of meet Collectors of the Moneys and to return a Schedule of the names of such as shall contribute and the sums that are offered by them that his Majesty may take notice of the good inclinations of his Subjects to a cause of such importance as likewise of such others if any such be as out of obstinacy or disaffection shall refuse to contribute About this time George Abbot Archbishop of Canterbury began to fall into disgrace at Court his enemies taking the advantage of a late sad misfortune for shooting at a Deer with a Cross-bow in Bramzil Park he casually killed the Keeper Upon this unhappy accident it was suggested to the King who already disgusted him for opposing the Match with Spain That in regard of his eminent rank in the Church it might administer matter of Scandal which was aggravated by such as aspired unto his place and dignity The Bishop of Lincoln then Lord Keeper informed the Marquess of Buckingham That by the Common Law of England the Archbishops whole estate was forfeited to the King and by the Common Law which is still in force he is made irregular ipso facto and so suspended from all Ecclesiastical Function until he be restored by his Superior which was the Kings Majesty in this rank and order of Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction To adde affliction to the afflicted said he will be against his Majesties nature yet to leave a man of Blood Primate and Patriark of all his Churches is a thing that sounds very harsh in the Old Councils and Cannons and the Papists will not spare to censure it The King made choice of the Lord Keeper the Bishops of London Winton Rochester St. Davids and Exeter Sir Henry Hobart Justice Doderidge Sir Henry Martin
most famous Prince have polished with Learning and Arts of Prudence would assent to the Father of lights illuminating the Christian world We easily apprehend how much it would conduce to the Publick peace that being King of Scotland you should join in one Kingdom those Nations and Islands divided either by the bars of the Mountains or by the depths of the Ocean For your Majesty seems for that very reason to be made Lord of so many Provinces that they might more easily and quickly receive healing and salvation from him whom they obey Wherefore we even then besought God by continual ●rayers who gives salvation to Kings that so many blessings by his grace conferred upon you by which you are admirable in the sight of Potentates might bring safety to Britain and joy to the Church A blessed hope from above not long ago shined upon us when we understood that you were desirous of a Catholick alliance and that the ●ssue which should succeed in the inheritance and government of those Nations might be begotten of a Catholick mother We can scarcely express how much joy Gregory the Fifteenth of blessed memory our Predecessor brought us when he made us one of the Congregation of those Cardinals whom he would have to take cognisance of the English Match While we discoursed of a matter of so great importance we expressed a singular propension of mind towards your Majesty and were both tender of your praises and desirous to provide for your happiness And now being by the consent of the Apostolical Senate advanced to this station where we are to watch and ward for all earthly Monarchs we cannot sufficiently declare what a care and desire we have of Great Britain and the honor of so great a King It seems to have been a special providence of God that the first Letters which we received reigning in the seat of S. Peter were those which the most noble Charls Prince of Wales wrote to our Predecessor as a testimony of his affection to the Popes of Rome And since we now desire that this venerable Marriage should by the blessing of God be perfected we resolved to write unto you without expecting Letters first from you for Charity is the honor of the Papal Empire and although most powerful Kings do homage to us in this seat yet we account it glorious charity so perswading to descend to humble prayers so that we may gain souls to Christ. First therefore we desire you to perswade your self that there is no Prince in the Christian world from whom you can expect more evidence of fatherly affection then from the Pope who desires to embrace you a most desired Son with the arms of Apostolical charity We know with what a Letter Gregory the Fifteenth excited you to obtain so great a glory And since we have succeeded him we will not only imitate his inclinations towards you but will exceed them We hope we shall shortly have news out of England that your Majesty is favorable to the Catholick interest and that the Catholicks who live there whom the Father of mercies hath vindicated into the liberty of the sons of God being freed from the fear of punishment enjoy your Royal protection He who is rich in mercy will reward such a purpose with some signal happiness The Kingdoms of the Earth will applaud your Majesty and the Host of Heaven will wage war for you Though sinners gnash their teeth and Impiety powerful to raise sedition threaten yet Europe hopes she shall see King James triumphing in the Roman Church and increasing the example of his Ancestors by new works of Piety We do not distrust that the time of Gods good pleasure is now at hand when they who recommend to History the praises of the British Religion shall not always speak of the deeds of another Age but may be able to propose the present Government as a pattern of imitation to the Ages following Your Ancestors call upon you who have left you so powerful and so famous an inheritance who believed that the gates of the kingdom of Heaven were opened to mankind with the Popes keyes Certainly it cannot be that your Majesty should dare either to contemn or condemn the belief of so many Ages and the judgment of so many Kings who have deserved well of you Do you not see that by your Majesties opinion they are deprived of Heaven who left you a Kingdom while you contend that they erred in the worship of their Religion By this means it would be that whom the Universal Church believes to be Citizens of Heaven and to reign as Coheirs with Christ in that everlasting Country you who are descended of them should snatch them out of Heaven and thrust them into the bottomless pit of Error and the prison of hellish torments Do you not perceive your bowels yearn at the thought of so ungrateful an offence Are not such deliberations repugnant to your Royal temper which nevertheless so many Nations of Europe are forced to reprehend while it dissents from the Seat of the Apostles Let the splendor of so great glory allure your eyes which looks out of Heaven upon you and reaches you out a hand ready to reduce by your means the Kingdom of Britain into the Sanctuary of God with the conduct of Angels and acclamations of men A long time ago Christian religion lay all along in the world squalid and deformed with anguish affrighted with the threats of Tyrants But that Emperor whom we owe to Great Britain Constantine the Great the Defender of the Popes authority and the Avoucher of the Roman Faith did not only bring her out of her lurking places but called her to an Empire He is a fit pattern of imitation for your Majesty not those Kings who have transgressed and dissipated the Everlasting Covenant We call you O most wished for Son from this Watch-Tower of the World into the Society of his Glory Adde one day to your past years which all posterity may celebrate with a grateful memory Put a Mitre of Eternal Glory upon your head that in the time of your Reign we may say with the Holy Apostle I have seen a new Heaven in Britain and a new City descending from Heaven and a guard of Angels upon her Walls If that should come to pass we shall make reckoning that our Reign hath been happy to mankinde This our Sollicitude we believe will be so grateful unto you That we verily hope upon the receipt of our Letter you will forthwith increase the advantage of the Catholicks which live there Which if you shall do you will exceedingly oblige us and we shall consign to you the King of Kings debtor of so great benefit who so long as he shall preserve your Royal Family in eminent Happiness shall second the wishes of the Roman Church and bring ioy to the holy Prelates Dated at Rome at St. Peters sub annulo Piscatoris 15 Octob. 1623. The first year of our Reign Nobilissimo
Desponsorios in Spain which was controlled again by an Express from hence issued an unnecessary discourtesie put upon the King and in a manner upon the Infanta by the Earl of Bristol From that proceeded a greater affront put upon the Prince the taking away the title La Princesa from the Infanta and the debarring of our Ambassadors from any further Access to her person Then was produced an Answer of the King of Spain to the Memorial of the Ambassador implying a Refusal to assist by Arms for the recovery of the Palatinate in case the Emperor consent not to a Restitution which we have inserted in series of time VI. The Stating of the Question Super totam Materiam THis Question the Duke stated on this manner Whether this being the full effect and product of all the Negotiation which I have opened unto you be sufficient Super totam Materiam for his Majesty to relie upon with any safety as well for the Marriage of his onely Son as for the relief of his onely Daughter Or that these Treaties set aside his Majesty were best to trust in his own strength and to stand upon his own feet So the Duke ended with this Conclusion That if the bringing us from darkness to light did deserve any thanks we ow it and must wholly ascribe it to the Prince his Highness The Prince was present at this Narration and assisted the Duke of Buckingham therein and certified many particulars thereof and it being reported the same day to the House his Highness approved thereof there also The Spanish Ambassador took great offence at the Dukes Relation as reflecting upon his Masters Honor and demanded his Head for satisfaction The House of Lords by a general Vote acquitted the Duke from the Accusation of the Spanish Ambassador and justified his Relation and intended to signifie as much to his Majesty by a Committee of the whole House That the Duke may be encouraged to proceed in his faithful service to the State Unto which the Commons so directly and fully answered as if the two Houses had been Twins and what one had said thought and done the other had thought said and done the same And the Commons desired to joyn with the Lords in signifying this to his Majesty which was done by the ensuing Address YOur Majesties most Loyal Subjects the Lords Knights Citizens and Burgesses Assembled at this time in both Houses of Parliament being informed of a Complaint made unto your most Excellent Majesty against the Duke of Buckingham That in the Narrative which by your Majesties command he made unto both Houses the Four and twentieth of February last he should let fall some passages grievous to the Honor of the King of Spain and inferred to be of so high a nature as if the same had been delivered by any Subject of that King against your Majesty it could not have been otherwise expiated then with the loss of his Head that spoke it Taking this into their mature deliberation and conceiving that this Accusation doth in an oblique manner fasten an Aspersion upon themselves also do in all submission and humility make unto your Majesty a Threefold Representation First Concerning that great King secondly Concerning that eminent Lord thirdly Concerning themselves First Concerning that King they do with an unanimous Vote of both Houses absolutely acquit and clear the Lord Duke from letting fall any words at all derogatory to the Honor of that King For the second That concerns my Lord they do in the like humility attest unto your most Sacred Majesty That if my Lord the Duke had omitted any matter represented unto them that day he had for so much failed in the performance of that duty and fidelity which he oweth unto your Majesty and to the business and unto both Houses For the last which concerneth themselves they make bold in like humility to represent unto your Majesty That they do much honor my Lord the Duke for that Narration and do render unto him all possible thanks for that fidelity and industry expressed therein and so without your further trouble Do humbly beseech your most Excellent Majesty to interpret fair of this their Representation which they held themselves bound to offer unto your Majesty for the clearing of so eminent a person who as they verily believe hath in this Negotiation well deserved of your Majesty and the Commonwealth So they heartily pray unto God to preserve your most Excellent Majesty To which Representation his Majesty returned this Answer MY Lords and Gentlemen all I might have reason to speak nothing in regard of the person whereof you spake but in regard of your Motion it were not civil For if I be silent I shall wrong neither my self nor that Nobleman which you now spake of because he is well known to be such a one as stands in no need of a Prolocutor or Fidejussor to undertake for his fidelity or well carrying of the business And indeed to send a man upon so great an Errand whom I was not resolved to trust for the carriage thereof were a fault in my discretion scarce compatible to the love and trust I bear him It is an old and true saying That he is a happy man that serves a good M●ster and it is no less truth That he is a happy Master that enjoys a faithful Servant The greatest fault if it be a fault or at leastwise the greatest error I hope he shall ever commit against me was his desiring this Justification from you as if he should have need of any Justification from others towards me and that for these Reasons First Because he being my Disciple and Schollar he may be assured I will trust his own Relation Secondly Because he made the same Relation unto me which he did afterward unto both Houses so as I was formerly acquainted both with the matter and manner thereof And if I should not trust him in the carriage I was altogether unworth● of such a Servant He hath no interest of his own in the business he had ill thoughts at home for his going thither with my Son although it was my command as I told you before And now he hath as little thanks for his Relation on the other part Yet he that serveth God and a good Master cannot miscarry for all this I have noted in his Negotiation these three remarkable things Faith Diligence and Discretion whereof my Son hath borne record unto me yet I cannot deny but as he thought to do good service to his Master he hath given ill example to Ambassadors in time to come because he went this long journey upon his own charges This would prove an ill example if many of my Ambassadors should take it for a President He run his head into the yoke with the people here for undertaking the journey and when he there spent above Forty or fifty thousand pounds never offered his accompt nor made any demand for the same or ever will I hope
other Ambassadors will do so no more I am a good Master that never doubted of him for I know him to be so good a Schollar of mine that I say without van●ty he will not exceed his Masters Dictates And I trust the Report not the worse he made because it is approved by you all yet I believe an honest man as much as all the World and the rather because he was a Disciple of mine And I am glad he hath so well satisfied you and thank you heartily for taking it in so good part as I finde you have done The Lords having debated those high Matters of State which the King put into their hands delivered their opinions That his Majesty cannot with honor and safety and with the conveniency of State and Religion proceed any further in the Treaty of the Princes Marriage nor relie any longer upon the Treaty for the recovery of the Palatinate in which Vote the Commons concurred with them And in this manner both Houses Addressed themselves to the King May it please your most Excellent Majesty WE are come unto you imployed from your most faithful Subjects and Servants the Lords and Commons assembled in this present Parliament And first They and we do give most humble and hearty thanks unto Almighty God that out of his gracious goodness he hath been pleased now at last to dispel the Clouds and Mists which for so many years have dimmed the eyes of a great part of Christendom in the business whereof we do now consult And secondly We acknowledge our selves most bound unto your Majesty that you have been pleased to require the humble Advice of us your obedient Subjects in a Case so important as this is which hitherto dependeth between your Majesty and the King of Spain Which we jointly offer from both Houses no one person there dissenting or disagreeing from the rest And it is upon mature consideration and weighing many particulars of sundry natures that finding so much wan● of Sincerity in all their Proceedings We super totam materiam present this our humble Address unto your Majesty That the Treaties both for the Marriage and the Palatinate may not any longer be continued with the honor of your Majesty the safety of your People the welfare of your Children and Posterity as also the assurance of your antient Allies and Confederates Reasons were also presented to fortifie this Vote Whereas the Propositions of the Match were at the first no more then Liberty of Conscience to the Infanta and her Family which the King might in honor grant The Spaniards taking advantage of the Prince's being in Spain importuned a General Connivence of Religion to the diminution of the Kings Soveraignty and against the usage of other Catholick Princes in the like Treaties and to the discouragement of all his well-affected Subjects And this they have labored with the Pope being of mischievous consequence During this Treaty the Popish Faction hath mightily increased And whereas heretofore they were wont to be divided some taking part with the Secular Priests and some with the Iesuites they are united which is a matter of great consequence considering they do as well depend on Spain for Temporal matters as on Rome for Spiritual And they cannot be suppressed as long as the Treaty holds They have by this Treaty devoured our Allies and the Protestant party in Germany and elswhere to the decay of true Religion and to the jealousie of our Friends beyond the Seas During this Treaty of Love they have spoiled his Majesties Son-in-law of his Lands and Honors and notwithstanding promises of Restitution still invaded his Rights and at length turned pretended Difficulties into apparent Impossibilities They have deluded our King and offered indignity to our Prince by importuning him again and again to a Conversion contrary ●o the Law of Hospitality and the Priviledge of Princes The Insincerity of their Proceedings is to be seen by that former Overture of Marriage for the late Prince Henry which after many specious Motions was followed with a disavowing of their own Ambassador and a scornful Proposition made to the King of the Prince's altering his Religion As also by the Treaty of Bruxels where the Lord Weston found nothing but Delays and Deceit and after divers peremptory Commands from Spain for his Majesties satisfaction it wrought no other effect then the Besieging and taking of Heidelburgh insomuch that the Ambassador was forced to protest and return To these things were added the Translation of the Electorate to the Duke of Bavaria and the Letter of the King of Spain to Conde Olivares with the Conde's Answer which imported that the Match was never intended As also after the Prince had taken a hazardous Journey they devised a shift by a Iuncto of Divines to let him come home without the Lady These Reasons were presented to the King by the universal consent of the House of Commons Hereupon the King came to Parliament and made a Speech deliberative enquiring into the Condition of the War which they advised and the means to uphold and carry it on My Lords and Gentlemen all I Have cause first to thank God with my heart and all the faculties of my mind that my Speech which I delivered in Parliament hath taken so good effect amongst you as that with an unanimous consent you have freely and speedily given me your Advice in this great Business for which I also thank you all as heartily as I can I also give my particular thanks to the Gentlemen of the Lower House for that I heard when some would have cast Jealousies and Doubts between me and my people they presently quelled those motions which otherwise might indeed have hindred the happy Agreement I hope to find in this Parliament You give me your Advice to break off both the Treaties as well concerning the Match as the Palatinate And now give me leave as an old King to propound my Doubts and hereafter to give you my Answer First it is true that I who have been all the days of my life a peaceable King and have had the honor in my Titles and Impresses to be stiled Rex Paci●icus should be loth without necessity to imbroil my self with War far from my Nature and from my Honor which I have had at home and abroad in endeavouring to avoid the effusion of Christian blood of which too much hath been shed and so much against my heart I say that unless it be upon such a Necessity that I may call it as some say merrily of Women Malum necessarium I should be loth to enter into it And I must likewise acquaint you that I have had no small hope given me of obtaining better Conditions for the Restitution of the Palatinate and that even since the sitting down of the Parliament But be not jealous or think me such a King that would under pretence of asking your Advice put a scorn upon you by disdaining and rejecting it For you
not what way they take to become masters of them sleighting the latter day of Judgment so they may rest secured from yielding any account in this World I have no more to say but that God would be pleased to incline our hearts to do that which may be most for his glory next for the Kings service then for the Countreys happiness To the Doubts which the King propounded the Parliament gave Solution by a Committee of both Houses in the Declaration following delivered by the Archbishop of Canterbury with this Introduction May it please your Sacred Majesty WE are come to you again from your most Faithful Subjects and Loyal Servants the Lords and Commons assembled in this present Parliament And first We humbly let your Majesty know how much we hold our selves bounden unto Almighty God that he hath sent a King to rule and reign over us who is pleased in the greatest and weightiest causes to speak and to be spoken to in Parliament by his good and loving people which causeth the King to understand them over whom he beareth rule and them again to understand him And is a true Bond that tieth the heart of the Sovereign to the Subject and of the Subject reciprocally to their Leige Lord and Sovereign And next we rejoyce that your Majesty hath shewed your self sensible of the insincerity of the King of Spain with whom of late you have had a double Treaty and of the indignities offered by them unto your Blessed Son the Prince and to your Royal Daughter And that your Kingly heart is filled with an earnest desire to make Reparation to her noble Consort and her self of the Palatinate their Patrimonial Possession which is agréeable to Iustice and to all Laws of God and Man For the effecting whereof to certifie with what alacrity with what expediteness and uniformity of heart both your Houses of Parliament in the name of your whole Kingdom have borne themselves unto your Majesty with offer to give their Royal assistance we have digested it into writing lest by the verbal or vocal Delivery of any person it may miscarry or the expression of our zeal be weakned or diminished Which we humbly pray your Majesty to give leave to be read unto you Most Gratious Sovereign WE your Majesties most humble and Loyal Subjects the Lords and Commons in this present Parliament assembled Do first render to your Sacred Majesty our most dutiful thanks for that to our unspeakable comfort you have vouchsafed to express your self so well satisfied with our late Declaration made unto your Majesty of our general Resolution in pursuit of our humble Advice to assist your Majesty in a Parliamentary way with our persons and abilities And whereas your Majesty in your great Wisdom and Iudgment foreséeing that it will make a déeper Impression both in the Enemies of that Cause and in your Friends and Allies if they shall not onely hear of the chearful Offers but also sée the real Performance of your Subjects towards so great a Work Your Majesty was pleased to descend to a particular Proposition for the Advancing of this great business We therefore in all humbleness most ready and willing to give your Majesty and the whole World an ample Testimony of our sincere and dutiful Intensions herein Upon mature Advice and Deliberation as well of the weight and importance of this great Affair as of the present Estate of this your Kingdom the Weal and Safety whereof is in our Iudgments apparently threatned if your Majesties Resolution for the dissolving of the Treaties now in question be longer deferred and that Provision for defence of your Realm and aid of your Friends and Allies be not seasonably made have with a chearful consent of all the Commons no one Dissenting and with a full and chearful Consent of the Lords resolved That upon your Maiesties Publick Declaration for the Dissolution and utter Discharge of both the said Treaties of the Marriage and of the Palatinate in pursuit of our Advice therein and towards the support of that War which is likely to ensue and more particularly for those Four Points proposed by your Majesty namely For the Defence of this your Realm the securing of Ireland the assistance of your Neighbors the States of the United Provinces and other your Majesties Friends and Allies and for the setting forth of your Royal Navy We will grant for the present the greatest Aid which ever was given in Parliament That is to say Thrée intire Subsidies and thrée Fiftéens to be all paid within the compass of one whole year after your Majesty shall be pleased to make the said Declaration the Money to be paid into the hands and expended by the direction of such Committées or Commissioners as hereafter shall be agréed upon at this present Session of Parliament And we most humbly beséech your Majesty to accept of these first-fruits of our hearty Oblation dedicated to that work which we infinitely desire may prosper and be advanced And for the future to rest confidently assured That we your loyal and loving Subjects will never fail in a Parliamentary way to assist your Majesty in so Royal a design wherein your own honor and the honor of your most Noble Son the Prince the antient renown of this Nation the welfare and very subsistence of your Noble and onely Daughter and her Consort and their Posterity the safety of your own Kingdom and People and the prosperity of your Neighbors and Allies are so déeply engaged Herunto his Majesty replied My Lords and Gentlemen all I Have nothing to say to the Preamble of my Lord of Canterbury but that he intimated something in it which I cannot allow of For whereas he said I have shewed my self sensible of the insincerity of those with whom I had lately to deal and of the indignity offered to my Children In this you must give me leave to tell you that I have not expressed my self to be either sensible or insensible of the good or bad dealing It was Buckinghams Relation to you which touched upon it by it you must not bar me nor make Iupiter speak that which Iupiter speaks not For when I speak any such thing I will speak it with that reason and back it with that power which becomes a King As for the matter of the Declaration unto my Demands which you have couched in that Paper which I now heard read unto me I confess it is without example that any King hath had such an offer And with your favor I need fear nothing in this World having so much the hearts of my people For the large offer of assistance I hold it to be more then Millions of Subsidies and indeed it is an ample reward for the trust and freedom which I have used with you But my Lords and Gentlemen you must give me leave on the one side to consider the possibility of the action For in this case I must do as a man that maketh a
I deserved better at their hands After this the King purposing to signifie to the King of Spain That his Parliament had advised him to break off the Treaties and to recover the Palatinate by War The notice of a sharp Petition against Popish Recusants framed by the House of Commons and sent up to the Lords for their Concurrence did a little stagger his Resolution as appeareth by the following Letter written with his own hand to Secretary Conway I Doubt not but you have heard what a stinging Petition against the Papists the Lower House have sent to the Higher House this day that they might joyntly present it unto me Ye know my firm resolution not to make this a War of Religion and seeing I would be loth to be Coney-catched by my people I pray you stay the Post that is going to Spain till I meet with my Son who will be here to morrow morning Do it upon pretext of some more Letters ye are to send by him and if he should be gone hasten after him to stay him upon some such pretext and let none living know of this as you love me And before two in the afternoon to morrow you shall without fail hear from me Farewell James R. The Petition which the King called a stinging one was intended to be presented to his Majesty from both Houses in form as followeth May it please your most Excellent Majesty WE your Majesties most humble and Loyal Subjects the Lords and Commons in this present Parliament assembled having to our singular Comfort received your Princely Resolution upon our humble Petition to dissolve the two Treaties of the Match and of the Palatinate and having on our parts with all alacrity and readiness humbly offered our assistance to your Majesty to maintain the War which may ensue thereupon Yet withal sensibly finding what Seditious and Traiterous Positions those Incendiaries of Rome and professed Engines of Spain the Priests and Iesuites infuse into your natural born Subjects what numbers they have seduced and do daily seduce to make their dependance on the Pope of Rome and King of Spain contrary to their Allegiance to your Majesty their Liege Lord What daily resort of Priests and Iesuites into your Kingdoms what Concourse of Popish Recusants much more then usual is now in and about the City of London what boldness yea what insolency they have discovered out of the opinion conceived of their foreign Patronage what publick resort to Masses and other Exercises of the Popish Religion in the houses of foreign Ambassadors there is daily to the great grief and offence of your good Subjects what great preparations are made in Spain sit for an Invasion the bent whereof is as probable to be upon some part of your Majesties Dominions as upon any other place what encouragement that may be to your Enemies and the Enemies of your Crown to have a party or but the opinion of a party within your Kingdoms who do daily increase and combine themselves together for that purpose what disheartening of your good and loving Subjects when they shall see more cause of fear from their false-hearted Countreymen at home then from their professed Adversaries abroad what apparent dangers by Gods providence and your Majesties wisdom and goodness they have very lately escaped which the longer continuance upon those Treaties upon such unfitting Conditions fomented by your own ill-affected Subjects would surely have drawn upon your Majesty and your State Do in all humbleness offer unto your sacred Majesty these their humble Petitions following I. That all Iesuites and Seminary Priests and all others having taken Orders by any Authority derived from the Sea of Rome may by your Maiesties Proclamation be commanded forthwith to depart out of this Realm and all other your Highness ' s. Dominions and neither they nor any other to return or come hither again upon peril of the severest penalty of the Laws now in force against them and that all your Majesties Subjects may hereby also be admonished not to receive entertain comfort or conceal any of that viperous brood upon penalties and forfeitures which by the Lawes may be imposed upon them II. That your Majesty would be pleased to give streight and speedy charge to the Iustices of Peace in all parts of this Kingdom that according to the Laws in that behalf made and the Orders taken by your Majesties Privy-Councel heretofore for policy of State they do take from all Popish Recusants legally convicted or justly suspected all such Armor Gunpowder and Munition of any kinde as any of them have either in their own hands or in the hands of any other for them and to see the same safely kept and disposed according to the Law leaving for the necessary defence of their house and persons so much as by the Law is prescribed III. That your Majesty will please to command all Popish Recusants and all other who by any Law or Statute are prohibited to come to the Kings Court forthwith under pain of your heavy displeasure and severe Execution of your Laws against them to retire themselves their wives and families from or about London to their several dwellings or places by your Laws appointed and there to remain confined within five miles of their dwelling places according to the Lawes of this your Realm And for that purpose to discharge all By-past Licences granted unto them for their repair hither And that they presume not any time hereafter to repair to London or within ten miles of London or to the Kings Court or to the Princes Court wheresoever IV. That your Majesty would forbid and restrain the great resort and concourse of your own Subjects for the hearing of Masse or other Exercises of the Romish Religion to the houses of foreign Ambassadors or Agents residing here for the service of their several Princes or States V. That where of late in several Counties in this Realm some have been trusted in the places of Lord-Lieutenants Deputy-Lieutenants Commissioners of Oyer and Terminer Iustices of Peace and Captains of their Countries which are either Popish Recusants or Non-Communicants by the space of a year now last past or which do not usually resort to the Church to Divine service and can bring no good Certificate thereof that your Majesty would be pleased to discharge them from these places of trust by which they have that power in the Countrey where they live as is not fit to be put into the hands of persons so affected VI. That your Majesty would be pleased generally to put the Lawes in due Execution which are made and stand in force against Popish Recusants And that all your Iudges Iustices and Ministers of Iustice to whose care these things are committed may by your Maiesties Proclamation be commanded to do their duty therein VII That seeing we are thus happily delivered from that danger which these Treaties now dissolved and that use which your ill-affected Subiects made thereof would certainly have
drawn upon us and cannot but foresee and fear least the like may hereafter happen and unevitably bring such peril to your Maiesties Kingdoms We are most humble Suitors to your gracious Maiesty to secure the hearts of your good Subiects by the engagement of your Royal word unto them that upon no occasion of Marriage or Treaty or other request in that behalf from any foreign Prince or States whatsoever you will take off or slacken the Execution of your Laws against the Popish Recusants To which our humble Petitions proceeding from our most loyal and dutifull affections toward your Maiesty our care of our Countries good and our confident perswasion that this will much advance the glory of Almighty God the everlasting honor of your Maiesty the safety of your Kingdom and the encouragement of all your good Subiects We do most humbly beseech your Maiesty to vouchsafe a gracious Answer This Petition after a Conference between both Houses was reduced to another form and so presented to the King To which his Majesty returned this Answer My Lords and Gentlemen of both Houses I Cannot but commend your zeal in offering this Petition to me yet on the other side I cannot but hold my self unfortunate that I should be thought to need a spur to do that which my Conscience and duty bindes me unto What Religion I am of my Books do declare my profession and behavior doth shew and I hope in God I shall never live to be thought otherwise surely I shall never deserve it and for my part I wish it may be written in Marble and remain to Posterity as a mark upon me when I shall swerve from my Religion for he that doth dissemble with God is not to be trusted with men My Lords for my part I protest before God that my heart hath bled when I have heard of the increase of Popery God is my Iudge it hath been such a great grief to me that it hath been as Thorns in my Eyes and Pricks in my Sides and so far I have been and shall be from turning another way And my Lords and Gentlemen you shall be my Confessors that one way or other it hath been my desire to hinder the growth of Popery and I could not be an honest man if I should have done otherwise And this I may say further that if I be not a Martyr I am sure I am a Confessor and in some sence I may be called a Martyr as in the Scripture Isaac was persecuted by Ishmael by mocking words for never King suffered more ill Tongues then I have done and I am sure for no cause yet I have been far from persecution for I have ever thought that no way more encreased any Religion then persecution according to that saying Sanguis Martyrum est Semen Ecclesiae Now my Lords and Gentlemen for your Petition I will not onely grant the substance of what you crave but add somewhat more of my own for the two Treaties being already annulled as I have declared them to be it necessarily follows of it self that which you desire and therefore it needs no more But that I do declare by Proclamation which I am ready to do that all Iesuites and Priests do depart by a day but it cannot be as you desire by our Proclamation to be out of all my Dominions for a Proclamation here extends but to this Kingdom This I will do and more I will Command all my Iudges when they go their Circuits to keep the same courses for putting all the Laws in Execution against Recusants as they were wont to do before these Treaties for the Laws are still in force and were never dispenced with by me God is my Iudge they were never so intended by me but as I told you in the beginning of the Parliament you must give me leave as a good horseman sometimes to use the Reins and not alwayes to use the Spurs So now there needs nothing but my Declaration for the disarming of them that is ready done by the Laws and shall be done as you desired and more I will take order for the shamefull disorder of the resorting of my Subjects to all foreign Ambassadors for this I will advise with my Councel how it may be best reformed It is true that the houses of Ambassadors are priviledged places and Major though they cannot take them out of their houses yet the Lord and Mr Recorder of London may take some of them as they come from thence and make them examples another point I will add concerning the education of their children of which I have had a principal care as the Lord of Canterbury and the Bishop of Winchester and other Lords of my Councel can bear me witness with whom I have advised about this business for in good faith it is a shame their Children should be bred here as if they were at Rome So I do grant not onely your desire but more I am sorry I was not the first mover of it to you but had you not done it I would have done it my self Now for the second part of your Petition you have here given me the best advice in the world for it is against the rule of wisdom that a King should suffer any of his Subjects to transgress the Laws by the intercession of other Princes and therefore assure your selves that by the Grace of God I will be carefull that no such conditions be foisted in upon any other Treaty whatsoever for it is fit my Subjects should stand or fall to their own Laws This Petition was furthered by the Duke of Buckingham who still retained the memory of his ill-usage in Spain and the Spanish Ambassador being netled thereat accused him to the King not without some reflection upon the Prince himself with some difficulty they procured a secret entercourse with the King and suggested unto him matters of near and high concernment to his Royal dignity and person They tell him that being besieged and closed up by the Dukes Servants and Vassals he was no more a freeman That he was to be confined to his Countrey-house and Pastimes the Prince having years and parts answerable for publick Government That the Duke had reconciled himself to all popular men such as Oxford Southampton Essex Say and others and sought to raise an opinion of his own greatness and to make the King grow less and that all looked towards the rising Sun Hereupon they advise the King to free himself from this Captivity and eminent Danger and to cut off so ungratefull an affecter of Popularity and greatness and so he should shew himself to be as he was reputed the oldest and wisest King in Europe These secrets were quickly blown abroad and brought to the Dukes Ear. But whatsoever impression the King received from them the thing whereupon he insisted openly was the demand of particular proofs But all their Answers consisted of Arguments against declaring the names of the Conspirators whereupon
the Kings Privy-Counsellors and other principal Subjects were examined upon oaths and Interrogatories most pertinent to the Accusation were propounded to them but this examination discovered nothing The King turned again to the Ambassadors with new instances to make a clear discovery but they still resolved to conceal the Authors And it was alledged by their Partakers and intimated to the King that the things were such as could not be evidenced by Legal proofs because the persons by whose testimony they may be confirmed do for fear of a most potent Adversary withdraw themselves and the Ambassadors never had the freedom personally to speak to his Majesty in the absence of the Duke of Buckingham an example say they unusual with other Kings and never to be taken well except when the King is weak in judgement and wants experience and a man wise and circumspect supplies his place But here said the Ambassador is a prudent King and a Favorite young rash and heady whose continual presence did argue guilt and fear and his Majesties most faithfull Servants dare not so much as disclose their minds Moreover they suggest that the business of the Palatinate was by him taken out of the hands of the Kings Council and referred to the Parliament that he did arrogate to himself the thanks of all things acceptable and was stiled the Redeemer of his Country and he would have it believed that he hath a dominion over the Kings and Princes will And things standing thus though many may be found that will speak against the King yet none will appear to speak against the Duke For which causes these close Informers besought his Majesty to free his Vassals from fear and diffidence who otherwise will dare discover nothing for his preservation But these dark Intelligences had no other issue then the moving of King Iames to represent to the King of Spain the miscarriages of his Ambassadors remitting the cause unto him with a demand of Justice and reparation for that the Information was sufficient to put impressions in him of perpetual jealousies of the Duke Hereupon when the Ambassadors were returned home they suffered a few dayes confinement but were afterwards rather rewarded and further imployed For in the Court of Spain Buckinghams name was odious and the Princes honor of little value and the Kings reputation at a low ebb divers particular Enmities were already begun between the Subjects of both Crowns the English Merchants were oppressed in the Spanish Ports Notwithstanding the Dukes vast power and popularity the Earl of Bristol refused to bow before him The Earl though his charge were heavy and his Cause strongly prejudiced did not abandon his own defence but protested against the Dukes Narration of the Spanish Affairs and was committed to the Tower being not admitted into the Kings presence nor to plead his Cause before him He was to the Duke a stout and dangerous Enemy insomuch that he was said to violate the rules of the prudent Mariner who in a Storm and foul weather is accustomed rather to pull down then to hoise up Sailes Saturday the 29 of May the King being come to the House of Peers and his Majesty and the Lords in their Robes Sir Thomas Crew Speaker being come to the Bar and the Commons present he made this Speech THat God to his own great glory had brought this Session of the Parliament so happily begun to so happy an end that both Houses and every particular Member thereof had given their willing assent even with one voice unto the Advice which his Majesty was pleased so low to descend as to demand of them As there was not an hammer heard in the building of the House of God so in this great Business there was not a Negative voice nor any jarring among them But their time was wholly spent in the business of Parliament in which they had prepared many Bills profitable for the Common-wealth and shewed the several natures of those Bills some for the service of God and restraint of Recusants some to redress the Enormities of the Commonwealth others of his Majesties grace and bounty to his people and some concerning the Prince's Highness touching his own Lands and others to settle strife in particular Estates all which do wait for and humbly desire his Majesties Royal assent He shewed also what great joy they all received for the Dissolution of the two Treaties with Spain and that Commissioners are required to see the Edicts performed against Recusants and Iesuites the Locusts of Rome wherein will consist his Majesties chiefest safety And they do render him humble thanks for their antient Priviledges which they fully enjoyed this Parliament and their so often access unto his Majesties presence and more especially for his Majesties general large liberal and free Pardon shewing the benefit thereof and reciting the particulars He also presented the Bill of Three entire Subsidies and Three Fifteens and Tenths granted this Session and declared the cheerfulness of the grant thereof And making his earnest prayers unto Almighty God to direct his Majesties heart to make his own Sword his Sheriff to put his Son-in-law in possession of his Palatinate the antient Inheritance of his Royal Grandchildren he ended humbly craving pardon for himself and his own errors committed this Session Unto which his Majesty presently made answer beginning with the last of the Speakers Speech touching their Freedom which he promised to continue unto them in as large a manner as ever they enjoyed the same And for the Restitution of his Son-in-law protested his continual care thereof and his great grief if he should not see an assured hope before he died and vowed that all the Subsidies for which he heartily thanked them though it had not been so tied and limited should have been bestowed that way His Majesty remembred them that nothing was given to relieve his own wants which he expecteth at the ne●● Session the beginning of Winter He acknowledged the obedience and good respect of the Commons in all things this Parliament for which as he was pleased to say he thanks them heart●ly and without complement and if they please to continue the same at their next meeting it will make this the happiest Parliament that ever was His Majesty spake also of the Grievances presented unto him yesterday by the Commons at Whitehall promising them a full Answer at their next meeting That he had looked over them and was glad they were of no greater importance His Majesty remembred the House to handle Grievances at their next meeting and to hunt after none nor to present any but those of importance He promised to go over them all and to give a free answer such as should be good for his People not respecting any Creature whatsoever and that he will advise herein with his Council and Judges At this time his Majesty said he would shew them his grievances first that they grieve at the Reformation of Building about London
with Brick which he intendeth onely for the Beauty and more ●afety of the City therefore he will go through with it and if the Commissioners offend herein let the party aggrieved complain and he will redress it that the form of proceedings used by the Commons in this Parliament is also a grievance unto his Majesty for that they did not call the Commissioners whom they complained of before them touching their complaint against Doctor Aynan his Majesty said their oath of Supremacy forbids them to meddle with Church matters besides they complain against him and never heard him Touching their complaint against the Apothecaries his Majesty protested his care therein to be onely for his peoples health it is dangerous for every one to meddle with Apothecaries ware and the Grocers have a Trade beside His fourth grievance is that Seditious Books are so frequently printed which he will be carefull to prevent hereafter Fifthly for calling in so many Patents appointing the Patentees to wait so many days with their Council and never to hear them wherefore his Majesty warned them to call for no more hereafter unless they first knew them to be grievous to the people and so his Majesty concluded with thanks for the Commons good carriage towards him and his Lords this Session Then the Lord Keeper spake to the particulars of the Speakers Speech and by his Majesties command approved them all alluding the general consent of both Houses to the Septuagint directed by the Holy Ghost and touching the Speakers desire for the Kings assent to the Bills past both Houses he said the royal assent is proper to the Lawgiver and shewed that it is best for the people that this is in his Majesties power and not in themselves for the King knoweth what is best to be granted unto his people as may appear by the Petition that Bathsheba made to King Solomon to give unto Adonijah Abishag to wife which had Solomon granted he had given Adonijah means to usurp the Kingdom contrary to Bathsheba's meaning and such is his Majesties intent this day for such Bills which he will not pass That his Majesty had given his consent to all the Bills of Grace and to the Bill of the continuance of some Statutes and repeal of others so necessary and for the good of the people That his Majesty accepteth in good part their thanks for his general Pardon which he hath so freely granted unto his Subjects but his special command is that those that are in Office do look strictly to the execution of Laws against Recusants the Subsidies his Majesties graciously accepteth and therefore imitates not the Story in Macrobius of one who had all his debts paid and instead of thanks answered mihi nihil though this be given to the Palatinate his Majesty interpreteth it as given to himself and rendreth to you all hearty thanks for the same The Lord Keeper having ended his Speech the Clerk of the Crown stood up and read the title of the Bills passed both Houses and the Clerk of the Parliament read his Majesties Answer to each Bill which being done his Majesty remembred the breaking up of three Parliaments together and the happy conclusion of this Session and puts the Commons again in minde that at their next meeting they do so carry themselves that this Parliament may be as happily continued to the end At the Parliament holden at Westminster by Prorogation the Nineteenth day of February Anno Regis Iacobi Angliae Franciae Hiberniae vicesimo primo Scotiae quinquagesimo septimo These Acts were passed 1. AN Act for making perpetual an Act made Anno 39 Eliz. Entituled An Act for the Erecting of Hospitals and Workhouses for the Poor 2. An Act for the quiet of the Subject against Concealments 3. An Act concerning Monopolies and Dispensations with Penal Laws 4. An Act for ease of the Subjects concerning Informations upon Penal Statutes 5. An Act That Sheriffs their Heirs c. having a Quietus est shall be discharged of their Accompts with the Judges opinion therein 6. An Act concerning Women convicted of small Felonies 7. An Act to repress Drunkenness and to restrain the haunting of Inns c. 8. An Act to punish Abuses in procuring Supersedeas of the Peace out of the Courts at Westminster and to prevent the Abuses in procuring Writs of Certiorari out of the said Courts c. 9. An Act for the Free Trade of Welsh Clothes c. in England and Wales 10. An Act to repeal a Branch of the Statute An. 34 H. 8. Entituled An Act for certain Ordinances in the Kings Dominions and Principality of Wale 11. An Act for Confirmation of a Judgment given for his Majesty in a Scire facias against Henry Heron and for Declaration of the Letters Patents therein mentioned to be void 12. An Act to make perpetual the Act for ease in pleading against troublesom Suits prosecuted against Justices of the Peace Mayors c. 13. An Act for the further reformation of Jeofails 14. An Act to admit the Subject to plead the General Issue in Informations of Intrusion brought on the Kings behalf and to retain his Possession till Trial. 15. An Act to enable Judges and Justices to give restitution of Possession in certain cases 16. An Act for Limitation of Actions and for avoiding of Suits in Law 17. An Act against Usury 18. An Act for the Continuance of a former Statute made 4º Iac. Entituled An Act for the true making of Woollen Clothes 19. An Act for the further Description of a Bankrupt and relief of Creditors against such as shall become Bankrupts and for inflicting of Corporal punishment upon them in some Cases 20. An Act to prevent Swearing and Cursing 21. An Act concerning Hostlers and Inholders 22. An Act explaining a Statute An. 3 4 5 E. 6. concerning the Traders of Butter and Cheese 23. An Act to avoid Delaies by removing of Actions out of Inferior Courts 24. An Act for relief of Creditors against such as die in Execution 25. An Act for relief of Patentees Tenants and Farmers of Crown-Lands and Duchy-Lands 26. An Act against such as shall levy any Fine suffer any Recovery knowledge any Statute Recognisance Bail or Judgment in the name of any person not privy thereunto 27. An Act to prevent the murthering of Bastard-children 28. An Act to continue divers Statutes and repeal others 29. An Act to enable Prince Charls to make Leases of Lands parcel of the Duchy of Cornwal or annexed to the same 30. An Act to assure York-House and other Lands to the King and to assure the Manors of Brighton Santon and other Lands to the Archbishop of York c. 31. An Act for the good Government of the Makers of Knives in Hallam-shire in the County of York 32. An Act to make the Thames Navigable from Bercot to Oxon. 33. An Act for the Subsidies of the Clergy 34. An Act for Three Subsidies Three Fifteens and Tenths granted by the
done to Catholicks procure envy to us and thank to themselves then that some of our Countreymen Zealous of the Truth though differing from the Religion which we have suckek from our Infancy should have an honorable occasion of making their abode in the Court of Rome from whom your Holiness may be certainly informed of the state of our Affairs In this regard we recommend unto you the Bishop of Vazion who as he doth impute whatsoever increase of his condition to your Holiness alone so we are earnest Suitors that for our sake especially the honor of a Cardinals Cap may be added to his former advantages By this means the Calumnies of our Enemies will cease when such are present with you who may be able to assert the truth of our doings We do not desire any of our actions should be concealed from just Arbitrators for though we have been bred up in the truth of that Religion which we now profess yet we have always determined that there is nothing better and safer then piously and without ostentation to endeavor the promoting of those things which really belong to the glory of Gods Name and laying aside the goa●ds of Envy and applying the warmth and fomentation of Charity diligently to consider what belongeth not to the empty name of Religion but to the holy Symbol of true Piety But because we have discoursed more at large of these things with the bearer hereof a man not unlearned and indifferently well conversant in our Affairs we have thought best to be no more tedious by a long Letter Your Holiness most dutiful Son J. R. From Holy Rood 24 Sept. 1599. SUmma mandatorum Edwardi Drummond Jurisconsulti quem ad Pontificem Maximum Ducem Etruriae Ducem Sabaudiae caeterosque Principes Cardinales ablegamus Salutabis imprimis nostro nomine quàm potes officiosissimè Pontificiem Maximum caeterosque Principes Cardinales datisque nostris literis fiduciariis significabis Capere nos vehementer eum quem decet amoris benevolentiae modum cum iis conservare omnemque removere non suspicionem modo sed suspicionis levissimam quamcunque occasionem Quod quamvis in ea persistimus Religione quam à teneris hausimus annis non tamen ita esse Charitatis expertes quin de Christianis omnibus bene sentiamus modo in officio primum erga Deum Optimum Maximum deinde erga Magistratus quorum subsunt imperio permanserint Nullam nos unquam saevitiam contra quoscunque Catholicos Religionis ergo exercuisse Et quia plurimum interest nostra ut pari diligentia qua malevoli mentiuntur nos per amicos subditos veritatem possimus adstruere idcirco inniteris in hoc totis viribus ut Pontifex Maximus tam rogatu nostro quam precibus Illustrissimorum Principum quos per literas nostras ad hoc rogavimus ad hoc induci possit ut Episcopus Vazionensis in Cardinalium Collegium adsciscatur in quo si profeceris ut de eo redditi fuerimus certiores ulterius progrediemur Cavebis ne in hoc negotio ad Pontificem Maximum aut Illustrissimos Cardinales ulterius progrediaris nisi prius subsit certa spes optati eventus This Letter was conveyed by Edward Drummond the Lawyer whom the King sent to the Pope the Duke of Tuscany the Duke of Savoy and other Princes and Cardinals First You shall most respectively Salute in our Name the Pope and those other Princes and Cardinals and having delivered our Letters of Credence shall signifie That we exceedingly desire to reserve with them the measure of Love and good Will which is sitting to remove not onely all suspition but any thing that may be the cause of Suspition That although we persist in the Religion which we suck'd in from our Infancy yet we are not so void of Charity but to think well of all Christians if so be they continue in their duty first towards God and then towards the Magistrate whose Subjects they are That we never exercised any cruelty against the Catholicks for Religion sake And because it doth very much concern us that we may be able to assert the truth by our Friends and Subjects with the same diligence that slanderers lie therefore you shall endeavor to the utmost to perswade the Pope as well at our entreaty as for the desire of these most Illustrious Princes whom in our Letters we have sollicited in our behalf to make the Bishop of Vazion Cardinal wherein if you be successful as soon as we shall be certified thereof we will proceed further You must be cautelous not to proceed any further in this business either with the Pope or the most Illustrious Cardinals unless there be a certain hope of our wished event The High mighty Monarch Charles by the grace of God King of Great Brittaine France Ireland Defender of the Faith Historical Collections Primo CAROLI ON the same day when King Iames departed this life at Theobalds the Lord President of the Council and the Lord Marshal of England were immediately sent by the Body of the Council to Prince Charles who was then retired to his Chamber to give him notice of his Fathers decease and that they were all there ready to present themselves unto him if his pleasure were to admit them but he being in sadness wished them to forbear their coming till the next morning In the mean time the Privy-Counsellors assembled themselves drew up the form of a Proclamation to proclaim King Charles which was forthwith published at the Court-Gate at Theobalds which being done the King signified his pleasure that the Lord Keeper the Lord Treasurer the Lord President the Lord Chamberlain the Treasurer of the House and the Comptroller should attend him they all came and rendred up their Offices and Places to him which his Majesty presently restored to them again The Privy-Counsellors gave notice to the Lord Major of London that he and all the Aldermen should that day appear in their Robes at Ludgate whither the Lords and others would repair to proclaim King Charles Accordingly the Lords went from Theobalds to the Palace of Whitehall where the Nobility then about London were gathered together At Whitehall-Gate the King was proclaimed by sound of Trumpet all the Nobility Privy-Counsellors and Gentry being on Horse-back went thence and proclaimed the King at Charing-Cross Denmark-house Temple-Bar at the great Conduit in Fleetstreet and thence they rode up to Ludgate where the Lord Major and Aldermen were on Horse-back expecting within the Gates and the Lords and others entered and proclaimed him there and then they rode all to Cheapside-Cross where they proclaimed the King again and the Lords returning thence left order with the Lord Major to go on with the Proclamation in other parts of the City The same day King Charles removed from Theobalds and came to St Iames's in the Evening and the Corps of the deceased King remained at Theobalds
sorts of persons might partake of the Publick Joy Prisoners for Debts were set at liberty and Pardon was granted to several Criminals as an earnest of the Kings respect and love to his Sister after this new Alliance The Duke of Buckingham was sent into France to his Christian Majesty to send away the Wife to the King of Great Britain and to be her Convoy He arrived at Paris the 24. of May with the Earl of Montgomery and other English Lords and was lodged in the Palace of the Duke of Chevereux who with his Lady was to conduct the Queen into England there to render her to the King her Husband During the seven days stay which the Duke made at Park the Feastings and Rejoicings were renewed and multiplied Bonfires shining and Canons playing but none did equalize the Feast that was made by the Cardinal of Richelieu The Second of Iune was the time appointed for our Queens departure The King of France sent to the Towns in her way to render her Majesty all due honors as if it were to himself The King of England having notice that the Queen was gone from Amiens sent a Royal Navy to Boloign to transport her the Fleet saluted the Town with a hundred peece of Canon Among other great Ladies the Duchess of Buckingham was sent to kiss the Queens hands as from the King her Husband desiring her to take her own time of coming over with most conveniencie to her own person The 22. of Iune New Stile the Queen imbarqued at Boloign and within Twenty four hours arrived at Dover And as the King was preparing to receive her she sent to his Majesty to desire him not to come till the morrow because she had been somewhat indisposed at Sea She passed that night at Dover and the next day about Ten of the clock the King was there with the Flower of the Nobility and after some Complements past caused every-body to retire and they were half an hour together in the Closet Thence his Majesty conducted the Queen to Canterbury and the same evening the Marriage was there consummated Then the Queen in testimony of her respect and love to the King her Husband made it her first suit as afterwards the King made known That he would not be angry with her for her faults of Ignorance before he had first instructed her to eschew them For that she being young and coming into a strange Country both by her years and ignorance of the Customs of the Nation might commit many Errors And she desired him in such cases to use no Third person but by himself to inform her when he found she did ought amiss The King granted her request and thanked her for it desiring her to use him even as she had desired him to use her which she willingly promised The Knights and Gentlemen of Kent together with the Trained Bands were by Order of the Council commanded to attend and receive the Queen at the most convenient places as she passed in such solemn manner and equipage as beseemed the dignity of his Majesty and the quality of her person Likewise the Magistrates of the Cities and Towns were commanded to attend at her passage in such Formalities as are used in principal and extraordinary Solemnities On the Sixteenth of Iune the King and Queen came both to London Great preparations were made and intended for her Majesties reception but the Plague then increasing those Ceremonies were laid aside A Chappel at Somerset-house was built for the Queen and her Family with Conveniencies thereunto adjoining for Capuchin-Friers who were therein placed and had permission to walk abroad in their Religious habits Thence-forward greater multitudes of Seminary-Priests and Iesuites repaired into England out of Forein parts This Summer the Pestilence raged in London At the entrance of the late King there was a great Plague in the City but this was far greater and the greatest that ever was known in the Nation For which cause a great part of Trinity-Term was adjourned from the First Return to the Fourth by the advice of the Privy-Council and the Justices of the Courts at Westminster and some few days in the beginning and ending thereof were holden for the better expediting and continuing of Causes and Suits and the returning and suing out of Processes and such like business as might be done in the absence of the Parties by their Attornies On the Eighteenth day of Iune the Parliament began at Westminster The King being placed in his Royal Throne the Lords sitting in their Robes the Commons also being present his Majesty spake thus I Thank God that the Business to be treated on at this time is of such a nature that it needs no Eloquence to set it forth For I am neither able to do it neither doth it stand with my Nature to spend much time in words It is no new business being already happily begun by my Father of blessed memory who is with God therefore it needeth no Narrative I hope in God you will go on to maintain it as freely as you advised my Father to it It is true He may seem to some to have been slack to begin so just and so glorious a work but it was his wisdom that made him loth to begin a work until he might find a means to maintain it But after that he saw how much he was abused in the confidence he had with other States and was confirmed by your Advice to run the Course we are in with your Engagement to maintain it I need not press to prove how willingly he took your Advice for the Preparations that are made are better able to declare it then I to speak it The assistance of those in Germany the Fleet that is ready for action with the rest of the Preparations which I have only followed my Father in do sufficiently prove that he entred into this Action My Lords and Gentlemen I hope that you do remember that you were pleased to imploy me to advise my Father to break off those two Treaties that were on foot so that I cannot say that I came hither a free unengaged man It 's true I came into this business willingly and freely like a Young man and consequently rashly but it was by your interest your engagement So that though it were done like a Young man yet I cannot repent me of it and I think none can blame me for it knowing the love and fidelity you have borne to your King having my self likewise some little experience of your affections I pray you remember that this being my first Action and begun by your Advice and intreaty what a great Dishonor it were to you and me if this Action so begun should fail for that Assistance you are able to give me Yet knowing the constancie of your love both to me and this Business I needed not to have said this but only to shew what care and sense I have
the Parliament to tend to the Kings dishonor and disturbance of Church and State and took Bond for his appearance Hereupon the King intimated to the House that the things determined concerning Mountague without his Privity did not please him for that he was his Servant and Chaplain in Ordinary and he had taken the business into his own hands whereat the Commons seemed to be much displeased Howbeit to take away all occasion of disgust from the King at the entrance of his Reign both Houses did humbly present two Subsidies granted to his Majesty as the first-fruits of their love whereof they craved acceptance The Lord Conway Secretary of State signified to the House of Lords the Commons being present the Kings gracious acceptance of the Bill of Two Subsidies Yet that the necessities of the present Affairs were not therein satisfied but required their further Counsels He reminded them that the late King was provoked beyond his nature to undertake a War for the recovery of his Childrens Antient Patrimony The charges of this War appeared by Computation to amount unto Seven hundred thousand pounds a year to support the Netherlands and to prevent the Emperors design of concluding with the Princes of Germany utterly to exclude the Palsgrave he levied an Army under Count Mansfield The Kings of Denmark and Sweden and the Princes of Germany levied another France Savoy and Venice joyned together for a War of Diversion and to uphold the Netherlands the charges of Mansfield and Denmarks Army must yet continue After this the Lord Keeper delivered a short Message from the King to both Houses That to the Petition of the Lords and Commons touching Religion his Majesty was pleased at the first to answer Gratiously but now he hath sent them a fuller Answer even an assurance of his real performance in every particular The Houses were preparing several Acts as against giving and taking of Bribes for places of Judicature about pressing of Soldiers and Tonnage and Poundage c. But by reason of the great increase of the Plague as appeared that week by the Bill of Mortality the King being moved by the Houses to grant a short Recess adjourned the Parliament to Oxford to reassemble the first of August following And for the same reason the receipt of the Kings Exchequer was removed from Westminster to Richmond and all Fairs within Fifty miles of London were prohibited to prevent a more general contagion In the time of this Recess the Vantguard a principal Ship of the Royal Navy with seven Merchant Ships of great burden and strength were lent to the French King and employed against Rochel which was thus brought about King Iames in his life time being in Treaty for a Marriage between his Son and the now Queen and entring into a War against the King of Spain and his Allies in Italy and the Valtoline had passed some Promise for the procuring or lending of ships to the French King upon reasonable Conditions but in no wise intending they should serve against Rochel or any of our Religion in France For the French Ministers pretended that the Ships should be employed onely against Genoa but afterwards the Protestants in France intimating their suspition that the design for Italy was a meer pretence to make up an Army to fall upon the Rochellers and others of the Religion King Iames willing to perform his promise and yet to secure the Protestants directed that the greater number of those that served in the Ships should be English whereby he might keep the power in his own hands For the performance of this Engagement the forenamed Ships were at this time commanded to the Coasts of France Nevertheless there wanted a sufficient care to prevent the abusing and inslaving them to the designs of the French King Captain Iohn Pennington the Admiral of this Fleet was much unsatisfied and presented to the Duke of Buckingham Lord High Admiral his Exceptions to the Contract between his Majesty and that King and chiefly for that the Companies were bound to fight at the French Kings Command against any Nation except their own and that the French might put aboard them as many of their own people as they pleased The Vantguard arived at Deep but the rest lingred behinde for the Companies understanding that the French design was to surprise the Ships and to block up the Harbor of Rochel resolved to sink rather then go against those of their own Religion Captain Pennington received Letters from the Duke and a Warrant from Secretary Conway in the Kings Name to command him to deliver up the Ships to the hands of such Frenchmen as his Christian Majesty shall appoint but withal directing him not to dissert his charge by which latter passage he was willing to understand that it was not the Dukes intention that he should dispossess himself and his Companies of them for he supposed his Grace had no such unjust thought as to continue him there alone These Orders were delivered unto him by the hands of the French Ambassador together with a Letter from the French King which willed him to receive his Soldiers and his Admiral the Duke of Montmorance and joyn with his Fleet against his Rebellious Subjects Whereupon the Ambassador urged the Surrender of the Ship and nothing would satisfie him but a present possession and a discharge of the English Soldiers save a very few in case they were willing to be entertained in the service Pennington after much dispute although he were promised an ample reward in Money to be given him at the Surrender and of a Royal Pension during his life came to this resolute Answer That without an express and clear Warrant he would not surrender nor discharge a man of his Company Whereupon the French Ambassadors Secretary came two several times to the Ship to protest against the Captain as a Rebel to his King and Countrey but at the making of the last Protest which was accompanied with threatning Speeches the Soldiers and Mariners grew into such a fury and tumult that they got up their Anchors and set fail for England saying They would rather be hanged at home then surrender the Ship or be Slaves to the French and fight against their own Religion All which Captain Pennington did not gainsay nor oppose but when they came to Anchor in the Downs he advertised the Duke of all that had hapned and craved further direction but complained of the Bondage of this Engagement assuring him That the Mariners would rather be hanged then return again into France So in all the rest of the Ships the Captains and Companies utterly refused the Service and protested against it though they were tempted with Chains of Gold and other Rewards All this while the Body of the Council were ignorant of any other design then th● of Genoa then divers persons came over from the Duke of Rohan and the Protestants of France to sollicit the King and Council against
was done to this effect THat our Soveraign Lord King Iames of Famous Memory at the Suit of both Houses of Parliament and by the powerful operation of his Majesty that now is gave consent to break off the Two Treaties with Spain touching the Match and the Palatinate and to vindicate the many wrongs and scorns done unto his Majesty and his Royal Children Besides if the King of Spain were suffered to proceed in his Conquests under pretence of the Catholick Cause he would become the Catholick Monarch which he so much affects and aspires unto Also amidst these Necessities our late King considered That he might run a hazard with his people who being so long inured to Peace were unapt to War that the uniting with other Provinces in this undertaking was a Matter of exceeding Difficulty This drew him to new Treaties for regaining his Children right which were expulsed by the Friends and Agents of Spain and wherein his Majesty proceeded as far as the wisest Prince could go and suffered himself to be won unto that which otherwise was impossible for his Royal Nature to endure He considered also the many Difficulties abroad the Duke of Bavaria by Force and Contract had the Palatinate in his own possession most of the Electors and Princes of Germany were joyned with him The Estates of the other Princes most likely to joyn in a War of Recovery were seized and secured and all by a Conquering Army Besides the Emperor had called a Diet in which he would take away all possibility of recovering the Honor and Inheritance of the Palatinate thus it stood in Germany And in France the King there chose to sheath his Sword in the Bowels of his own Subjects rather then to declare against the Catholick Cause In the Low-Countreys the Sect of the Arminians prevailed much who inclined to the Papists rather then to their own safety notwithstanding that the Enemy had a great and powerful Army near them so that his Majesty was inforced to Protect and Countenance them with an Army of Six thousand from hence with a Caution of the like Supply from thence if required Moreover he sought Alliance with France by a Match for his Royal Majesty that now is thereby to have Interest in that King and to make him a Party The last consideration was his Majesties own Honor who had labored with the two Kings of Denmark and Sweden and the German Princes from whom he received but cold Answers they refusing to joyn unless they first saw his Majesty in the Field But of this he was very tender unless the League were broken or he first warred upon The Forces of an Army were considered and the way of proceeding whether by Invasion or Diversion The Charges thereof appeared in Parliament to be Seven hundred thousand pounds a year besides Ireland was to be fortified the Forts here repaired and a Navy prepared he thought it feasible to enter into a League with the French King and the Duke of Savoy and Venice Hereupon an Army was committed to Count Mansfield the charge whereof came to Seventy thousand pounds a Moneth for his Majesties part also he commanded the preparing of this great Fleet All which so heartned the Princes of Germany that they sent Ambassadors to the Kings of Denmark and Sweden and those two Kings offered a greater Army both of Horse and Foot to which his Majesty was to pay a proportion Count Mansfields Army though disastrous produced these happy effects First It prevented the Diet intended by the Emperor Secondly The German Princes gained new courage to defend themselves and oppose their Enemies Thirdly The King of Denmark hath raised an Army with which he is marched in person as far as Minden Moreover the Confederates of France and Italy have prosecuted a War in Milan and Peace is now made by the French King with his own Subjects so that by this means breath is given to our Affairs This Parliament is not called in meer Formality upon his Majesties first coming to the Crown but upon these Real Occasions to consult with the Lords and Commons Two Subsidies are already given and gratiously accepted but the Moneys thereof and much more are already disbursed A Fleet is now at Sea and hastning to their Rendezvous the Army is ready at Plimouth expecting their Commanders His Majesties Honor Religion and the Kingdomes safety is here engaged besides he is certainly advised of Designs to infest his Dominions in Ireland and upon our own Coasts and of the Enemies increase of Shipping in all parts These things have called the Parliament hither and the present Charge of all amounts to above Four hundred thousand pounds the further prosecution whereof the King being unable to bear hath left it to their Consultations His Majesty is verily perswaded That there is no King that loves his Subjects Religion and the Laws of the Land better then himself and likewise that there is no people that better loves their King which he will cherish to the uttermost It was thought that this place had been safe for this Assembly yet since the Sickness hath brought some fear thereof his Majesty willeth the Lords and Commons to put into the Ballance with the fear of the Sickness his and their great and weighty occasions Then the Lord Treasurer added That the late King when he died was indebted to the City of London 120000 l. besides Interest and indebted for Denmark and the Palatinate 150000 l. and indebted for his Wardrobe 40000 l. That these debts lie upon his Majesty that now is who is indebted upon London 70000 l. That he hath laid out for his Navy 20000 l. and 20000 l. for Count Mansfield And for Mourning and Funeral expences for his Father 42000 l. For expences concerning the Queen 40000. The Navy will require to set it forth in that Equipage as is requisit for the great Design his Majesty hath in hand and to pay them for the time intended for this Expedition 300000 l. After this Conference the Commons fell into high Debates alleaging That the Treasury was mis-employed that evil Councels guided the Kings Designs that our Necessities arose through Improvidence that they had need to Petition the King for a strait hand and better Counsel to Manage his Affairs And though a former Parliament did engage the King in a War yet if things were managed by contrary Designs and the Treasure misemployed This Parliament is not bound by another Parliament to be carried blindfold in Designs not guided by sound Counsel and that it is was not usual to grant Subsidies upon Subsidies in one Parliament and no Grievances redressed There were many Reflections upon the Dukes miscarriages likewise they reassumed the Debate concerning Montague and they resolved That Religion should have the first place in their Debates and next unto it the Kingdoms Safety and then Supplies Other particulars were likewise insisted on That the King be desired to Answer in full Parliament to the Petition
concerning Religion and that his Answer be Inrolled with the force of an Act of Parliament Also that the House consider of the new prepared Fleet and Army and whither intended no Enemy being yet declared That great Sums of Money were given for places to the value of an Hundred and forty thousand pounds at least that the King should contribute to help the Palatinates Cause with his own Estate that the time of the year was too far spent for the Fleet to go forth in Service that inquiry be made whether the Duke brake not the Match with Spain out of Spleen and Malice to Conde Olivares whether he made not the Match with France upon harder terms and whether the Ships lent against Rochel were not maintained with the Subsidies given for the relief of the Palatinate that an Advised Counsel for the Government of the present Affairs and to look into the Kings Estate is necessary that his Majesty be desired to give his Answer concerning the Imposition on Wines and Select Committees draw out these Heads at large to be presented to the King The doing whereof they said was no Capitulation with his Majesty but an ordinary Parliamentary course Without which the Commonwealth could never supply the King nor indeed subsist Soon after the Commons had a Conference with the Lords desiring their Concurrence in presenting to the King these Matters following That notwithstanding the Lords and Commons at their last Meeting this Session did Petition his Majesty for the advancing of Gods true Religion and the suppressing of Popery unto which his Majesty vouchsafed as well from his own Mouth as by the Lord Keeper to return such Answer as assured them of his Royal performance yet at this Meeting they finde That on the 12 of Iuly last his Majesty granted a Pardon unto Alexander Baker a Jesuite and unto Ten other Papists which as the Commons have been informed was gotten by the importunity of some Foreign Ambassador and passed by immediate Warrant and was recommended by the Principal Secretary of State without the payment of the ordinary Fees And further That divers Copies of Letters and other Papers being found in the house of one Mary Estmonds in Dorsetshire by two Justices of Peace who thereupon tendred her the Oath of Alleagiance and upon her refusal committed her to the Constable from whom she made an escape and complained to the King The Principal Secretary did write to those two Justices in favor of her Upon these Passages the Commons made Observations first upon the date of the Pardon which was the next day after his Majesties Answer by the Lord Keeper to their Petition concerning Religion secondly That the Pardon dispenced with several Laws as of the 21 and 27 of Queen Elizabeth and of the Third of King Iames provided to keep the Subjects in due obedience thirdly That the Pardon was signed by the Principal Secretary of State and therefore the Commons declared that these actings tended to the prejudice of true Religion his Majesties dishonor the discountenancing of the Ministers of Justice the grief of the good people the animating of the Popish party who by such examples grew more proud and insolent and to the discouragement of the High Court of Parliament All which they humbly desire his Majesty to take into due consideration and to give effectual and speedy Redress therein The Lord Conway principal Secretary of State being called to give an Accompt of this business answered That he ever hated the Popish Religion That the Pardon was granted before the King answered their Petition though it bore not date till afterwards That the King commanded the doing thereof and that no Fees should be taken That he was commanded by the King to write a Letter in favor of the Woman in Dorset-shire and what he did therein was to take off all scandal from the King though it lighted upon himself This Conference no sooner ended but both Houses were ordered to meet at Christ-Church to receive an Answer to their Petition concerning Religion To every Clause whereof his Majesty answered in a Parliamentary way The Petition Remedies and the Kings Answer we give you intermixt for the better understanding the Answer to every respective Clause distinctly To the Kings most Excellent Majesty Most Gracious Soveraign IT being infallibly true that nothing can more establish the Throne and assure the peace and prosperity of the people then the unity and sincerity of Religion We your most humble and loyal Subjects the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and Commons of this present Parliament assembled hold our selves bound in conscience and duty to represent the same to your Sacred Majesty together with the dangerous Consequences of the increase of Popery in this Land and what we conceive to be the principal Causes thereof and what may be the Remedies The Dangers appear in these particulars I. In their desperate ends being both the subversion of Church and State and the restlesness of their spirits to attain these ends the Doctrine of their Teachers and Leaders perswading them that therein they do God good service II. Their evident and strict dependencie upon such Forein Princes as no way affect the good of your Majesty and this State III. The opening a way of Popularity to the Ambition of any who shall adventure to make himself Head of so great a Party The principal Cause of the Increase of Papists I. The want of the due execution of Laws against Iesuites Seminary Priests and Popish Recusants occasioned partly by the connivencie o● the State partly by defects in the Laws themselves and partly by the manifold acuse of Officers II. The interposing of Foreign Princes by their Ambassadors and agents in favor of them III. Their great Concourse to the City and frequent Conferences and Conventicles there IV. The open and usual resort to the Houses and Chappels of Forein Ambassadors V. The Education of their Children in Seminaries and Houses of their Religion in Foreign parts which of late have been greatly multiplied and enlarged for entertaining of the English VI. That in some places of your Realm your people be not sufficiently instructed in the knowledge of true Religion VII The licentious printing and dispersing of Popish and Seditious Books VIII The imployment of men ill-affected in Religion in places of Government who do shall or may countenance the Popish party The Remedies against this outragious and dangerous disease We conceive to be these ensuing I. That the Youth of this Realm be carefully educated by able and Religious Schoolmasters and they to be enjoined to Catechise and instruct their Scholars in the grounds and principles of true Religion And whereas by many Complaints from divers parts of the Kingdom it doth plainly appear That sundry Popish Scholars dissembling their Religion have craftily crept in and obtained the places of Teaching in divers Counties and thereby infected and perverted their Scholars and so fitted them to be transported to the Popish Seminaries beyond
and he will improve it to your honor and the good of Religion as you issue nothing that is loss so you will bring home something that is gain and henceforward maintain the War by the perquisites thereof make but once an Entrance it may afterwards be maintained with profit when the Enemy is declared you may have Letters of Mart none shall be denied I have not been so idle but I shall make Propositions of advantage whither your selves may go and shall have the honey of the business August 9. 1625. After the Commons returned from the House of Lords they made Report of this Business unto the House which occasioned variety of Opinions Some were for giving the King present Supply who had made so gracious an Answer to the Petition for Religion and given direction that the same should be Inrolled pressing further That this Supply was not for the Kings own particular Wants but for the Honor and Defence of the Kingdom and that it might prove dangerous not to comply with the King in a modest and just desire Others were of a contrary minde and said It was requisite to present to his Majesty the means how he may live glorious at home and how he may be feared abroad by having his Designs better mannaged and an Enemy Declared Then may spurs be added to the Sea-horse and the King of Spain infested at a lesser charge and we better secured from Papists at home whose hearts are knit with the Spaniard and whose Estates may liberally contribute to the War and the great Sums given for Honors and Offices would go far in setting forth a Fleet at Sea and the Subject not be always importuned for Supply But the further Debate of this Business was put off till the next day being Wednesday the Tenth of August The next day the King sends a Message to the Commons wherein he takes notice that the House intended to enter into Consideration of divers heads concerning the King and the Common-wealth that he was pleased with their good intentions but desired them to consider his Affairs which require a speedy dispatch the season of the year was far spent yet the time not unseasonable for the Design that if the Plague should happen in the Navy the Action would be lost that if any of the House should be touched with the sickness much inconvenience would ensue by an abrupt breaking up therefore desires a present Answer about Supply if not he will take more care of the Commons then they will of themselves and will make as good a shift for himself as he can to go through with this present occasion and offereth that the Parliament shall meet again in Winter at what time they please upon his Royal word and hold together till they have perfected all things for the good of the Common-wealth and the King which are now in conception and desires them to consider it was the first Request that ever he made unto them Hereupon some earnestly pressed the giving of two Subsidies and two Fifteens his Majesties honor and the Necessity of his Affairs requiring it as it appeared out of Considerations already frequently represented Others replied that Necessity is a dangerous Counsellor and is a continual Argument of Supplies in all Parliaments that those Counsellors who have put the King and Kingdom into such a Necessity and hazard ought to answer for it whosoever they be that if the State of things will not admit a Redress of Grievances surely there is not so much necessity for money to give Subsidy upon Subsidy in one Parliament is not usual in the Eighteenth year of Henry the third there was one punished for pressing of more Subsidies when Subsidies had been granted before in that Parliament In the end it was proposed that a Report be made to the King that they have regard to his Honor Necessity and Safety and the safety of the Kingdom and that they will assist his Majesty in any honorable Action grounded upon sound Councils and that something be drawn up in writing to that purpose accordingly the House agreed upon a short Declaration which was assented unto without a Negative WE the Knights Cittzens and Burgesses of the Commons House of Parliament being the Representative body of the whole Commons of this Realm abundantly comforted in his Majesties late gracious Answer touching Religion and his Message for the care of our health do Solemnly protest and vow before God and the world with one heart and voice that we are all resolved and do hereby declare that we will ever continue most Loyal and obedient Subjects to our most gracious Soveraign Lord King Charles and that we will be ready in convenient time and in a Parliamentary way freely and dutifully to do our utmost endeavors to discover and reform the Abuses and Grievances of the Realm and State and in like sort of afford all necessary Supply to his most Excellent Majesty upon his present and all other his just Occasions and Designs most humbly beseeching our said Dear and Dread Soveraign in his Princely wisdom and goodness to rest assured of the true and hearty affections of his poor Commons and to esteem the same to be as we conceive it is indeed the greatest worldly reputation and security that a just King can have and to accompt all such as slanderers of the peoples affections and Enemies to the Common-wealth that shall dare to say the contrary This Declaration was sent to the King by such of the Privy-Council as were Members of the House Notwithstanding the King perceiving the House resolved against Supply without Redress of Grievances and in their Debates to reflect upon some great Persons near unto him the 12th of August sent to the House of Peers a Commission directed to several Lords for the Dissolution of the Parliament whereupon the Gentleman-Usher was commanded to signifie to the Speaker of the House of Commons that the Lords had received his Majesties Commission which was read unto both Houses whereupon the Commons with their Speaker went up presently to the Lords heard the Commission read and the Parliament declared to be dissolved At this Parliament begun and holden by Prorogation at Westminster the 18th day of Iune Anno Regis Caroli Primo 1625. these Acts were passed 1. AN Act for the punishing of divers Abuses committed on the Lords-Day commonly called Sunday 2. An Act to enable the King to make Leases of Lands parcel of the Dutchy of Cornwal 3. An Act for the ease of obtaining Licenses of Alienation and in the pleading of Alienations with licence or of Pardons of Alienations without licence in the Court of Exchequer or elsewhere 4. An Act to restrain Tipling in Inns and Ale-houses 5. An Act for the Subsidy of the Clergy 6. An Act for the two Subsidies of the Temporalty 7. An Act that this Session of Parliament shall not determine by his Majesties assent to this and some other Acts. 8. An Act
require of you by these Presents is Which we do promise in the name of Us our Heirs and Successors to repay to you or your Assigns within Eighteen moneths after the paiment thereof unto the Collector The person whom we have appointed to collect it is To whose hands we do require you to send it within Twelve days after you have received this Privy-Seal which together with the Collectors Acquittance shall be sufficient Warrant unto the Officers of our Receipt for the repaiment thereof at the time limited Given at c. The Collectors of this Loan were appointed to pay into the Exchequer the Sums received and to return the Names of such as discovered a disposition to delay or excuse the paiment of the Sums imposed Amidst the preparations for War with Spain the Privy-Council issued out Warrants for the disarming of Popish Recusants grounding their Order upon the Petition of the late Parliament HIs Majesty and we of his Council having received information from so many several parts of the bold and impudent spéeches used by many Romish Catholicks of this Realm declaring how much they are offended with the gracious satisfaction given by his Majesty to the Lords and Commons in Parliament in the points concerning the Conservation of true Religion as it is at this day by Authority preached in the Church of England And having just cause to doubt that many violent Papists through the instigation of Iesuited Priests may be inclined to take part with such as we well understand at this time practise with the Kings Subjects to raise stirs and tumults which they do not only foment by perswasions and instigations but with promise of assistance and seconding them with Arms their pretext being Religion but their ends Conquest pushed thereunto by an unlimited Ambition to a General Monarchy of which we have too large and clear proof And although we do not misjudge and condemn all his Majesties Subjects Romish Catholicks but believe that many of them will imploy their Arms and lives in his service Yet because we are not able to distinguish betwéen the well and worse-affected We have seconded with one Advice his Majesties Princely inclination following the example of his wi●e Predecessors of happy memory and government to take out of the possession of all Romish Recusants convicted or justly suspected according to the Acts of State heretofore expressed all such Martial Ammunitions Arms and Weapons as shall be found in their houses or discovered to be in the houses of any other persons belonging by right to any of the said Romish Recusants But so that the said Arms be only taken to be safely kept and the Property to be reserved to the Owners according to the former Presidents in like Cases This Design proceeded and the Council directed their Letters to these Lords Recusants viz. The Marquis of Winchester and the Lord St. John his son Lord Viscount Mountague Lord Viscount Colchester Lord Peter the Earl of Castlehaven Lord Morley Lord Vaux Lord Eures Lord Arundel of Warder Lord Tenham Lord Herbert Lord Windsor requiring them to render their Arms and Furniture thereunto belonging together with all their Habiliments of War to be removed into places convenient and to remain there till the King shall determine otherwise Moreover the Privy-Council having received information from the Lords-Lieutenants in divers parts of the Kingdom That there was great and unaccustomed Resort to the houses of Papists and that other Courses justly to be suspected were held among them Authorised the Lords-Lieutenants to examine the truth and reason of such Assemblies and Entertainment and of the conveyance and intercourse of Letters as also to enquire and search if there were any preparation of Men or Arms or Practice of Arms or endeavors of Alteration among persons discontented with the present Government In the mean time the Fleet was ready and Ten brave Regiments were designed for this Expedition The Duke not going in person Sir Edward Cecil was created Lord Viscount Wimbleton and made Commander in Chief In the Choice of the Officers for this service Sir Robert Mansel an experienced Sea-Commander was neglected which much disgusted the Mariners The Common Censure that passed both upon the Duke and this Enterprise may be known by the Lord Cromwels free language to the Duke in this Letter THey offer to lay wagers the Fleet goes not this year And that of necessity shortly a Parliament must be which when it comes sure it will much discontent you It is wondred at that since the King did give such great Gifts to the Duchess of Chevereux and those that then went how now a small Sum in the Parliament should be called for at such an unseasonable time And let the Parliament sit when it will begin they will where they ended They say the Lords of the Council knew nothing of Count Mansfield's Iourney or this Fleet which discontents even the best sort if not all They say it is a very great burden your Grace takes upon you since none knows any thing but you It is conceived that not letting others bear part of the burden you now bear it may ruine you which Heaven forbid Much discourse there is of your Lordship here and there as I passed home and back And nothing is more wondred at then that one Grave man is not known to have your ear except my good and Noble Lord Conway All men say if you go not with the Fleet you will suffer in it because if it prosper it will be thought no act of yours and if it succeed ill they say it might have been better had not you guided the King They say your undertakings in the Kingdom will much prejudice your Grace And if God bless you not with goodness as to accept kindly what in duty and love I here offer questionless my freedom in letting you know the discourse of the world may much prejudice me But if I must lose your favor I had rather lose it for striving to do you good in letting you know the talk of the wicked world then for any thing else so much I heartily desire your prosperity and to see you trample the ignorant multitude under foot All I have said is the Discourse of the World and when I am able to judge of Actions I will freely tell your Lordship my mind Which when it shall not always incline to serve you may all Noble thoughts forsake me But whilst the English Fleet was preparing for this Voyage great Reports were given out that the Spaniard would land Forces upon the Coast of Essex Wherefore the Earl of Warwick was commanded with Three thousand of the Trained Bands of Essex to secure the Port of Harwich and Langer-Point which service he performed with much readiness But upon the Blocking up of Dunkirk with Ships belonging to the English and to the States of the United Provinces his Lordship was ordered to dismiss his men Presently after Advertisements came to
Coronation was briefly thus THe King went that day from Westminster-Hall to the Abbey Church attended by the Aldermen of London Eighty Knights of the Bath in their Robes the Kings Serjeants at Law Solicitor and Attorney Generals the Judges Barons Bishops Viscounts and such of the Earls who bore no particular Office that day in their Parliament Robes going two by two before the King all uncovered and after them followed his Officers of State being Eight Earls and one Marquess those persons according to their respective places and offices carried the Swords the Globe the Scepter the Crown and the Lord Major of London carried the short Scepter two Bishops carried the one the Golden Cup and the other the Plate for the Communion Next before his Majesty went the Earl of Arundel as Earl-Marshal of England and the Duke of Buckingham as Lord High-Constable of England for that day The King being cloathed in White Sattin went under a rich Canopy supported by the Barons of the Cinque Ports the King having on each hand a Bishop and his Train of Purple-Velvet was carried up by the Master of the Robes and the Master of the Wardrobe At the entring into the Church Bishop Laud delivered into the Kings hands the Staff of King Edward the Confessor with which the King walked up to the Throne then the Archbishop of Canterbury presented his Majesty to the Lords and Commons there present East West North and South who gave their consent to his Coronation as their lawful Soveraign After Sermon was done the King went to the Altar where the Old Crucifix amongst other Regalia stood as also the Ointment consecrated by a Bishop to take the Coronation Oath which as is said was performed in this manner viz. SIS says the Archbishop will You grant and kéep and by Your Oath confirm to the People of England the Laws and Customs to them granted by the Kings of England Your Lawful and Religious Predecessors and namely the Laws Customs and Franchises granted to the Clergy by the glorious King St. Edward Your Predecessor according to the laws of God the true Profession of the Gospel established in this Kingdom agréeable to the Prerogative of the Kings thereof and the Antient Customs of the Realm I grant and Promise to keep them Sir will You kéep Peace and Godly Agréement according to Your Power both to God the Holy Church the Clergy and the People I will keep it Sir will You to Your Power cause Law Justice and Discretion to Mercy and Truth to be executed to Your Judgment I will Sir will You grant to hold and kéep the Laws and Rightful Customs which the Communalty of this Your Kingdom have and will You defend and uphold them to the honor of God so much as in you lyeth I grant and promise so to do Then one of the Bishops read this Passage to the King Our Lord and King we beseech You to Pardon and to Grant and to Preserve unto us and to the Churches committed to Your Charge all Canonical Priviledges and do Law and Iustice and that You would Protect and Defend us as every good King to His Kingdoms ought to be Protector and Defender of the Bishops and the Churches under their Government The King answereth With a willing and devout Heart I promise and grant my Pardon and that I will preserve and maintain to you and the Churches committed to your Charge all Canonical Priviledges and due Law and Justice and that I will be your Protector and Defender to my Power by the assistance of God as every good King in his Kingdom in right ought to protect and defend the Bishops and Churches under their Government Then the King arose and was lead to the Communion Table where he takes a Solemn Oath in sight of all the People to observe all the Premisses and laying his hand upon the Bible said The things which I have here promised I shall perform and keep So help me God and the Contents of this Book After the Oath the King was placed in the Chair of Coronation and was Anointed by the Archbishop with a costly Ointment and the Antient Robes of King Edward the Confessor was put upon him and the Crown of King Edward was put upon his Head and his Sword girt about him and he offered the same and two Swords more together with Gold and Silver at the Communion Table He was afterwards conducted by the Nobility to the Throne where this Passage was read to his Majesty Stand and hold fast from henceforth the place to which You have been Heir by the Succession of Your Forefathers being now delivered to You by the Authority of Almighty God and by the hands of us and all the Bishops and Servants of God And as You see the Clergy to come nearer to the Altar then others so remember that in all places convenient You give them greater honor that the Mediator of God and Man may establish You in the Kingly Throne to be a Mediator betwixt the Clergy and the Laity and that You may Raign for ever with Iesus Christ the King of Kings and Lord of Lords Afterwards the Nobility were sw●rn to be Homagers to the King and some other Ceremonies were performed which being done the Lord Keeper by the Kings command read a writing unto them which declared the Kings free Pardon to all his Subjects who would take the same under the Great Seal The Ceremonies of the Coronation being ended the Regalia were offered at the Altar by Bishop Laud in the Kings Name and then reposited The Bishop of Lincoln faln into disgrace by the displeasure of the Duke of Buckingham had not received his Writ of Summons which he represented to the King with Submission to his Majesties pleasure denied as he said to no Prisoners or condemned Peers in his Fathers Reign to enable him to make his Proxy if his Personal attendance be not permitted Likewise he besought his Majesty That he would be pleased to mitigate the Dukes causless anger towards him who was so little satisfied with any thing he could do or suffer that he had no means left to appease him but his Prayers to God and his Sacred Majesty Also that in his absence in this Parliament no use might be made of his Majesties Sacred Name to wound the Reputation of a poor Bishop who besides his Religion and Duty to that Divine Character which his Majesty beareth hath affectionately honored his very person above all Objects in this World as he desired the Salvation of the World to come And he craveth no Protection against any other Accuser or Accusation whatsoever On Monday the Sixth of February began the Second Parliament of the Kings Reign The King being placed in his Royal Throne the Lords in their Robes and the Commons below the Bar it pleased his Majesty to refer them to the Lord Keeper for what he had to say The Lord Keepers Speech My Lords ANd you the Knights
to the performance of this weighty and publick Charge wherein as I do and shall to the end most humbly desire your gratious acceptance of my good intentions and endeavors So I could not but gather some confidence to my self that your Majesty will look favorably upon the works of your own hands And in truth besides this particular these publick things which are obvious to every Understanding are so many Arguments of Comfort and Encouragement where I contemplate and take a view of those great and inestimable blessings which by the goodness of God we do enjoy under your Majesties most pious and prudent Government If we behold the frame and the face of the Government in general we live under a Monarchy the best of Governments the nearest resemblance unto the Divine Majesty which the Earth affords the most agreeable to Nature and that in which other States and Republicks do easily fall and reverse into the Ocean and are naturally dissolved as into their Primam Materiam The Laws by which we are governed are above any value my words can set upon them time hath refined and approved them they are equal at least to any Laws Humane and so curiously framed and fitted that as we live under a temperate climate so the Laws are temperate yielding a due observance to the Prerogative Royal and yet preserving the Right and Liberty of the Subject That which Tacitus saith of two of the best Emperors Res olim insociabiles miscuerunt imperium libertas and so far is this from the least diminution of Soveraigns that in this your Majesty is truly stiled Pater Patriae and the greatest King in the World that is King of such and so many Free-born Subjects whose persons you have not onely power over but which is above the greatest of Kings to command their hearts If time or corruption of manners breed any Mists or Grievance or discover any defects in the Law they are soon reformed by Parliament the greatest Court of Justice and the greatest Council of the Kingdom to which all other Courts and Councils are subordinate Here your Royal Person sits inthroned in the Seat of Majesty attended by a Reverend and Learned Prelacy a great and full Nobility inthroned like Stars in the Firmament some of a greater some of a lesser magnitude full of light and beauty and acknowledging to whom they owe their lustre and by a choise number of worthy Knights and Gentlemen that represent the whole body of your Commons But to leave generals We live not under a Monarchy only the best of Goverments and under a Government the best of Monarchies but under a King the best of Monarchs Your Royal Person and those eminent graces and vertues which are inherent in your Person in whom Greatness and Goodness contend for superiority it were presumption in me to touch though with never so good a meaning they will not be bounded within the narrow compass of my discourse And such Pictures of such a King are not to be made in Limning but for Publick things and actions which the least eye may see and discern and in them obliquely and by reflexion cheerfully and with comfort behold your Person What Age shall not record and eternise your Princely magnanimities in that Heroick action or venturous Journey into Spain or hazarding your Person to preserve the Kingdom Fathers will tell it to their children in succession After-ages will then think it a Fable Your piety to the Memory of your dear Father in following and bedewing his Herse with your tears is full in every mans memory The Publick Humiliation when Gods hand lay heavy upon us and the late Publick Thanksgiving to Almighty God for removing his hand both commanded and performed in person by your Majesty is a work in piety not to be forgotten and I trust the Lord will remember them and reward them with mercy and blessing to your Majesty and the whole Kingdom Your love to Justice and your care in the administration of Justice we all behold with comfort and rejoice to see it The great Courts of Justice from the highest to the lowest furnished with Judges of that wisdom and gravity learning and integrity The Thrones of Kings are established by Justice and may it establish and I doubt not but it will establish the Throne of your Majesty in your Person and in your Royal Line to the end of time But above all and indeed it is above all as far as Heaven is distant from Earth your care and zeal for the advancement of Gods true Religion and Worship are cleerly and fully exprest and do appear both in your Person and by your many Publick Acts and Edicts It is true that is said of Princes Quod faciunt praecipiunt Of your Majesty both are true and a Proposition made convertible We have received a most gracious Answer from your Majesty to all our late Petitions concerning Religion seconded with a Publick Declaration under the Great Seal and Inrolled in all the Courts of Justice for your Royal pleasure and direction to awaken and put life into these Laws by a careful Execution with provision that the Penalties be not converted to your Private Coffers and yet the Coffers of Kings are not Private Coffers but by your express direction set apart to Publick uses such as concern the immediate Defence of the Kingdom wherein we all have our share and interest Your Royal Proclamation hath commanded those Romish Priests and Jesuites to Banishment those Incendiaries that infect the State of this Church and Commonwealth Their very entrance into this Kingdom is by a just and provident Law made Treason their aims being in truth how specious soever their pretences be nothing else but to plot and contrive Treason against the State and to seduce your Natural born Subjects from their true obedience nourishing in their posterities Factions and Seditions Witness those many Treasons and Conspiracies against the person of that glorious Lady whose memory will never die and that horrible matchless Conspiracie the Powder-Treason the Master-piece of the Devil But God that preserved her and your Royal Father against all their treacherous Conspiracies and hath given you a heart to honor him will honor and preserve you Religion will more truly keep your Kingdoms then the Seas do compass them It is the joy of heart to your Majesties loyal and well-affected Subjects and will ever be the honor of your Regal Diadem and the Crown of your Crown The Spanish Invasion in Eighty Eight I hope will ever be remembred in England with thankful acknowledgment to God for so great a deliverance And I assura my self it is remembred in Spain but with another mind a mind of Revenge they are too constant to their Counsels to acquit their Resolutions and Purposes that drew on that Attempt It was long before discovered and since printed not without their liking That they affect an Universal Monarchy Videor mihi vidore saith Lipsius of their State Solem
That Images may be used for the instruction of the Ignorant and excitation of Devotion V. That in the same Homily it is plainly expressed That the attributing the defence of certain Countries to Saints is a spoiling God of his honor and that such Saints are but Dii tutelares of the Gentiles Idolators The said Richard Montague hath notwithstanding in his said Book Entituled A Treatise concerning the Invocation of Saints affirmed and maintained That Saints have not onely a Memory but a more peculiar Charge of their Friends and that it may be admitted That some Saints have a peculiar Patronage Custody Protection and Power as Angels also have over certain Persons and Countries by special deputation and that it is no impiety so to believe Whereas in the seventeenth of the said Articles it is resolved That God hath certianly Decreed by his Counsel secret to us to deliver from Curse and Damnation those whom he hath chosen in Christ out of mankinde and to bring them by Christ to everlasting Salvation wherefore they which be endued with so excellent a benefit of God be called according to Gods purpose working in due season they through Grace obey the Calling they be justified freely walk Religiously in good works and at length by Gods mercy attain to everlasting felicity He the said Richard Montague in the said Book called The Appeal doth maintain and affirm That men justified may fall away and depart from the state which once they had they may arise Again and become new men possibly but not certainly nor necessarily and the better to countenance this his opinion he hath in the same Book wilfully added falsified and charged divers words of the sixteenth of the Articles before mentioned and divers other words both in the Book of Homilies and in the Book of Common-Prayer and so misrecited and changed the said places he doth alleadge in the said Book called The Appeal endeavouring thereby to lay a most wicked and malicious scandal upon the Church of England as if he did herein differ from the Reformed Churches of England and from the Reformed Churches beyond the Seas and did consent to those pernitious Errors which are commonly called Arminianism and which the late famous Queen Elizabeth and King Iames of happy memory did so piously and diligently labour to suppress That the said Richard Montague contrary to his Duty and Allegiance hath endeavored to raise great Factions and Divisions in this Common-wealth by casting the odious and scandalous name of Puritans upon such his Majesties loving Subjects as conform themselves to the Doctrine and Ceremony of the Church of England under that name laying upon them divers false and malicious Imputations so to bring them into jealousie and displeasure with his most Excellent Majesty and into reproach and ignominy with the rest of the people to the great danger of Sedition and Disturbance in the State if it be not timely prevented That the Scope and end of the said Richard Montague in the Books before mentioned is to give encouragement to Popery and to withdraw his Majesties Subjects from the true Religion established to the Roman Superstition and consequently to be reconciled to the Sea of Rome All which he laboreth by subtile and cunning ways whereby Gods True Religion hath been much scandalized those Mischiefs introduced which the wisdom of many Laws hath endeavored to prevent the Devices and Practices of his Majesties Enemies have been furthered and advanced to the great peril and hazard of our Soveraign Lord the King and of all his Dominions and loving Subjects That the said Richard Montague hath inserted into the said Book called The Appeal divers passages dishonorable to the late King his Majesties Father of famous memory full of bitterness railing and injurious Speeches to other persons disgracefull and contemptible to many worthy Divines both of this Kingdom and of other Reformed Churches beyond the Seas impious and profane in scoffing at preaching meditating and conferring Pulpits Lectures Bible and all shew of Religion all which do aggravate his former Offences having proceeded from malicious and envenomed heat against the Peace of the Church and the sincerity of the Reformed Religion publickly professed and by Law established in this Kingdom All which Offences being to the dishonor of God and of most mischievous effect and consequence against the good of this Church and Commonwealth of England and of other his Majesties Realms and Dominions The Commons assembled in Parliament do hereby pray That the said Richard Montague may be punished according to his Demerits in such exemplary manner as may deter others from attempting so presumptuously to disturb the Peace of Church and State and that the Book aforesaid may be suppressed and Burnt Whether an Answer was made to these Articles by Mr Montague we cannot tell for upon search we can finde none About the same time his Majesty being informed that there was great liberty taken by divers of his Subjects to resort to the hearing of Masse at Durham-house in the Lodgings of a Foraign Ambassodor the Privy Council taking notice thereof and accounting it scandalous to this Church and of ill example to be suffered at any time but much more in this time of Parliament required the Bishop of Durham to apprehend such of his Majesties Subjects as should be present at the Masse and to commit them to Prison There was also a Letter sent from the Attorney-General to the Judges of the Circuits to direct their Proceedings against Recusants to this effect THat their Lordships will not omit to publish the Kings Gracious and Religious Determination to go on really and constantly in this way and that out of his bounty and goodness he hath published his Resolution under the Great Seal of England That whatsoever Revenue or Benefit shall arise hereby from Purses of Popish Recusants shall be set apart from his own Treasure and be wholly imployed for the Service of the Commonwealth and shall not be dispensed with to any of what degree soever nor diverted by any the Suits of his Servants or Subjects 2. That their Lordships will be pleased at their first coming into every County within their Circuit to command the Clerk of Assise and Clerk of the Peace to be carefull for the Indictment of Popish Recusants without respect of Persons of what Degree of Honor or Office soever and that they neither make nor suffer to be made any omission or mistaking in their Indictment or other proceedings and that the next Term within ten dayes of the beginning of the Term they give or send to him viz. the Attorney a note in writing who stand indicted of new and that they fail not to certifie the Recusants convicted into the Exchequer by that time That at their Lordships first coming into the County they call the Iustices of Peace then present and the Grand-Iury men to give their Lordships true Information of the Recusants of any Note or Name in that Country and that
presented to and answered by the King And the Commons the same day resumed the Debate again concerning the Duke and Misgovernment and Misimployment of the Revenue c. Ordered the Duke to have notice again thereof The next day the King sent a Message to the House of Commons That they do to morrow at Nine of the clock attend his Majesty in the Hall at Whitehall and in the mean time all Proceedings in the House and Committee to cease Where his Majesty made this ensuing Speech My Lords and Gentlemen I Have called you hither to day I mean both Houses of Parliament but it is for several and distinct reasons My Lords you of the Upper House to give you thanks for the Care of the State of the Kingdom now and not only for the Care of your own Proceedings but for inciting your Fellow-House of the Commons to take that into their consideration Therefore my Lords I must not only give you thanks but I must also avow that if this Parliament do not redound to the good of this Kingdom which I pray God it may it is not your faults And you Gentlemen of the House of Commons I am sorry that I may not justly give the same thanks to you but that I must tell you that I am come here to shew you your errors and as I may call it Unparliamentary proceedings in this Parliament But I do not despair because you shall see your faults so cleerly by the Lord Keeper that you may so amend your Proceeding that this Parliament shall end comfortably and happily though at the beginning it hath had some rubs Then the Lord Keeper by the Kings command spake next MY Lords and you the Knights Citizens and Burgesses of the House of Commons You are here assembled by his Majesties commandment to receive a Declaration of his Royal pleasure which although it be intended only to the House of Commons yet his Majesty hath thought meet the matter being of great weight and importance it should be delivered in the presence of both Houses and both Houses make one General Council And his Majesty is willing that the Lords should be Witnesses of the Honor and Justice of his Resolutions And therefore the Errand which by his Majesties direction I must deliver hath relation to the House of Commons I must address my self therefore to you Mr. Speaker and the rest of that House And first his Majesty would have you to understand That there was never any King more loving to his People or better affectioned to the right use of Parliaments then his Majesty hath approved himself to be not only by his long patience since the sitting down of this Parliament but by those mild and calm Directions which from time to time that House hath received by Message and Letter and from his Royal mouth when the irregular humors of some particular persons wrought diversions and distractions there to the disturbance of those great and weighty Affairs which the Necessity of the Times the honor and safety of the King and Kingdom called upon And therefore his Majesty doth assure you that when these great Affairs are setled and that his Majesty hath received satisfaction of his reasonable Demands he will as a just King hear and answer your just Grievances which in a dutiful way shall be presented unto him and this his Majesty doth avow Next his Majesty would have you know of a surety That as never any King was more loving to his People nor better affectioned to the right use of Parliaments so never King more jealous of his Honor nor more sensible of the neglect and contempt of his Royal Rights which his Majesty will by no means suffer to be violated by any pretended colour of Parliamentary Liberty wherein his Majesty doth not forget that the Parliament is his Council and therefore ought to have the liberty of a Council but his Majesty understands the difference betwixt Council and Controlling and between Liberty and the Abuse of Liberty This being set down in general his Majesty hath commanded me to relate some particular passages and proceedings whereat he finds himself agrieved First Whereas a seditious speech was uttered amongst you by Mr. Cook the House did not as they ought to do censure and correct him And when his Majesty understanding it did by a Message by Mr. Chancellor of the Exchequer delivered to the House require Justice of you his Majesty hath since found nothing but protracting and delaies This his Majesty holds not agreeable to the wisdom and the duty which he expected from the House of Commons Secondly Whereas Doctor Turner in a strange Unparliamentary way without any ground of knowledge in himself or offering any particular proof to the House did take upon him to advise the House to enquire upon sundry Articles against the Duke of Buckingham as he pretended but in truth to wound the Honor and Government of his Majesty and of his renowned Father And his Majesty first by a Message and after by his own Royal mouth did declare That that Course of Enquiry was an Example which by no way he could suffer though it were against his meanest Servant much less against one so neer him and that his Majesty did much wonder at the foolish insolencie of any man that can think that his Majesty should be drawn out of any end to offer such a Sacrifice so unworthy of a King or a good Master Yet for all this you have been so far from correcting the Insolencie of Turner that ever since that time your Committees have walked in the steps of Turner and proceeded in an Unparliamentary Inquisition running upon generals and repeating that whereof you have made Fame the groundwork Here his Majesty hath cause to be exceeding sensible that upon every particular he finds the Honor of his Father stained and blemished and his own no less and withal you have manifested a great forwardness rather to pluck out of his bosom those who are neer about him and whom his Majesty hath cause to affect then to trust his Majesty with the future reformation of these things which you seem to aim at And yet you cannot deny but his Majesty hath wrought a greater Reformation in matters of Religion Execution of the Laws and concerning things of great importance then the shortness of his Reign in which he hath been hindred partly through sickness and the distraction of things which we could have wished had been otherwise could produce Concerning the Duke of Buckingham his Majesty hath commanded me to tell you That himself doth better know then any man living the sincerity of the Dukes proceedings with what cautions of weight and discretion he hath been guided in his publick Imployments from his Majesty and his blessed Father what Enemies he hath procured at home and abroad what peril of his person and hazard of his estate he ran into for the service of his Majesty and his ever blessed Father and how
good or evil they are to continue or not to be And remember that if in this time instead of mending your Errors by delay you persist in your Errors you make them greater and irreconcileable Whereas on the other side if you do go on cheerfully to mend them and look to the distressed State of Christendom and the Affairs of the Kingdom as it lieth now by this great Engagement you will do your selves honor you shall encourage me to go on with Parliaments and I hope all Christendom shall feel the good of it The Commons upon the Debate of what fell from his Majesty and the Lord Keeper turned the House into a Grand Committee ordered the doors to be locked and no Member to go forth and that all Proceedings in all other Committees shall cease till the House come to a Resolution in this business His Majesty being informed that some things in his own Speeches and the Lord Keepers Declaration were subject to misunderstanding commanded the Duke to explain them at a conference of both Houses in the Painted-Chamber held for that purpose WHereas it is objected by some who wish good Correspondency betwixt the King and People that to prefix a day to give or to break was an unusual thing and might express an inclination in the King to break to remove this as his Majesty was free from such thoughts he hath descended to make this Explanation That as his Majesty would not have you condition with him directly or indirectly so he will not lye to a day for giving further Supply but it was the pressing occasion of Christendom that made him to pitch upon a day His Majesty hath here a Servant of the King of Denmark and another from the Duke of Weymer and yesterday received a Letter from his Sister the Queen of Bohemia who signified that the King of Denmark hath sent an Ambassador with Power to perfect the Contract which was made at the Hague so it was not the King but time and the things themselves that pressed a time Therefore his Majesty is pleased to give longer time hoping you will not give him cause to put you in minde of it again so that you have a greater Latitude if the business require to think further of it I am commanded further to tell you that if his Majesty should accept of a less sum then will suffice it will deceive your expectations disappoint his Allies and consume the Treasure of the Kingdom whereas if you give largly now the business being at the Crisis it comes so seasonably it may give a Turn to the Affairs of Christendom But while we delay and suffer the time to pass others abroad will take advantage of it as the King of Spain hath done by concluding a Peace as 't is though in Italy for the Vatoline whereby our work is become the greater because there can be no diversion that way As it was a good Rule to fear all things and nothing and to be Liberal was sometimes to be Thrifty so in this particular if you give largly you shall carry the War to the Enemies door and keep that Peace at home that hath been Whereas on the contrary if you draw the War home it brings with it nothing but disturbance and fear all Courses of Justice stopt and each mans Revenues lessened and nothing that can be profitable Another Explanation I am commanded to make touching the grievances wherein his Majesty means no way to interrupt your Proceedings but hopes you will proceed in the antient wayes of your Predecessors and not so much seek faults as the means to redress them I am further commanded to tell you That his Majesty intends to elect a Committee of both Houses whom he will trust to take the view of his Estate the Defects whereof are not so fit for the Eyes of a Multitude and this Committee will be for your ease and may satisfie you without casting any ill odour on his Government or laying open any weakness that may bring shame upon us abroad That which is proposed is so little that when the payment comes it will bring him to a worse estate then now he is in therefore wishes you to enlarge it but leaves the augmentation to your selves but is sorry and touch'd in Conscience that the burthen should lie on the poorest who want too much already yet he will not prescribe but wish that you who were the Abettors and Counsellors of this War would take a greater part of the Burthen to your selves and any man that can finde out that way shall shew himself best affected and do the best service to the King and State The Duke then made his Address to them in his own behalf My Lords and Gentlemen YOu were all witnesses yesterday how good and gratious a Master I serve and I shall be likewse glad that you be witnesses how thankful a heart I have And I protest I have a heart as full of zeal to serve my Master as any man and it hath been my study to keep a good correspondency betwixt the King and his people And what ever thought hath been entertained of me I shall not alien my heart from that intention but shall adde spurs to my endeavours and actions to vindicate my self from ill opinion And however I lye under the burthen of the same it lies in your hands to make me happy or not and for my part I wish my heart and actions were known to you all then I assure my self you would resume me to your good opinions When I had with some hazard waited on my Master into Spain it is well known what Testimony I gave of my Religion and no man that comes to a true and near view of my action can justly charge me Let me be excused If I give accompt of this particular when I should speak of the general for this goes near my heart and to dissemble with my Conscience no ends of Fortunes in the World can make me do it For if I had any ill inclination I had such offers made to me in Spain as might have tempted me If I would have been converted my self I might have had the Infanta to put in my Masters Bed and if my discontent should have risen here I might have had an Army to have come with me But I thought the offer foolish ridiculous and scornful in that point of Religion I will now take the boldness to speak a little in the general business and I call it boldness to speak after one who did so well the other day But I had rather suffer in my own particular then not refresh your Memories with that which is materially needful I shall not need to reflect so far back as to the beginning of those Counsels which engaged my Master into the War they are well known onely I will so far touch it as to say That the last years preparations were not Voluntary or out of Wantonness but out of Necessity My Master
had good intelligence that the King of Spains eye was malitiously bent this way which had been pursued accordingly if the employment of the Low-Countrymen to the Bay of Todos los Santos had not diverted it Now for the Counsel which was used for sending out the Fleets I will refer you to the Relation of the Lord Conway who as well in this as other Resolutions can tell you That nothing was carried with single Councils And for my self I know that in all those actions no man can stand up against me to say that I ever did go with single Councils or made breach of any but have been an obedient Servant and Minister unto their Resolutions The proof whereof will appear in a Journal thereof which my Lord Conway keeps I confess all Councils were not ever as your selves would nor have wished they should if you had known them as my Master did in whom the former Affairs of State had bred such affections that the business being altered they were not to be trusted with the Change I will now give you an accompt of all my Negotiations since my being at Oxford both at home and abroad and because there it was charged that those things were carried with single Counsels I was more careful to advise the King to have his Counsel with him in the Country being to enter into War with an Active King And for my part I did diligently wait on the Council left all Recreations all personal occasions studying to serve my Master and to gain the good opinion of both Houses The Council of Woodstock generally advised the going out of the Fleet. And though it were objected that the Season were not fit yet the action shewed the contrary for they all arived in safety And for what was also objected that the Provision was not good experience tells you the contrary for the preparations were all good in quality and proportion And if the Success were not such as any honest man could wish I hope I shall not be blamed being not there in person though I made the greatest suit for it to my Master that ever I did for any thing But his Majesty thought my Service more useful in the Low-Countreys to comfort his Sister and to treat with the Kings o● Denmark Sweden and the States And though the Success as I said of the Fleet were not answerable to the desires of honest men yet it had these good effects first It put our Enemy to great charge in fortifying his Coasts secondly They took so many Ships as caused many of his Merchants to break whereby the Army in Flanders suffered much And lastly They could carry no Treasure out to pay their Forces in Flanders And for Omissions of what more might have been done I leave that to its proper place and time and let every man bear his own burden From Oxford the Council went to Southampton where the States Ambassadors did wait often on the King and Council and a League Offensive and Defensive betwixt us and them was thought fit to be resolved on whereof some Reasons I will express but not all First They are of our own Religion secondly They are our near Neighbors for situation so useful as when they are in distress it is policy in us to give them relief therefore the King thought fit to do it in such manner as might lay an Obligation on them which if it had not been done they had been pressed with a long War and such a Faction among themselves as if the King had not joyned and in a manner appeared their Protector they had broke among themselves And in this the Kings care was not onely of them but of all Christendom and of his own particular For as before he onely assisted them his Majesties care now used Arguments to draw them to Contribution so that they bear the fourth part of the charge of the War at Sea according to such Conditions as by the Lord Chamberlain you have heard This League being perfected betwixt the States and us his Majesty by Advice of his Council thought fit to send me to get such a League with the other Princes as I could The Rendezvous was in the Low-Countreys being in a manner the Centre for repair for England France and Germany I had Latitude of Commission to make the League with most advantage I could Now I had discovered from Monsieur B. The French Ambassador here that a League Offensive and Defensive would be refused and I found the King of Denmark shie and loth to enter into such a League against the King of Spain and so partly out of Necessity and partly out of Reason of State I was forced to conclude the League in general Terms for the restoring of the Liberty of Germany without naming the King of Spain or the Emperor that other Princes might come in and this to continue till every one had satisfaction and nothing to be treated of debated or concluded on but by consent of all parties It did appear that the Charge was so great that the Kingdom could not endure it and therefore I endeavored in the Low-Countreys to lessen it and so the Sea charge was helped and the Land assistance given unto them is to cease Six moneths hence which the Lord Conway said was to end in September next Also by this Treaty it is conditioned with the King of Denmark That when my Master shall by Diversion equal to this Contribution with his own Subjects enter into an Action then this Charge to cease Or if the King of France may be drawn in of which there is great hope though he hath now made peace in Italy for that the policy of France may not give way unto the greatness of the House of Austria and ambition of Spain whose Dominions do grasp him in on every side And if the business be well carried his Engagement to the King of Denmark may draw him in so there is great possibility of easing our Charge But all is in the discreet taking of the time for it not we may think the King of Denmark will take hold of those fair Conditions which are each day offered him and then the Enemies Army will fall upon the River of Elve and the Lord Conway added upon East-Friezland from whence they would make such progress as in my poor experience would ruine the Low-Countreys And thus I think I have satisfied all of you or at least given an account of my Negotiation in the Low-Countreys with the King of Denmark Sweden and the rest I should be glad before I end to say somewhat of my self but I shall request your favorable construction for I have been too long already but I fear I shall offend and therefore I will restrain my self to generals If in any of these employments my Errors may be shewed me I shall take him for my best friend that will manifest them in particulars I have bent all my thoughts on nothing but my Masters Honor the Service
Peace as they doubted he would not be brought to enter into War But Count Mansfield procured the King of France to Contract to receive our Troops with promise to enter into the War upon condition it might be regulated by the Council of the French King and England This favor to Count Mansfield That France agreed that his Armies should joyn with the Kings Troops wrought the Princes of Germany to believe that the King would enter into a War Thereupon the Imperialists left their Dyet and sent Tilly to Friezland and to take up the River of Embden which if he had obtained they would have trampled the Low-Countreys under foot and would have become Governors of the Sea Upon this the King of Denmark sent to our King and offered to raise an Army of Thirty thousand men if our King would allow Thirty thousand pounds a Moneth and said He would admit no time of respite for if Tilly had not been presently met and headed all had been lost Whereupon our King called a Counsel and appointed Commissioners and from that time all the Warrants for the issuing of the Moneys were all under the Kings own hand to the Council of War and from them to the Treasurers and the Warrants were from the Lords of the Council for the Levying of Men and for Coats and Conduct-Money A List whereof is hereunder specified Thereupon the Duke asked the Question Whether any thing was done by single Council To which the Lord Conway answered No. For the Treaty of Denmark Project of Count Mansfield Treaties with France and the business of the Navy were done all by the King himself and who can say it was done by single Council when King Iames commanded it whose Council every man ought to reverence especially in matters of War whereunto that King was not hasty The Total of Moneys paid by Warrants of the Treasurers of the Subsidy Money IN Toto for the Four Regiments of the Low-Countries from the Thirtieth of Iune 1624. till the One and twentieth of Iuly 1624. 99878 l. 00 s. 06 d. For the Navy from the Thirteenth of Iuly 1624. till the Three and twentieth of December 37530 l. 08 s. 04 d. For the Office of the Ordinance and Forts in England from the Twentieth of Iuly 1624. till the Fifteenth of Iune 1625. 47126 l. 05 s. 05 d. To defray Charges for Forts in Ireland about October 1624. 32295 l. 18 s. 04 d. For the Service under Count Mansfield for Provisions of Arms transporting of Soldiers from the Fourth of October 1624. till the Tenth of December 1624. 61666 l. 13 s. 04 d. Sum Total 278497 l. 04 s. 11 d. MEmorandum That over and above the several Services before specified and the several Sums issued and to be issued by our Warrants for the same We did long since resolve and order accordingly that out of the Moneys of the Second and third Subsidies these further Services should be performed and Moneys issued accordingly viz. In full of the Supply of all the Forts and Castles before-mentioned Surveyed per Sir Richard Morison Sir Iohn Ogle Sir Iohn Kay in September 1613. with all sorts of Munitions according to several Proportions and Warrants for the same 4973 l. In full for the Reparations of all the said Forts and Castles according to the said Survey 10650 l. 06s 08 d. But the said Subsidies being not like to afford means to perform these so necessary Works We humbly commend the supply of what shall be wanting for the same unto your Majesties Princely consideration Whilest the Commons were inquiring into Publick Grievances the Lords represented to the King a Grievance to their own Order in this following Petition To the Kings most Excellent Majesty The Petition of your ever Loyal Subjects the Lords Spiritual and Temporal now in Parliament Assembled In all humility sheweth THat whereas the Péers and Nobility of this Your Kingdom of England have heretofore in Civility yeilded as to strangers Precedency according to their several degrées unto such Nobles of Scotland and Ireland as being in Titles above them have resorted hither Now divers of the natural born Subjects of those Kingdoms resident here with their Families and having their cheif Estates among us do by reason of some late created Dignities in those Kingdoms of Scotland and Ireland claim Precedency of the Péers of this Realm which tends both to the disservice of Your Majesty and these Realms and to the great disparagement of the English Nobility as by these Reasons may appear I. It is a novelty without president that men should inherit Honors where they possess nothing else II. It is injurious to those Countreys from whence their Titles are derived that they should have a Uote in Parliament where they have not a foot of Land III. It is a grievance to the Country where they inhabite that men possessing very large Fortunes and Estates should by reason of Foreign Titles be exempted from those Services of Trust and Charge which through their default become greater pressures upon others who bear the burthen IV. It is a shame to Nobility that Persons dignified with the Titles of Barons Viscounts c. should be obnoxious and exposed to arrest they being in the view of the Law no more then méer Plebeians We therefore humbly beséech your Majesty That you will be pleased according to the examples of the best Princes and times upon consideration of these inconveniencis represented to Your Majesty by the nearest Body of Honor to Your Majesty that some course may be taken and an order timely setled therein by Your Princely Wisdom so as the inconvenience to Your Majesty may be prevented and the prejudice and disparagement of the Péers and Nobility of this Kingdom be redressed To this Petition the King gave Answer That he would take order therein The Earl of Bristol who continued under Restraint and was debarred Access to his Majesty ever since his return out of Spain had been examined touching his Negotiation there by a Committee of Lords appointed by the King Certain Propositions were tendred unto him in order to his Release and composing of that Affair concerning which he had written to the Lord Conway and about this time received the ensuing Letter from him The Lord Conway to the Earl of Bristol My Lord I Received a Letter from your Lordship dated the Fourth of this Moneth written in Answer to a former Letter which I directed to your Lordship by his Majesties Commandment This last Letter according to my duty I have shewed unto his Majesty who hath perused it and hath commanded me to write back to you again That he findes himself nothing satisfied therewith The Question propounded to your Lordship from his Majesty was plain and clear Whether you did rather chuse to sit still without being questioned for any Errors past in your Negotiation in Spain and enjoy the benefit of the late gratious Pardon granted in Parliament whereof you may have the benefit Or
whether for the clearing of your Innocency whereof your self and your friends and followers are so confident you will be content to wave the advantage of that Pardon and put your self into a legal way of Examination for the Tryal thereof His Majesties purpose thereby is not to prevent you of any favors the Law hath given you but if your Assurance be such as your words and Letters import he conceives it stands not with that Publick and resolute Profession of your Integrity to decline your Tryal His Majesty leaves the choice to your self and requires from you a direct Answer without circumlocution or bargaining with him for future Favors beforehand but if you have a desire to make use of that Pardon which cannot be denied you nor is any way desired to be taken from you his Majesty expects you should at the least forbear to magnifie your Service and out of an opinion of your Innocency cast an aspersion upon his Majesties Iustice in not affording you that present fulness of Liberty and Favor which cannot be drawn from him but in his good time and according to his good pleasure Thus much I have in Commandment to write to your Lordship and to require your Answer clearly and plainly by this Messenger sent on purpose for it and so I remain Whitehal 24 March 1625. Your Lordships humble Servant Edw. Conway My Lord I Have received your Letter of the Four and twentieth of March the Twenty eighth and I am infinitely grieved to understand that my former Answer to yours of the Fourth of March hath not satisfied His Majesty which I will endeavor to do by this to the best of my understanding and to that end shall answer to the particular points of your present Letter with the greatest clearness I am able First Whereas you say in your Letter that the Question propounded to me was plain and clear viz. Whether I would chuse to sit still without being questioned for any Errors past in my Negotiation in Spain and enjoy the benefit of the late gratious Pardon whereof I may take the benefit Or whether being contented to wave the advantage of that Pardon I should put my self into a legal way of Examination for the Tryal thereof c. First Your Lordship may be pleased to remember that your last Proposition was Whether I desired to rest in the Security I was in which you now express Whether I will chuse to sit still Secondly Your Proposition was Whether I would acknowledge the gratious Favor of his Majesty that now is who had been pleased not to question my actions when it is best known to your Lordship That by a Commission of the Lords I was questioned upon Twenty Articles divers involving Felony and Treason Although it be true That when I had so answered as I am confident their Lordships would have cleared me I was so unhappy as their Lordships never met more about that business But now your Proposition is Whether I will now chuse to sit still without being further questioned for Errors past whereas before it was required I should acknowledge that I had not been questioned at all which is a different thing But conferring both your Letters together and gathering the sense and meaning by making the latter an Explanation of the former which I could have wished your Lordship would have more clearly explained I return unto your Lordship this plain and direct Answer That understanding by the Security I am in and sitting still and not being further questioned I am restored to the bare Freedom and Liberty of a Subject and Peer For a man being called in question by his Majesty if after his Majesty shall be pleased out of his goodness that he rest quiet and secure and that he shall not be further questioned I conceive that it is not apparent that his liberty naturally revolveth unto him when by his Majesties Grace he is pleased to declare he shall not be further questioned but may live in further Security So that understanding your Letter in this sort for no direct Answer can be made until the sense of the Question be truly slated I do most humbly acknowledge and accept his Majesties Grace and Favor and shall not wave any thing that shall come to me by the Pardon of the 21 Jac. Regis nor by the Pardon of his Majesties Coronation and am so far from bargaining as you are pleased to express it for future favor though I hope my humble and submissive courses of Petitioning his Majesty neither hath nor shall deserve so hard an expression that I shall not presume so much as to press for any favor until my dutiful and loyal Behavior may move his Majesties Royal and Gratious Heart thereunto but receive with all humbleness this my Freedom and Liberty the which I shall onely make use of in such sort as I shall judge may be most agreeable to his Majesties pleasure As for the second part of your Letter wherein you say That if I desire to make use of that Pardon his Majesty expects that I should at least forbear to magnifie my Services or out of an opinion of my own Innocency cast an aspersion upon his Majesties Iustice. To this point I answer That as I hope I shall never erre in that sort of immodesty of valuing my Services which I acknowledge to have been accompanied with infinite weaknesses and disabilities so I trust it shall not displease that I make use to mine own comfort and the honor of my Posterity of those many Written Testimonies which my late most Blessed Master hath left me of his gratious Acceptance of my Services for the space of Twenty years So likewise I hope the modest avowing of mine Innocency will not be thought to cast any aspersion upon his Majesties Honor or Iustice. I most freely confess unto your Lordship I am much afflicted to see Inferences of this nature made both in your Lordships last Letter and in this For if it shall be inferred as a thing reflecting upon the Kings Honor that a man questioned shall not endeavor to defend his own Innocency before he be convict it will be impossible for any man to be safe for the Honor of his Majesty is too Sacred a thing for any Subject how innocent soever to contest against So likewise God forbid that it should be brought into Consequences as in your former Letter as a Tax upon the Government and Iustice of his late Majesty and Majesty that now is that I should have suffered so long time not being guilty For as I never have been heard so much as to repine of Injustice in their Majesties in all my sufferings so I well know That the long continuance of my troubles may well be attributed unto other Causes as to my own Errors of Passion or other Accidents For your Lordship may well remember That my Affairs were almost two years since upon the point of a happy Accommodation had it not been interrupted by the
unfortunate mistaking of the Speeches I used to Mr. Clark I shall conclude by entreating your Lordships favor That I may understand from you as I hope for my comfort that this Letter hath given his Majesty satisfaction or if there should yet remain any scruple That I may have a clear and plain signification of the Kings pleasure which I shall obey with all Humility Your Lordships humble Servant BRISTOL The Earl of Bristol petitions the House of Lords shewing That he being a Peer of this Realm had not received a Summons to Parliament and desires their Lordships to mediate with his Majesty that he may enjoy the Liberty of a Subject and the Priviledge of his Peerage after almost two years restraint without being brought to a Tryal And if any Charge be brought in against him he prayeth that he may be tryed by Parliament The business is referred to the Committee of Priviledges and the Earl of Hartford reported from that Committee That it is necessary that their Lordships humbly beseech his Majesty that a Writ of Summons may be sent to the Earl of Bristol as also to such other Lords whose Writs are stopped except such as are made uncapable to sit in Parliament by Judgment of Parliament or some other Legal Judgment Hereupon the Duke signified to the House That upon the Earl of Bristols Petition to the King His Majesty had sent him his Writ of Summons And withal he shewed to the Lords the Copy of a Letter written from the King unto the said Earl being as followeth WE have received your Letter addressed unto us by Buckingham and cannot but wonder that you should through forgetfulness make request to us of favour as if you stood evenly capable of it when you know what you behaviour in Spain deserved of us which you are to examine by the observations we made and know you well remember how at our first coming into Spain taking upon you to be so wise as to foresee our intention to change our Religion you were so far from disswading us that you offered your advice and secresie to cocurre in it and in many other Conferences pressing to shew how convenient it was to be a Roman Catholick it being impossible in your opinion to do any great action otherwise And how much wrong disadvantage and disservice you did to the Treaty and to the Right and Interest of our dear Brother and Sister and their Children what disadvantage inconvenience and hazard you intangled us in by your Artifices putting off and delaying our return home the great estimation you made of that State and the low price you set this Kingdom at still maintaining that we under colour of friendship to Spain did what was in our power against them which you said they very well knew And last of all your approving of those Conditions that our Nephew should be brought up in the Emperors Court to which Sir Walter Ashton then said that he durst not give his consent for fear of his head you replying unto him that without some such great Action neither Marriage nor Peace could ●e had Upon the receipt of the Writ Bristol again Petitions the House of Lords and annexes to his Petition the Lord Keepers Letter and his own Answer thereto and desires to be heard in accusation of the Duke The humble Petition of Iohn Earl of Bristol Humbly shewing unto your Lordships THat he hath lately received his Writ of Parliament for which he returneth unto your Lordships most humble thanks but ioyntly with it a Letter from my Lord Keeper commanding him in his Majesties name to forbear his personal attendance and although he shall ever obey the least intimation of his Majesties pleasure yet he most humbly offereth unto your Lordships wise considerations as too high a point for him how far this may trench upon the Liberty and Safety of the Peers and the Authority of their Letters Patents to be in this sort discharged by a Letter missive of any Subject without the Kings hand And for your Lordships due information he hath annexed a Copy of the said Lord Keepers Letter and his Answer thereunto He further humbly Petitioneth your Lordships That having been for the space of two years highly wronged inpoint of his Liberty and of his Honor by many sinister aspersions which have been cast upon him without being permitted to answer for himself which hath been done by the power and industry of the Duke of Buckingham to keep him from the presence of his Majesty and the Parliament l●st he should discover many crimes concerning the said Duke He therefore most humbly beseecheth That he may be heard both in the point of his Wrong and of his Accusation of the said Duke wherein he will make it appear how infinitely the said Duke hath both abused their Majesties the State and both the Houses of Parliament And this he is most confident will not be denied since the Court of Parliament never refuseth to hear the poorest Subject seeking for redress of Wrongs nor the Accusation against any be he never so powerfull And herein he beseecheth your Lordships to mediate to his Majesty for the Suppliants coming to the House in such sort as you shall think fitting assuring his Majesty That all he shall say shall not onely tend to the Service of his Majesty and the State but highly to the Honor of his Majesties Royal Person and of his Princely vertues And your Suppliant shall ever pray for your Lordships prosperity The Lord Keeper to the Earl of Bristol March 31. 1626. My very good Lord BY his Majesties commandment I herewith send unto your Lordship your Writ of summons for the Parliament but withal signifie his Majesties pleasure herein further that howsoever he gives way to the awarding of the Writ yet his meaning is thereby not to discharge any former directions for restraint of your Lordships coming hither but that you continue under the same restriction as you did before so as your Lordships personal attendance is to be forborn and therein I doubt not but your Lordship will readily give his Majesty satisfaction And so I commend my service very heartily unto your Lordship and remain Your Lordships assured Friend and Servant THO. COVENTRY C.S. Dorset-Court March 31. 1626. His Answer to the Lord Keeper May it please your Lordship I Have received your Lordships Letter of the 31 of March and with it his Majesties Writ of Summons for the Parliament In the one his Majesty commandeth me that all excuses set aside upon my Faith and Allegiance I fail not to come to attend his Majesty And this under the Great Seal of England In the other as in a Letter missive his Majesties pleasure is intimated by your Lordship that my personal attendance should be forborn I must crave leave ingenuously to confess unto your Lordship that I want judgement rightly to direct my self in this Case as likewise that I am ignorant how far this may trench
upon the Priviledges of the Peers of this Land and upon mine and their safety hereafter For if the Writ be not obeyed the Law calleth it a Misprission and highly fineable whereof we have had late examples and a missive Letter being avowed or not is to be doubted would not be adjudged a sufficient discharge against the Great-Seal of England On the other side if the Letter be not obeyed a Peer may De facto be committed upon a Contempt in the interim and the Question cleared afterwards so that in this case it is above mine abilities I can onely answer your Lordship that I will most exactly obey and to the end I may understand which obedience will be in all kindes most suitable to my duty I will presently repair to my private Lodging at London and there remain until in this and other Causes I shall have petitioned his Majesty and understand his further pleasure For the second part of your Lordships Letter where your Lordship saith That his Majesties meaning is not thereby to discharge any former directions for restraint of your Lordships coming hither but that you continue under the same restriction as before so that your Lordships personal attendance here is to be forborne I conceive your Lordship intendeth this touching my coming to Parliament onely for as touching my comning to London I never had at any time one word of prohibition or colourable pretence of restraint but on the contrary having his late Majesties express leave to come to London to follow my affairs out of my respect to his Majesty then Prince and to the Duke of Buckingham I forbore to come until I might know whether my coming would not be disagreeable unto them whereunto his Majesty was pleased to answer both under the hand of the Duke and of Mr Secretary Conway That he took my respect unto him herein in very good part and would wish me to make use of the leave the King had given me since which time I never received any Letter or Message of restraint onely his Majesty by his Letter bearing date June the last commandeth me to remain as I was in the time of the King his Father which was with liberty to come to London to follow mine own affairs as I pleased as will appear unto your Lordship if you will afford me so much favor as to peruse them I have writ this much unto your Lordship because I would not through misunderstanding fall into displeasure by my coming up and to intreat your Lordship to inform his Majesty thereof And that my Lord Conway by whose Warrant I was onely restrained in the late Kings time of famous memory may produce any one word that may have so much as any colourable pretence of debarring my coming up to London I beseech your Lordship to pardon my desire to have things clearly understood for the want of that formerly hath caused all my troubles and when any thing is misinformed concerning me I have little or no means to clear it so that my chief labor is to avoid misunderstanding I shall conclude with beseeching your Lordship to do me this favor to let his Majesty understand that my coming up is onely rightly to understand his pleasure whereunto I shall in all things most dutifully and humbly conform my self And so with my humble service to your Lordship I recommend you to Gods holy protection and remain Your Lordships most humble Servant BRISTOL Sherborn April 12. 1626. Hereupon the Lord Keeper delivered this Message from the King to the House of Lords THat his Majesty hath heard of a Petition preferred unto this House by the Earl of Bristol so void of duty and respects to his Majesty that he hath great cause to punish him That he hath also heard with what duty and respectfulness to his Majesty their Lordships have proceeded therein which his Majesty conceiveth to have been upon the knowledge they have that he hath been restrained for matters of State and his Majesty doth therefore give their Lordships thanks for the same and is resolved to put the Cause upon the honor and justice of their Lordships and this House And therefore his Majesty commanded him the Lord Keeper to signifie to their Lordships his Royal pleasure That the Earl of Bristol be sent for as a Delinquent to answer in this House his Offences committed in his Negotiations before his Majesties being in Spain and his Offences since his Majesties coming from Spain and his scandalizing the Duke of Buckingham immediately and his Majesty by reflection with whose privity and by whose directions the Duke did guide his Actions and without which he did nothing All which his Majesty will cause to be charged against him before their Lordships in this House The Lords appointed a Committee to attend the King and to present their humble thanks to his Majesty for the trust and confidence he had placed in the honor and justice of their House About this time the Marshal of Middlesex petitioned to the Committee of the House of Commons touching his resistance in seising of Priests goods A Warrant was made by Mr Attorney General to Iohn Tendring Marshal of Middlesex and other therein named to search the Prison of the Clink and to seise all Popish and Superstitious matters there found A Letter also was directed to Sir George Paul a Justice of Peace in Surrey to pray him to take some care and pains to expedite that service On Good Friday April 7. Sir George Paul was ready by six a clock in the morning five or six Constables being charged and about an hundred persons to aid and assist them The Marshall being attended with the persons named in the Warrant and divers others of his own servants and the Aid being provided by Sir George Paul came to the Clink and finding a door open without any Porter or Door-keeper at all entred without resistance at the first appearing But immediately upon discovery of his purpose the Concourse of people without and his unexpected entrance giving occasion thereto the Porter steps up shuts the door and keeps the Marshal and some few that entred together with him within and his Aid without resisting them that would enter their Warrant being shewed notwithstanding until by force another door was broken open by which the other persons named in the Warrant the Marshals men with the Constables and others appointed for their assistance with Halberts did enter also leaving sufficient company without to guard the three several doors belonging to the House Being within the Marshall gave direction to his followers to disperse themselves into several parts of the House to the end that whilest he did search in one part the other parts and places might be safely guarded and so he proceeded in his search in the prosecution whereof he found four several Priests in the house viz. Preston Cannon Warrington Prator Preston was committed to the Clink about 16 years since and discharged of his imprisonment about
the Clink But I am of opinion that if you had curiously enquired upon the Gentleman who gave the Information you should have found him to be a Disciple of the Iesuites for they do nothing but put tricks on these poor men who do live more miserable lives then if they were in the Inquisition in many parts beyond the Seas By taking the Oath of Allegiance and writing in defence of it and opening some points of high consequence they have so displeased the Pope that if by any cunning they could catch them they are sure to be burnt or strangled for it And once there was a plot to have taken Preston as he passed the Thames and to have shipt him into a bigger Vessel and so to have transported him into Flanders there to have made a Martyr of him In respect of these things King James always gave his protection to Preston and Warrington as may be easily shewed Cannon is an old man well-affected to the Cause but medleth not with any Factions or Seditions as far as I can learn They complain their Books were taken from them and a Crucifix of Gold with some other things which I hope are not carried out of the house but may be restored again unto them For it is in vain to think that Priests will be without their Beads or Pictures Models of their Saints and it is not improbable that before a Crucifix they do often say their prayers I leave the things to your best consideration and hope that this Deed of yours together with my Word will restrain them for giving offence hereafter if so be that lately they did give any I heartily commend me unto you and so rest Your very loving Friend G. Canterbury By this time the Commons had prepared an Humble Remonstrance to the King in Answer to his Majestie 's and the Lord Keeper's Speech Most Gracious Soveraign WHereas your Majesty hath béen pleased of late at sundry times and by several means to impart unto us your Royal pleasure touching some passages and procéedings in this present Parliament We do first with unspeakable joy and comfort acknowledge your Majesties grace and favor in that it hath pleased you to cause it to be delivered unto us by the Lord Kéeper of your Great Seal in your own Royal presence and before both Houses of Parliament That never King was more loving to his people nor better affected to the right use of Parliaments withal professing your most gracious resolution to hear and redress our just Grievances And with like comfort we acknowledge your Majesties goodness shining at the very entrance of your glorious Reign in commanding the Execution of the Laws established to preserve the true Religion of Almighty God in whose service consisteth the happiness of all Kings and Kingdoms Yet let it not displease your Majesty that we also express some sense of just Grief intermixed with that great Ioy to sée the careful procéedings of our sincere Intentions so misreported as to have wrought effects unexpected and we hope undeserved First touching the Charge against us in the matter concerning Mr. Cook We all sincerely protest That neither the words mentioned in your Maiesties Message nor any other of seditious effect were spoken by him as hath béen resolved by the House without one Negative voice Howsoever in a Spéech occasionally uttered he let fall some few words which might admit an ill construction whereat the House being displeased at the delivery of them as was expressed by a general and instant Check he forthwith so explained himself and his intention that for the present we did forbear to take them into consideration which since we have done And the effect thereof had before this appeared if by important businesses of your Maiesties service we had not béen interrupted The like interruption did also befall us in the Case of Doctor Turner wherein the Question being formerly stated a Resolution was ordered to have béen taken that very day on which we received your Maiesties command to attend you But for our own procéedings We humbly beséech your Maiesty to be truly informed That before that Overture from Doctor Turner out of our great and necessary care for your honor and welfare of your Realm We had taken into serious Consideration the Evils which now afflict your people and the Causes of them that we might apply our selves unto the fittest remedies In the pursuit whereof our Committées whatsoever they might have done have in no particular proceeded otherwise then either upon ground of knowledge in themselves or proof by examination of Witnesses or other Evidence In which course of service for the publick good as we have not swerved from the Parliamentary ways of our Predecessors so we conceive that the discovery and reforming of Errors is so far from laying an aspersion upon the present Time and Government that it is rather a great honor and happiness to both yielding matter to great Princes wherein to exercise and illustrate their noblest vertues And although the grievous Complaints of the Merchants from all parts together with the Common service of the Subiects well-affected to those who profess our Religion gave us occasion to debate some businesses that were partly Forein and had relation to affairs of State yet we beseech your Maiesty to rest assured it was exceeding far from our intention either to traduce your Counsellors or disadvantage your Negotiations And though some examples of great and potent Ministers of Princes heretofore questioned in Parliament have been alleadged yet was it without paralleling your Maiesties Government or Councils to any Times at all much less to Times of Exception Touching the Letter of Your Majesties Secretary it was first alleaged by your Advocate for his own Iustification and after by direction of the Committée produced to make good his Allegation And for the search at the Signet Office the Copy of a Letter being divulged as in your Majesties Name with pregnant cause of suspition both in the Body and Direction thereof to be supposititious the Committée out of desire to be cléered therein did by their Order send some of themselves to the Signet Office to search whither there were any Records of Letters of that nature without Warrant to the Officer for any much less for a general search But touching Publick Records we have not forborn as often as our businesses have required to make search into them wherein we have done nothing unwarranted by the Laws of your Realm and the constant usage of Parliaments And if for the ease of their Labors any of our Committées have desired the help of the Officers Repertories or Breviats of Direction We conceive it is no more then any Subject in his own affairs might have obtained for ordinary Fées Now concerning Your Majesties Servants and namely the Duke of Buckingham We humbly beséech Your Majesty to be informed by us your Faithful Commons who can have no private end but your Majesties Service and the good of
our Countrey That it hath béen the antient constant and undoubted Right and Usage of Parliaments to question and complain of all persons of what degree soever found grievous to the Commonwealth in abusing the power and trust committed to them by their Soveraign A course approved not onely by the examples in your Fathers days of famous memory but by frequent presidents in the best and most glorious Reigns of your Noble Progenitors appearing both in Records and Histories without which liberty in Parliament no private man no servant to a King perhaps no Counsellor without exposing himself to the hazard of great enmity and prejudice can be a means to call great Officers into question for their misdemeanors but the Commonwealth might languish under their pressures without Redress And whatsoever we shall do accordingly in this Parliament we doubt not but it shall redound to the Honor of the Crown and welfare of your Subjects Lastly We most humbly beseech Your Majesty gratiously to conceive that though it hath been the long Custom of Parliaments to handle the matter of Supply with the last of their businesses yet at this time out of extraordinary respect to your Person and care of your Affairs We have taken the same into more speedy consideration and most happily on the very day of your Majesties Inauguration with great alacrity and unanimous consent After a short Debate we grew to the Resolution for a present Supply well-known to your Maiesty To. which if Addition may be made of other great things for your Service yet in Consultation amongst us we doubt not but it will appear That we have not receded from the Truth of our first Intention so to supply you as may make you safe at home and feared abroad especially if your Maiesty shall be pleased to look upon the way intended in our promise as well as to the measure of the gift agreed With like humility we beseech your Majesty not to give ear to the officious reports of private persons for their own ends which hath occasioned so much loss of time nor to judge our proceedings whilst they are in agitation but to be pleased to expect the issue and conclusion of our labors which we are confident will manifest and justifie to your Majesty the sincerity and Loyalty of our hearts who shall ever place in a high degree of happiness the performing of that duty and service in Parliament which may most tend to your Majesties Honor and the good of your Kingdom Unto this Remonstrance the King said He could give no present answer but desired the House to adjourn for a week as the Lords had done and they adjourned accordingly In the interim it was intimated in Writing to the Duke that he should procure his Majesty to signifie to a certain number of Lords that he hath endeavored to divert the Charge against the Duke because his Majesty hath had sound knowledge and experience of his service and fidelity That his Majesty may let them know that he is now pleased to reveal some secrets and mysteries of State That the King his Father finding the Palatinate more then in danger to be lost and his Majesty being in Spain and there deluded and his abode and return both unsafe it was a necessity of State to sweeten and content the Spaniard with the hope of any thing which might satisfie and redeem those Engagements And that therefore the King willed the Duke to yield discreetly to what he should find they most desired and this was chiefly the point of Religion So as in this and all of the like kind the Duke upon his Majesties knowledge was commanded and but the Instrument trusted by the King in this Exigent or if you will say Extremity Upon the same ground though not in so high a degree the sending of the Ships to Rochel may be excused Touching the vast Creation of Nobility his Majesty may declare that his Father who was born a King and had long experience of that Regiment found that this State inclined much to popularity and therefore thought fit to enlarge the number of his Nobles that these being dispersed into several Counties might shine as Lamps of Soveraignty in protecting their own degrees and at their own cha●●e inure the people with respect and obedience to greatness And the King may protest that this was a child of his Fathers best Judgment and the Duke the Instrument thereof And if you say there was money many times given for these Honors nay if you say that money hath been given for places of Clergy and Judicature take this of me it is so in all other Countreys as in France and Spain c. though I am not satisfied in this opinion And if it be said the King should have had the money which the Duke took to his own use I beleeve this last may the King say is more then any man can prove Neither will I deliver what I know therein onely this I will say I know the Dukes particular service and affection towards me and that he and his will lay down themselves and all they have at my feet Is it for a King to use his Servant and Instrument as he doth his Horses and being by hard riding in his service foundred and lame to turn them out to Grass or to the Cart I must therefore may the King say in right of the King my Fathers Honor protect a man though justly seeming guilty yet in my own knowledge innocent Will you therefore deny the King to favor whom he pleaseth which the King never denied to you that are his Subjects Well commend me to my Lords and tell them that if any thing hath been formerly done amiss by others I have power and will to redress it and to prevent the like At this time the King commanded all the Bishops to attend him and when they were come before him being fourteen in number he reprehended them that in this time of Parliament they had not made known unto him what might be profitable for the Church whose cause he was ready to promote And he laid this Charge upon them that in the Cause of Bristol and Buckingham their Consciences being their Guides they should follow onely proofs and not rumors The Commons sent again to the Duke by Sir Iohn Epsley to let him know that they were passing Articles against him and that they had given the Messengers leave to take Notes thereof out of the Clerks Book whereof he might take a Copy if he pleased and that they expected his Answer that day before ten of the Clock if he pleased to send any This the Duke signified to the Lords who did not think fit that he should answer as appears by the ensuing Report made by Sir Iohn Epsley This day his Grace gave us this Answer after he had moved the Lords that he should with great care make all due acknowledgment of your respect and favors in giving him this notice
which though it do invite him to render unto you such a satisfaction that he hopes may acquit and restore him to your good opinion and might prevent your proceedings which otherwise by a Parliamentary course are like to follow Yet according to his duty having moved the Lords of the Upper House upon your notice given him they would by no means as things now stand give him leave to answer in regard he is not ignorant you are presently to enter into consideration of his Majesties Message and that by a delay therein your own purposes will be in some sort disappointed and the affairs of Christendome much prejudiced but for that upon a resolution you have deferred and respited that service until those things depending against him be first determined he out of fear that his necessary defence would spin out a great deal of time which is more precious is the willinger to obey their Lordships that so he might hasten without obstacle or interruption given unto him to keep day with his Majesty And this he doth as he conceives to his own infinite prejudice knowing how grievous it is to be transmitted as a Grievance by the voice of this House But he doth profess he will rather hazard the safety of his Fortunes Reputation and himself then to be the least occasion of any that may work dis-affection or mis-understanding between the King and his People And it is his Protestation that whatsoever interruption is made by his actions his endeavors shall be as long as he hath any favor with his gracious Master to take opportunity of doing good offices to this House and of rendring all that he can be able for the safety of the State and the general good of the Common-wealth And this he saith you may the easier beleeve because his Majesty can witness that he hazarded in his Fathers time the loss of the best affection of the best of Masters to obtain for them their desire In this zeal he was desirous to have appeared unto you ever since the beginning of this Parliament and in this zeal he doth now present himself unto you But to return to the main point he lest we should be mistaken gave us occasion in plain words to remember you that it is not he that doth refuse to answer but the Lords commanded him not to answer which he the cheerfullier obeyed in respect of his fidelity to prefer the Universal Weal before his own particular And in the mean time he desireth the charitable opinion of this Noble House until he be convinced that he shall appear not worthy of it which his own innocency maketh him confident that he shall not Whilst the Duke stood ready to be impeacht his Grace propounded to the Lords of the Council to have it moved to the King that in regard of the important services by Sea the usual pay to the Sailers might be raised from Fourteen to Twenty shillings a Moneth which was as much as they ordinarily received for Merchants wages The King being therein moved was consenting Nevertheless multitudes of the pressed Mariners ran away leaving his Majesties Ships unfurnished and his Service disappointed There was a great Debate in the House of Commons Whether the Committee of Twelve where Mr. Glanvile had the Chair shall consider of any new matter not heretofore propounded in the House against the Duke And it was resolved in the Affirmative Mr. Glanvile reports from the Committee the Examination concerning a Plaister and a Posset applied and given to King Iames in his sickness when the Kings sworne Physicians had agreed upon other Directions Hereupon it was resolved That this should be annexed to the Charge against the Duke as a transcendent Presumption of dangerous consequence Hereupon his Majesty sent this Message to the Commons THat he having given way to Enquiry about the Duke of Buckingham and hearing that there is new matter intended to be brought against him nevertheless leaveth the House to their own way to present the business to him or to the Lords withal adviseth them to consider of the season of the year and to avoid all loss of time It was Ordered That thanks should be returned to his Majesty for this Message On Monday the First of May the Gentleman-Usher brought the Earl of Bristol to the Bar according to their Lordships Order and the Lord Keeper acquainted him That the King had commanded his Attorney General to charge the Earl of Bristol before their Lordships with High Treason and other Offences and Misdemeanors of a very high nature that they might proceed in a Legal course against him according to the Justice and usual proceedings of Parliament I. Offences done and committed by the Earl of Bristol before His Majesties going into Spain when he was Prince I. THat the said Earl being trusted and employed by the said late King as his Ambassador to Ferdinando then and now Emperor of Germany and to Philip the Fourth then and now King of Spain in Annis 1621.22 and 23. And having Commission and particular and special Direction to Treat with the said Emperor and the King of Spain for the plenary restoring of such parts of the Dominions Territories and Possessions of the Count Palatine of Rhine who married with the most Excellent Lady Elizabeth his now Royal Consort the onely Daughter of the said late King Iames which were then wrongfully and in hostile manner taken and possessed with and by the Armies of the said Emperor and King of Spain or any other and for preserving and keeping such other parts thereof as were not then lost but were then in the protection of the said late King Iames and to the use of the said Count Palatine and his Children And also to Treat with the said King of Spain for a Marriage to be had between the most High and Excellent Prince Charls then Prince of Wales the onely Son and Heir Apparant of the said King Iames and now our most Soveraign Lord and the most Illustrious Lady Donna Maria the Infanta of Spain Sister to the now King of Spain He the said Earl contrary to his duty and Alleagiance and contrary to the trust and duty of an Ambassador at Madrid in the Kingdom of Spain to advance and further the designs of the said King of Spain against our said Soveraign Lord his Children Friends and Allies falsly willingly and traiterously and as a Traitor to our said late Soveraign Lord the King by sundry Letters and other Messages sent by the said Earl from Madrid in the years aforesaid unto King Iames and his Ministers of State of England did confidently and resolutely inform advise and assure the said late King That the said Emperor and King of Spain would really fully and effectually make restitution and plenary restauration to the said Count Palatine and his Children of the said Dominions Territories and Possessions of the said Count Palatine and of the said Electoral Dignity And that the said King of
the Princes hands might have been bound up and yet he neither sure of a Wife nor any assurance given of the Temporal Articles All which in his high presumption he adventured to do being an express breach of his Instructions and if the same had not been prevented by his late Majesties vigilancy it might have turned to the infinite dishonor and prejudice of his Majesty XI Lastly That he hath offended in a high and contemptuous manner in preferring a scandalous Petition to this honorable house to the dishonor of his Majesty of blessed memory deceased and of his sacred Majesty that now is which are no way sufferable in a Subject towards his Soveraign and in one Article of that Petition specially wherein he gives his now Majesty the Lye in denying and offering to falsifie that Relation which his Majesty affirmed and thereunto added many things of his own remembrance to both Houses of Parliament ROBERT HEATH The Earl of Bristol upon the Attorney Generals accusing him of high Treason thus exprest himself THat he had exhibited his Petition to the House April 19 that he might come up and be heard in his Accusation of the Duke of Buckingham and that thereupon he being a Peer of this Realm is now charged with Treason That he had heretofore in●ormed the late King of the Dukes unfaithfull service and thereupon the Duke labored that he might be clapt up in the Tower presently upon his return out of Spain That he importuned the late King that he might be heard before himself and his Majesty promised it I pray God said he that that promise did him no hurt for he died shortly after And for the Kings promise he vouched the Lord Chamberlain for a witness and he desired the Lords to take notice that their House was possessed already of his said Petition and of his Accusation of the said Duke And therefore desired first that they would receive his charge against the Duke and the Lord Conway and not to invalid his Testimony against them by the Kings Charge against him and that he might not be impeached till his Charge of so high a nature be first heard So he tendred to the House the Articles against the Duke which the Clerk received and he withdrew and his Petition exhibited the 19 of April was read and the Lords resolved upon the Question That the said Earls Charge against the Duke of Buckingham and the Lord Conway should be presently read The Earl being shortly after called in again to the Bar of the Lords House concerning his Articles against the Duke made this speech FIrst he craved pardon of their Lordships for his earnest Speeches the other day confessing them to have been in passion saying That unexpected accusation of Treason would warm any honest heart but would hereafter amend it Then he rendred their Lordships humble thanks for their manner of proceeding against him and desired to know from Mr Attorney whether that were his whole Charge or not Mr Attorney answered That he had Commandment to open no more against him peradventure upon the opening of the Charge some particulars might arise and be urged but no new matter should Then the Earl desired to know of Mr Attorney who was the Relator to his Charge and that he might understand who was his Accuser Mr Attorney answered That the King himself out of his own mouth had given him directions for his own Relation against him and corrected many things that were added Unto which the Earl answered That he would not contest with the King neither did it beseem him so to do neither esteemed he his life or his fortunes so much as to save them by contesting with his Soveraign and therefore would make no reply or answer were it not that his Religion and Honor were joyntly questioned with his life but this being to descend to his Posterity for their sakes he was an humble Suitor unto his Majesty that he would not take indignation at his own just defence yet would he be ready to make any humble submission to his Majesty and heartily desired some means might be made that he might make it personally to himself wherein he would submit himself most willingly to some such act of humiliation and submission not wronging his innocency that never Subject did towards his Soveraign And also That his Majesty would be pleased to set himself in his Throne of Justice and declare out of his Royal justice that he would have the Duke and him upon equal terms and that neither of their causes should be advanced before others These were his humble Petitions which he besought their Lordships to present unto his Majesty and to take into their considerations of how dangerous a consequence it would be if the King should be Accuser Judge Witness and should have the Confiscation As touching the Charge against him he said He had once answered it all except that of his Petition and he doubted not but to clear himself before their Lordships of every particular of it he said he expected not to have heard of this again having once answered it He rather expected to have been charged with some practise with Spain against the State or the receipt of Ten or Twenty thousand pounds for the perswading and procuring of the delivery up of some Town of which the Crown was in possession as might be the Town of Flushing the Brill or the like or for being the means of lending the Kings Ships to a Forein Nation and that against those of our own Religion or for revealing his Majesties highest Secrets which none above two or three dares know or for treating the greatest affairs as it were by his own Authority without formal Instructions in the points or for having taken Rewards or been corrupted by a Foreign Prince or to have broken his Instructions in any Ecclesiastical point or as the Law calleth it to have committed an overt Act of disloyalty and not to be charged after seven Ambassages with Discourses and Inferences Then he desired their Lordships that he might have a Copy of his Charge in writing and time allowed him for his Answer and Counsel assigned him to plead his Cause and said there was a great difference between the Duke of Buckingham and him for the Duke was accused of Treason and yet at large and in the Kings favour and he being accused but of that which he had long since answered was a Prisoner and therefore he moved that they might be put in equal condition And as touching the Lord Conway in as much as he had given in Articles against him he desired his Lordship might not meddle in that particular business nor use the Kings name against him ex officio he also besought their Lordships to be Suitors to his Majesty on his behalf that all the particular dispatches of his own Ambassages and Sir Walter Ashtons might be brought thither and that he might make use of them for his defence as his Evidence
then he desired their Lordships not to think it tedious for him to proceed and lay open his Case unto them which being granted he began as followeth HE said that he had the honor to serve the late King his Master of happy memory for the space of twenty years and a long time as a Counsellor and in seven Forein Ambassages In all which time in point of his Negotiation he had never received one check or rebuke until the return of the Duke of Buckingham out of Spain and therefore from thence he would begin his present Narration The very day that his Majesty departed from Spain he was pleased to tell him That he had no wayes offended him but did him the honor to trust him with the custody of the powers for his Marriage and after his return into England wrote unto him some Letters which did in no kinde express any distrust or displeasure against him About the same time he wrote unto his Majesty several Letters as in duty he was bound not for any earthly respect whatsoever to conceal from him the true state of his Affairs in which Letter he set down truly and honestly That he conceived that the distastes grown there betwixt the King of Spain and his Ministers and the Duke of Buckingham would disorder and utterly overthrow all his affairs if his wisdom prevented it not hinc illae lacrymae The Duke of Buckingham got a sight and knowledge of the Letters and fearing lest the Earl at his return should discover unto his said late Majesty his practises and misdemeanors in Spain he resolved That his access to the King was no wayes to be admitted and therefore labored and endeavored that he might be committed to the Tower presently upon his arrival and conceiving That the Lord Maquess Hamilton in regard of his Friendship with the Earl and the Alliance which was then intended between them might oppose this course he earnestly pressed him therein and moved him to deal with my Lord Chamberlain to the same purpose vowing That there was no hurt intended to the Earl but onely that he feared that if he should be admitted to the King he would cross and disturb the Course of Affairs but they were so honorable that neither of them would condescend thereunto and so that intention of his took no effect and therein the Earl desired my Lord Chamberlain that he would be pleased upon his Honor to deliver his knowledge This Design of the Duke not taking he fell upon other things indeed to have frightened the Earl out of his Country and honor and thereupon laid some great and sinister aspersions upon him in both Houses of Parliament thinking thereby to have terrified him that he should not return saying That if he kept not himself where he was and laid hold of those great offers which he heard were made unto him in Spain it would be worse with him Then the Earl of Bristol proceeded and said That the knowledge of these aspersions cast upon him in the Parliament came first unto him at Burdeaux in France where he was coming home at leisure in the company of his wife and family having formerly sent a Post of purpose to the Lord Conway to know if his speedy return would be any way useful to his Majesties service Who answered him That he might very well return at leisure with his family And in the mean time he was fallen upon by the Duke of Buckingham in Parliament in such sort as your Lordships well remember of whose Declaration he said he would boldly affirm unto their Lordships that there was scarce any one thing concerning him in it which was not contrary to or different from the truth From Burdeaux the Earl took Post making haste for that he hoped to clear his Honor in Parliament before it should break up and being arrived at Calis he sent over to have one of the Kings Ships for which there was publick Order given but although both wind and weather were as fair as could be and the Kings Ships lay at Boloign having carried over Count Mansfield and might every day within three hours have been with him yet the Ship came not in eight days expectance so that the Earl fearing the Parliament would be dissolved was enforced to pass the Sea in a Boat with six Oars as he did having with him Thirty or Forty thousand pounds of the Kings Jewels Upon his landing at Dover hoping that if his Arrest should have been deferred until his coming to London he might have gotten directly to the Kings presence which the Duke resolved was by no means to be admitted The Earl was there by a Letter of the Lord Conway's delivered unto him by a Servant of his in his Majesties name commanded to retire himself to his House and not to come to the Court or the Kings presence until he should have answered to certain Questions which his Majesty would appoint some of the Lords of the Council to ask him Hereupon he sent presently to his Majesty who sent him word That his restraint was neither for any ill meaning unto him nor that it should last long but was intended for his good to keep the Parliament from falling violently upon him And the same reason the Duke alleadged to some of his Friends and all those his troubles which have followed upon his first restraint have been procured by the Dukes Art under colour of Favor But the Earl having received his Message from the King became a most humble Suitor unto his Majesty that he would expose him to the Parliament for that if he had not served him honestly in all things he deserved no favor but to be proceeded against with all severity And in this particular he pressed the King as far as could stand with duty and good manners but received answer from his Majesty That there should but few more days pass before he would put an end to his affairs And about this time the Parliament was dissolved He still continued his sollicitation to be admitted to the Kings presence Who sent him word and confirmed it by oath That as soon as he should have answered the Questions which the Commissioners were to propound to him he would both see him and hear him and wondred that he should so much doubt thereof He then sollicited with all earnestness to have the Questions sent unto him which was promised should be within few days In the interim his Majesty being desirous that the business should have been accommodated sent secretly to him by a Gentleman who is ready to depose it this Message That he should write a fair Letter to the Duke and leave the rest to Him Hereupon the Duke sent a Gentleman one Mr. Clark with fair Propositions offering to procure him whatsoever he could reasonably pretend only he must not be admitted to the Kings presence for some time and that the Duke would have the disposing of his Vice-chamberlains Place having been therein formerly
he had heard by several ways the King suffered much and was infinitely pressed by the Duke concerning the said Earl and his affairs and this he said was the suffering he had spoken of to their Lordships the other day The Earl craved leave of their Lordships to specifie some other particulars whereby it should appear that his Majesty was in no kind ill opinioned of him till his dying day viz. That several persons will depose that they have heard his Majesty say that he esteemed him an honest man And that he was pleased to accept of Toyes by way of Present from him graciously and in good part and at last was likewise pleased to give him leave to come to London and to follow his own affairs and that his pleasure was signified unto him by the Duke his own Letter Whereupon he determined to come to London intimated to the Duke his intention of going to his Lodging in Whitehall but the Duke was therewith incensed again and said he mistook the Kings meaning which was that he might privately follow his own business And this he said was the true State and Condition when it pleased God to take unto his mercy his late most gracious Majesty Upon his Majesties coming to the Crown he said he wrote a most humble Letter unto his Majesty imploring his grace and goodness and desiring the Dukes mediation But he was pleased to answer by his Letter of 7 Maii 1625. That the resolution was to proceed against him without a plain and direct Confession of the Point which he had formerly required him to acknowledge and in a Courtly manner of menace telleth him That he would take the freedom to advise him to bethink himself in time what will be most for his good But in the interim his Majesty was graciously pleased that his Writ of Parliament should be sent him and thereupon he wrote unto the Duke of the receipt of the said Writ but that he should do nothing but what he should understand to be most agreeable to his Majesties pleasure Whereunto the Duke answered in his Letters of May in this manner I have acquainted his Majesty with your requests towards him touching your Summons to the Parliament which he taketh very well and would have you rather make excuse for your absence notwithstanding your Writ then to come your self in person Whereupon he sent humbly to desire a Letter of leave under his Majesties hand for his Warrant but in stead thereof he received from the L. Conway an absolute Prohibition and to restrain and confine him in such sort as he hath been in the late Kings time And although he was indeed absolutely set free he could never get cleared by the Lord Conway though he sent him all the Papers to examine and when he could make no further reply he said he conceived he was under restraint and that his liberty expired with the late Kings death when indeed Restraint may expire but Liberty is natural After this he continued for the space of three quarters of a year in the Country without moving in which time he was removed from those Places and Offices he held during his late Majesties life and the greatest part of his Estate being laid out in their Majesties service by their particular appointment he could never be admitted so much as to the clearing of Accompts Yet hereof he never made the least complaint But against the time of his Majesties Coronation he thought it fit to lay hold of that occasion when Princes do Acts of grace and favor to be a most humble Suitor to his Majesty for his grace and goodness and addressed his Letters unto the Duke of Buckingham from whom he received a Letter all written in his own hand and therein a Letter inclosed from his Majesty so different from some gracious Message which he had received from his Majesty since the said Earl returned into England upon the occasion of a great sickness and likewise from his speeches several times delivered to his Wife to wit That he had never offended him and that for his faults he no ways held them criminal but to be expiated by any easie acknowledgment That he confessed he knew not what judgment to make of the said Letter neither hath presumed hitherto to make any Answer thereto although by reducing the occasions of speeches and circumstances to his Majesties memory he no ways doubteth but he shall be able to give unto his Majesty such satisfaction to every particular as his Majesty would not remain with the least scruple in any one point After this he said that his Writ of Parliament was detained whereupon he addressed himself to the Lord Keeper that he would be a Suitor to his Majesty for him in that behalf which diligences not taking effect by Petition he became a Suitor to their Lordships for their Honorable mediation to his Majesty and thereupon his Writ of Parliament was awarded But the Duke of Buckingham upon that took occasion as he had published Copies of the said Letter over all the Kingdom to read it likewise in that Honorable House as was best known unto their Lordships and the Writ was accompanied with a Prohibition from the Lo●d Keeper whereupon he addressed himself for Justice to that Honorable House being possessed of his Cause by his Petition for both redress of his own wrongs and likewise of Complaints against the Duke for many Crimes And that Honorable House being possessed of his Cause by his Petition there is preferred against him a succeeding Complaint amounting as high as Treason as it is pretended although he for divers years hath not been questioned yet since his Complaint against the Duke he hath been fetcht up like a Prisoner and brought into that House as a Delinquent And the Duke of whom he hath complained for his great Crimes is admitted still to sit in the House as one of his Judges The which with all that he hath formerly said together with his Life Fortunes and Honor he did with all willingness humility and duty submit to the Justice and Honor of that House Then the Lords asked him When he would bring in his Answer He promised to answer as soon as might be but knew not how far he should have occasion to use his antient Dispatches The Lord Keeper told him that Mr. Attorney might help him by letting him know it The Attorney said that his Charge should in nothing look further back then to the year 1621. Which he desired might be recorded Whereupon the Earl thanking their Lordships for their patience he was carried away by Mr. Maxwell the Gentleman-Usher in whose house and custody he remained Then were read the Earls Articles against the Duke and the Lord Conway viz. Articles of the Earl of Bristol whereby he chargeth the Duke of Buckingham bearing Date the First day of May 1626. I. THat the Duke of Buckingham did secretly combine with the Conde of Gondomar Ambassador for the King of Spain before
his the said Ambassadors last return into Spain in the Summer An. 1622. To carry his Majesty then Prince into Spain to the end he might be informed and instructed in the Roman Religion and thereby have perverted the Prince and subverted the true Religion established in England From which misery this Kingdom next under Gods mercy hath by the wise religious and constant carriage of his Majesty been almost miraculously delivered considering the many bold and subtile attempts of the said Duke in that kind II. That Mr. Porter was made acquainted therewith and sent into Spain and such Messages at his return framed as might serve for a ground to set on foot this Conspiracie The which was done accordingly and thereby the King and Prince highly abused and their Consents thereby first gotten to the said Journey that is to say after the return of the said Mr. Porter which was about the end of December or the beginning of Ianuary 1622. whereas the said Duke had plotted it many moneths before III. That the said Duke at his arrival in Spain nourished the Spanish Ministers not only in the belief of his own being Popishly affected but did both by absenting himself from all Exercises of Religion constantly used in the Earl of Bristols house and frequented by all other Protestant English and by conforming himself to please the Spaniards in divers Rites of their Religion even so far as to kneel and adore their Sacrament from time to time give the Spaniards hope of the Prince his Conversion The which Conversion he endeavored to procure by all means possible and thereby caused the Spanish Ministers to propound far worse Conditions for Religion then had been formerly by the Earl of Bristol and Sir Walter Aston setled and signed under their Majesties hands with a Clause in the King of Spain's Answer of Decemb. 12. 1622. That they held the Articles agreed upon sufficient and such as ought to induce the Pope to the granting of the Dispensation IV. That the Duke of Buckingham having several times in the presence of the Earl of Bristol moved and pressed his late Majesty at the instance of the Conde of Gondomar to write a Letter unto the Pope and to that purpose having once brought a Letter ready drawn wherewith the Earl of Bristol by his Majesty being made acquainted did so strongly oppose the writing of any such Letter that during the abode of the said Earl of Bristol in England the said Duke could not obtain it yet not long after the Earl was gone he procured such a Letter to be written from his late Majesty unto the Pope and to have him stiled Sanctissime Pater V. That the Pope being informed of the Duke of Buckingham's inclination and intention in point of Religion sent unto the said Duke a particular Bull in parchment for to perswade and encourage him in the perversion of his Majesty then Prince VI. That the said Dukes behaviour in Spain was such that he thereby so incensed the King of Spain and his Ministers as they would admit of no reconciliation nor further dealing with him Whereupon the said Duke seeing that the Match would be now to his disadvantage he endeavored to break it not for any service to the Kingdom nor dislike of the Match in it self nor for that he found as since he hath pretended that the Spaniards did not really intend the said Match but out of his particular ends and his indignation VII That after he intended to cross the Marriage he put in practice divers undue courses as namely making use of the Letters of his Majesty then Prince to his own ends and not to what they were intended as likewise concealing divers things of high importance from his late Majesty and thereby overthrew his Majesties purposes and advanced his own ends VIII That the said Duke as he had with his skill and artifices formerly abused their Majesties so to the same end he afterwards abused both Houses of Parliament by his sinister Relation of the carriage of Affairs as shall be made appear almost in every particular that he spake unto the said Houses IX As for scandal given by his personal behaviour as also the imploying of his power with the King of Spain for the procuring of Favors and Offices which he bestowed upon base and unworthy persons for the recompence and hire of his Lust These things as neither fit for the Earl of Bristol to speak nor indeed for the House to hear he leaveth to your Lordships wisdom how far you will be pleased to have them examined It having been indeed a great infamy and dishonor to this Nation that a Person of the Dukes great quality and imployments a Privy-Counsellor an Ambassador eminent in his Masters favor and solely trusted with the Person of the Prince should leave behind him in a Forein Court so much scandal as he did by his ill behaviour X. That the Duke hath been in great part the Cause of the ruine and misfortune of the Prince Palatine and his Estates in as much as those Affairs had relation unto this Kingdom XI That the Duke of Buckingham hath in his Relations to both Houses of Parliament wronged the Earl of Bristol in point of his Honor by many sinister aspersions which he hath laid upon him and in point of his Liberty by many undue Courses through his power and practices XII That the Earl of Bristol did reveal unto his late Majesty both by word and letter in what sort the said Duke had disserved him and abused his trust And that the King by several ways sent him word That he should rest assured he would hear the said Earl but that he should leave it to him to take his own time And thereupon few days before his sickness he sent the Earl word that he would hear him against the said Duke as well as he had heard the said Duke against him Which the Duke himself heard And not long after his blessed Majesty sickned and died having been in the interim much vexed and pressed by the said Duke Articles of the Earl of Bristol against the Lord Conway bearing Date 1 Maii 1626. I. THat the Lord Conway is so great a Servant of the Duke of Buckingham's that he hath not stuck to send the Earl of Bristol plain word That if businesses could not be accommodated betwixt him and the Duke he must then adhere and declare himself for the said Duke and therefore unfit to be a Judge in any thing that concerneth the Duke or the Earl II. That the said Lord Conway professeth himself to be a Secretary of the Duke of Buckingham's creation and so acknowledgeth it under his own hand And although that he be the Kings Secretary of State and a Privy-Counsellor he usually beginneth his Letters to the Duke Most gracious Patron III. That as a Creature of the said Dukes the said Lord Conway hath been made the Instrument of keeping the Earl of Bristol from the Kings presence and
of imprisoning of him by Warrants only under his own hand for which he cannot as the Earl conceiveth produce any sufficient Warrant IV. That by the space of Twelve moneths last past the said Lord Conway hath been the Cause of the Earls restraint only by misinforming his Majesty and procuring a Letter of restraint upon undue grounds And when it was made apparent unto him that the said Earl was restored to his liberty freely to follow his own affairs by his late Majesty of blessed memory he replied That that liberty given him by his Majesty expired with the Kings death V. That the Earl of Bristols Mother lying sick upon her death-bed desired for her comfort to see her Son and to give him her last blessing Whereupon the Earl wrote to the Lord Conway to desire him to move the King for his leave which he putting off from day to day told the person imployed That by reason of the Dukes sickness he could not find opportunity to get the Dukes leave to move the King And having spoken with the Duke he made a Negative answer in the Kings name Wherewith the Earl acquainting the King by some of his Bedchamber his Majesty was in a very great anger swearing the Secretary had never moved him and that to deny the said Earl leave was a barbarous part and thereupon sent him presently free leave which the Secretary hearing of sent likewise afterwards a Letter of leave but with divers clauses and limitations differing from the leave sent him from the Kings own mouth VI. That having the businesses of the Earl of Bristols in his hands and the Earl being commanded by the King to address himself in his occasions unto his Lordship He would never deliver any Message from the said Earl without acquainting the said Duke and receiving his directions and in a noble manner of freeness stuck not to send him word VII That the Earl of Bristol having received from the Lord Conway Twenty Interrogatories in his late Majesties name drawn up by a Commission of the Lords appointed to search into the Proceedings and Imploiments of the said Earl in which search there was more then two moneths spent divers of the said Interrogatories involving Felony and Teason And his Majesty having been pleased to assure the said Earl both by Message and Letters that upon satisfaction given to himself and the Commissioners by his Answers he would presently put an end to the Earl of Bristol's Businesse The Earl of Bristol having so fully answered as would admit of no reply and that many of the Commissioners declared themseves to be fully satisfied The said Lord Conway being the Secretary in the Commission to whom it properly belonged to call the Lords to assemble perceiving the Earl of Bristol was like to be cleared never moved for any further meeting neither have they ever been permitted to meet until this day whereby the troubles of the Earl of Bristol have been kept on foot till this present and the said Earls Imprisonment hath been enlarged Twenty moneths And by the Artifices of the said Duke of Buckingham and the said Lord Conway as shall be made appear the said Earl hath been insensibly involved and stauked into the troubles he is now in which he doubteth not but your Lordships will judge to be a very considerable Case VIII That for a colour of keeping the Earl from his late Majesties presence it being pretended after the Answer to the twenty Interrogatories that there were some few Questions more to be added whereunto when he should have answered his Majesty swore solemnly that without any delay he should be admitted to his presence and that within two or three dayes he should have the said Questions sent unto him the Lord Conway notwithstanding he acknowledged under his hand that he had received his Majesties directions for the sending of the said Articles and was often thereunto sollicited on the behalf of the said Earl would never send the said Questions and at last answered That he had no more to do with the Earls businesses IX That the Earl of Bristol being set free by his late Majesty to come to London to follow his own Affairs as he pleased and thereupon having his Writ of Parliament sent unto him without any Letter of Prohibition but the Earl of Bristol out of his great desire to conform all his actions to that which he should understand would best please his Majesty sent to know whether his going or stay would be most agreeable unto his Majesty who was pleased to answer by a Letter from my Lord Duke of Buckingham That he took in ve●● good part the said Earls respect unto him but wished him to make some excuse for the present The which accordingly he did and moved That he might have a Letter under the Kings hand to warrant his absence but under colour of this Letter of leave upon the Earl of Bristol's own motion and desire the Lord Conway sent a Letter from his Majesty absolutely forbidding his coming to Parliament and therein likewise was inserted a Clause That the Earl should remain restrained as he was in the time of his late Majesty and so thereby a colour of restraint under his Majesties hand was gotten which could never be procured in his late Majesties time whereby the Earl of Bristol hath been unduly restrained ever since without being able to procure any redress or to make the Lord Conway willing to understand his Case although he sent him all the Papers whereby he might clearly see that the Earl was not under restraint in his late Majesties time but never other Answer could be procured from him but That he judged the said Earl to be under restraint and that his Liberty was expired by the late Kings death as is aforesaid X. That the Lord Conway knowing that the Match for the marrying of the King of Bohemia's eldest Son with the Emperors Daughter and being bred in the Emperors Court was allowed and propounded by his late Majesty And that his Majesty by his Letters unto his Son-in-law declareth That he thinketh it the fairest and clearest way for the accommodation of his Affairs and that he will take sufficient care for his breeding in true Religion And notwithstanding that the said Earl received a Copy of the said Letter by the late Kings order with other Papers setting down all that had been done in the said business and his Majesties assent thereunto from the Lord Conway himself yet hath he suffered all to be charged as a crime against the Earl of Bristol both in the twentieth Interrogatory and in his Majesties last Letter that he should consent to the breeding of the young Prince in the Emperors Court And further in the Interogatory he alledgeth it as an aggravation against the said Earl That the breeding of the said Prince in the Emperors Court inferred to the perversion of his Religion when he knew that his said breeding was never thought nor spoken of by the
King nor any other but with that express Clause and Condition That he should be bred in his own Religion and have such Tutors and Servants as his Father should appoint XI That the Lord Conway hath been the cause of all the Earl of Bristol's Troubles by his dubious and intrapping Dispatches and in●erring That the said Earl hath failed in his Directions when it shall be made appear that his Dispatches contained no such Directions as he hath alledged were given The House not being satisfied to commit the Earl to the Tower let him remain where he was before with the Gentleman Usher and further ordered That the Kings Charge against the Earl of Bristol be first heard and then the Charge of the said Earl against the Duke yet so that the Earls Testimony against the Duke be not prevented prejudiced or impeached The day following the Lord Keeper delivered a Message from the King to the House of Lords THat his Majesty taketh notice of the Articles exhibited against the Duke of Buckingham by the Earl of Bristol and he observeth that many of them are such as himself is able to say more of his own knowledge then any man for the Dukes sincere carriage in them That one of them touching the Narrative made in Parliament in the One and twentieth of King Iames trencheth as far upon himself as the Duke for that his Majesty went as far as the Duke in that Declaration and that all of them have been closed in the Earls own breast now for these two years contrary to his Duty if he had known any crime of that nature by the Duke and now he vents it by way of recrimination against the Duke whom he knows to be a principal Witness to prove his Majesties Charge And therefore That his Majesty gave them thanks that they gave no way to the Earl of Bristol's unreasonable motion of putting the Duke under the same restraint that they had put the Earl thereby eschewing what the Earl aimeth at to alter their dutifull Procedings toward his Majesty That thereby they had made his Majesty confident that as they have so they will put a difference between his Majesties Charge against one that appeareth as a Delinquent and the recrimination of the Earl of Bristol against his Majesties Witness and they will not equal them by a proceeding Pari Passu At this time there was an endeavor to take the Earls Cause out of the House and to proceed by way of Indictment in the Kings-Bench To which manner of proceeding why the Lords should not give way these ensuing Reasons were offered to consideration I. IT was ordered That in all Causes of moment the Defendants shall have Copies of all Depositions both pro and contra after publication in convenient time before hearing to prepare themselves and if the Defendants will demand that of the House in due time they shall have their learned Council to assist them in their defence And their Lordships declared That they did give their assents thereto because in all Cases as well Civil as Criminal and Capital they hold That all lawfull help could not before just Judges make one that is guilty avoid Justice and on the other side God defend that an Innocent should be condemned II. The Earl of Bristol by his Petition to the House complained of his restraint desiring to be heard here as well in points of his wrongs as in his accusations against the Duke whereof his Majesty taking consideration signified his pleasure by the Lord Keeper April the 20 That his Majesty was resolved to put his Cause upon the honor and justice of this House and that his pleasure was that the said Earl should be sent for as a Delinquent to answer the offences he committed in his Negotiation before his Majesties going into Spain whilest his Majesty was there and since his coming thence and that his Majesty would cause these things to be charged against him in this House so as the House is fully possessed of the Cause as well by the Earls Petition as by the Kings assent and the Earl brought up to the House as a Delinquent to answer his offences there and Mr. Attorney hath accordingly delivered the Charge against him in the House and the Earl also his Charge against the Duke And now if he be proceeded withal by way of Indictment in the Kings-Bench these dangerous inconveniences will follow viz. 1. He can have no Counsel 2. He can use no Witness against the King 3. He cannot know what the Evidences against him will be in a convenient time to prepare for his Defence and so the Innocent may be condemned which may be the Case of any Peer 4. The Liberties of the House will be thereby infrigned the Honor and Justice thereof declined contrary to the Kings pleasure expresly signified by the Lord Keeper All these things are expresly against the Order 5. The Earl being indicted it will not be in the power of the House to keep him from Arraignment and so he may be disabled to make good his Charge against the Duke Therefore the way to proceed according to the Directions and true meaning of the Order and the Kings pleasure already signified and preserve the Liberties of the House and protect one from injury will be First To have the Charge delivered into the House in writing and the Earl to set down his Answer to it in writing and that the Witnesses may be examined and Evidences on both sides heard by such course and manner of proceedings as shall be thought fit by the House and if upon full hearing the House shall finde it to be Treason then to proceed by way of Indictment if doubtfull in point of Law to have the opinion of the Judges to clear it if doutfull in matter of Fact then to refer it to a regal Fait And the rather for that 1. It appears that the Earl in the space of two years till now he complained hath not been so much as questioned for matter of Treason 2. He hath been examined upon twenty Interrogatories and the Commissioners satisfie that his Answer would admit of no Reply 3. The Lord Conway by several Letters hath intimated That there was nothing against him but what was pardoned by the Parliament Pardon of 21 Iac. And signified his Majesties pleasure That he might rest in that security he was and sit still His Majesty hath often declared both to the Countess of Bristol and others That there was neither Fellony nor Treason against him nor ought else but what a small acknowledgment would expiate Some Cases happened in Parliament 1 2 Caroli wherein the Judges opinions were had viz. THis Question was put to all the Justices Whether a Peer impeached for Treason shall be tried in Parliament And the chief Justice in the name of all the Justices delivered his opinion that the course by Law was Indictment and this to be signified in Parliament before the Lord Steward vide 10
the Articles of several High Treasons and other great and enormous Crimes Offences and Contempts supposed to be committed by him against our late Soveraign Lord King James of Blessed Memory deceased and our Soveraign Lord the Kings Majesty that now is wherewith the said Earl is charged by his Majesties Attorney-General on his Majesties behalf in the most High and Honorable Court of Parliament before the King and the Lords there And not acknowledging any the supposed Treasons Crimes Offences and Contempts wherewith he is charged in and by the said Articles to be true and saving to himself all advantages benefit and exception to the Incertainty and Insufficiency of the said Articles and of the several Charges in them contained And humbly praying that his Cause may not suffer for want of Legal form whereunto he hath not been used but may be judged according to such real and effectual Grounds and Proofs as may be accepted from an Ambassador the ground of the Charge growing thence and that he may have leave to explain himself and his own meaning in any thing that may seem of a doubtful Construction For Answer saith as followeth I. THe First Article he denieth and because the Matters contained in the said Article consist of several parts viz. The loss of the said Palatinate and the Match with the said Lady of Spain and of the several Employments as of one Extraordinary Ambassage to the Emperor and another to the King of Spain in the years 1621.22 and 23. He humbly craves leave of this most Honorable Court to separate the businesses and distinguish the times And beginning with the Palatinate first to give an account of his Ambassage to the Emperor and so to make as brief a Deduction as he could of the whole carriage in that business from the beginning of his employment to the time he left it in his Ambassage to the Emperor he propounded all things faithfully according to his Instructions and the Answers which he returned to his late Majesty of Blessed Memory were the very same and no other then such as were given by the Emperor under his Hand and Imperial Seal the which according to his duty he faithfully sent unto his said Majesty and withal did honestly and truly advertise his said Majesty what he understood and thought then upon the place but was so far from giving to his Majesty any ill-grounded hopes in that behalf that he wrote unto the Lords of the Council here in England from Vienna 26 Iuly 1624. in such sort as followeth I Am further to move your Lordships That there may be a Dispatch made presently into Spain to his Majesties Ambassador and Mr. Cottington that they deal effectually for the repairing and ripening of the business against my coming that they use some plain and direct Language letting the Ministers there know That the late Letter sent by the King of Spain to the Emperor was colder and more reserved then his Master had reason to expect I shall conclude with telling your Lordships That although I dispair not of good success in that knotty business yet I hope his Majesty and your Lordships lay not aside the care of all fitting preparations for a War in case a Peace cannot be honorably had And amongst other things I most earnestly commend unto your Lordships by your Lordships unto his Majesty the continuing yet abroad for some small time of Sir Robert Mansels Fleet upon the Coasts of Spain which in case his Majesty should be ill used will prove the best Argument we can use for the Restitution of the Palatinate And this his Advice he saith was wholly intended by his Actions by being the cause as he returned homeward out of Germany to bring down Count Mansfield whereby the Town of Frankendale was relieved by supplying of his Majesties Army then in great distress with Moneys and Plate to the value of 10000 l. meerly out of his zeal and affection to the good of the King and his Children having no Warrant or Order but that his heart was ever really bent in effects more then in shews to serve the Kings Son-in-law and his cause as by the discourse of this business will appear And how acceptable these Services were will more appear by the Letters of the Queen of Bohemia in these words following My Lord HAving understood from Heidelburgh how you have shewed your affection to the King and me in all things and in the help of Money you have lent our Soldiers I cannot let so great Obligation pass without giving many thanks for it by these lines since I have no other means to shew my gratefulness unto you Howsoever assure your self that I will never be forgetful of the Testimonies you give me of your love which I intreat you to continue in doing the King and me all good Offices you can to his Majesty You have been an eye-witness of the miserable estate our Countreys are in I intreat you therefore to solicite his Majesty for our help you having given me an assurance of your affection I intreat you now to shew it in helping of us by your good endeavors to his Majesty and you shall ever binde me to continue as I am already Your very affectionate Friend ELIZABETH Which Letters were seconded with others about the same time both from the King of Bohemia and Council of Heidelburgh to the same effect And how much satisfaction his late Majesty received in that behalf and touching that business will plainly appear several ways and particularly by his Speech in Parliament And the said Earl likewise appealeth to both Houses of Parliament to whom by his late Majesties Order he gave a just and true accompt of that employment with what true zeal he proceeded and how he pressed that single Treaty and Promises no longer be relied on but that a fitting preparation for War might go along hand in hand with any Treaty of Accommodation And for a conclusion among many of his late Majesties approbations of his carriage in this employment he humbly desireth that a Letter of the Duke of Buckinghams under his own hand bearing date the Eleventh of October 1621. may be produced being as followeth My Lord I Am exceeding glad that your Lordship hath carried your self so well in this employment that his Majesty is infinitely pleased for your Service you have done for which he commanded me to give your Lordship thanks in his Name until he see you himself You of all men have cause to commend his Majesties choice of such a man that unless your heart had gone with the business you could never have brought it to so good a pass Amongst other things his Majesty liketh very well the care of clearing his Honor whereof he will advise further with your Lordship at your next coming over I hope you will not finde your Negotiation with the Infanta of such difficulty as you seem to fear in your Letter seeing my Brother Edward hath brought with him a Letter
his late Majesty was pleased to give order to the Duke and Earl to proceed in the Business which his said Majesty would not have Treated till the said Marriage was concluded as will appear by a Letter of his said late Majesty joyntly to the Duke of Buckingham and the said Earl of the 23 Iuly 1623. Secondly It will appear by Letters of the said Lord Conway to the Duke of Buckingham bearing date September 4. 1623. That the said Duke had good assurance of the Conclusion of the said Match and upon this confidence were all things put in due execution in England as had been Capitulated And the Lord Conway and others faithfully agreed and setled all the Points of Immunity and Liberty for the Roman Catholicks for the use of their Religion as was set down in the Declaration August 9. 1623. hereafter mentioned in the Answers to the Fifth Article of this Charge Thirdly the very day his now Majesty and the Duke of Buckingham departed from the Escurial in Spain towards England the said Duke solemnly swore the Treaty of the said Marriage and the furtherance of it all that should be in his power upon the holy Evangelists in the presence of the said Earl and Sir Walter Aston Fourthly The Treaty of the said Marriage had been formerly signed sealed and solemnly sworne by the King of Spain And when his Majesty and that King took their leaves he did solemnly in the words of a King faithfully and punctually protest to perform all that had been capitulated in the Treaty of Marriage and thereupon imbraced his Majesty at his departure and sent the very next day a Letter written all with his own hand to his Majesty vowing and protesting to make all good that he had capitulated or promised unto his Majesty at his departure the day before So that if there were no true meaning on the part of Spain to make the Marriage as by Mr. Attorney is pretended yet certainly the Earl hath not been sleightly deceived neither can it be as he conceiveth any fault in him since not only his late Majesty but also his Majesty that now is and the Duke of Buckingham being then both upon the place did confidently believe and that upon other grounds then misinformations suggestions and perswasions of the said Earl that the Marriage was really intended And to that effect both his late Majesty of blessed memory and his most Excellent Majesty that now is after his return into England wrote unto him the said Earl several Letters assuring him that their intents and pleasures were to have the said Match proceeded in and thereupon the Proxies of his Majesty then Prince were again inrolled and sent unto the said Earl So that the said Earl having so many and so great causes to be assured that the Match was really intended on both sides he conceiveth it will be hard for Mr. Attorney to make good that part of his Charge wherein he affirmeth that the Earl should know the contrary or the Assurance to be upon false grounds as in the said Article is alleadged II. To the Second Article He directly denieth all the supposed Offences wherewith he stands charged by the said Article And for a clear declaration and manifestation of the truth and manner of his proceedings He saith First as to the continuing the Treaties upon Generalities That the Temporal Articles were by Agreements on both sides not to be treated or setled until such time as the Articles of Religion were fully agreed on For that it was held most proper and honorable for both sides first to see if the Difficulty of Religion might be removed before they passed to any further Engagements And the said Articles of Religion by reason of the Popes new Demands sent into England by Mr. Gage were not signed nor condescended unto by his late Majesty nor his Majesty that now is then Prince until Ian. 5. 1622. and were then sent away in Post out of England to the said Earl by Mr. Simon Digby who arrived with them at Madrid in Spain about the 25. of the same moneth But the Earls care was such to have no time spent in the setling of the Temporal Articles that before he would condescend so much as de bene esse unto the Articles of Religion that they should be sent back to Rome he procured the King of Spain to promise That within the time limited for procuring the Desponsories which was by March or April following the furthest all the Temporal Articles should be setled and agreed to the end that the Infanta might be delivered at the Spring as by the King of Spain his Answer in writing was declared to be the Kings intention And accordingly Sir Walter Aston and the said Earl did not deal in general but did most industriously labor to settle all in particular viz. That the Portion should be Two Millions it appearing that it was so agreed by the late King of Spain That the Dispensation coming the Desponsories should be within Forty days after And that Don Duarte de Portugal should be the man that should attend the Infanta in the Journey And all other Particulars necessary for the Conclusion of the said Treaties were by Sir Walter Aston and the said Earl and the Spanish Commissioners drawn up into heads in writing and after many Debates they were consulted with that King and 2 Martii 1623. stilo vet the Conde Gondomar and the Secretary Don Andreas de Prada were appointed to come home to the house of the said Earl to signifie unto Sir Walter Aston and himself as they did That the King of Spain had declared his resolution in all the Particulars and given them order to come to a speedy Conclusion with them in all things And that Kings Answer to that Conclusion the Earl saw and read all written with the King of Spain's own hand On the seventh day of the said moneth of March 1623. the Kings Majesty then Prince and the Duke of Buckingham arrived at Madrid And then the Spaniards took new laws and the Negotiation was put into a new form So that whereas it is objected against the Earl that he entertained and continued the Treaties so long upon Generalities He conceives it is not meant upon the Spiritual Articles for they were such as were sent from Rome into England and from thence they came to the Earl And for the Temporal Articles they were not to be setled and treated till the Articles of Religion were concluded He conceiveth it cannot be alleadged with any colour that his Majesty was entertained with Generalities since the time that the said Articles of Religion were brought unto the said Earl by Mr. Simon Digby being about the 25. of Ianuary There were but six weeks until March 7. following when his Majesty then Prince arrived in Madrid and in the interim all the above-mentioned Particulars were setled And the time that hath been spent in this Treaty hath not been through his the said Earls
this business can be attributed to his fault since on the one side it will evidently appear to your Lordships that be never moved his Majesty and the Prince to admit of delays but rather to think of some other course and it will on the other side appear by all the Dispatches that he pressed things with the Ministers of Spain to as speedy a conclusion as the uttermost terms of fair Negotiation and good manners would bear And whereas it is pretended that the Spaniards should take occasion by entertaining the said Treaties to abuse his said late Majesty which he knoweth not yet he saith he used all the vigilancie and industry that a careful Minister could do and had from the Spaniards all the assurances by oaths words and writings which could be expected from Christians the which without adding or diminishing he faithfully presented unto his said late Majesty and his said late Majesty was pleased in those times to conceive upon those assurances that they dealt really with him And he conceiveth that his Majesty that now is then Prince and the Duke of Buckingham were pleased to write as much to the late Kings Majesty at their first coming into Spain and that all which the said Earl had written touching that imploiment was there avowed by the Conde Olivarez and Conde Gondomar to the said Prince and Duke at their arrival at Madrid and he hopeth that if that Dispatch may be perused it will as well appear and be adjudged that he served his Majesty with some measure of vigilancie as well as fulness of fidelity III. To the Third Article the said Earl saith That he did not either by words or by Letters to his late Majesty or his Ministers extol or magnifie the greatness and power of the King of Spain nor represented to his late Majesty the supposed dangers that might ensue unto him if a War should happen between him and the King of Spain nor affirmed nor insinuated the same as in the said Article is mentioned but if he did at any time speak or write of the power and greatness of the King of Spain or represented any danger to his said late Majesty that might ensue by entring into Hostility with the said King of Spain it was as a faithful Counsellor and Servant to his Majesty by way of his advice and opinion which he ever delivered sincerely faithfully and truly according to the present occasion and in no wise with such as intent as in the said Article is mentioned nor to any other evil intent and purpose whatsoever But he hath been so far from disswading his late Majesty to take Arms that he hath upon all just occasions advised that all fitting preparations for War might be made as beginning with the year 1621. from which time he is onely charged will appear by his Speech in Parliament presently after his return out of Germany and that he hoped his Majesty would no longer relie upon single Treaties but make all fitting preparations for War and that the Parliament would enable his Majesty thereunto and by the care he took before his going again upon his Ambassage into Spain that the establishment of an Army under his Majesties own Standard of Horse and Foot and under his own pay might be setled and provided for as likewise his advice to the Lords of the Council that his Majesty might have a curb upon the King of Spain upon all occasions by continuing of Sir Robert Mansfields Fleet upon the Coasts of Spain as will appear by his Letter written from Vienna 26 Iuly 1621. mentioned in the Answer to the first Article By all which it appeareth That he labored and endeavored as much as in him lay that his Majesty might be well prepared for any occasions of War that should happen And he no way remembreth to have discouraged or to have spoken or written any thing that might have been understood to have tended to the discouraging of his said late Majesty for the taking of Arms and entring into hostility with Spain or for resisting of him and his Forces from attempting the Invasions of his late Majesties Dominions or the Dominions of his late Majesties Confederates Friends or Allies as by the said Article is charged against him neither remembreth that he had any cause so to do But if he have in any kinde spoken or written of Spain or the power thereof it may have been to his late Majesty or his Majesty that now is by way of discourse speaking of the solidness of the Spanish proceedings of their serious and deliberate debating of business before they resolve on them of the constant pursuing of them when they are once resolved wishing that England and other Nations would therein imitate them For he supposeth the right way to impeach their greatness was to grow as wise as they and to beat them at their own Weapons But otherwise he is confident never to have been heard to speak or write any thing that might give any terror or discouragement to his late Majesty or his cheif Ministers knowing that England well-ordered need to take little terror at the power of Spain having almost in all attempts and enterprises won honor upon them And as for the preventing of dangers that might ensue upon a War though he knew not what is aimed at in that particular yet he is most confident out of the Integrity of his own Conscience That he neither said nor advised any thing but what befitted a faithful Counsellor and an Ambassador which was truly to deliver his opinion as he understood it upon the present occasion And as for affirming that his Majesties quiet should be disturbed and he not to be permitted to Hawk or to Hunt he remembreth not what discourse he may have had or written to any person how fit it might be upon the being broiled in a great War seriously to intend it and to make it our whole work But as he is confident it will appear that what discourse soever it might have been it wanted not true zeal and affection which he hath ever borne to the Kings service And he hopeth it will not be found to want due respect and reverence on his part which he ought to shew to so gratious a Master Neither can it be conceived that the considerations of Hunting and Fowling should be considerations worthy so great and prudent a King to withhold from a War for the good of Christendom and his Kingdom if he should have been justly provoked thereunto IV. To the Fourth Article the said Earl saith That he did not any thing contrary to his duty and alleagiance or contrary to the faith and duty of an Ambassador as by this Article is alleaged but did intend the service and honor of his late Majesty and no corrupt and sinister ends of his own advancement as by this Article is also alleaged And as for the Conferences which is pretended he should hold concerning the Treaty That being told there was little
his Majesties will and pleasure is that a Legal and Authentical Pardon shall be passed under the Great Seal wherein shall be freely pardoned all those Penalties Forfeitures and Seisures Indictments Convictments and Incumbrances whatsoever whereunto the Roman Catholicks are lyable or have been proceeded against or might be as well Priests as others for matters of Conscience onely and to which the rest of his Majesties Subjects are not liable And to the end his Majesty may make himself clearly understood where it shall happen that any of those Forfeitures and Pecuniary Mul●s have béen given away under his Majesties Great Seal his Majesty will not hide that it is not in his power so to make void those Letters Patents except they be voidable by Law and then his Majesty is well pleased that all Roman Catholicks may in these Cases plead in Law if they finde it good and shall have equal and legal Tryal And his Majesty is likewise pleased that his General Pardon shall remain in being Five years to the end all that will may in that time take it out and his Majesty will give order for the comfort of the poorer sort that the Pardon shall not be costly but such like course shall be taken as was in a like occasion at his majesties coming into England and that it shall be lawful to put as many as can be possible into one Pardon And we do further Declare That his Majesties will and pleasure is to the end the Roman Catholicks his Majesties Subjects may have a present and a frée fruition of as much as is intended them by the Articles of Treaty of Marriage to cause a present Suspension under his Majesties Seal of all those Penal Laws Charges and Forfeitures whereunto the Roman Catholick Subjects of his Majesty have heretofore béen subject and to which the rest of his Majesties Subjects have not béen liable and in the same Grant and under the same Seal to give a Dispensation and Toleration to all the Roman Catholicks his Majesties Subjects as well Priests as Temporal persons and others of and from all the Penalties Forfeitures Troubles and Incumbrances which they have béen or may be subject to by reason of any Statute or Law whatsoever to the observation whereof the rest of his Majesties Subjects are not bound We do likewise declare That his Majesty hath promised in his Royal Word that the execution shall be no ways burthensome or penal to the Roman Catholicks but that for the manner of priviledging and fréeing them from that he must confer with Bishops and Advocates into which he will presently enter and expedite by all means And we do further declare That his Majesties intention is presently to pursue his former Directions which had béen before executed if their Excellencies had so thought good to put under his Seal severally the said Pardon and Suspension and Dispensation and that his Majesties Attorney and learned Council shall have referred to them the charge to pen them with all those effectual words clauses expressions and reservations which may presently give fruition to the Roman Catholicks his Majesties Subjects and make them inviolable in the fruition of all that is intended and promised by his Majesty in the Articles of Marriage and his Majesties further Grace And we do declare That his Majesties further will and pleasure is for the better satisfaction and discharge of the care and endeavor of their Excellencies the Ambassadors that it shall be lawful to them to assign a discréet person to entertain such sufficient Lawyers as shall be thought sit to take care to the strength validity and security of the said Grants and his Majesties Attorney shall have charge to receive and admit the said Lawyers to the sight and judgment of the said Draughts and in any doubts to give them satisfaction or to use such legal necessary and pertinent words and phrases as he the said Lawyer shall propound for the security of the Roman Catholicks and sure making of the said Grants And we do further declare That his Majesties pleasure is to make a Dispatch into Ireland un●o his Deputy there by the hands of the Lord Treasurer and Secretary of State Sir George Calvert for the present confirming and sealing the things concerning the Roman Catholicks answerable to the Articles of Treaty his Royal Promise and Procéedings here And for Scotland That his Majesty according to the constitution of his Affairs there and regard to the Publick good and peace of that Kingdom and as soon as possible will do all that shall be convenient for the accomplishment of his Promise in Grace and Favor of the Roman Catholicks his Subjects conformable to the Articles of Treaty of Marriage But this Declaration the said Earl saith and affirmeth was the effect of the Duke of Buckinghams Negotiation and treated and concluded by the Lord Conway with the Spanish Ambassador here whilst the Prince was in Spain neither was his privity or advice in it For if he had known it he should have protested against it All which together with the difference betwixt the Conditions of Religion agreed at the Treaty of Madrid 12 December 1622. by the said Earl and the said Sir Walter Aston being by their Lordships considered the said Earl doubteth not but it will manifestly appear whose endeavor it was to advance the Romish Religion and the Professors thereof and judge the said Earl most unfortunate to be charged with an Article of this kinde VI. To the Sixth Article the Earl saith That the Assurances which he gave his late Majesty and his Majesty that now is concerning the Treaties were such That it had been dishonesty and breach of his duty and trust for him to have held them back being the same that were given him by the Emperor and the King of Spain and their Ministers upon as great Assurances as can pass between Ministers of Princes in the like case And for the Delays of Spain they could be never so ill and with so little colour complained of as at the time of his Majesties coming thither for that a certain time was before then prefixed for the coming of the Dispensation viz. in April 1623. at the furthest which was the next moneth after the Princes arival at Madrid the Desponsories were to be within four days following and the Infanta to begin her journey into England twenty days after So as three moneths patience longer would have shewed the issue of the business without putting of the person of the Prince being Heir-Apparant to the Crown in so eminent a hazard for the trying of an experiment And it is an argument of great suspition because the Spaniards were suspected to have dealt falsly and so the less to be trusted with the person of the Prince to be put into their hands to try conclusions But the truth is though that were made the pretended ground and the occasion of the journey it was neither the Assurances of the said Earl nor the Jealousies of Spain
that publick Trust reposed in him when the Proxies were deposited in his hands with publick and legal Declaration with an instrument by a Secretary of State to the King of Spain leading and directing the use of them and the same being then instrumentum stipulatum wherein as well the King of Spain was interessed by the acceptation of the substitution as the Prince by granting of the Proxies he could not in honesty fail the publick Trust without clear and undoubted warrant which as soon as he had he obeyed So as the Case standing thus the said Earl is very confident that the supposed Countermands Directions and Restrictions when they should be perused and considered of will appear to have been very slender and insufficient warrant against the aforesaid Orders and Reasons before specified And is also as confident That what is assured out of his the said Earls Dispatches will also appear to be misunderstood and that if he had proceeded to the execution of the Desponsories before he received direct and express commandment to the contrary by the aforesaid Letters November 13. 1623. which he readily and punctually obeyed he had not under favor broken his Instructions or deserved any blame for lack of assurance of the restitution of the Palatinate and Temporal Articles And first of the Palatinate his said Majesty did not send to the said Earl express Directions not to dispatch the Desponsories until a full conclusion were had of the other Treaty of the Palatinate together with that of the Marriage as by the said Article is alledged onely his late Majesty by the aforesaid Letters of October 8. required the said Earl so to endeavor that his Majesty might have the joy of both at Christmas Whereas his Instructions of May 14. 1621. were express that he should not make the business of the Palatinate a condition of the Marriage And his late Majesties Letters of December 30. 1623. were fully to the same effect Yet did the said Earl according to what was intimated by the said Letters of October 8. so carefully provide therein as that before the Proxies were to be executed he had an absolute answer in the business of the Palatinate the same should be really restored according to his late Majesties desire and the Conde Olivarez both in his Majesties name and in his own desired the said Earl and Sir Walter Aston that they would assure his Majesty of the real performance of the same and intreated if need were they should engage their honor and life for it as by their joynt Dispatches of November 23. 1623. will appear and so much the said Sir Walter Aston and the said Earl agreed should be delivered to them in writing before they would have delivered their Proxies and so the said Earl declared it the which Answer in writing should have been the same which since was given them of Ianuary 8. 1623. And both Sir Walter Aston and the said Earl were confident therein as they by their said Letters of November 23. wrote to his late Majesty as followeth Viz. That his Majesty might according to his desire signified to the said Earl by his Letters of October 8. give as well to his Majesties Daughter that Christmas the comfortable news of the expiring of her great troubles and sufferings as to his Son the Prince the Congratulation of being married to a most worthy and excellent Princess By which it will evidently appear he meant not to leave the business of the Palatinate loose when he intended to proceed to the Marriage but he confessed that he was ever of opinion that the best pawn and assurance his late Majesty could have of the real proceedings of the Palatinate was That they proceeded really to the effecting of the Match and of the same opinion was his late Majesty also and the Lords Commissioners here in England as appeareth by his Instructions dated March 14. 1621. which opinion still continued in them as appeareth by his late Majesties Letters of Ianuary 7. 1622. And as for the Temporal Articles the said Earl saith when the Desponsories were formerly appointed to have been as he remembreth on Friday August 29. before the departure of his Majesty then Prince out of Spain which was onely hindred by the not coming of the Dispensation the Prince appointed him and Sir Walter Aston to meet with the Spanish Commissioners and they drew up the heads of the Temporal Articles wherewith the Prince and the Duke of Buckingham were acquainted and in case the Dispensation had come and the Desponsories been performed on that day there had been no other provision made for them before the Marriage but presently upon the Prince his departure he the said Earl caused them to be drawn into form and sent them to his late Majesty September 27. 1623. desiring to understand his Majesties pleasure with all speed especially if he disapproved any thing in them but never received notice of any dislike thereof until the aforesaid Letters of November 13. 1623. which put off the Desponsories So as it appeareth the said Earl was so far from breaking his Instructions or from having any intention to have proceeded to the execution of the Desponsories before his Majesty and the Prince were satisfied of this point of the Infanta entring into Religion or before convenient assurance as well for the restitution of the Palatinate as performance of the Temporal Articles that he deserveth as he conceiveth under favor no blame so much as in intention but if he had erred in intention onely as he did not the same being never reduced into Act the Fault as he conceiveth was removed by his obedience before the intention was put into execution For so it is in Cases towards God And as to the matter of aggravation against him that he appointed so short a time for the Desponsories as that without extraordinary diligence the Prince had been bound he thereto saith as he said before that he set no day at all thereunto nor could defer it after the Dispensation came from Rome without a direct breach of the Match so long labored in and so much desired yet he and Sir Walter Aston having used all possible industry to discover how the motion of deferring the Match would be taken and finding an absolute resolution in the King of Spain to proceed punctually and to require the Proxies according to the Capitulations within ten dayes after the coming of the Dispensation and that time also getting advertisement from Rome that the Dispensation was granted and would presently be there he the said Earl to the end in so great a Cause he might have a clear and undoubted understanding of his late Majesties pleasure sent a Dispatch of November 1. with all diligence unto his Majesty letting his Majesty know that it could not be possible for him to protract the Marriage above four dayes unless he should hazard the breaking for which he had no warrant But that this was no new Resolution nor the
King so straitned in time as by the said Article is pretended will appear by the said Earls Dispatch of September 28. 1623. In which upon scruple that was then made of the Infanta's entring into Religion he wrote to the same effect Viz. That if the Dispensation should come he knew no means how to detain the Proxies above twenty or twenty four dayes So that although difficulty happened until the middest of November 1623. yet it was foreseen that it must of necessity happen whensoever the Dispensation should come and then was warning of two moneths given thereof viz. from September 24. until November 29. which was the time appointed for the Desponsories So as he most humbly submits himself unto your Lordships which of the two wayes was the safer or dutifuller for him to take whether upon inferences and conjectures to have overthrown so great a business or on the otherside first to have presented unto his Majesty the truth and sincerity as he did the true estate of his Affairs with his humble opinion therein with an intimation that if his Majesty should resolve to break the Match that for the said Earl his honest discharge of the publick Trust reposed in him when the Proxies were deposited in his hands and for his sufficient warrant in so great a cause his Majesty would be graciously pleased to give him clear and express order which he had not and in the interim whilest his Majesty might take into consideration the great inconveniences that might ensue the said inconveniences might be suspended and the business kept upon fair terms that his Majesty might have his way and choice clear and unsoiled before him And as to the evil Consequences which are pretended would have followed if the said Earl had proceeded to the consummation of the Match before he had express order and warrant to the contrary he supposeth his Majesty should speedily have seen the Marriage which he so long sought to have effected that the Prince should have had a worthy Lady whom he loved that the Portion was much greater then ever was given in money in Christendom that the King of Spain had engaged himself for restitution of the Palatinate for which the said Earl conceived a daughter of Spain and Two Millions had been no ill pawn besides many other additions of advantage to the Crown of England Whereas on the contrary side he foresaw that the Prince would be kept a year longer unmarried a thing that so highly concerneth these Kingdoms he doubteth that the recovery of the Palatinate from the Emperor and Duke of Bavaria by force would prove a great difficulty and that Christendom was like to fall into a general Combustion So that desiring that his Majesty should have obtained his ends and have had the honor and happiness not onely to have given peace plenty and increase unto his own Subjects and Crowns but to have compounded the greatest differences that had been these many years in Christendom And by his Piety and Wisdom to have prevented the shedding of so much Christian Blood as he feared would ensue if these businesses were disordered These Reasons he confesseth and the zeal unto his Majesties service made him so earnestly desire the effecting of this business and cannot but think himself an unfortunate man his Majesties affairs being so near setling to his Majesties content as he conceived they were and hoping to have been unto his Majesty not onely a faithful Servant but a successful Servant to see the whole estate of his affairs turned up-side down without any the least fault of his and yet he the onely Minister on the English and Spanish side that remained under disgrace XI To the Eleventh Article the said Earl saith That the Article is grounded upon a Petition by him preferred to this Honorable House supposed to be scandalous which your Lordships as he conceiveth according to the Customs and Priviledges of the House of Peers would have been pleased first to have adjudged so to have been either for matter appearing in it self or upon hearing the said Earl for if the matter appearing in the Petition it self be not to be excepted unto it cannot as he conceiveth by Collateral accidents be taken for a Scandal till it be examined and found false For a plain and direct Answer thereunto he saith That the said Petition is such as will not warrant any such inference as by the said Article is inforced And that he hopeth to justifie the Contents of the said Petition in such sort as shall not displease his Majesty nor deserve that expression which is used in the Charge but contrarily what he hath said or shall say therein in his defence shall in all things tend to the Honor and Service of his Majesty by reducing into his Memory divers Circumstances and laying before him the passages of divers particulars which by undue practices have been either concealed from his Majesty or mis-related to him Having thus offered to this High and Honorable Court such Proofs and Reasons as he hopeth shall in your Lordships W●sdom and Justice clearly acquit him of any capital Crime or wilful Offence if it shall appear that out of Errors of Judgment too much ferventness of zeal to his Majesties service or the ignorance of the Laws of this Realm wherewith he hath not been able to be so well acquainted as he ought by reason of Foreign Employments by the space of many years or by any other ways or means he hath faln into the danger of the Laws for any thing pardoned in the General Pardon made in the Parliament holden at Westminster Anno Vicesimo primo Regni Imp. Iacobi Angliae c. of Blessed Memory he humbly prayeth allowance of the Pardons and the benefit thereof with this Clause That he doth and will aver that he is none of the persons excepted out of the same although he is very confident he shall not need the help of any pardon having received many significations as well from his Majesties own mouth that he had never offended his Majesty as lately by several Letters from the Lord Conway that he might rest in the security he was in and sit still and should be no further questioned But he hopes your Lordships will not onely finde him so far from blame but that he hath served his late Majesty of Blessed memory and his most gratious Son the Kings Majesty that now is with that fidelity care and industry that your Lordships will take such course as you in your wisdoms shall think fit not onely for the upholding the Honor and Reputation of a Peer of this Realm after so many employments but likewise become humble and earnest Suitors to his Majesty on his behalf which he humbly prayeth That he may be restored to his Majesties most gratious Favor which above all worldly things he most desireth The Eighth of May the Commons brought up their Charge against the Duke which was delivered at a Conference of both Houses
and spun out two days time It was managed by Eight Members and Sixteen more as Assistants The Eight cheif managers were Sir Dudley Diggs Mr. Herbert Mr. Selden Mr. Glanvile Mr. Pym Mr. Sher●and Mr. Wandesford and Sir Iohn Elliot Sir Dudley Diggs by way of Prologue made this Speech My Lords THere are so many things of great importance to be said in very little time to day that I conceive it will not be unacceptable to your Lordships if setting by all Rhetorical Affectations I onely in plain Country Language humbly pray your Lordships favor to include many excuses necessary to my manifold infirmities in this one word I am Commanded by the Knights Citizens and Burgesses of the Commons House to present to your Lordships their most affectionate thanks for your ready condescending to this Conference which out of confidence in your great Wisdoms and approved Justice for the service of his Majesty and the welfare of this Realm they desired upon this occasion The House of Commons by a fatal and universal Concurrence of Complaints from all the Sea-bordering parts of this Kingdom did finde a great and grievous interruption and stop of Trade and Traffick The base Pirates of Sally ignominiously infesting our Coasts taking our Ships and Goods and leading away the Subjects of this Kingdom into Barbarous captivity while to our shame and hindrance of Commerce our enemies did as it were besiege our Ports and block up our best Rivers mouths Our friends on slight pretences made Imbargoes of our Merchants Goods and every Nation upon the least occasion was ready to contemn and slights us So great was the apparent diminution of the antient Honor of this Crown and once strong Reputation of our Nation Wherewith the Commons were more troubled calling to remembrance how formerly in France in Spain in Holland and every where by Sea and Land the Valors of this Kingdom had been better valued and even in latter times within remembrance when we had no Alliance with France none in Denmark none in Germany no Friend in Italy Scotland to say no more ununited Ireland not setled in peace and much less security at home when Spain was as ambitious as it is now under a King Philip the Second they called their Wisest the House of Austria as great and potent and both strengthned with a malitious League in France of persons ill-affected when the Low-Countreys had no Being yet by constant Councils and old English ways even then that Spanish pride was cooled that greatness of the House of Austria so formidable to us now was well resisted and to the United Provinces of the Low-Countreys such a beginning growth and strength was given as gave us honor over all the Christian World The Commons therefore wondring at the Evils which they suffered debating of the Causes of them found they were many drawn like one Line to one Circumference of decay of Trade and strength of Honor and Reputation in this Kingdom which as in one Centre met in one great Man the cause of all whom I am here to name The Duke of Buckingham Here Sir Dudley Diggs made a little stop and afterwards read the Preamble to the Charge viz. The Commons Declaration and Impeachment against the Duke of Buckingham FOr the speedy Redress of great Evils and Mischeifs and of the cheif cause of these Evils and Mischeifs which this Kingdom of England now grievously suffereth and of late years hath suffered and to the honor and safety of our Soveraign Lord the King and of his Crown and Dignity and to the good and welfare of his people The Commons in this present Parliament by the Authority of our said Soveraign Lord the King assembled Do by this their Bill shew and declare against George Duke Marquess and Earl of Buckingham Earl of Coventry Viscount Villers Baron of Whaddon Great Admiral of the Kingdoms of England and Ireland and of the Principality of Wales and of the Dominions and Islands of the same of the Town of Calais and of the Marches of the same and of Normandy Gascoigne and Guienne General-Governor of the Seas and Ships of the said Kingdom Lieutenant-General Admiral Captain-General and Governor of his Majesties Royal Fleet and Army lately set forth Master of the Horse of our Soveraign Lord the King Lord Warden Chancellor and Admiral of the Cinque Ports and of the Members thereof Constable of Dover Castle Iustice in Eyre of all the Forests and Chases on this side the River Trent Constable of the Castle of Windsor Gentleman of his Majesties Bed-Chamber one of his Majesties most Honorable Privy Council in his Realms both in England Scotland and Ireland and Knight of the most Honorable Order of the Garter The Misdemeanors Misprisions Offences Crimes and other Matters comprised in the Articles following and him the said Duke do accuse and impeach of the said Misdemeanors Misprisions Offences and Crimes My Lords THis lofty Title of this Mighty Man methinks doth raise my spirits to speak with a Paulò Majora Canamus and let it not displease your Lordships if for Foundation I compare the beautiful structure and fair composition of this Monarchy wherein we live to the great work of God the World it self In which the solid Body of incorporated Earth and Sea as I conceive in regard of our Husbandry Manufactures and Commerce by Land and Sea may well resemble us the Commons And as it is incompassed with Air and Fire and Sphears Celestial of Planets and a Firmament of fixed Stars all which receive their heat light and life from one great glorious Sun even like the King our Soveraign So that Firmament of fixed Stars I take to be your Lordships those Planets the great Officers of the Kingdom that pure Element of Fire the most Religious Zealous and Pious Clergy and the Reverend Judges Magistrates and Ministers of Law and Justice the Air wherein we breathe All which encompass round with cherishing comfort this Body of the Commons who truly labor for them all and though they be the Foot stool and the lowest yet may well be said to be the setled Centre of the State Now my good Lords if that glorious Sun by his powerful Beams of Grace and Favor shall draw from the Bowels of this Earth an exhalation that shall take Fire and burn and shine out like a Star it needs not be marvelled at if the poor Commons gaze and wonder at the Comet and when they feel the effects impute all to the incorruptible matter of it But if such an imperfect mixture appear like that in the last age in the Chair of Cassiopeia among the sixed Stars themselves where Aristotle and the old Philosophers conceived there was no place for such corruption then as the Learned Mathematicians were troubled to observe the irregular motions the prodigious magnitude and the ominous prognosticks of that Meteor so the Commons when they see such a blazing Star in course so exorbitant in the Affairs of this Commonwealth cannot
but look upon it and for want of Perspectives commend the nearer examination to your Lordships who may behold it at a nearer distance Such a prodigious Comet the Commons take this Duke of Buckingham to be against whom and his irregular ways there are by learned Gentlemen legal Articles of Charge to be delivered to your Lordships which I am generally first commanded to lay open 1. The Offices of this Kingdom that are the Eyes the Ears and the Hands of this Commonwealth these have been ingrossed bought and sold and many of the greatest of them holden even in the Dukes own hands which severally gave in former ages sufficient content to greatest Favorites and were work enough for wisest Counsellors by means whereof what strange abuses what infinite neglects have followed The Seas have been unguarded Trade disturbed Merchants oppressed their Ships and even one of the Royal Navy by cunning practice delivered over into Foreign hands and contrary to our good Kings intention employed to the prejudice almost to the ruine of Friends of our own Religion 2. Next Honors those most pretious Jewels of the Crown a Treasure inestimable wherewith your Noble Ancestors my Lords were well rewarded for eminent and publick Service in the Common-wealth at home for brave exploits abroad when covered all with dust and blood they sweat in service for the honor of this Crown What back-ways what by-ways have been by this Duke found out is too well known to your Lordships whereas antiently it was the honor of England as among the Romans the way to the Temple of Honor was through the Temple of Vertue But I am commanded to press this no further then to let your Lordships know one instance may perhaps be given of some one Lord compelled to purchase Honor 3. As divers of the Dukes poor Kinred have been raised to great honors which have been and are likely to be more chargeable and burthensome to the Crown so the Lands and Revenews and the Treasuries of his Majesty have been intercepted and exhausted by this Duke and his Friends and strangely mis-employed with strange confusion of the Accounts and overthrow of the well established antient Orders of his Majesties Exchequer 4. The last of the Charges which are prepared will be an injury offered to the person of the late King of Blessed memory who is with God of which as your Lordships may have heard heretofore you shall anon have further information Now upon this occasion I am commanded by the Commons to take care of the honor of the King our Soveraign that lives long may he live to our comfort and the good of the Christian World and also of his Blessed Father who is dead on whom to the grief of the Commons and their great distaste the Lord Duke did they conceive unworthily cast some ill odor of his own foul ways whereas Servants were antiently wont to bear as in truth they ought their Masters faults and not cast their own on them undeservedly It is well known the King who is with God had the same power and the same wisdom before he knew this Duke yea and the same affections too through which as a good and gratious Master he advanced and raised some Stars of your Lordships Firmament in whose hands this exorbitancy of will this transcendency of power such placing and displacing of Officers such irregular runing into all by-courses of the Planets such sole and single managing of the great Affairs of State was never heard of And therefore onely to the Lord Duke and his procurement by mis-informations these faults complained of by the Commons are to be imputed And for our most Gratious Soveraign that lives whose name hath been used and may perhaps now be for the Dukes justification the Commons know well That among his Majesties most Royal Virtues his Piety unto his Father hath made him a pious nourisher of his Affections ever to the Lord Duke on whom out of that consideration his Majesty hath wrought a kinde of wonder making Favor Hereditary but the abuse thereof must be the Lord Dukes own And if there have been any Commands such as were or may be pretended his mis-informations have procured them whereas the Laws of England teach us That Kings cannot command ill or unlawful things when ever they speak though by their Letters Patents or their Seals If the things be evil these Letters Patents are void and whatsoever ill event succeeds the Executioners of such Commands must ever answer for them Thus my Lords in performance of my duty my weakness hath been troublesome unto your Lordships it is now high time humbly to entreat your pardon and give way to a learned Gentleman to begin a more particular charge Then were read the First Second and Third Articles viz. 1. THat whereas the great Offices expressed in the said Dukes Stile and Title heretofore have been the singular Preferments of several Persons eminent in Wisdom and Trust and fully able for the weighty Service and greatest Employments of the State whereby the said Offices were both carefully and sufficiently executed by several Persons of such Wisdom Trust and Ability And others also that were employed by the Royal Progenitors of our Soveraign Lord the King in places of less Dignity were much encouraged with the hopes of advancement And whereas divers of the said places severally of themselves and necessarily require the whole care industry and attendance of a most provident and most able person He the said Duke being yong and unexperienced hath of late years with exorbitant Ambition and for his own profit and advantage procured and ingrossed into his own hands the said several Offices both to the danger of the State the prejudice of that Service which should have been performed in them and to the great discouragement of others who by this his procuring and ingrossing of the said Offices are precluded from such hopes as their Vertues Abilities and Publick Employments might otherwise have given them II. Whereas by the Laws and Statutes of this Kingdom of England if any person whatsoever give or pay any sum of Money Fee or Reward directly or indirectly for any Office or Offices which in any-wise touch or concern the Administration or Execution of Justice or the keeping of any of the Kings Majesties Towns Castles or Fortresses being used occupied or appointed for places of strength and defence the same person is immediately upon the same Fee Money or Reward given or paid to be adjudged a disabled person in the Law to all intents and purposes to have occupy or enjoy the said Office or Offices for the which he so giveth or payeth any sum of Money Fee or Reward He the said Duke did in or about the Moneth of Ianuary in the Sixteenth year of the late King Iames of Famous memory give and pay to the Right Honorable Charles then Earl of Nottingham for the Office of Great Admiral of England and Ireland and the Principality of
the other Knight being Robert Clifford it was agreed in Parliament that he should have the voices of both because the other must of necessity be absent And they both amongst other things petitioned the Council that if the King in his Person should come on the Sea they might have such a liberty to wait upon him as they might make their Lieutenant during the time for the service of their places But the Council that allowed the rest or most of their demands answered to that Le Councel ne pent faire Then he estimated the nature of the offence by the consequences which follow the not guarding of the Seas viz. 1. The losses already shewed 2. The prevention of Trade which gives life to the wealth of the Kingdom 3. The weakning of the Naval strength the Merchants being thereby discouraged from building ships which they cannot use In 1 Rich. 2. the Commons opened the two chief and almost whole Causes of the weakning the Kingdom at that time the neglect of Chivalry and eminent vertue not regarded nor rewarded the decay of Trade since the Navy was grown weak besides all the loss of quiet possession of so large a Territory as the Seas of England and Ireland by the free use of which the ancient glory and greatness of the Crown of England hath so constantly subsisted Then he instanced in Michael de la Pool Lord Chancellor who in 9 Rich. 2. mis-spent Subsidies given pro salva custodia maris as appears in the Roll and was adjuged in Parliament though for other offences because some other Lords of the Council had been trusted with him and it was not fit to impeach him sans les companions they taking it for a crime without question fit to be complained of Secondly in William Duke of Suffolk who for the same fault being Admiral onely in the right of Henry Earl of Exeter his Ward was by the King extraordinarily commanded into banishment Then he brought examples of such who had been put to death and confiscated for not safe-guarding Towns and Castles and Forts which are of like nature with not safe-guarding the Seas and with losing the possession of the Crown To the Fifth he said The staying of the ship called the Peter of Newhaven and detaining part of the goods was against the Marine Laws of England against the Common Laws against the Laws of Merchants and consequently the Law of Nations By the Marine Laws agreeable to the Civil Laws sentence given by any Subject or other against the King may upon new proof be revoked but not without new proof He made by his Patent a Judge of all Maritine Causes as well as Keeper of the Seas his Jurisdiction was to be exercised juxta leges nostras civiles Maritimas and accordingly to hear all Causes and generally to proceed ex officio mero mixto promoto secundum leges nostras Civiles Maritimas Against the Common-Laws All Justices and all other deputed to do Law or Right are commanded by Act of Parliament to permit the course of ordinary Justice and although they be commanded to do the contrary that they do execution aright and according to justice as far as in them lies and so for any Letters of Commandment which may come unto them from us or from any other or by any other cause Against the Law of Nations Against what is agreed by the Leagues between us and Forain Nations That the Subjects of Nations in Amity with us shall be well used and permitted without Molestation for what cause or occasion soever according to the Laws and Customs of the places where they shall be Lastly against the Laws of Merchants which is to have Celerem justitiam The Consequences of this Offence are 1. Great damage to our English Merchants that have suffered by reason of it in Forain Parts as they alleadge 2. It is a discouragement to those that are Subjects to the Marine Jurisdiction 3. An example that may serve hereafter to justifie all absolute Authority in the Admiral without Law or Legal course over the ships and good of all Merchants whatsoever and so no security to Merchants Lastly He instanceth in the Duke of Suffolk who was adjudged in Parliament for Treason and among other offences it was laid to his charge that he took to his own use goods Piratically taken and expresly against the Order determined by the Lord Protector and the whole Council whereunto his hand had been for the restitution of them Next were read the Sixth Seventh and Eighth Articles viz. VI. Whereas the honor wealth and strength of this Realm of England is much increased by the Traffick chiefly of such Merchants as imploy and build great warlike Ships a consideration that should move all Counsellors of State especially the Lord Admiral to cherish and maintain such Merchants The said Duke abusing the Lords of the Parliament in the One and twentieth year of the late King Iames of famous memory with pretence of serving the State did oppress the East India Merchants and extorted from them Ten thousand pounds in the subtil and unlawfull manner following About February in the year aforesaid he the said Duke hearing some good success that those Merchants had at Ormus in the parts beyond the Seas by his Agents cunningly in or about the moneth aforesaid in the year of the said late King endeavored to draw from them some great sum of money which their poverty and no gain by that success at Ormus made those Merchants absolutely to deny whereupon he the said Duke perceiving that the said Merchants were then setting forth in the course of their Trade four Ships and two Pinaces laden with goods and merchandise of very great value like to lose their voyage if they they should not speedily depart The said Duke on the first of March then following in the said year of the said late King did move the Lords then assembled in the said Parliament whether he should make stay of any Ships which were then in the Ports as being high Admiral he might and namely those ships prepared for the East India voyage which were of great burthen and well furnished which motion being approved by their Lordships the Duke did stay those ships accordingly but the fifth of March following when the then Deputy of that Company with other of those Merchants did make suit to the said Duke for the release of those Ships and Pinaces he the said Duke said he had not been the occasion of their staying but that having heard the motion with much earnestness in the Lords House of Parliament he could do no less then give the order they had done and therefore he willed them to set down the reasons of their suit which he would acquaint the House withall yet in the mean time he gave them leave to let their said ships and Pinaces fall down as low as Tilbury And the tenth of March following an unusual joynt action was by his procurement entred
their Lordships as followeth YOur Lordships may have observed how in handling the former Articles I have in my Discourse used the method of time which I hold to be best for the discovery of the truth I shall therefore by your Lordships patience whereof now I have had some good experience use the like order in my enlargment upon these later Articles touching which that which I have to say is thus In or about the Two and twentieth year of the reign of our late dear Soveraign Lord King Iames of famous memory there being then a Treaty between our said late Soveraign and the French King for a Marriage to be had between our then most Noble Prince now our most gratious King and the French Kings Sister our now Queen and for entring into an Active War against the King of Spain and his Allies in Italy and the Valtoline Our said late Soveraign passed some promise to the French Kings Ambassador here the Marquess D' Effiat for procuring or lending some Ships to be employed by the French in that Service upon reasonable conditions but without thought or intent that they should be employed against the Rochellers or any others of our Religion in France For it was pretended by the French Kings Ministers to our King That the said Ships should be employed particularly against Genoa and not otherwise But afterwards some matter of Suspition breaking forth from those of our Religion in France that the Design for Italy was but a pretence to make the Body of an Army fall upon the Rochellers or other of our Religion in that Kingdom the King grew so cautious in his Conditions that as he would perform his promise to lend his Ships so to preserve those of our Religion he contracted or gave directions that the greater part of the Men in the same Ships should be English whereby the power of them should be ever in his hands And the Duke of Buckingham then and yet Lord Great Admiral of England well knowing all this to be true pretended he was and would be very careful and proceed with art to keep the said Ships in the hands of our King and upon our own Coasts and yet nevertheless under hand he unduly intended practised and endeavored the contrary For afterwards by his direction or procurement in or about the Two and twentieth year aforesaid a Ship of his Majesties called the Vantguard being of his Majesties Royal Navy was allotted and appointed to be made ready for the service of the French King and seven other Merchants Ships of great burthen and strength belonging to several persons Natural Subjects of our said late Soveraign Lord were by the Dukes direction impressed as for the service of his said late Majesty and willed to make themselves ready accordingly The Names and Tunage of the said Seven Merchants Ships were as followeth 1. The Great Neptune whereof Sir Ferdinando Gorge was Captain 2. The Industry of the burthen of Four hundred and fifty Tuns whereof Iames Moyer was Captain 3. The Pearl of Five and forty Tuns Anthony Tench was Captain 4. The Marigold of Three hundred Tuns Thomas Davies Captain 5. The Loyalty of Three hundred Tuns Iasper Dare Captain 6. The Peter and Iohn of Three hundred and fifty Tuns Iohn Davies Captain 7. The Gift of God of Three hundred Tuns Henry Lewen Captain Also about the same time a Contract was made by and between Sir Iohn Cooke and other the Commissioners of his Majesties Navy as on behalf of his Majesty for his said Ship the Vantguard and on behalf of the Captains Masters and Owners of the said Seven Merchants Ships but without their privity or direction for the service of the French King upon conditions to be safe and reasonable for our King this Realm and State as also for the said Captains Masters and Owners of the said seven Merchants Ships and for the Companies For Sir Iohn Cooke drew the Instructions for the Direction of the said Contract which Instructions passed and were allowed by the King and such of the Council as were made acquainted therewith and used in this business In which Instructions as Sir Iohn Cooke hath since alleaged in the House of Commons there was care taken for provision to be made that the said Ship of his Majesty called Vantguard should not serve against the City or Inhabitants of Rochel or those of the Religion in France nor take into her more men of the French then she could from time to time be well able to command and master But whether the Instructions for the Merchants Ships and the Kings said Ship were all one is not yet cleared unto the Commons howbeit it appeareth not but that the intent of our King and State was to be a like careful for both Nevertheless a Form of Articles dated the Five and twentieth day of March in the Three and twentieth year of his said late Majesties raign was prepared ingrossed and made ready to be sealed without the knowledge of the Captains Masters and Owners of the said Merchants Ships between the said Marquess D' Effiat the Ambassador on the one part and the several Owners of the said Merchants Ships respectively on the other part viz. A several Writing or Instrument for every of the said Ships respectively whereby amongst other things as by the same appeareth it was covenanted and agreed by and on the part and behalf of the owners to and with the said Marquess D' Effiat to this effect namely 1. That their said Ships respectively with a certain number of men for every of them limitted with Ordnance Munition and other necessaries should be ready for the French Kings service the Thirteenth of April then next following 2. That they should go on in that Service under a French General to be as Captain in every of the said Merchants Ships respectively of the appointment of the French King or his Ambassador 3. That they should serve the French King against any whomsoever but the King of Great Britain 4. That they should take in as many Soldiers into their said several Ships as they could stow or carry besides their Victual and Apparel 5. That they should continue six moneths or longer in the Service so that the whole time did not exceed eighteen moneths 6. That they should permit the French to have the absolute Command of their Ships for Fights and Voyages And it was amongst the said Articles besides other things Covenanted and agreed by the said Marquess D' Effiat as for and on the behalf of the French King to this effectly namely I. That there should be paid to every owner a moneths freight in hand after the rate agreed on and freight for two moneths more after the same rate within Fifteen days after the date of the Articles the computation of the moneths to begin from the 28 of March II. And that the Ships should be ready in a certain form prescribed at the end of the Service When all things were in a
the Kings pleasure they should so do without security for redelivery of their ships or satisfaction for the same to their good contentment Hereupon Pennington went on shore at Diep and there spake with D'Effiat the Ambassador and shortly after returned aboard and gave the Captains Masters and Owners an Answer resting upon the validity and urging the performance of the former Contract made and peraffetted in England Then the said Masters and Captains prepared to be gone and weighed anchor accordingly Whereupon Captain Pennington shot at them and forced them to come again to anchor as yielding themselves for fear to his mercy and disposal Upon this Captain Pennington and the Frenchmen that now commanded the Vantguard came aboard the Merchants ships and there proposed unto them a new way for their security touching their ships namely to accept the security of the Town of Diep Whereupon they all went ashore except Sir Ferdinando Gorge who with his ship the Great Neptune adventured to come away as not liking these new and unreasonable Propositions At their coming ashore they spake with Mr. Nicholas and there by his enforcement came to a new Agreement to accept the Security of the Town of Diep upon certain hard Conditions namely The said Marquis d' Effiat as Extraordinary Ambassador in England and as having power by deputation from the Duke of Chevereux and Villocleer on or about August 15. 1625 did agree and promise to the said Moyer Touchin Thomas Davies Dard John Davies Lewen as Captains and Owners of the said ships called the Industry the Pearl the Marigold the Loyalty the Peter and Iohn and the Gift of God then being in the Road of the Town of Diep That the French King should give and furnish to the said Owners they being present and accepting it in this Town this sufficient security That within fifteen dayes after the said French King should be in possession of the said ships he should give sufficient caution in London for the sum of Two hundred and thirteen thousand Livres whereat the said ships were estimated with all that appertaineth to them as Cannons and other Munitions of War viz. Fifty thousand pounds And in or about the same 15 August 1625. the Commonalty of the said Town of Diep entred security and bound the goods of their Commonalty to the said English Captains and Owners That the said French King and his Ambassadors should furnish the security within the City of London within the time and for the sum aforesaid On or about August 16. 1625. the said Marquis d' Ef●iat as well in his quality of being Ambassador as by vertue of his said Deputation did by a publick Act promise unto the said Moyer Touching c. to give and furnish to them they being present and requiring it in the Town of Diep sufficient security in the City of London within fifteen dayes after the French King should be in peaceable possession of the said ships for the sum of Two hundred and thirteen thousand Livres Turnoys whereat the said ships were valued namely for the said ship called the Industry and so a several sum for every ship which security should remain for assurance to pay to every of them the prices of their ships before specified in that Act in case they should be left in the French Kings hands with other particulars in the said Act mentioned without derogating nevertheless from the Clauses of the said Contract March 25. 1625. Albeit because the said Ambassadors had found it good now to discharge the English Mariners out of the said ships that therefore the freight agreed upon by the said former Contract should not be wholly paid but only for the space of the first six moneths yet if the French King would use them for twelve moneths longer or for any less time that then he should pay freight for the same according to a new particular rate and manner expressed in the said Articles and bound the goods of himself and the said Duke of Chevereux and Monsieur Villocleer for the performance hereof as by the said Article it self reference being thereunto had amongst other things more fully appeareth This Article being passed and recorded at Diep all the said seven Merchants ships except the Great-Neptune who was gone away in detestation of the action intended by the French were forthwith delivered into the absolute possession power and command of the French King and of his said Ambassador d' Effiat and other the Ministers and Subjects of the French King to be imployed by him in his service at his pleasure and not one of all the English Company Man or Boy other then one onely man a Gunner as it should seem would stay in any of those ships to serve against the Rochellors or those of our Religion As soon as these ships were thus delivered into the possession and power of the French the said Ambassador then moved them and dealt earnestly with them for the sale of their ships Mr Nicholas having finished the work he went for at his coming from Diep he recei-a Diamond-Ring worth Fifty pounds and a Hatband set with Sparks of Diamonds worth One hundred Marks of the Ambassador as a recompence for his pains taken in this Imployment which although Ambassadors do confer greater rewards sometimes at their parting upon persons of Mr Nicholas his quality for less service done yet was it more then so ill an office as he was imployed in could in any sort deserve The said Captain Pennington returned speedily into England and took his journey towards the City of Oxford where the Parliament was then sitting by adjournment from Westminster thither and there several Propositions were taken into debate for the good of our Religion and the supply of his Majesties occasions For the well resolving and setling whereof the true knowledg how and upon what occasions and terms the several ships were sent delivered imployed and to be imployed was very requisite Afterwards neverthertheless upon or about August 6. 1625. at a meeting and conference between both the Houses of Parliament in Christchurch-Hall after the reading there of his Majesties most gracious Answer to a Petition of the Lords and Commons formerly exhibited unto his Majesty touching our Religion and much for the good thereof the Duke of Buckingham well knowing all the passages which I have now related to your Lordships to be true did not onely cautelously conceal the same but also much boldly and untruely by colour of a Message delivered from his Majesty to both the Houses affirm unto them touching those ships to this effect That it was not alwayes fit for Kings to give accompt of their Counsels and that about five of the six Moneths were already past and yet the said ships were not imployed against Rochel willing and advising the said Lords and Commons to judge the things by the event to which he seemed to refer the matter By which cunning Speeches the Duke intended and accordingly did make the Lords and Commons
then to believe That the said ships were never meant or any way in danger to be imployed against the Rochellors or those of our Religion in France and herein he did great injury and disservice to his Majesty to the great scandal and prejudice of our Religion and Affairs and highly abused both the Lords and Commons by this cautelous and subtile Speech and Insinuation and thereby gave both Houses occasion to forbear Petitioning or suing to his Majesty for Redress in this Business while the time was not then passed for the ships were not as then actually imployed against the Rochellors albeit in truth they were then delivered into the French Kings power And the same time before the Parliament was dissolved Captain Pennington who could have opened the whole truth of the business for the Service of the King and the Realm came to Oxford but was there drawn to conceal himself by means of the Duke and not to publish in due time his knowledge of the Premisses as was there shortly after reported The truth whereof the Lords in this Parliament may be pleased to examine as they shall see cause the Parliament at Oxford being shortly after viz. Aug. 12. unhappily dissolved In or about September 1625. The said ships were actually imployed against the Rochellors and their Friends to their exceeding great prejudice and almost utter ruine It hath been said by some of the French that the Vantguard she mowed them down like grass To the great dishonor of our Nation and the scandal of our Religion and to the disadvantage of the great affairs of this Kingdom and all Christendom Also the Ships themselves were in eminent peril to be utterly lost for lack of sufficient Cautions If they be come home since this Parliament sate down long after the matter was here expounded and taken into examination It may be well presumed that it is by some underhand procuring of the Duke and the secret complying of the French with him to colour out the matter which the Lords may examine as they see cause The one and onely English-man that presumed to stay in one of the Ships and serve against the poor Rochellors of our Religion at his return was slain in charging a Peece of Ordnance not by him well sponged In February last 1625. Monsieur de la Touche having speech with Master Thomas Sherwell a Member of the Commons House of Parliament at Salisbury as he was coming up to the Parliament and Monsieur de la Touche going down into Somerset-shire to Master John Pawlets to Monsieur Sobysa He told Master Sherwell in the hearing also of one Master Iohn Clements of Plymouth who is now in Town the words that the Duke had spoken to him the last Summer touching these Ships and thereupon used these words Ce Duque est un meshant homme Upon this whole Narration of the Fact touching the manner of Delivery of the Ships to the French divers things may be observed wherein the Dukes offences do consist As In betraying a Ship of the Kings Royal Navy unto a Foreign Princes hand without good Warrant for the same The dispossessing the Subjects of this Realm of their Ships and Goods by many artifices and subtilties and in conclusion with high hand and open violence against the good will of the Owners In breaking the duty of Lord Admiral and Guardian of the Ships and Seas of this Kingdom In varying from the original good Instructions and presuming to give others of his own head in matters of State In violating the duty of a sworne Privy-Counsellor to his Majesty In abusing both Houses of Parliament by a cautelous Misinformation under a colour of a Message from his Majesty And in disadvantaging the Affairs of those of our Religion in Foreign parts Offences of an high and grievous nature For the proof of some parts thereof which are not the least I offer to your Lordships consideration the Statute of the 2 3 E. 6. touching the Duke of Somerset wherein is recited That amongst other things he did not suffer the Piers called the Newhaven and Blackerst in the parts beyond the Seas to be furnished with victuals and money whereby the French were encouraged to invade and win the same Aud for this offence amongst others it was Enacted That a great part of his Land should be taken from him And if Non-feazance in a matter tending to lose a fixed Castle belonging to the King be an high offence then the actual putting of a Ship Royal of the Kings into the hand of a Foreign Prince which is a moveable and more useful Castle and Fortress of the Realm must needs be held a greater offence I will forbear to cite any more Presidents of this kind because some of those who have gone before me have touched at divers Presidents of this nature which may be applied to this my part Only because the abuse of the Parliament which is the chiefest Council of State and Court of Judicature in the Realm is not the least offence in this business I shall desire your Lordships to take into consideration the Statute of Westm. 1. cap. 30. whereby such as seem to beguile Courts of Justice are to be sore judged in the same Courts and punished as by that Statute appeareth So he concluded and left the Duke to their Lordships equal Justice The Ninth and Tenth Articles were read next IX Whereas the Titles of Honor of this Kingdom of England were wont to be conferred as great Rewards upon such vertuous and industrious Persons as had merited them by their faithful service The said Duke by his importunate and subtile procurement hath not only perverted that antient and most honorable way but also unduly for his own particular gain he hath enforced some that were rich though unwilling to purchase Honor As the Lord R. Baron of T. who by practice of the said Duke and his Agents was drawn up to London in or about October in the Two and twentieth year of Reign of the late King Iames of famous memory and there so threatened and dealt withall that by reason thereof he yielded to give and accordingly did pay the sum of Ten thousand pounds to the said Duke and to his use For which said sum the said Duke in the moneth of Ianuary in the Two and twentieth year of the said lake King procured the Title of Baron R. of T. to the said Lord R. In which practice as the said Lord R. was much wronged in his particular so the Example thereof tendeth to the prejudice of the Gentry and dishonor of the Nobility of this Kingdom X. Whereas no Places of Judicature in the Courts of Justice of our Soveraign Lord the King nor other like Preferments given by the Kings of this Realm ought to be procured by any Subject whatsoever for any Reward Bribe or Gift He the said Duke in or about the moneth of December in the Eighteenth year of the Reign of the late King Iames of famous
no man amongst the Thebans was to take upon him any Place of Government in the Commonwealth if that he were a Merchant unless there were ten years distance between And the reason is this Because Merchants are used to buying and selling It is their Trade and Art to to 〈◊〉 Money so that their fingers are accustomed to that which they cannot leave when they come to Places of Trust and Judicature Nay further in honor of the Merchants He is accounted the wisest Merchant that gains most so that if any such comes to Offices and Places of Trust he thinks it best to advance his profit Next to the Pagans the Popes a Generation full of Corruption yet they by their Bulls are full of Declamation against such And this is plain by a Bull of Pius Quintus who lays the Penalty of Confiscation of Goods of any that do for money acquire any Offices and condemns them by his Papal sentence to be great sinners So Gregory the Thirteenth condemns the like And now to come nearer home to come to that which will principally lead your Lordships which are the Judgments of your Ancestors in Parliament wherein it appears by the Statute of 5 H. 6. that the same Statute condemns the Seller and Receiver as well as the Buyer and Giver It further appears by the Preamble of that Statute that such offences were against the Law and they foresaw the Corruptions of those that came into those Places by those means and that it is a hinderance of sufficient and worthy men from those Places And also 2 3 E. 6. which was likewise cited in the Case of the Duke of Somerset by which he was to forfeit his Estate that one thing was for selling of Places in the Commonwealth for money And certainly with your Lordships favor it is most just and probable that they that profess themselves to be Patriots and shew by their actions that they aim at their own lucre and labor to hinder the distributing of Iustice it is most just and proper that those men should return back again to the Publick Treasury of the King and Kingdom what they have by their unsatisfied lucre gotten And so my Lords craving Pardon of you for my boldness confusion and distractions in going through this business I humbly leave my self to the judgments of your favors and charities and this Great man the Duke to your wise Censure and Justice Then was read the Eleventh and Twelfth Articles XI That he the said Duke hath within these ten years last past procured divers Titles of Honor to his Mother Brothers Kindred and Allies as the Title of Countess of Buckingham to his Mother while she was Sir Thomas Compton's wife the Title of Earl of A. to his younger Brother Christopher Villiers the Titles of Baron of M. P. Vicount F. and Earl of D. to his Sisters Husband Sir W. F. the Titles of Baron of S. and Vicount P. to Sir Iohn Villiers elder Brother unto the said Duke and divers more of the like kind to his Kindred and Allies whereby the Noble Barons of England so well deserving in themselves and in their Ancestors have been much prejudiced and the Crown disabled to reward extraordinary Vertues in future times with Honor while the small Estates of those for whom such unnecessary Advancement hath been procured ar● apparently likely to be more and more burthensom unto the King notwithstanding such Annuities Pensions and Grants of Lands annexed to the Crown of great value which the said Duke hath procured for those his Kindred to support these their Dignities XII He the said Duke 〈◊〉 contented with the great Advancement formerly received from the late King of famous memory by his procurement and practice in the Fourteenth year of the said King for the support of the many Places Honors and Dignities conferred on him did obtain a grant of divers Manors Parcel of the Revenue of the Crown and of the Duchy of Lancaster to the yearly value of One thousand six hundred ninety seven pounds two shillings halfpenny farthing of the old Rent with all Woods Timber Trees and Advowson part whereof amounting to the sum of Seven hundred forty seven pounds thirteen shillings four pence was rated at Two and thirty thousand pounds but in truth of a far greater value And likewise in the Sixteenth year of the same Kings reign did procure divers other Manors annexed to the Crown of the yearly value at the old Rent of Twelve hundred pounds or thereabouts according as in a Schedule hereunto annexed appeareth In the Warrant for passing of which Lands he by his great favour procured divers unusual Clauses to be inserted viz. that no Perquisites of Courts should be valued and that all Bailiffs Fees should be reprised in the particulars upon which those Lands were rated whereby a president hath been introduced which all those who since that time have obtained any Lands from the Crown have pursued to the damage of his late Majesty and of our Soveraign Lord the King that now is to an exceeding great value And afterwards he surrendred to his said Majesty divers Mannors and Lands parcel of those Lands formerly granted unto him to the value of Seven hundred twenty three pounds eighteen shillings and two pence half-penny per annum in consideration of which surrender he procured divers other Lands of the said late King to be sold and contracted for by his own Servants and Agents and thereupon hath obtained grants of the same to pass from his late Majesty to several persons of this Kingdom and hath caused Tallies to be stricken for the money being the consideration mentioned in those Grants in the Receipt of the Exchequer as if any such monies had really come to his Majesties Coffers whereas the Duke or some other by his appointment hath indeed received the same sums and expended them upon his own occasions And notwithstanding the great and inestimable gain by him made by the sale of Offices Honors and by other Suits by him obtained from his Majesty and for the countenancing of divers Projects and other Courses burthensom to his Majesties Realms both of England and Ireland The said Duke hath likewise by his procurement and practise received into his hands and disbursed to his own use exceeding great sums that were the monies of the late King of famous memory as appeareth also in the said Schedule hereunto annexed And the better to colour his doings in that behalf hath obtained several Privy-Seals from his late Majesty and his Majesty that now is warranting the payment of great sums to persons by his named causing it to be recited in such Privy-seals as if those sums were directed for secret Services concerning the State which were notwithstanding disposed of to his own use and other Privy-seals by him have been procured for the discharge of those Persons without accompt and by the like fraud and practice under colour of free gifts from his Majesty he hath gotten into
Scotland and Ireland and they will tell you Sejanus pride was so excessive as Tacitus saith he neglected all Councel mixed his businesses and service with the Prince seeming to confound their Actions and was often stiled Imperatoris laborum socius How lately and how often hath this Man commixed his Actions in Discourses with ACtions of the Kings My Lords I have done you see the Man onely this which was conceived by the Knights Citizens and Burgesses should be boldly by me spoken That by him came all these evils in him we finde the Cause and on him we expect the Remedies and to this we met your Lordships in Conference to which as your Wisdom invites us so we cannot doubt but in your Lordships Wisdom Greatness and Power we shall in due time finde Judgment as he deserves I conclude by presenting to your Lordships the particular Censure of the Bishop of Ely reported in the 11 Rich. 1. and to give you a short view of his faults He was first of all noted to be Luxurious secondly He married his own Kinred to Personages of highest rank and places thirdly No mans business was done without his help fourthly He would not suffer the Kings Council to advise in Matters of State fifthly He grew to such a height of Pride that no man was thought worthy to speak unto him and lastly His Castles and Forts of Trust he did obscuris ignotis hominibus tradere his doom was this Per totam insulam publicè proclamatur periat qui perdere cuncta festinat opprimatur ne omnes opprimat Sir Dudley Diggs having made the Prologu● and Sir Iohn Elliot the Epilogue in the Impeachment of the Duke they were both by the Kings Command committed to the Tower Upon the Impeachment of the Duke a Paper was privately conveyed to the King importing THat this great opposition against the Duke was stirred up and maintained by such as seek the destruction of this free Monarchy Because they finde it not yet ripe to attempt against the King himself they endeavor it through the sides of the Duke The persons agreeing in this one mischeif are of divers sorts and humors First Medling and busie persons who love popular Speeches Secondly Govetous Landlords Inclosers Depopulators c. who being of the Parliament ease themselves in Subsidies and lay it on the true Commons and cry out the grievances are caused by the Duke Thirdly Recusants who hate the Duke for the breach of the Spanish Match Fourthly Persons indebted who by priviledge of Parliament avoid payment Fifthly Puritans and Sectaries though two of them scarcely agree in what they would have Haters of Government and would have the Kings power extinguished in matters Ecclesiastical and limited in Civil Sixtly Male-contents who look upon the Duke with an evil eye because themselves are not preferred Seventhly Lawyers who are very fit in Parliaments to second any Complaint against ●oth Church and King and all his Servants with their Customs Antiquities Records Statutes Presidents and Stories Eighthly Merchants and Citizens who deceive the King of Custom Ninethly Innovators Plebicolae That since the time of Henry the Sixth these Parliamentary discoursings might never be suffered as being but certain symptomes of Subsequent Rebellions Civil Wars and the dethroning of our King and no one Patriot daring to oppose them least he incur the reputation of a Fool or Coward in his Countreys Cause His Majesty therefore strengthned himself ever with some Favorite as whom he might better trust then many of the Nobility tainted with this desire of Oligarchy It behoveth without doubt his Majesty to uphold the Duke against them who if he be but decourted it will be the Corner Stone on which the demolishing of his Monarchy will be builded For if they prevail with this they have hatched a thousand other demands to pull the Feathers of Royalty They will appoint him Counsellors Servants Alliances Limits of Expences and accompt of his Revenue cheifly if they can they will now dazle him in the beginning of his raign Lastly King James and King Charls are the Dukes Accusers in all the Aspersions that are laid upon him King James for the Money destined for the Wars in his time spent in Treaties c. And his Majesty can testifie for the things done in his time And all these though actions of the King are imputed to the Duke Who if he suffer for obeying his Soveraign the next attempt will be to call the King to accompt for any thing he undertakes which doth not prosperously succeed as all men would desire it If it please his Majesty to remove and set aside all these disadvantages he shall find the Charge against the Duke very empty and of small moment And if his Majesty and the Dukes Grace think it no impeachment to their Honors all that the Parliament hath objected against the Duke except two or three things that may receive an Answer is pardoned at the Kings Coronation which benefit every poor Subject enjoyeth May 11. The King came to the Parliament and spake to the House of Peers as followeth My Lords THe cause and onely cause of my coming to you this day is to express the sense I have of all your Honors for he that toucheth any of you toucheth me in a very great measure I have thought fit to take order for the punishing some insolent speeches lately spoken I have been too remiss heretofore in punishing such speeches as concern my self Not that I was greedy of their monies but that Buckingham through his importunity would not suffer me to take notice of them lest he might be thought to have set me on and that he might come the forwarder to his Trial. And to approve his innocencie as touching the matters against him I my self can be a Witness to clear him in every one of them I speak not this to take any thing out of your hands but to shew the reason why I have not hitherto punished those insolent speeches against my self And now I hope you will be as tender of my Honor when time shall serve as I have been sensible of yours And so his Majesty was pleased to depart The same day this following Message was brought from the Commons to the Lords by Sir Nathanael Rich. THe Commons taking into serious consideration the many mischiefs and inconveniences which this renowned Kingdom doth now suffer threatening apparent danger to the King and Common-wealth have by search and disquisition into the Causes thereof found that they do principally flow from the exorbitant power and abusive carriage of the Duke of Buckingham whereof he hath this Parliament béen impeached before their Lordships by the Commons besides an accusation of a Péer in their own House who hath charged him as they are informed of High Treason They therefore with one voice make an entire Declaration That they hold it a thing of dangerous Consequence both for the present and future times that a man of so
likewise besides his Charge That he brake off ambiguously and abruptly with a Sentence of Cicero as if something else might be which was not yet discovered Sir Iohn Elliot thanked the Vice-Chamberlain for dealing so plainly with him and giving him occasion to clear himself And to the particular charged against him he answered First considering the Dukes plurality of great and different Offices together with his deceit and fraud in perswading the Merchants to go to Diep there to entrap them in colouring the Designs to the King which he had plotted to serve against those of his Religion in abusing the Parliament at Oxford and disguising his purpose as if the ships were to go to Rochel These particulars being so various and of such a nature he called by the name of Stellionatus from a beast discoloured uncertain and doubtfull that they knew not by what name to call it or by what colour to describe it and these he called a Character of the minde because they lie in the heart and were deceits to abuse the King and Parliament Secondly as to his saying He knew not the ships were come he answered he did not know it then and as yet he knew it not though it was true that he had heard it Thirdly he denied not that speaking of the Duke he sometimes used this word that man though at other times he was not wanting to give him his due titles and said That the Latines speaking of Caesar call him Ille Caesar and that the same is usual in all Languages nor did he think the Duke to be a God Fourthly he con●●ssed That he paralleled him with the Bishop of Ely and Sejanus and though there were many particular censures of that Bishop yet he produced none but such as were within the compass of his Charge nor did he apply the Veneries and Venefices of Sejanus to the Duke but excluded them Lastly touching the Physick of the King he said he brake off so abruptly in aggravation of the Dukes offence who not content with the injury of Justice the wrong of Honor the prejudice of the State nor that of the Revenue his attempts go higher even to the person of the King making on that his practice in such a manner to such an effect that he said he feared to speak nay he doubted to think in which regard he left it as Cicero did another thing Ne gravioribus c. It was then resolved on the Question That Sir Iohn Elliot hath not exceeded the Commission given him in any thing that passed from him in the late Conference with the Lords The like for Sir Dudley Diggs both passed without a Negative the like Vote did pass for Mr Selden Mr Herbert Mr Glanvile Mr Sherland Mr Pym and Mr Wandesford who were also managers at that Conference The King in the time of this Parliament had committed the Earl of Arundel to the Tower but the cause of his Commitment was not expressed yet it was conceived to be about the Marriage of the Lord Maltravers the Earls eldest son to the young Duke of Lenox his sister which was brought about by the contrivance of the Countess of Arundel and the old Dutchess of Lenox The Lords were highly discontented at his commitment in time of Parliament concerning whose Liberties and their own Priviledges they had presented several Petitions to his Majesty but receiving no satisfactory answer thereto agreed on this ensuing Petition occasioned by the release of Sir Dudley Diggs May it please your Majesty THe cause that moves us now to attend your Majesty as at first we did is because we observe that the House of Commons have speedily received a Member of theirs who was committed We the Peers ambitious to deserve of your Majesty and to appear to the eye of the world as much respected in our Rights and Priviledges as any Peers or Commons have ever been acknowledging you a King of as much goodness as ever King was do now humbly beseech that the Earl of Arundel a Member of our House may be restored to us it so much concerning us in point of Priviledge that we all suffer in what he suffers in this Restraint In March last when the Earl of Arundel was committed the House of Lords purposed to take the same into their considerations and so to proceed therein as to give no just cause of offence to his Majesty and yet preserve the Priviledges of Parliament The Lord Keeper of the Great-Seal thereupon signified unto the House that he was commanded to deliver this Message from his Majesty unto their Lordships viz. That the Earl of Arundel was restrained for a misdemeanor which was personal to his Majesty and lay in the proper knowledge of his Majesty and had no relation to matters of Parliament Whereupon the House was put into a Committee and being resumed The Lords Committees for Priviledges c. were appointed to search for Presidents Concerning the commitment of a Peer of this Realm during the time of Parliament and the Lord Chief Justice Mr Justice Doderidge and Mr Justice Yelverton were appointed to attend their Lordships in that behalf The day following the Lord Teasurer delivered another Message from the King in haec verba WHereas upon a Motion made by one of your Lordships the Lord Keeper did yesterday deliver a Message from his Majesty that the Earl of Arundel was restrained for a misdemeanor which was personal to Majesty and lay in the proper knowledge of his Majesty and had no relation to matters of Parliament His Majesty hath now commanded him to signifie to your Lordships that he doth avow the Message in sort as it was delivered to have been done punctually according to his Majesties own Direction and he knoweth that he hath therein done justly and not diminished the Priviledges of that House And because the Committee appointed yesterday to search for Presidents c. had not yet made any Report to the House therefore the directions for this business were suspended for that time Not long after the Earl of Hertford made report to the House That the Lords Committees for Priviledges met on Monday last The first Question that arose amongst them was Whether those Proxies were of any validity which are deputed to any Peer who sitteth not himself in Parliament And it was conceived that those Votes were lost Whereupon the Committee found this House to be deprived of five suffrages by the absence of the Earl of Arundel unto whom they were intrusted And the Committee finding by the Journal Book that the Sub-Committee which was appointed to ●earch Presidents for Priviledges concerning the Commitment of a Peer in the time of Parliament had not yet made report to the House and then considering together their Notes of Presidents whereof they had made search found That no one Peer had been committed the Parliament fitting without trial of Judgement of the Peers in Parliament and that one only President of the Bishop of Winchester
in the Book-Case in the Third year of Edw. 3. which was here urged cannot be proved to be in Parliament time and this the Lords of the Grand-Committee thought fit to offer to the consideration of the House Hereupon the House was moved to give power to the Lords Sub-Committees for Priviledges c. to proceed in the search of Presidents of the Commitment of a Peer of this Realm during the time of Parliament and that the Kings Council might shew them such Presidents as they have of the said Commitment And that the said Sub-Committee may make the Report unto the House at the next access All which was granted and agreed unto and these Lords were called unto the said Sub-Committee viz. The Lord Treasurer Lord President Duke of Buckingham Earl of Dorset Earl of Devon The Earl of Clare The Vicount Wallingford Vicount Mansfield Lord North. And the Kings Council were appointed to attend the Lords The Lord President reported the Proceedings of the said Sub-Committees for Priviledges c. upon Commitment of the Earl of Arundel viz. That the Kings Council had searched and acquainted the Lords Sub-Committees with all that they had found in Records Chronicles and Stories concerning this matter Unto which the said Lords Sub-Committees had given full Answer and also shewed such Presidents as did maintain their own Rights The Presidents being read which for the length we forbear to mention It was resolved upon the Question by the whole House Nemine dissentiente That the Priviledge of this House is That no Lord of Parliament the Parliament sitting or within the usual times of Priviledges of Parliament is to be imprisoned or restrained without Sentence or Decree of the House unless it be for Treason or Felony or refusing to give Surety of the Peace And it was thereupon ordered That the said Lords Sub-Committees for Priviledges c. or any five of them shall meet this afternoon to consider of a Remonstrance and Petition of the Peers concerning the Claim of their Priviledges from Arrests and Imprisonments during the Parliament Which was conceived by the Lords Sub-Committees for Priviledges according to the Order of the House and was read openly viz. May it please your Majesty WE the Péers of this your Realm assembled in Parliament ●inding the Earl of Arundel absent from his place that sometimes in this Parliament sate amongst us his presence was therefore called for But thereupon a Message was delivered unto us from your Majesty by the Lord Kéeper That the Earl of Arundel was restrained for a misdemeanor which was personal to your Majesty and had no relation to matters of Parliament This Message occasioned us to enquire into the Acts of our Ancestors and what in like cases they had done that so we might not erre in any dutiful respect to your Majesty and yet preserve our right and priviledge of Parliament And after diligent search both of all Stories Statutes and Records that might inform us in this case We find it to be an undoubted right and constant priviledge of Parliament That no Lord of Parliament the Parliament sitting or within the usual times of Priviledge of Parliament is to be imprisoned or restrained without Sentence or Order of the House unless it be for Treason or Felony or for refusing to give Surety for the Peace And to satisfie our selves the better we have heard all that could be alleaged by your Majesties Council learned at the Law that might any way weaken or infringe this claim of the Peers And to all that can be shewed or alleaged so full satisfaction hath been given as that all the Peers of Parliament upon the Question made of this Priviledge have una voce consented That this is the undoubted Right of the Peers and hath unviolably been enjoyed by them Wherefore we your Majesties Loyal Subjects and humble Servants the whole body of the Peers now in Parliament assembled most humbly beseech your Majesty that the Earl of Arundel a Member of this Body may presently be admitted with your gracious favor to come sit and serve your Majesty and the Commonwealth in the great Affairs of this Parliament And we shall pray c. This Remonstrance and Petition to this Majesty was approved by the whole House who agreed that it should be presented by the whole House to his Majesty and it was further agreed That the Lord President the Lord Steward the Earl of Cambridge and the Lord Great-Chamberlain should presently go to the King to know his Majesties pleasure when they shall attend him These Lords returning the Lord President reported that his Majesty had appointed that day between two and three of the clock for the whole House to attend him with the said Remonstrance and Petition in the Chamber of Presence at Whitehall And it was agreed That the Lord Keeper should then read the same to the King and present it unto his Majesty The Twentieth of April the Lord President reported the Kings Answer unto the Remonstrance and Petition of the Lords to this effect That their Lordships having spent some time about this business and it being of some consequence his Majesty should be thought rash if he should give a sudden Answer thereto and therefore will advise of it and give them a full Answer in convenient time The 21. of April 1626. It was ordered That the House should be called on Monday next being the 24. of April Which was done accordingly And the Earl of Arundel being called the Lord Keeper signified unto the House That his Majesty had taken into consideration the Petition exhibited by their Lordships the 19. of April concerning the Earl of Arundel and will return an Answer thereunto with all expedition The 2. of May it was ordered That the Lord Keeper should move his Majesty from the House for a speedy and gracious Answer unto the Petition on the Earl of Arundels behalf The 4. of May 1626. the Lord Keeper signified unto their Lordships That according to the Order of the 2. of May he had moved his Majesty from the House on the behalf of the Earl of Arundel Who answered It is a Cause wherein he hath had a great deal of care and is willing to give their Lordships satisfaction and hath it in his consideration how to do it and hath been interrupted by other business wherein Mr. Attorney hath had occasion of much conference with him as their Lordships are acquainted But will with all conveniencie give their Lordships satisfaction and return them an Answer The 9. of May 1626 the House being moved to petition the King touching the Earl of Arundel certain Lords were appointed to set down the form of the said Petition who reported the same in writing as followeth viz. May it please your Majesty WHereas the whole body of the Peers now assembled in Parliament did the 19 day of April exhibit to your Majesty an humble Remonstrance and Petition concerning the Priviledge of Peers
in Parliament and in particular touching the Earl of Arundel whereupon we received a gracious Answer That in convenient time we should receive a fuller Answer which we have long and dutifully attended And now at this time so great a business being in handling in the House we are pressed by that business to be humble suitors to your Majesty for a gracious and present Answer Which being read was approved of by the House and the said Committee appointed to present the same unto his Majesty from the House at such time as the Lord Chamberlain shall signifie unto them that his Majesty is pleased to admit them to his presence The 11 of May the Lord President reported the Kings Answer to the said Petition That he did little look for such a Message from the House That himself had been of the House and did never know such a Message from the one House unto the other Therefore when he received a Message fit to come from them to their Soveraign they shall receive an Answer The Lord President further Reported That the Lords Committees appointed to deliver the Petition to the King did thereupon withdraw and required him humbly to desire his Majesty to be pleased to let them know unto what point of the said Petition he takes this Exception and that his Majesty willed him to say this of himself viz. The Exception the King taketh is at the peremptoriness of the Term To have a Present Answer And the King wonders at their impatience since he hath promised them an answer in convenient time Hereupon the House altered their former Petition leaving out the word Present and appointed the former Committee humbly to deliver the same to his Majesty The 13 of May the Lord President reported the Kings Answer to the Petition viz. It is true the word Present was somewhat strange to his Majesty because they did not use it from one House to another but now that his Majesty knows their meaning they shall know this from him that they shall have his Answer so soon as conveniently he can And this his Majesty will assure them it shall be such an Answer as they shall see will not trench upon the Priviledges of the House The Lords having agreed on another Petition to the King wherein they acknowledged him to be a Prince of as much goodness as ever King was The 19 of May the Lord Chamberlain signified to their Lordships That his Majesty being acquainted therewith is pleased that this House attend him at two of the Clock this day in the Afternoon at Whitehall On which day the Lords delivered the Petition to his Majesty who upon the 20 May returned this Answer My Lords I See that in your Petition you acknowledge me a King of as much goodness as ever King was for which I thank you and I will endeavor by the Grace of God never to deserve other But in this I observe that you contradict your selves for if you believe me to be such as you say I am you have no reason to mistrust the sincerity of my Promises For whereas upon often Petitions made by you unto me concerning this business I have promised to give you a full Answer with all convenient speed by this again importuning of me you seem to mistrust my former promises But it may be said there is an Emergent cause for that I have delivered a Member of the Lower-House In this My Lords by your favour you are mistaken for the Causes do no way agree for that he that was committed of the House of Commons was committed for words spoken before both Houses which being such as I had just cause to commit him yet because I found they might be words onely misplaced and not ill meant and were so conceived by many honest men I was content upon his interpretation to release him without any suit from the Lower-House whereas my Lord of Arundel's fault was directly against my self having no relation to the Parliament yet because I see you are so impatient I will make you a fuller Answer then yet I have done not doubting but that you will rest contented therewith It is true I committed him for a cause which most of you know and though it had been no more I had reason to do it yet my Lords I assure you that I have things of far greater importance to lay to his charge which you must excuse me for not no tell you at this time because it is not yet ripe and it would much prejudice my service to do it and this by the word of a King I do not speak out of a desire to delay you but as soon as it is possible you shall know the cause which is such as I know you will not judge to be any breach of your Priviledges For my Lords by this I do not mean to shew the power of a King by diminishing your Priviledges This Answer being read it was ordered That the Committee for Priviledges should meet and consider how farther to proceed with dutifull respect to his Majesty and yet so as it may be for the preservation of the Priviledges of the Peers of this Land and the Liberties of the House of Parliament The 24 of May the Lord President reported the Petition agreed on by the Lords Committees for Priviledges c. to be presented to the King which was in haec verba May it please your most Excellent Majesty WHatever our care and desire is to preserve our right of Péers yet it is far from our thoughts either to distrust or to press any thing that stands not with the affection and duty of most dutiful and loyal Subjects And therefore in all humility we cast our selves before your Majesty assuring our selves in the word of a King that with all conveniencie possible your Majesty will please either to restore the Peer to his place in Parliament or express such a cause as may not infringe our Priviledges The Petition was generally approved and ordered to be presented to his Majesty by the whole House and the Earl of Carlisle and the Lord Carlton to go presently to know the Kings pleasure when they shall attend his Majesty Who being returned reported That his Majesty hath appointed that Afternoon at two of the clock for the same The 25. of May the Lord Keeper delivered the Kings Answer unto the said Petition to be read in haec verba viz. My Lords YOur often coming to me about this matter made me somewhat doubt you did mistrust me But now I see you rely wholly on me I assure you it shall prevail more upon me then all importunities And if you had done this at first I should have given you content And now I assure you I will use all possible speed to give satisfaction and at the furthest before the end of this Session of Parliament This being read the House was moved the second time That all businesses might be laid
aside and that Consideration might be had how their Priviledges may be preserved unto posterity And the House was put into a Committee for the freer Debate thereof and afterwards resumed And it was ordered That the House be adjourned till to morrow and all businesses to cease The 26. of May the Lord Keeper delivered this Message from the King to the House of Lords viz. THat his Majesty hath willed him to signifie unto their Lordships That he doth marvel his meaning in his last Answer should be mistaken And for the better clearing of his intention hath commanded him to signifie unto their Lordships his further Answer which is That their Lordships last Petition was so acceptable to his Majesty that his intent was then and is still to satisfie their Lordships fully in what they then desired Whereupon it was ordered That all businesses be adjourned till that day seven night At the same time the Duke of Buckingham signified unto their Lordships his desire to have the Kings Council allowed him to plead his cause But the Lords would not hear him because they would entertain no business And so the House was adjourned to the second of Iune At which time the House sitting again the Lord Keeper delivered this Message from the King to the House of Lords viz. HIs Majesty hath commanded me to deliver unto your Lordships a Message touching the Earl of Arundel That his Majesty hath thought of that business and hath advised of his great and pressing affairs which are such as make him unwilling to enter into dispute of things doubtful And therefore to give you clear satisfaction touching that Cause whereby you may more cheerfully proceed in the business of the House he hath endeavored as much as may be to ripen it but cannot yet effect it but is resolved that at the furthest by Wednesday sevennight being the fourteenth of Iune he will either declare the Cause or admit him to the House And addeth further upon the word of a King That if it shall be sooner ripe which he hath good cause to expect he will declare it at the soonest And further That if the occasion doth enforce to stay to the time prefixed yet he doth not purpose to set such a short end to the Parliament but that there shall be an ample and good space between that and the end of the Sessions to dispatch affairs This Message being delivered the House was adjourned ad libitum and put into a Committee And being resumed it was agreed That all businesses should cease but this of the Earl of Arundel's concerning the Priviledges of the House and the House to meet thereon to morrow morning and to be put into a Committee to consider thereof And so the House was adjourned to the next day Then the Lord Keeper delivered this Message from the King Viz. THat in the matter concerning the Earl of Arundel his Majesty hath been very careful and desirous to avoid all jealousie of violating the Priviledges of this House that he continueth still of the same mind and doth much desire to find out some Expedient which might satisfie their Lordships in point of Priviledge and yet not hinder his Majesties service in that particular But because this will require some time his Majesty though his great affairs are urgent and pressing is unwilling to urge their Lordships to go on therewith till his Majesty hath thought on the other And therefore hath commanded him to signifie his pleasure That his Majesty is contented their Lordships adjourn the House till Thursday next and in the mean time his Majesty will take this particular business into further consideration Hereupon the Lords agreed That the Lord Keeper do render unto his Majesty from the House their humble thanks for his gracious respect unto their Priviledges Then the Lord Keeper demanded of the Lords whether their Lordships would adjourn the House till Thursday next Whereupon it was agreed by the Lords and the House was so adjourned On Thursday Iune 8. the Lord Keeper delivered this Message to the Lords from his Majesty viz. THat on Saturday last his Majesty sent word to the House That by this day he would send them such an Answer concerning the Earl of Arundel as should satisfie them in point of Priviledge And therefore to take away all dispute and that their Priviledges may be in the same estate as they were when the Parliament began his Majesty hath taken off the restraint of the said Earl whereby he hath liberty to come to the House The Earl of Arundel being returned to the House did render his humble thanks unto his Majesty for this gracious favor towards him and gave their Lordships also most hearty thanks for their often intercessions for him unto the King and protested his Loyalty and faithful service unto his Majesty Much about this time Mr. Moor a Member of the House of Commons having spoken some words which seemed to reflect upon his Majesty they were reported to the House viz. That he said We were born free and must continue free if the King will keep his Kingdom Adding these words Thanks be to God we have no occasion to fear having a just and pious King The House for these words committed Mr. Moor to the Tower of London And his Majesty shortly after sent a Message That he had passed by his offence Whereupon he was released While the Duke stood charged in the Parliament the Chancellorship of Cambridge became void by the death of the Lord Howard Earl of Suffolk who died on Whitsonday the 28. of May 1626. The University having understood by several hands That it was the Kings express will and pleasure that the Duke should be chosen in his stead were ambitious and forward to express their obedience to his Majesty in that behalf well knowing that in regard of their multitude and worthy Judgment and wisdom that is esteemed and ought to be in those Electors this was one of the most honorable Testimonies of Worth and Integrity that the Nation can afford And that whereas all other the Dukes Honors did but help the rather to sink him with their weight this would seem to shoar and prop him up Letters were pretended to be sent from his Majesty to the intent to disencourage all opposers But though the pretence of Letters served mainly to effect their ends yet the producing of them would have prejudiced the chief intendment of the Election namely the honor of the Testimony in it which chiefly lying in the freedom of the Votes had by Letters been cut off Many Heads of Houses bestirr'd themselves according to their several power and interest in their respective Societies and Trinity-Colledge alone the Master whereof was Doctor Maw one of the Kings Chaplains supplied the Duke with Forty three Votes the third part of those which served the turn for he had in all One hundred and eight He was chosen the Thursday following the
see them earthed before me My Answer to the several points in Charge I shall crave leave to deliver in brief and in form of Law but as naked as truth loves to be and so I leave my self and my cause to your Lordships Justice The humble Answer and Plea of George Duke of Buckingham to the Declaration and Impeachment made against him before your Lordships by the Commons House of Parliament THe said Duke of Buckingham being accused and sought to be impeached before your Lordships of the many Misdemeanors Misprisions Offences and Crimes wherewith he is charged by the Commons House of Parliament and which are comprised in the Articles preferred against him and were aggravated by those whose service was used by that House in the delivery of them Doth finde in himself an unexpressible pressure of deep and hearty sorrow that so great and so worthy a Body should have him suspected of those things which are objected against him whereas had that Honorable House first known the very truth of those particulars whereof they had not there the means to be rightly informed he is well assured in their own true judgments they would have forborn to have charged him therewith The Charge touching Plurity of Offices To the first which concerneth Plurality of Offices which he holdeth he answereth thus That it is true that he holdeth those several Places and Offices which are enumerated in the preamble of his Charge whereof onely three are worthy the name of Offices viz. The Admiralty the Wardenship of the Cinque Ports and Mastership of the Horse the other are rather titulary and additions of Honor. For these Offices he humbly and freely acknowledgeth the bounty and goodness of his most Gratious Master who is with God who when he had cast an Eye of Favor upon him and had taken him into a more near place of service about his Royal Person was more willing to multiply his Graces and Favors upon him then the Duke was forward to ask them and for the most part as many honorable persons and his now most Excellent Majesty above all others can best testifie did prevent the very desires of the Duke in asking And all these particular places he can and doth truly affirm his late Majesty did bestow them of his own Royal motion except the Wardenship of the Cinque Ports onely and thereto also he gave his approbation and encouragement And the Duke denieth that he obtained these places either to satisfie his exorbitant ambition or his own profit or advantage as is objected against him And he hopeth he shall give good satisfaction to the contrary in his particular Answers ensuing touching the manner of his obtaining the places of the Admiralty and the Wardenship of the Cinque Ports whereunto he humbly desireth to refer himself And for the Mastership of the Horse to his Majesty he saith it is a meer domestick office of attendance upon the Kings person whereby he receiveth some profit yet but as a conveniency to render him more sit for his continual attendance and in that place the times compared he hath retrenched the Kings annual charge to a considerable value as shall be made apparent And for the number of places he holdeth he saith That if the Commonwealth doth not suffer thereby he hopeth he may without blame receive and retain that which the liberal and bountiful hand of his Master hath freely conferred upon him And it is not without many Presidents both in Antient and Modern times That one man eminent in the esteem of his Soveraign hath at one time held as great and as many Offices But when it shall be discerned That he shall falsly or corruptly execute those places or any of them or that the Publick shall suffer thereby he is so thankful for what he hath freely received that whensoever his Gratious Master shall require it without disputing with his Soveraign he will readily lay down at his Royal Feet not onely his Places and Offices but his whole Fortunes and his life to do him service But the integrity of his own Heart and Conscience being the most able and most impartial witnesses not accusing him of the least thought of disloyalty to his Soveraign or to his Country doth raise his spirits again to make his just defence before your Lordships of whose Wisdom Justice and Honor he is so well assured That he doth with confidence and yet with all humbleness submit himself and his cause to your Examinations and Judgments before whom he shall with all sincerity and clearness unfold and lay open the secrets of his own actions and of his heart and in his Answer shall not affirm the least Substantial and as near as he can the least Circumstantial point which he doth not believe he shall clearly prove before your Lordships The Charge consisteth of Thirteen several Articles whereunto the Duke saving to himself the usual benefit of not being prejudiced by any words or want of form in his Answer but that he may be admitted to make further explanation and proof as there shall be occasion and saving to him all Priviledges and Rights belonging to him as one of the Peers of the Realm doth make these several and distinct Answers following in the same order they are laid down unto him For his buying of the Admirals place the said Duke maketh this clear and true Answer That it is true that in Ianuary in the Sixteenth year of his late Majesties Raign his late Majesty did by his Letters Patents under the Great Seal of England grant unto the Duke the Office of Admiralty for his life which Grant as he well knoweth it was made freely and without any Contract or Bargain with the late Lord Admiral or any other and upon the voluntary Surrender of that Noble and wel-deserving Lord so he is advised it will appear to be free from any defect in Law by reason of the Statute of 5 Edw. 6. mentioned in this Article of his Charge or for any other cause whatsoever For he saith the true manner of his obtaining this Office and of all the passages thereof which he is ready to make good by Proof was thus That Honorable Lord the late Earl of Nottingham the Lord Admiral being grown much in years and finding that he was not then so able to perform that which appertained to his place as in former times he had done to his great Honor and fearing lest his Majesties service and the Commonwealth might suffer by his defect became an humble and earnest Petitioner to his late Majesty to admit him to surrender his Office His late Majesty was at the first unwilling unto it out of his Royal Affection to his Person and true Judgment of his worth But the Earl renewed his Petitions and in some of them nominated the Duke to be his Successor without the Dukes privity or fore-thought of it And about that time a Gentleman of good place about the Navy and of long experience
of himself came to the Duke and earnestly moved him to undertake the place The Duke apprehending the weight of the place and considering his yong years and want of experience to manage so great a charge gave no ear unto it but excused it not for form but really and ingenuously out of the apprehension of his then unfitness for it This Gentleman not thus satisfied without the Duke applied himself to the late King and moved his Majesty therein and offered Reasons for it That the Duke was the fittest man at that time and as the State of the Navy then stood for that place for he said it was then a time of peace That the best service that could be done for the present was to repair the Navy and Ships Royal which then were much in decay and to retrench the Kings charge and to employ it effectually and that before there was like to be personal use of service otherwise the Duke being yong and active might gain experience and make himself as fit as any other and that in the mean time none was so fit as himself having the opportunity of his Majesties Favor and Means to his Person to procure a constant assignment and payment of moneys for the Navy the want whereof was the greatest cause of the former defects These Reasons perswaded his late Majesty and upon his Majesties own motion perswaded the Duke to take the charge upon him And thereupon the Earl voluntarily freely and willingly and upon his own earnest and often suit surrendred the place without any President Contract or Promise whatsoever which might render the Duke in the least degree subject to the danger of the Law which was not then so much as once thought upon and upon that Surrender the Grant was made to the Duke But it is true That his Majesty out of his Royal bounty for recompence of the long and faithful service of the said Earl and for an honorable memory of his deserts to him and the Crown of England did grant him a Pension of One thousand pounds per annum for his life which in all Ages hath been the Royal way of Princes wherewith to reward antient and well-deserving Servants in their elder years when without their own faults they are become less serviceable to the State And the Duke also voluntarily and freely and as an argument of his noble respect towards so honorable a Predecessor whom to his death he called Father whose Estate ●s he then understood with his late Majesties privity and approbation did send him Three thousand pounds in money which he hopeth no person of worth and honor will esteem to be an act worthy of blame in him And when the Duke had thus obtained this place of great trust he was so careful of his duty that he would not relie upon his judgment or ability but of himself humbly besought his then Majesty to settle a Commission of fit and able persons for the Affairs of the Navy by whose Council and assistance he might manage that weighty business with the best advantage for his Majesties service which Commission was granted and yet continueth and without the advice of those Commissioners he hath never done any thing of moment and by their advice and industry he hath thus husbanded the Kings money and furthered the service that where before the ordinary charge of the Navy was Fifty four thousand pounds per annum and yet the Ships were very much decayed and their Provisions neglected the charge was returned to Thirty thousand pounds per annum and with that charge the Ships all repaired and made serviceable and two new Ships builded yearly and for the two last years when there were no new Ships built the ordinary charge was reduced to Twenty one thousand six hundred pounds per annum And now he dare boldly affirm that his Majesties Navy is in better state by much then ever it was in any precedent time whatsoever For his buying the Wardenship of the Cinque Ports he maketh this plain ingenuous and true Answer That in December in the Two and twentieth year of his late Majesties Raign he obtained the Office of Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports and Constable of the Castle of Dover being one entire Office upon the Surrender of the Lord Zouch then Lord Warden The manner of obtaining whereof was thus The Lord Zouch being grown in years and with his almost continual lameness being grown less fit for that place he discovered a willingness to leave it and made several offers thereof to the Duke of Richmond and Richard Earl of Dorset deceased but he was not willing to part with it without recompence Notice whereof coming to the Duke by an offer made from the Lord Zouch he finding by experience how much and how many ways both the Kings service might and many times did suffer and how many inconveniences did arise to the Kings Subjects in their Goods Ships and Lives by the intermixture of the Jurisdictions of the Admiralty and Wardenship of the Cinque Ports by the emulation disaffection and contention of their Officers as clearly appear by these particulars amongst many others which may be instanced 1. Where the Admiral-Jurisdiction extends generally to all the Narrow Seas the Warden of the Cinque Ports hath and exerciseth Admiral-Jurisdiction on all the Sea Coasts from Show-Beacon in Essex to the Red Noor in Sussex and within those Limits there have been continual differences between the Lord Admiral and the Lord Warden whether the Lord Wardens Jurisdiction extends into the main Sea or onely as far as the low Water Mark and so much further into the Sea as a man on Horsback can reach with a Launce which occasioneth Questions between those cheif Officers themselves 2. There are many and continual differences in executing of Warrants against offenders the Officers of the one refusing to obey or assist the Authority of the other whereby the offenders protected or countenanced by either easily escapeth 3. Merchants and Owners of Goods questioned in the Admiralty are often enforced to sue in both Courts and often enforced for their peace to compound with both Officers 4. The Kings service is much hindred for the most usual and ordinary Rendevouz of the Kings Ships being at the Downs and that being within the Jurisdiction of the Lord Warden the Lord Admiral or Captains of the Kings Ships have no Power or Warrant to press men from the shore if the Kings Ships be in distress 5. When the Kings Ships or others be in danger on the Goodwins and other places within the view of the Portsmen they have refused to help with their Boats lest the Kings Ships should command them on board whereby many Ships have perished and much Goods have been lost 6. When Warrants come to press a Ship at Road for the Kings service the Officers take occasion to disobey the Warrants and prejudice the Kings service For if the Warrant come from the Lord Warden they will pretend
the Ship to be out of their Jurisdiction if the Warrant come from the Lord Admiral they will pretend it to be within the Jurisdiction of the Cinque Ports And so whilst the Officers dispute the opportunity of the service is lost 7. When the Kings Ships lie near the Ports and the men come on shore the Officers refuse to assist the Captains to reduce them to the Ships without the Lord Wardens Warrant 8. If the Kings Ships on the sudden have any need of Pilots for the Sands Coasts of Flanders or the like wherein the Portsmen are best experienced they will not serve without the Lord Wardens or his Lieutenants Warrant who perhaps are not near the place 9. When for great occasions for the service of the State the Lord Admiral and Lord Warden must both joyn their Authority if the Officers for want of true understanding of their several Limits and Jurisdictions mistake their Warrants the service which many times can endure no delay is lost or not so effectually performed For these and many other Reasons of the like kinde the Duke not being led either with ambition or hope of profit as hath been objected for it could be no encrease of Honor to him having been honored before with a greater place nor of profit for it hath not yielded him in any matter any profit at all nor is like to yield him above Three hundred pounds per annum at any time but out of his desire to make himself the more able to do the King and Kingdom service and prevent all differences and difficulties which heretofore had or hereafter might hinder the same He did entertain that motion and doth confess that not knowing or so much as thinking of the said Act of Parliament before mentioned he did agree to give the said Lord One thousand pounds in money and Five hundred pounds per annum in respect of his Surrender he not being willing to leave his place without such consideration nor the Duke willing to have it without his full satisfaction and the occasion why the Duke of Buckingham gave that consideration to the Lord Zouch was because the Duke of Richmond in his life time had first agreed to give the same consideration for it and if he had lived he had had that place upon the same terms And when the said Duke of Richmond was dead his late Majesty directed the Duke of Buckingham to go thorow for that place and for the Reasons before-mentioned to put both these Offices together and to give the same consideration to the said Lord which the Duke of Richmond should have given and his late Majesty said he would repay the money And how far this act of his in acquiring this Office accompanied with these Circumstances may be within the danger of the Law the King being privy to all the passages of it and encouraging and directing it he humbly submitteth to your judgement and he humbly leaves it to your Lordships judgments in what third way an antient servant to the Crown by age or infirmity disabled to perform his service can in an honorable course relinquish his place for if the King himself give the Reward it may be said it is a charge to the Crown if the succeeding Officer give the Recompence it may thus be objected to be within the danger of the Law And howsoever it be yet he hopeth it shall not be held in him a crime when his intentions were just and honorable and for the furtherance of the Kings service neither is it without president that in former times of great employment both these Offices were put into one hand by several Grants To this Article whereby the not guarding of the Narrow Seas in these last two years by the Duke according to the trust and duty of an Admiral is laid to his charge whereof the consequence supposed to have been meerly through his default are the ignominious infesting of the Coasts with Pirats and Enemies the endangering of the Dominion of these Seas the extream loss of the Merchants and the decay of the Trade and Strength of the Kingdom The Duke maketh this Answer That he doubteth not but he shall make it appear to the good satisfaction of your Lordships that albeit there hath hapned much loss to the Kings Subjects within the said time of two years by Pirats and Enemies yet that hath not hapned by the neglect of the Duke or want of care and diligence in his place For whereas in former times the ordinary Guard allowed for the Narrow Seas hath been but four Ships the Duke hath since Hostility begun and before procured their number to be much increased for since Iune 1624. there hath never been fewer then Five of the Kings Ships and ordinarily Six besides Pinnaces Merchants Ships and Drumblers and since open hostility Eight of the Kings Ships besides Merchants of greater number and Pinnaces and Drumblers and all these well furnished and manned sufficiently instructed and authorised for the service He saith he hath from time to time upon all occasions acquainted his Majesty and the Council-Bord therewith and craved their advice and used the assistance of the Commissioners for the Navy in this service and for the Dunkirkers who have of late more infested these Coasts then in former years he saith There was that Providence used for the repressing of them that his Majesties Ships and the Hollanders joyning together the Port of Dunkirk was blocked up and so should have continued had not a sudden storm dispersed them which being the immediate hand of God could not by any pollicy of man be prevented at which time they took the opportunity to Rove abroad but it hath been so far from endangering the Dominion of the Narrow Seas thereby as is suggested That his Majesties Ships or Men of War were never yet mastered nor encountred by them nor will they endure the sight of any of our Ships and when the Duke himself was in person the Dunkirkers run into their Harbors But here is a necessity that according to the fortune of Wars interchangeable losses will happen yet hitherto notwithstanding their more then wonted insolency the loss of the Enemies part hath been as much if not more then what hath hapned to us and that loss that hath faln hath cheifly come by this means that the Dunkirkers Ships being of late years exercised in continual hostility with the Hollanders are built of a Mold as fit for flight as for fight and so they pilfer upon our Coasts and creep to the shore and escape from the Kings Ships But to prevent that inconvenience for the time to come there is already order taken for the building some Ships which shall be of the like Mold light and quick of sail to meet with the adverse party in their own way And for the Pirates of Sallie and those parts he saith it is but very lately that they found the way into our Coasts where by surprise they might easily do
to an Admiral of England and a true English man And he doth deny that by menace or compulsion or any other indirect or undue practice or means he by himself or by any others did deliver those Ships or any of them into the hands of the French as is objected against him That the Error which did happen by what direction soever it were was not in the intention any ways injurious or dishonorable or dangerous to this State or prejudicial to any private man interested in any of those Ships nor could have given any such offence at all if those promises had been observed by others which were professed and really performed by his Majesty and his Subjects on their parts To this Article wherewith he is taxed to have practised for the employment of the Ships against Rochel he answereth That he was so far from practising or consenting that the said Ships should so be employed that he shall make it clearly to appear that when it was discovered that they would be employed against those of the Religion the Protestation of the French King being otherwise and their pretence being That there was a Peace concluded with those of the Religion and that the French King would use those Ships against Genoa which had been an action of no ill consequence to the Affairs of Christendom The Duke did by all fit and honorable means endeavor to divert that course of their employment against Rochel And he doth truly and boldly affirm That his endeavors under the Royal care of his most Excellent Majesty hath been a great part of the means to preserve the Town of Rochel as the Proofs when they shall be produced will make appear And when his Majesty did finde that beyond his intention and contrary to the faithful Promises of the French they were so misemployed he found himself bound in honor to intercede with the most Christian King his good Brother for the Peace of that Town and of the Religion lest his Majesties Honor might otherwise suffer Which intercession his Majesty did so sedulously and so successfully pursue that the Town and the Religion there do and will acknowledge the fruits thereof And whereas it is further objected against him That when in so unfaithful a manner he had delivered those Ships into the power of a foreign State to the danger of the Religion and scandal and dishonor of our Nation which he utterly denieth to be so That to mask his ill intentions in cunning and cautelous manner he abused the Parliament at Oxford in affirming before the Committees of both Houses That the said Ships were not nor should be so used or employed he saith under the favor of those who so understood his words That he did not then use those words which are expressed in the Charge to have been spoken by him but there being then a jealousie of the mis-employing of those Ships the Duke having no knowledge thereof and knowing well what the promises of the French King were but was not then seasonable to be published he hoping they would not have varied from what was promised did say That the event would shew it was no undertaking for them but a Declaration of that in general terms which should really have been performed and which his Majesty had just cause to expect from them That the Duke did compel the Lord R. to buy his Title of Honor he utterly denieth and he is very confident that the Lord R. himself will not affirm it or any thing tending that way Neither can he nor any man else truly say so but the said Duke is able to prove that the Lord R. was before willing to have given a much greater sum but could not then obtain it and he did now obtain it by solicitation of his own Agents For the selling of places of Judicature by the Duke which are specially instanced in the Charge he answereth That he received not or had a penny of either of those sums to his own use but the truth is the Lord M. was made Lord Treasurer by his late Majesty without contracting for any thing for it and after that he had the Office conferred upon him his late Majesty moved him to lend him Twenty thousand pounds upon promise of repayment at the end of a year the Lord M. yielded to it so as he might have the Dukes word that it should be repayed unto him accordingly The Duke gave his word for it the Lord M. relied upon it and delivered the said sum to the hands of Mr. Porter then attending upon the Duke by the late Kings appointment to be disposed as his Majesty should direct And according to the Kings direction that very money was fully paid out to others and the Duke neither had nor disposed of a penny thereof to his own use as is suggested against him And afterwards when the Lord M. left that place and his money was not repayed unto him he urged the Duke upon his promise whereupon the Duke being jealous of his Honor and to keep his word not having money to pay him he assured Lands of his own to the Lord M. for his security But when the Duke was in Spain the Lord M. obtained a promise from his late Majesty of some Lands in Fee-farm to such a value as he accepted of the same in satisfaction of the said money which were afterwards passed unto him and at the Dukes return the Lord M. delivered back unto him the security of the Dukes Lands which had been given unto him as aforesaid And for the Six thousand pounds supposed to have been received by the Duke for procuring to the Earl of M. the Mastership of the Wards he utterly denieth it but afterwards he heard that the Earl of M. did disburse Six thousand pounds about that time and his late Majesty bestowed the same upon Sir Henry Mildmay his Servant without the Dukes privity and he had it and enjoyed it and no penny thereof came to the said Duke or to his use To this Article the Duke answereth That it is true that his late Majesty out of his Royal Favor unto him having honored the Duke himself with many Titles and Dignities of his bounty and as a greater argument of his Princely Grace did also think fit to honor those who were in equal degree of Blood with him and also to ennoble their Mother who was the Stock that bare them The Title of the Countess of Buckingham bestowed upon the Mother was not without President and she hath nothing from the Crown but a Title of Honor which dieth with her The Titles bestowed on the Viscount P. the Dukes Elder Brother were conferred on him who was a Servant of the Bed-chamber to his now Majesty then Prince by his Highness means the Earl of A. was of his late Majesties Bed-chamber and the Honors and Lands conferred on him was done when the Duke was in Spain The Earl of D. hath the Honors mentioned in the
to the Acts and Law of State in that behalf A Committee was appointed to prepare an Answer to his Majesties Letter which was ingrossed and allowed of but the Copy thereof we cannot finde yet the Substance was delivered by the Speaker Sir Henage Finch in these words Most gracious and dread Soveraign ACcording to that liberty of access and liberty of speech which your Majesty and your Royal Progenitors have ever vouchsafed to your House of Commons your Majesties most humble and Loyal Subjects the Commons now assembled in Parliament have been Suitors for this access to your Royal Throne And out of their consideration of the nature and of the weight and importance of the business they have thought the attendance of the whole house with their Speaker not too solemn and yet they have not thought fit barely to commit those words which express their thoughts to the trust of any mans Speech but are bold to present them in writing to your gracious hands that they may not vanish but be more lasting then the most powerfull words of a more able Speaker like to be I have much to read and shall therefore as little as I can weary your Majesty with Speeches This Parchment contains two things the one by way of Declaration to give your Majesty an accompt and humble satisfaction of their clear and sincere endeavors and intentions in your Majesties service and the other an humble Petition to your Majesty for the removal of that great person the Duke of Buckingham from access to your Royal presence For the first They beseech your most excellent Majesty to beleeve that no earthly thing is so dear and precious to them as that your Majesty should retain them in your grace and good opinion and it is a grief to them beyond my expression that any misinformation or misinterpretation should at any time render their words or proceedings offensive to your Majesty It is not proper for any to hear the Eccho of a voice that hears not the voice and if Eccho's be sometimes heard to double and redouble the Eccho of the Eccho is still fainter and sounds not lowder I need not make the Application words misreported though by an Eccho or but an Eccho of an Eccho at a third or fourth hand have oft a lowder sound then the voice it self and may sound disloyalty though the voice had nothing undutifull or illoyal in it Such misinformations they fear have begot those interruptions and diversions which have delayed the ripening and expediting of those great Counsels which concern your Majesties important service and have enforced this Declaration I pass from that to the Petition in which my purpose is not to urge those Reasons which your Majesty may hear expressed in their own words in the language of the people I am onely directed to offer to your great wisdom and deep judgement that this petition of theirs is such as may stand with your Majesties honor and justice to grant Your Majesty hath been pleased to give many Royal Testimonies and Arguments to the world how good and gracious a Master you are and that which the Queen of Sheba once said to the wisest King may without flattery be said to your Majesty Happy are those Servants which stand continually before you But the Relations by which your Majesty stands in a gracious aspect towards your people do far transcend and are more prevalent and binding then any relation of a Master towards a Servant and to hear and satisfie the just and necessary desires of your people is more honorable then any expression of grace to a servant To be a Master of a Servant is communicable to many of your Subjects to be a King of people is Regal and incommunicable to Subjects Your Majesty is truly stiled with that name which the greatest Emperors though they borrowed names and titles from those Countries which they gained by conquest most delighted in Pater Patriae and desires of children are preferred before those of servants and the servant abideth not in the house for ever but the son abideth ever The Government of a King was truely termed by your Royal Father a Politick Marriage between him and his People and I may safely say there was never a better union between a married Pair then is between your Majesty and your People Afterwards the Commons made what haste they could to perfect a Remonstrance or Declaration against the Duke and concerning Tonage and Poundage taken by the King since the death of his Father without consent in Parliament which was no sooner finished but they had intimation the King would that day dissolve the Parliament whereupon they ordered every Member of the House to have a Copy of the Remonstrance And at the same time the Lords prepared this ensuing Petition to stay his purpose in dissolving the Parliament May it please your Excellent Majesty WE your faithfull and loyal Subjects the Peers of this Kingdom having received this morning a Message from your Majesty intimating an intention to dissolve this Parliament remembring that we are your Majesties hereditary great Council of the Kingdom do conceive that we cannot deserve your Majesties gracious opinion expressed in this Message unto us nor discharge our duty to God your Majesty and our Country if after expression of our great and universal sorrow we did not humbly offer our loyal and faithfull advice to continue this Parliament by which those great and apparent dangers at home and abroad signified to us by your Majesties command may be prevented and your Majesty made happy in the duty and love of your people which we hold the greatest Safety and Treasury of a King for the effecting whereof our humble and faithfull endeavor shall never be wanting The Lords sent the Vicount Mandevile Earl of Manchester Lord President of his Majesties Council the Earl of Pembrook the Earl of Carlile and the Earl of Holland to intreat his Majesty to give audience to the whole House of Peers But the King returned Answer That his Resolution was to hear no motion to that purpose but he would dissolve the Parliament and immediately caused a Commission to pass under the Great-Seal to that purpose in haec verba CAROLUS Dei gratia Angliae Scotiae Franciae Hiberniae Rex Fidei Defensor c. Reverendissimo in Christo Patri fideli Consiliario nostro Georgio Archiepisc. Cantuar. totius Angliae Primati Metropolitano Ac perdilecto fideli Consiliar nostro Thom●e Coventry militi Dom. Custod Magni Sigilli nostri Angliae Ac etiam Reverendiss in Christo Patri Tobiae Archiep. Ebor. Angliae Primati Metropolitano Nec non charissimis Consanguineis Consiliariis nostris Iacobo Comiti Marlborough Thesaurario nostro Angliae Henrico Comiti Manchester Dom. Presidenti Consilii nos●ri Edwardo Comiti Wigorn. Custod Privati Sigilli nostri Georgio Duci Buckingham Magno Admirallo nostro Angliae Willielmo Comiti Pembroke Camerario Hospitii nostri Ac etiam
we took into serious Consideration several Propositions how for the ●afety and happiness of your Majesties Kingdoms and Allies we might enlarge your Supports add to the Military Strength without charge to the poorer sort of your Subjects and give a larger Supply to your Majesty for your instant and pressing occasions then hath ever yet but once been given in Parliament Whereupon for the enabling of our selves and those whom we represent we conceive it first necessary to search into the Causes of those Mischiefs which this your Kingdom suffereth and divers of the Grievances that overburthen your Subjects without doing of which we could neither be faithful to your Majesty nor to the Country that doth trust and imploy us as your Royal Father also of blessed memory admonished the House of Commons in the fourth Session of his first Parliament In this consideration we found that the most pressing and comprehensive Mischief and Grievance that we suffered was fundamentally setled in the vast power and enormous Actions of the said Duke being such that by reason of his plurality of Offices all gotten by ambition and some for money expresly against the Lawes of your Realm His breach of Trust in not guarding the Seas his high injustice in the Admiralty his extortion his delivering over the Ships of this Kingdom into the hands of a Forein Prince his procuring of the compulsory buying of honor for his own gain his unexampled exhausting of the Treasures and Revenues of the Kingdom his transcendent presumption of that unhappy applying of Phisick to your Royal Father of blessed memory few dayes before his death and some other his Offences carefully and maturely examined by us we made a Parliamentary Charge of the same matters and offences against him to the Lords by your Majesty assembled in Parliament there expecting some remedy by a speedy proceeding against him but may it please your most excellent Majesty not onely during the time of our examination of the matters and offences of the same Charge we were diversly interrupted and diverted by Messages procured through misinformation from your Majesty which with most humble duty and reverence we did ever receive whence it first fell out that so not onely much time was spent amongst us before the same Charge was perfected but also within two dayes next after the same Charge was transmitted by us to the Lords Upon untrue and malicious misinformations privately and against the Priviledge of Parliaments given to your Majesty of certain words supposed to have been spoken by Sir Dudley Digs and Sir John Elliot Knights two of the Members of our House in their service of the transmitting of the said Charge both of them having been especially employed in the Chairs of Committees with us about the examination of the said matters and offences they were both by your Majesties command committed to close imprisonment in the Tower of London and their Lodgings presently searched and their papers there found presently taken away by reason whereof not onely our known Priviledges of Parliament were infringed but we our selves that upon full hope of speedy course of Iustice against the said Duke were preparing with all dutifull affection to proceed to the dispatch of the Supply and other Services to your Majesty were wholly as the Course and Priviledge of Parliament bindes us diverted for divers dayes to the taking onely into consideration some Courses for the ratifying and preservation of the Priviledges so infringed and we think it our duties most gracious Soveraign most rightly to inform hereby your most excellent Majesty of the Course held in the Commitment of the two Members For whereas by your Majesties Warrant to your Messengers for the arresting of them you were pleased to command that they should repair to their Lodgings And there take them Your Majesties principal Secretary the Lord Conway gave the said Messengers as they affirmed an express command contrary to the said Warrants that they should not go to their Lodgings but to the House of Commons and there take them and if they found them not there they should stay until they were come into the House and apprehend them wheresoever else they should finde them Which besides that it is contrary to your Majesties command is an apparent Testimony of some mischievous intention there had against the whole House of Commons and against the service intended to your Majesty All which with the several interruptions that preceded it and the misinformation that hath caused all of them we cannot doubt but that they were wrought and procured by the Duke to his own behoof and for his advantage especially because the said Interruptions have through misinformation come amongst us onely at such times wherein we have had the matters and offences charged against him in agitation but your Majesty out of your great goodness and justice being afterwards informed truely of our Priviledge and the demerit of the Cause that concerned our said two Members graciously commanded the delivery of them out of the Tower for which we render unto your Majesty most humble thanks and were then again by reason of our hopes of the dispatch of proceedings with the Lords upon our Charge against him said the Duke in a cheerfull purpose to go on with the matter of Supply and other services to your Majesty when again these hopes failed in us by reason of some new exorbitancies now lately shewed in the exercise of his so great power and ambition for by such his power and ambition notwithstanding our Declaration against him for his so great plurality of Offices he also procured to himself by the sollicitation of his Agents and of such as depended upon him the Office of Chancellor of the University of Cambridge whereas the same University having two Burgesses in Parliament did by the same Burgesses a few weeks before consent with us in the Charge against him for his ambition for procuring such a plurality of Offices such was his ambition to sue for it such was his power to make them give it him contrary to what themselves had agréed in Parliament with all the Commons of England And he procured also the same Office by the special labors and endeavors as we are informed of a Factious party who adhereth to that dangerous Innovation of Religion published in the seditious Writings of one Richard Montague Clerk of whom it is thence also and heretofore upon other reasons it hath béen conceived that the said Duke is and long hath béen an Abettor and Protector These Actions of the said Duke have thus among us hindred the service of your Majesty by reason both of the interruptions that have so necessarily accompanied them and of the prevention of our chéerfulness which otherwise had long since béen most effectually shewed in us that have nothing else in our cares next to our duty to God but the loyal service of your Majesty the safety of your Kingdom and the subsistence of our selves and those whom we represent
for the continuance of that service and safety Which we cannot hope for and we beséech your most excellent Majesty graciously to receive this our humble and frée protestation That we cannot hope for it so long as we thus suffer under the pressures of the power and ambition of the said Duke and the divers and false Informations so given to your Majesty on his behalf and for his advantage especially when we observe also that in such his greatness he preventeth the giving of true Information to your Majesty in all things that may any ways reflect on his own misdoings to shew unto your Majesty the true state of your Subjects and Kingdoms otherwise then as it may be represented for his own ends And to that purpose also hath he procured so many persons depending on him either by alliance or advancement to places of eminencie near your Sacred person Through his misinformations of that kind also and power we have séen to our great grief both in the time of your Majesties Royal Father of blessed memory and of your Majesty divers Officers of the Kingdom so often by him displaced and altered that within these few years past since the beginning of his greatness more such displacings and alterations have by his means happened then in many years before them Neither was there in the time of your Royal Father of blessed memory any such Course held before it was by the practice of the said Duke thus induced And since that time divers Officers of the Crown not only in this your Kingdom of England but also in Ireland as they have béen made friends or adverse to the said Duke have béen either so commended or mispresented by him to his Soveraign and by his procurement so placed or displaced that he hath always herein as much as in him lay made his own ends and advantage the measure of the good or ill of your Majesties Kingdoms But now at length may it please your most excellent Majesty we have received from the Lords a Copy of the said Dukes Answer to our Charge transmitted against him whereunto we shall presently in such sort reply according to the Laws of Parliament that unless his power and practice again undermine our procéedings we do not doubt but we shall upon the same have Iudgment against him In the times also most gracious Soveraign of these Interruptions which came amongst us by reason of the procurement of two of our Members committed A gracious Message was formerly received from your Majesty wherein you had been pleased to let us know That if you had not a timely Supply your Majesty would betake your self to New Counsels which we cannot doubt were intended by your most excellent Majesty to be such as stood with Iustice and the Laws of this Realm But these words New Counsels were remembred in a Speech made amongst us by one of your Majesties Privy-Council and lately a Member of us who in the same Speech told us He had often thought of those words New Counsels That in his consideration of them he remembred that there were such kinds of Parliaments antiently among other Nations as are now in England That in England he saw the Country-people live in happiness and plenty but in these other Nations he saw them poor both in persons and habit or to that effect Which state and condition happened as he said to them where such New Counsels were taken as that the use of their Parliaments ended This intimation may it please your Majesty was such as also gave us just cause to fear there were some ill Ministers near your Majesty that in behalf of the said Duke and together with him who is so strangely powerful were so much against the Parliamentary Course of this Kingdom as they might perhaps advise your most excellent Majesty such New Counsels as these that fell under the memory and consideration of that Privy-Counsellor And one especial reason among others hath increased that fear amongst us For that whereas the Subsidies of Tonnage and Poundage which determined upon the death of your most Royal Father our late Soveraign and were never payable to any of your Majesties Ancestors but only by a special Act of Parliament and ought not to be levied without such an Act yet ever since the beginning of your Majesties happy Reign over us the said Subsidies have béen levied by some of your Majesties ministers as if they were still due although also one Parliament hath béen since then begun and dissolved by procurement of the said Duke as is before shewed wherein no Act passed for the same Subsidies Which example is so much against the constant use of former times and the known Right and Liberty of your Subjects that it is an apparent effect of some new Counsels given against the antient setled Course of Government of this your Majesties Kingdom and chiefly against the Right of your Commons as if there might be any Subsidy Tax or Aid levied upon them without their consent in Parliament or contrary to the setled Laws of this Kingdom But if any such do so ill an office as by the misrepresentation of the state and right of your Majesties loyal Subjects advise any such new Counsels as the levying of any Aid Tax or Subsidy among your people contrary to the setled Laws of your Kingdom We cannot most gracious Soveraign but esteem them that so shall advise not only as Uipers but Pests to their King and Commonwealth as all such were to both Houses of Parliament expresly stiled by your most Royal Father but also Capital Enemies as well to your Crown and Dignity as to the Commonwealth And we shall for our parts in Parliament shew as occasion shall require and be ready to declare their offences of this kind such as that may be rewarded with the highest punishment as your Laws inflict on any Offenders These and some of these things amongst many other Most gracious Soveraign are those which have so much prevented a right understanding betwéen your Majesty and us and which have possessed the hearts of your people and loyal Commons with unspeakable sorrow and grief finding apparently all humble and hearty endeavors misinterpreted hindred and now at last almost frustrated utterly by the interposition of the excessive and abusive power of one man Against whom we have just cause to protest not only in regard of the particulars wherewith he hath béen charged which in Parliamentary way we are enforced to insist upon as matters which lie in our notice and proof but also because we apprehend him of so unbridled Ambition and so averse to the good and tranquillity of the Church and State that we verily believe him to be an Enemy to both And therefore unless we would betray our own duties to your Majesty and those for whom we are trusted We cannot but express our infinite grief that he should have so great power and interest in your Princely affections and under your Majesty wholly in
expectation to have run the least hazard through their defaults This Parliament after some Adjourment by reason of his Majesties unavoidable occasions interposing being assembled on the Eightéenth day of June It is true that his Commons in Parliament taking into their due and serious Consideration the manifold Occasions which at his first entry did press his Majesty and his most important Affairs which both at home and abroad were then in action did with great readiness and alacrity as a pledge of their most bounden duty and thankfulness and as the first fruits of the most dutiful affections of his loving and loyal Subjects devoted to his service present his Majesty with the frée and cheerful gift of two entire Subsidies which their gift and much more the freeness and heartiness expressed in the giving thereof his Majesty did thankfully and lovingly accept But when he had more narrowly entred into the consideration of his great affairs wherein he was imbarqued and from which he could not without much dishonor and disadvantage withdraw his hand he found that this sum of money was much short of that which of necessity must be presently expended for the setting forward of those great Actions which by advice of his Council he had undertaken and were that Summer to be pursued This his Majesty imparted to his Commons house of Parliament but before the same could receive that debate and due consideration which was fit the fearful Uisitation of the Plague in and about the Cities of London and Westminster where the Lords and the principal Gentlemen of quality of his whole Kingdom were for the time of this their service lodged and abiding did so much increase that his Majesty without extreme peril to the lives of his good Subjects which were dear unto him could not continue the Parliament any longer in that place His Majesty therefore on the eleventh day of July then following adjourned the Parliament from Westminster until the first day of August then following at the City of Oxford And his Highness was so careful to accommodate his Lords and Commons there that as he made choice of that place being then the fréest of all others from the danger of that grievous Sickness so he there fitted the Parliament-men with all things convenient for their entertainment And his Majesty himself being in his own heart sincere and frée from all Ends upon his people which the Searcher of hearts best knoweth he little expected that any misconstruction of his actions would have béen made as he there found But when the Parliament had béen a while assembled and his Majesties affairs opened unto them and a further Supply desired as necessity required he found them so slow and so full of delays and diversions in their Resolutions that before any thing could be determined the fearful Contagion daily increased and was dispersed into all the parts of this Kingdom and came home even to their doors where they assembled His Majesty therefore rather preferred the safety of his people from that present and visible danger then the providing for that which was more remot● but no less dangerous to the State of this Kingdom and of the affairs of that part of Christendom which then were and yet are in friendship and alliance with his Majesty And thereupon his Majesty not being then able to discern when it might please God to stay his hand of Uisitation nor what place might be more secure then other at a time convenient for their re-assembling his Majesty dissolved that Parliament That Parliament being now ended his Majesty did not therewith cast off his Royal care of his great and important affairs but by the advice of his Privy-Council and of his Council of War he continued his preparations and former resolutions And therein not only expended those monies which by the two Subsidies aforesaid were given unto him for his own private use whereof he had too much occasion as he found the state of his Exchequer at his first entrance but added much more of his own as by his credit and the credit of some of his servants he was able to compass the same At last by much disadvantage by the retarding of provisions and uncertainty of the means his Navy was prepared and set to Sea and the Designs unto which they were sent and specially directed were so probable and so well advised that had they not miscarried in the execution His Majesty is well assured they would have given good satisfaction not only to his own people but to all the world that they were not lightly or unadvisedly undertaken and pursued But it pleased God who is the Lord of Hosts and unto whose providence and good pleasure his Majesty doth and shall submit himself and all his endeavors not to give that success which was desired And yet were those Attempts not altogether so fruitless as the envy of the Times hath apprehended the Enemy receiving thereby no small loss nor our party no little advantage And it would much avail to further his Majesties great affairs and the Peace of Christendom which ought to be the true end of all Hostility were these first beginnings which are most subject to miscarry well seconded and pursued as his Majesty intended and as in the judgment of all men conversant in Actions of this nature were fit not to have béen neglected These things being thus acted and God of his infinite goodness beyond expectation asswaging the rage of the Pestilence and in a manner of a suddain restoring health and safety to the Cities of London and Westminster which are the fittest places for the resort of his Majesty his Lords and Commons to meet in Parliament His Majesty in the depth of winter no sooner descried the probability of a safe assembling of his people and in his princely wisdom and providence foresaw that if the opportunity of seasons should be omitted preparations both defensive and offensive could not be made in such sort as was requisite for their common safety but he advised and resolved of the summoning of a new Parliament where he might freely communicate the necessities of the State and by the Council and advice of the Lords and Commons in Parliament who are the Representative body of the whole Kingdom and the great Council of the Realm might proceed in these enterprises and be enabled thereunto which concern the common good safety and honor both of Prince and people and accordingly the sixth of February last a new Parliament was begun At the first meeting his Majesty did forbear to press them with any thing which might have the least appearance of his own interest but recommended unto them the care of making of good Laws which are the ordinary Subject for a Parliament His Majesty believing that they could not have suffered many days much less many weeks to have passed by before the apprehension and care of the common safety of this Kingdom and the true Religion professed and maintained therein and of
our Friends and Allies who must prosper or suffer with us would have led them to a due and a timely consideration of all the means which might best conduce to those ends which the Lords of the Higher-House by a Committee of that House did timely and seasonably consider of and invited the Commons to a Conference concerning that great business At which Conference there were opened unto them the great occasions which pressed his Majesty which making no impression with them his Majesty did first by Message and after by Letters put the House of Commons in minde of that which was most necessary the defence of the Kingdom and due and timely preparations for the same The Commons House after this upon the 27 of March last with one unanimous consent at first agreed to give unto his Majesty three intire Subsidies and three Fifteens for a present supply unto him and upon the 26 of April after upon second Cogitations they added a fourth Subsidy and ordered the dayes of payment for them all whereof the first should have been on the last day of this present June Upon this the King of Denmark and other Princes and States being engaged with his Majesty in this common Cause his Majesty fitted his occasions according to the times which were appointed for the payment of those Subsidies and Fifteens and hasted on the Lords Committees and his Council at War to perfect their Resolutions for the ordering and setling of his designs which they accordingly did and brought them to that maturity that they found no impediment to a final conclusion of their Councels but want of mony to put things into action His Majesty hereupon who had with much patience expected the real performance of that which the Commons had promised finding the time of the year posting away and having intelligence not onely from his own Ministers and Sujects in Forrein parts but from all parts of Christendom of the great and powerfull preparations of the King of Spain and that his design was upon this Kingdom or the Kingdom of Ireland or both and it is hard to determine which of them would be of worst consequence He acquainted the House of Commons therewith and laid open unto them truly and clearly how the state of things then stood and yet stand and at several times and upon several occasions reiterated the same But that House being abused by the violent and ill-advised passions of a few Members of the House for private and personal ends ill-beseeming publick persons trusted by their Country as then they were not onely neglected but wilfully refused to hearken to all the gentle admonitions which his Majesty could give them and neither did nor would intend any thing but the prosecution of one of the Peers of this Realm and that in such a disordered manner as being set at their own instance into a legal way wherein the proofs on either part would have ruled the cause which his Majesty allowed they were not therewith content but in their intemperate passions and desires to seek for Errors in another fell into a greater Error themselves and not onely neglected to give just satisfaction to his Majesty in several Cases which happened concerning his Regality but wholly forgot their engagements to his Majesty for the publick defence of the Realm whereupon his Majesty wrote the forementioned Letter to the Speaker dated the ninth day of June 1626. Notwithstanding which Letter read in the House being a clear and gracious Manifest of his Majesties Resolutions they never so much as admitted one Reading to the Bill of Subsidies but instead thereof they prepared and voted a Remonstrance or Declaration which they intended to prefer to his Majesty containing though palliated with glossing terms aswel many dishonorable aspersions upon his Majesty and upon the sacred memory of his deceased Father as also dilatory excuses for their not proceeding with the Subsidies adding thereto also coloured conditions crossing thereby his Majesties direction which his Majesty understanding and esteeming as he had cause to be a denial of the promised Supply and finding that no admonitions could move no reasons or perswasions could prevail when the time was so far spent that they had put an impossibility upon themselves to perform their promises when they esteemed all gracious Messages unto them to be but interruptions His Majesty upon mature advisement discerning that all further patience would prove fruitless on the fifteenth day of this present moneth he hath dissolved this unhappy Parliament The acting whereof as it was to his Majesty an unexpressible grief for the memory thereof doth renew the hearty sorrow which all his good and well affected Subjects will compassionate with him These passages his Majesty hath at the more length and with the true Circumstances thereof expressed and published to the world least that which hath been unfortunate in it self through the malice of the Author of so great a mischief and the malevolent report of such as are ill-affected to this State or the true Religion here professed or the fears or jealousies of Friends and dutifull Subjects might be made more unfortunate in the consequences of it which may be of worse effect then at the first can be well apprehended and his Majesty being best privy to the integrity of his own heart for the constant maintaining of the sincerity and unity of the true Religion professed in the Church of England and to free it from the open contagion of Popery and secret infection of Schism of both which by his publick Acts and Actions he hath given good testimony and with a single heart as in the presence of God who can best judge thereof purposeth resolutely and constantly to proceed in the due execution of either and observing the subtilty of the adverse party he cannot but believe that the hand of Joab hath been in this disaster that the common Incendiaries of Christendom have subtilly and secretly insinuated those things which unhappily and as his Majesty hopeth beyond the intentions of the Actors have caused these diversions and distractions And yet notwithstanding his most excellent Majesty for the comfort of his good and well-affected Subjects in whose loves he doth repose himself with confidence and esteemeth it as his greatest riches for the assuring of his Friends and Allies with whom by Gods assistance he will not break in the substance of what he hath undertaken for the discouraging of his Adversaries and the Adversaries of his Cause and of his Dominions and Religion hath put on this resolution which he doth hereby publish to all the world That as God hath made him King of this great people and large Dominions famous in former ages both by Land and Sea and trusted him to be a Father and Protector both of their Persons and Fortunes and a Defender of the Faith and true Religion so he will go on cheerfully and constantly in the defence thereof and notwithstanding so many difficulties and discouragements will take his
they Ordered That all such Duties and Merchandizes shall be levied and paid And they advised the King That the Attorney General prepare for his Majesties Signature an Instrument which may pass under the Great Seal of England to declare his pleasure therein until by Parliament as in former times it may receive an absolute settlement Which passed the Great Seal accordingly The Forfeitures arising to the Crown by the execution of the Laws against Priests Jesuites and Popish Recusants were dedicated to the vast and growing charge of the Designs in hand And Complaint being made against Inferior Officers whose service was herein employed that they had misdemeaned themselves to the oppressing of Recusants without advantage to the King Commissioners of honorable Quality were appointed for the regulating of these proceedings yet no Liberty given to the encouragement or countenance of such dangerous persons as might infect the People or trouble the Peace of Church and State The King therefore Grants a Commission under the Great Seal directed to the most Reverend Father in God Toby Archbishop of York Sir Iohn Savile Knight Sir George Manners Sir Henry Slingsby Sir William Ellis Knights and to divers other Knights and Gentlemen and therein recites THat his Majesty hath received credible Information of the great loss and damages which the Kings Subjects living in Maritime Towns especially in the Northern parts do suffer by depredations attempts and assaults at Sea from Foreign Enemies whereby Trade from those parts are interrupted and the City of London much endamaged for want of Coals and other Commodities usually transported thither from Newcastle upon Tine For redress of which evil his Majesty doth think fit to appropriate and convert all such Debts sums of Money Rents Penalties and Forfeitures of all Recusants inhabiting in the Counties of York Durham Northumberland Cumberland Westmorland Lancaster Nottingham Derby Stafford and Chester which at any time have grown due since the Tenth year of King James and are not yet satisfied or which hereafter shall grow due by reason of any Law or Statute against Recusants to be employed for the maintenance provision arming manning victualling and furnishing of Six able Ships of War for guarding and defending the Coast of this Realm from the furthest North-East point of the Sea unto the mouth of the River of Thames his Majesty further expressing in the said Commission That his Subjects who are owners of Coal●Pits the Oast-men of Newcastle upon Tine Owners of Ships and Merchants Buyers and Sellers of Newcastle Coals have béen and are willing to contribute and pay for every Chaldron for the uses aforesaid Wherefore his Majesty upon the considerations before-mentioned doth by his said Commission give power unto the said Commissioners or any four or more of them to treat and make Composition and Agréement with the said Recusants inhabiting within the said Counties for Leases of all their Manors Lands Tenements c. within those Counties for any term of years not excéeding One and forty years and for all Forfeitures due since the Tenth year of King James for their Recusancy in not going to Church to hear Divine Service according to the Laws and Statutes of this Realm under such Condition and Immunities as they or any four of them shall sée méet and convenient according to such Instructions as his Majesty hath or shall give for that purpose his Majesty rather desiring their Conversion then Destruction And such Leases his Majesty doth declare made to the said Recusants themselves or to any persons for their use shall be good and effectual any Law or Statute to the contrary notwithstanding And by the said Commission Sir Iohn Savile was appointed Receiver of all such sums of Money as shall be paid upon these Leases and Mr. Alexander Davison of the Town of Newcastle upon Tine Merchant Adventurer was appointed to receive out of the voluntary and free-wil Contribution of the Owners Buyers and Sellers of Coals the Six pence per Chaldron of Coals In pursuance of this Commission the Recusants did make their Composition upon very easie terms as was afterwards complained of in Parliament A Proclamation was published declaring the Kings Resolution to make his Revenue certain by granting his Lands as well holden by Copy as otherwise to be holden in Fee-farm To the Nobles the King sent particularly to let them know That according to the Presidents of former times wherein the Kings and Queens of England upon such extraordinary occasions have had recourse to those Contributions which arose from the Subjects in general or to the private helps of some that were well affected he doth now expect from them such a large and chearful testimony of their Loyalty as may be acceptable to himself and exemplary to his people His Majesty demanded of the City of London the Loan of an Hundred thousand pounds But the peoples excuses were represented to the Council Table by the Magistrates of the City Immediately the Council sent a very strict command to the Lord Major and Aldermen wherein they set forth the Enemies strong preparations as ready for an Invasion and the Kings great necessities together with his gratious and moderate Proposals in the sum required and the frivolous pretences upon which they excuse themselves Wherefore they require them all excuses being set apart to enter into the business again and to manage the same as appertaineth to Magistrates so highly intrusted and in a time of such necessities and to return to his Majesty a direct and speedy Answer that he may know how far he may relie upon their Faith and Duty or in default thereof may frame his Counsels as appertaineth to a King in such extream and important occasions Moreover a peculiar charge was laid upon the several Ports and Maritime Counties to furnish and set out Ships for the present service The Privy Council expressing his Majesties care and providence to guard his own Coasts against attempts from Spain or Flanders by arming as well the Ships of his Subjects as of his own Navy made a distribution to every Port that with the Assistance and Contribution of the Counties adjoyning they prepare so many Ships as were appointed to them severally and in particular the City of London was appointed to set forth Twenty of the best Ships that lay in the River with all manner of Tackle Sea-stores and Ammunition Manned and Victualled for Three Moneths The Deputy Lieutenants and Justices of the Peace of Dorset having received the Kings Commandment for the setting forth of Ships from the Ports of Pool Weymonth and Lime with the assistance of Contribution from the Counties adjoyning presented to the Council Table an excuse in the behalf both of the Ports and County and pleaded That the Case was without President The Council gave them a check for that instead of Conformity they disputed the Case letting them know That State occasions and the defence of the Kingdom in times of extraordinary danger were not
for Posterity to strike at the propriety of their Goods contrary to the piety and intention of your Majesty so graciously exprest And these being the true Grounds and Motives of his forbearance to the said Loan shewing such inconveniences in Reason and representing it an Act contradicting so many of your Laws and most of them by the most prudent and happiest of our Princes granted which could not without presumption beyond pardon in your Suppliant in taking to himself the Dispensation of those Laws so piously Enacted by him be violated or impeached In the fulness of all Submission and Obedience as the Apology of his Loyalty and Duty he lowly offers to your most Sacred Wisdom for the satisfaction of your Majesty most humbly praying your Majesty will be graciously pleased to take them into your Princely consideration where when it shall appear as he doubts not but from hence it will to your déep judgment that no factious humor nor disaffection led on by stubbornness and will hath herein stirred or moved him but the just Obligation of his Conscience which binds him to the service of your Majesty in the observânce of your Laws he is hopeful presuming upon the Piety and Iustice of your Majesty that your Majesty according to your innate Clemency and Goodness will be pleased to bestow him to your Favor and his Liberty and to afford him the benefit of those Laws which in all humility he craves Notwithstanding the said Petition he still continued a prisoner in the Gate-house till the general Order of Discharge came Sir Peter Hayman refusing to part with Loan-money was called before the Lords of the Council who charged him with refractoriness and with an unwillingness to serve the King and told him if he did not pay he should be put upon service Accordingly they commanded him to go upon his Majesties service into the Palatinate and having first setled his estate he undertook and performed the journey and afterwards returned into England Archbishop Abbot having been long slighted at Court now fell under the Kings high displeasure for refusing to Licence Doctor Sibthorps Sermon as he was commanded intituled Apostolical Obedience and not long after he was sequestred from his Office and a Commission was granted to the Bishops of London Durham Rochester Oxford and Doctor Laud Bishop of Bath and Wells to execute Archiepiscopal Jurisdiction The Commission as followeth CHARLS by the Grace of God King of England Scotland France and Ireland Defender of the Faith c. To the Right Reverend Father in God George Bishop of London and to the Right Reverend Father in God Our Trusty and Welbeloved Counsellor Richard Lord Bishop of Durham and to the Right Reverend Father in God Iohn Lord Bishop of Rochester and Iohn Lord Bishop of Oxford to the Right Reverend Father in God Our Right Trusty and Welbeloved Counsellor William Lord Bishop of Bathe and Wells Greeting WHereas George now Archbishop of Canterbury in the right of the Archbishoprick hath several and distinct Archiepiscopal Episcopal and other Spiritual and Ecclesiastical Powers and Iurisdictions to be exercised in the Government and Discipline of the Church within the Province of Canterbury and in the Administration of Iustice in Causes Ecclesiastical within that Province which are partly executed by himself in his own person and partly and more generally by several persons nominated and authorised by him being learned in the Ecclesiastical Laws of this Realm in those several places whereunto they are deputed and appointed by the said Archbishop Which several places as We are informed they severally hold by several Grants for their several lives as namely Sir Henry Martin Knight hath and holdeth by the Grants of the said Archbishop the Offices and places of the Dean of the Arches and Iudge or Master of the Prerogative Court for the Natural life of the said Sir Henry Martin Sir Charls Caesar Knight hath and holdeth by Grants of the said Archbishop the places or Offices of the Iudge of the Audience and Master of the Faculties for the term of the Natural life of the said Sir Charls Caesar. Sir Thomas Ridley Knight hath and holdeth by the Grant of the said Archbishop the place or Office of Uicar-General to the said Archbishop And Nathaniel Brent Doctor of the Laws hath and holdeth by Grant of the said Archbishop the Office or place of Commissary to the said Archbishop as of his proper and peculiar Diocess of Canterbury And likewise the several Registers of the Arches Prerogative Audience Faculties and of the Uicar-General and Commissary of Canterbury hold their places by Grants from the said Archbishop respectively Whereas the said Archbishop in some or all of these several places and Iurisdictions doth or may sometimes assume unto his personal and proper Iudicature Order or Direction some particular Causes Actions or Cases at his pleasure And forasmuch as the said Archbishop cannot at this present in his own person attend these Services which are otherwise proper for his Cognisance and Iurisdiction and which as Archbishop of Canterbury he might and ought in his own person to have performed and executed in Causes and Matters Ecclesiastical in the proper Function of Archbishop of that Province We therefore of Our Regal Power and of Our Princely Care and Providence that nothing shall be defective in the Order Discipline Government or Right of the Church have thought fit by the Service of some other Learned and Reverend Bishops to be named by Us to supply those things which the said Archbishop ought or might in the Cases aforesaid to have done but for this present cannot perform the same Know ye therefore That We reposing special Trust and Confidence in your approved Wisdoms Learning and Integrity have nominated authorised and appointed and do by these presents nominate authorise and appoint you the said George Lord Bishop of London Richard Lord Bishop of Durham John Lord Bishop of Rochester John Lord Bishop of Oxford and William Lord Bishop of Bathe and Wells or any four thrée or two of you to do execute and perform all and every those Acts Matters and things any way touching or concerning the Power Iurisdiction or Authority of the Archbishop of Canterbury in Causes or Matters Ecclesiastical as amply fully and effectually to all intents and purposes as the said Archbishop himself might have done And We do hereby Command you and every of you to attend perform and execute this Our Royal Pleasure in and touching the premisses until We shall declare Our Will and Pleasure to the contrary And We do further hereby Will and Command the said Archbishop of Canterbury quietly and without interruption to permit and suffer you the said George Bishop of London Richard Bishop of Durham John Bishop of Rochester John Bishop of Oxford and William Bishop of Bathe and Wells any four thrée or two of you to execute and perform this Our Commission according to Our Royal Pleasure thereby signified And We do further Will
hear one day So when your Soveraign in the Parliament time had spoken sharply to both Houses commanding them to go together again and to give more money and commanding them to meddle no more with the Duke of Buckingham you came the next day and thought to smooth all taking the glory of qualifying disturbances to your self whereas if you had read Books of true State Government wherewithal you are not acquainted sweet things are personally to be acted by Kings and Princes as giving of Honors and bestowing of noted benefits and those things that are sour and distasting are to be performed by their Ministers you go the contray way But as before the whole House falleth on fire some sparks do flie out So before the Message of the King was brought me by the Secretary there were some inklings that such a thing would follow And upon the naming of me by occasion it was said by a Creature of the Dukes That it would not be long before the Archbishop should be sequestred that was the word So well acquainted are the Dukes followers with great actions that are likely to fall out in State Accordingly on Tuesday the Fist of Iuly One thousand six hundred twenty and seven the Lord Conway came unto me to Croyden before Dinner time having travelled as he said a long journey that morning even from Oatlands thither he would say nothing till he had dined then because he was to return to Oatlands that night I took him into the Gallery and when we were both sat down we fell to it in this manner MY Lord I know you coming from Court have somewhat to say to me Secretary It is true my Lord and I am the most unwilling man in the World to bring unpleasing news to any person of quality to whom I wish well and especially to such a one as of whose Meat I have eaten and been merry at his House But I come from the King and must deliver his pleasure I know who you are and much more with very civil language Archb. I doubt not my Lord but you have somewhat to say and therefore I pray you in plain terms let me have it Secre. It is then his Majesties pleasure that you should withdraw your self unto Canterbury for which he will afford you some convenient time Archb. Is that it then I must use the words of the Psalmist He shall not be afraid of any evil tydings for his heart standeth fast and believeth in the Lord. But I pray you what is my fault that bringeth this upon me Secre. The King saith you know Archb. Truly I know none unless it be that I am lame which I cannot help it is against my will and I am not proud of it Secre. The King bad me tell you That if any expostulation were used Archb. No I will not use any expostulation if it be his pleasure I will obey I know my self to be an honest man and therefore fear nothing But my Lord do you think it is for the Kings service in this sort to send me away Secre. No by God! I do not think it and so yesterday I told the King with an Oath but he will have it so Archb. I must say as before He shall not be afraid of any evil tidings for his heart standeth fast and he believeth in the Lord. But I pray you my Lord is the King precisely set upon my going to Canterbury there are questions in Law between me and that Town about the Liberties of my Archbishoprick which I by my Oath am bound to maintain and if I should be among them I have many Adversaries of the Citizens I have there some Tenants and the Dean and Chapter are interessed in the Question I would be unwilling that my Servants and their people should fall together by the ears while I am in the Town His Majesty knoweth this difference to be between us by the token that a Suit which I lately brought against them by a Quo Warranto in the Kings Bench was stopped Justice being denied me which is not usual to be denied to any Subject and the King well knoweth by whose means it was stayed I have therefore another House called Foord Five Miles beyond Canterbury and more out of the way his Majesty may be pleased to let me go thither Secre. I can say nothing to that but I will acquaint the King with it and I conceive nothing to the contrary but that his Majesty will yield so much unto you I have a second Charge to deliver unto you and that is That his Majesty will not have you from henceforth to meddle with the High Commission he will take care that it shall be done otherwise Archb. I do not doubt but it shall be better managed then it hath been by me And yet my Lord I will tell you that for these many years that I have had the direction of that Court the time is to come that ever honest man did finde fault that he had not there Justice done Secre. It is now Vacation time and so consequently little to do and by Michaelmas his Majesty may set all in order Archb. I am sorry that the King proceedeth thus with me and letteth me not know the cause Secre. Although I have no Commission to tell you so it is for a Book which you would not allow which concerned the Kings Service Archb. If that be it when I am questioned for it I doubt not but to give an honest Answer Secre You will never be questioned for it Archb. Then am I the more hardly dealt withal to be censured and not called to my Answer Secre. Well my Lord I will remember that of Foord and will your Grace command me any more Service Archb. No my Lord but God be with you onely I end where I began with the words of the Prophet He shall not be afraid for any evil tydings for his heart standeth fast and believeth in the Lord. It comforted me not a little that the word was now out My confining must be for not allowing of a Book I had much ado to forbear smiling when I heard it because now it was clear it was not for Felony or Treason that was laid to my charge nor for intelligence with the Spaniards or French nor for Correspondency with Jesuites or Seminary Priests or any other grievous crime I thank God for that I had almost forgotten that among many other memorable Speeches that passed between us I used this one That peradventure the King might be offended at me because I was no more present at the matter of the Loan but said I my lameness hindered me therein and I hoped thereby to do my Master better service because if ever course be taken to reconcile the King and his people which if it be not this Kingdom will rue it in the end I would hope among many other to be a good Instrument therein since my hand hath not been in those bitternesses which
have of late faln out You say well saith the Secretary Would you that I should tell the King so much Yea said I if you please I hold it not unfit that his Majesty should know it What he reported therein I do not know but matters proceeded in the former course as if there were no regard had of any such thing The Lord Conway being gone from me for two or three days I expected to hear the resolution to what place in Kent I should betake my self and receiving no news I tossed many things in my minde as perhaps that the King desired to hear somewhat from the Duke how he sped in his journey or that peradventure he might alter his purpose upon report of my ready obeying or that it might so fall out that some of the Lords at the Court understanding upon the Secretaries return from Croyden that which was formerly concealed from them might infuse some other Councils into the King These thoughts I revolved at last not forgetting the courses of the Court and imprinting that into my heart That there was no good intended towards me but that any advantage would be taken against me I sent a man to Whitehal whether the King was now come for a night or two and by him I wrote to the Lord Conway in these words My very good Lord I Do not forget the Message which you brought unto me on Thursday last and because I have heard nothing from you since that time I send this Messenger on purpose to know what is resolved touching the House or Houses where I must remain there belong to the Archbishoprick three Houses in Kent one at Canterbury another Five Miles beyond called Foord and a third on the side of Canterbury but two Miles of the name whereof is Becksburn I pray your Lordship to let me know his Majesties pleasure Whether he will leave the choice of any of those Houses to me to reside in I have reason to know the resolution hereof because I must make my Provision of Wood and Coals and Hey for some definite place and when I shall have brewed it is fit I should know where to put it or else it will not serve the turn It is an unseasonable time to Brew now and as untimely to cut Wood being green in the highest degree and to make Coals without all which my House cannot be kept But when I shall know what must be my Habitation I will send down my Servants presently to make the best Provision that they can And so expecting your Lordships Answer I leave you to the Almighty and remain Your Lordships very loving Friend G. Cant. Croyden Iuly 10. 1627. He made my Servant stay and when he had gone up to know the Kings further pleasure he returned me the Answer following May it please your Grace I Am ashamed and do confess my fault that I wrote not to your Grace before I received your Reproof though a Gratious one but in truth I did not neglect nor forget But the continual oppression of business would not permit me to advertise to your Grace the Kings Answer His Majesty heard seriously your Professions and Answers and commanded me to signifie unto you That he knew not the present differences between you and the Town and if he had he would not have cast you into that inconvenience He was well pleased you should go to your house at Foord and said He did not expect when the Question was ended between your Grace and the Town that you should go to Canterbury And he further said He would not tye you to so short a time as might be any way inconvenient but doth expect that your Grace will govern it so as his Majesty shall not need to warn you a second time I will not fail to move his Majesty to give you Liberty to chuse either of your Houses you name and give you knowledge of his pleasure and in all things be ready to obey your Commandments or take occasion to serve you in the condition of Your Graces most humble Servant Conway Whitehal Iuly 10. 1627. I could not but observe therein that passage That the King doth expect that your Grace will govern it so as his Majesty shall not need to warn you a second time I needed no Interpreter to expound those words and therefore did take order that one of my Officers was presently dispatched unto Foord to see the House ready While Necessaries were caring for and I lay for some days at Croyden and afterwards at Lambeth the City of London was filled with the Report of my confining for so they did term it and divers men spake diversly of it I will not trouble my self to mention some idle things but some other of them require a little consideration A main matter that the Duke was said to take in ill part was the resort which was made to my House at the times of Dinner and Supper and that oftentimes of such as did not love him My Answer unto that is That by Nature I have been given to keep a House according to my Proportion since I have had any means and God hath blessed me in it That it is a property by Saint Paul required in a Bishop That he should be given to Hospitality that it is another of his Rules Let your Conversation be without Covetousness and those things I had in mine eyes Besides I have no Wife nor Childe and as for my Kinred I do that for them which I hold fit but I will not rob the Church nor the Poor for them Again It is so rare a fault in these days that men not feeding on the Kings Meat but of their own charge should frankly entertain their Friends when they come unto them that I deserve to be pardoned for it But this is not all When King Iames gave me the Bishoprick he did once between him and me and another time before the Earl of Salisbury charge me that I should carry my House Nobly that was his Majesties word and live like an Archbishop which I promised him to do And when Men came to my House who were of all civil sorts I gave them friendly entertainment not sifting what exceptions the Duke made against them for I knew he might as undeservedly think ill of others as he did of me But I meddled with no mans quarrels and if I should have received none but such as cordially and in truth had loved him I might have gone to Dinner many times without company There frequented me Lords Spiritual and Temporal divers Privy Counsellors as occasion served and Men of the highest rank where if the Duke thought that we had busied our selves about him he was much deceived Yet perhaps the old saying is true That a Man who is guilty of one Evil to himself thinketh that all men that talk together do say somewhat of him I do not envy him that happiness but let it ever attend him As for
the Queen should commend unto him and make some suit on his behalf That if the Queen afterwards being ill intreated should complain of this Dear one he might make his answer It is long of your self for you were the Party that commended him unto me Our old Master took delight strangely in things of this nature That Noble Queen who now resteth in Heaven knew her Husband well and having been bitten with Favorites both in England and Scotland was very shie to adventure upon this request King Iames in the mean time more and more loathed Somerset and did not much conceal it that his affection increased towards the other But the Queen would not come to it albeit divers Lords whereof some are dead and some yet living did earnestly sollicit her Majesty thereunto When it would not do I was very much moved to put to my helping hand they knowing that Queen Anne was graciously pleased to give me more credit then ordinary which all her Attendants knew she continued to the time of her death I laboured much but could not prevail The Queen oft saying to me My Lord You and the rest of your Friends know not what you do I know your Master better then you all For if this Young man be once brought in the first persons that he will plague must be you that labor for him yea I shall have my part also The King will teach him to despise and hardly intreat us all that he may seem to be beholden to none but himself Noble Queen how like a Prophetess or Oracle did you speak Notwithstanding this we were still instant telling her Majesty that the Change would be for the better For George was of a good nature which the other was not And if he should degenerate yet it would be a long time before he were able to attain to that height of evil which the other had In the end upon importunity Queen Anne condescended and so pressed it with the King that he assented thereunto Which was so stricken while the Iron was hot that in the Queens Bed-chamber the King Knighted him with the Rapier which the Prince did wear And when the King gave order to swear him of the Bed-chamber Somerset who was near importuned the King with a message that he might be only sworne a Groom But my self and others that were at the door sent to her Majesty that she would perfect her work and cause him to be sworne a Gentleman of the Chamber There is a Lord or two living that had a hand in this atchievement I diminish nothing of their praise for so happy a work But I know my own part best and in the word of an honest man I have reported nothing but truth George went in with the King but no sooner he got loose but he came forth unto me into the Privy-gallery and there embraced me He professed that he was so infinitely bound unto me that all his life long he must honor me as his Father And now he did beseech me that I would give him some lessons how ●e should carry himself When he earnestly followed this chace I told him I would give him three short lessons if he would learn them The first was That daily upon his knees he should pray to God to bless the King his Master and to give him George grace studiously to serve and please him The second was That he should do all good offices between the King and the Queen and between the King and the Prince The third was That he should fill his Masters ears with nothing but Truth I made him repeat these three things unto me and then I would have him to acquaint the King with them and so tell me when I met him again what the King said unto him He promised me he would and the morrow after Mr. Tho. Murrey the Princes Tutor and I standing together in the Gallery at Whitehall Sir Geo. Villeirs coming forth and drawing to us he told Mr. Murrey how much he was beholden unto me and that I had given him certain Instructions which I prayed him to rehearse as indifferently well he did before us yea and that he had acquainted the King with them who said They were Instructions worthy of an Archbishop to give to a Young man His countenance of thankfulness for a few days continued but not long either to me or any other his Welwishers The Roman Historian Tacitus hath somewhere a note That benefits while they may be requited seem courtesies but when they are so high that they cannot be repaid they prove matters of hatred Thus to lie by me to quicken my remembrance I have laid down the Cause and the Proceedings of my sending into Kent where I remain at the writing of this Treatise Praying God to bless and guide our King aright To continue the prosperity and welfare of this Kingdom which at this time is shrewdly shaken To send good and worthy men to be Governors of our Church To prosper my mind and body that I may do nothing that may give a wound to my Conscience and then to send me patience quietly to endure whatsoever his Divine Majesty shall be pleased to lay upon me Da quod jubes jube quod vis And in the end to give me such a happy deliverance either in life or death as may be most for his glory and for the wholsom example of others who look much on the Actions and Passions of Men of my Place AMong those many Gentlemen who were imprisoned throughout England for refusing to lend upon the Commission for Loans only Five of them brought their Habeas Corpus viz. Sir Thomas Darnell Sir Iohn Corbet Sir Walter Earl Sir Iohn Heveningham Sir Edward Hampden In Michaelmas Term 3 Caroli a Return was made of their several Commitments To instance only in one all the rest being in the same form The Warden of the Fleet made this Return That Sir Walter Earl Knight named in the Writ is detained in the Prison of the Fleet in his Custody by special Command of the King to him signified by Warrant of several of the Privy-Council in these words Whereas Sir Walter Earl Knight was heretofore committed to your Custody These are to will and require you still to detain him letting you know that both his first Commitment and direction for the continuance of him in Prison were and are by his Majesties special commandment From Whitehall Novemb. 7. 1627. Tho. Coventry c. Sir Thomas Darnell was the first that was brought to the Bar upon that Writ where the Kings Attorney-General Sir Robert Heath did inform the Court that his Majesty told him He heard that some of the imprisoned Gentlemen for the Loan did report That the King did deny them the Course of Justice And therefore his Majesty commanded him to renew the Writ of Habeas Corpus lest they should not move for another themselves by reason the Warden of the Fleet had not returned the first according
get them to a Rendevouz and when they were come to a Rendevouz and he ready to set sail with the whole Fleet the winds proved contrary But some of the chief Commanders when they came into England spake somwhat loudly of other miscarriages at Rhee pleading much on the behalf of the Council of War And now when the unfortunate Action of Rhee was known and published throughout the Nation the cry of the People was so great and the Kings necessities so pressing that it was in every mans mouth A Parliament must needs be summoned For we have now provoked two potent neigbor Kings and near Enemies our Coasts and Ports were unguarded our able Commanders worne away or not imployed The Mariners come in multitudes to the Court at Whitehall in great disorder and confusion crying out for Pay and much ado there was to appease them The Enemies come into our Harbors survey our Rivers and the Fishermen can scarce look out A vast number of our Ships have been lost and taken in the three years past and the Merchants cease to build more because they were prest for the Kings service at a low rate and not paid and the Mariners flee from their own imployment fearing to be prest again And our Enemies grow upon us especially in the Eastern Countries We give you here a brief Account of such Arrearages as were behind and unpaid for Freight of Ships Seamens Wages and Materials for Shipping in the Years 1625 1626 1627. FOr freight of Merchants and Newcastle-Ships imployed in his Majesties service and for several Bills of provisions yet unpaid in the years 1625 1626 according to the former Estimates Privy-seals passed for the same l. 60000 s. 00 d. 00 For the freight of sundry Merchants and Newcastle-ships imployed in his Majesties service to the Isle of Rhee and other places in the year 1627 19560 12 04 For Seamens wages in the same year 1627 ending the last of this moneth 61957 19 08 The repairing of the Hulls Masts of the said Ships to make them fit only for imployment in the Narrow-Seas together with repair and for setting forth of the Nostredame and Sea-waller two Prise-ships 05761 10 04 For repairing the said Ships mentioned in the margin for their Hulls Masts c. at 1000 marks apeece 08000 00 00 For supply of 700 Tuns of Cordage taken out of his Majesties Stores for furnishing to Sea of several Fleets at 26 l. 13 s. 4 d. per Tun being demanded upon several Estimates to be made good at the end of each service and yet unpaid 18666 13 04 Besides these Arrears there were Demands made by the Navy for supplying the Stores with Mast Timber Plank Deal Sales Ropes Tar Tallow Iron Anchors c. the Sum of 26000 00 00 The Rochellers after the Dukes arrival in England sent their Deputies to his Majesty for succor and relief in their distressed condition and presented their Desires in nature of a Remonstrance to the King and the Lords of the Council wherein they gave his Majesty most humble thanks for the great assistance and comfort they had received by the Fleet sent in Iuly last whereof the Duke of Buckingham was Admiral which would have been of greater assistance unto them had the season of the year permitted their stay longer there or that the supply of Victuals and Ammunition had come unto them which his Majesty had assigned That they are given to understand that there is application made to the King of Denmark to propound the making of a Peace between the two Crowns of England and France a thing to be wished if really intended But the Proceedings of France with the Reformed Churches there hath hitherto been such as when they spake most fair and nothing but Peace uttered nothing less was intended and great advantages thereby have been taken against the Reformed Churches But in case the Treaty do proceed they humbly prayed that then his Majesty will be pleased to insist upon the Capitulation which was made upon his mediation and for which he passed his word that the Reformed Churches should perform on their part which they kept inviolable till there were Forces placed and kept in Forts against them contrary to Capitulation and more Forces drawn down in order to the reduction of the Remonstrants and a Fleet unexpectedly come upon them to destroy their Navigation when nothing on their part was offered in violation of the Treaty They did further remonstrate That now the Forces of France are breaking down apace about them totally to block them up by Land and do intend to make a Barracado cross the Channel leaving a narrow passage for the flux and reflux of the Sea and by that means to stop all manner of Provisions by Sea which evidently remonstrates their further ruine if they with all expedition have not succor and help from his Majesty of Great Britain For their necessities and straits are very great already by reason their Magazines are consumed their monies spent and the Inhabitants reduced to small allowances And therefore do beseech his Majesty with all possible diligence to send them supply of all sorts of Provisions fit for a Siege and to succor them once more with the Navy-Royal to interrupt the blocking up of the River otherwise they are inevitably lost And lastly they did humbly beseech his Majesty and the Lords of his Council to have also so far pity of their indigencie and need as to permit a General Collection to be made in England and Scotland of such persons whom God shall move to contribute to their succor and relief And declare that they are resolved still to hold out hoping yet a Relief would come that might be of advantage unto them and they were assured thereof by the Duke of Buckingham at his departure that he would once more come in person to their assistance In this state of Affairs it is said Sir Robert Gotton being thereunto called presented his Advice to certain Lords of the Council in manner following AS soon as the House of Austria had incorporated it self with Spain and by their new Discoveries gotten to themselves the Wealth of the Indies They began to affect and have ever since pursued a Fifth Monarchy The Emperor Charls would lay the first Foundation of Italy by surprising Rome From this he was thrust by force and respect of Religion Hen. 8. being made Caput Foediris against him He then attempted High-Germany practising by faction and force to reduce them first to Petty States and so to his absolute power In this Hen. 8. again prevented him by laying the Lutheran Princes under this Confederacie and assistance His Son the Second Philip pursued the same Ambition in the Netherlands of Germany by reduction whereof he intended to make his way further into the others This the late Queen of England interrupted by siding with the afflicted people on the one part and making herself the Head of the
spits and spues out its own rankor and venom You remember how that famous and immortal Statesman the Count of Gondomar fed King James his fancy and rocked him asleep with the soft and sweet sound of Peace to keep up the Spanish Treaty Likewise we were much bound to some Statesmen of our own Country for gaining time by procuring those most advantagious Cessations of Arms in the Palatinate and advancing the Honor and Integrity of the Spanish Nation and vilifying the Hollanders remonstrating to King James That that State was most ungrateful both to his Predecessor Queen Elizabeth and his Sacred Majesty That the States were more obnoxious then the Turk and perpetually injured his Majesties loving Subjects in the East-Indies and likewise they have usurped from his Majesty the Regality and unvaluable profit of the Narrow-Seas in fishing upon the English Coast c. This great Statesman had but one principal means to further their great and good designs which was to set on King James that none but the Puritan-Faction which plotted nothing but Anarchy and his Confusion were averse to this most happy Union We steered on the same Course and have made great use of this Anarchical Election and have prejudicated and anticipated the Great one that none but the Kings Enemies and his are chosen of this Parliament c. We have now many strings to our Bow and have strongly fortified our Faction and have added two Bulwarks more For when King James lived you know he was very violent against Arminianism and interrupted with his pestilent Wit and deep Learning our strong Designs in Holland and was a great Friend to that old Rebel and Heretick the Prince of Orange Now we have planted that Soveraign Drug Arminianism which we hope will purge the Protestants from their Heresie and it flourisheth and bears fruit in due season The Materials which build up our Bulwark are the Projectors and Beggers of all ranks and qualities Howsoever both these Factions cooperate to destroy the Parliament and to introduce a new species and form of Government which is Oligarchy Those serve as direct Mediums and Instruments to our end which is the Universal Catholick Monarchy Our foundation must be Mutation and Mutation will cause a Relaxation which will serve as so many violent diseases as the Stone Gout c. to the speedy distraction of our perpetual and insufferable anguish of body which is worse then death it self We proceed now by Councel and mature deliberation how and when to work upon the Duke's Iealousie and Revenge And in this we give the honor to those which merit it which are the Church-Catholicks There is another matter of Consequence which we take much into our consideration and tender care which is to slave off the Puritans that they hang not in the Duke's ears They are impudent subtile people And it is to be feared lest they should negotiate a Reconciliation between the Duke and the Parliament T is certain the Duke would gladly have reconciled himself to the Parliament at Oxford and Westminster But now we assure our selves we have so handled the matter that both Duke and Parliament are irreconcileable For the better prevention of the Puritans the Arminians have already locked up the Duke's ears And we have those of our own Religion which stand continually at the Duke's Chamber to see who goes in and out We cannot be too circumspect and careful in this regard I cannot choose but laugh to see how some of our own Coat have accoutred themselves you would scarce know them if you saw them And 't is admirable how in speech and gesture they act the Puritans The Cambridge-Scholars to their woful experience shall see we can act the Puritans a little better then they have done the Jesuites They have abused our sacred Patron Saint Ignatius in jest but we will make them smart for it in earnest I hope you will excuse my merry digression For I confess unto you I am at this time transported with joy to see how happily all Instruments and means as well great as less cooperate unto our purposes But to return unto the main Fabrick Our foundation is Arminianism The Arminians and Projectors as it appears in the premisses affect mutation This we second and enforce by probable Arguments In the first place we take into consideration the Kings honor and present necessity and we shew how the King may free himself of his Ward as Lewis the Eleventh did And for his great splendor and lustre he may raise a vast Revenue and not be beholden to his Subjects which is by way of Imposition of Excise Then our Church-Catholicks proceed to shew the means how to settle this Excise which must be by a Mercenary Army of Horse and Foot For the Horse we have made that sure They shall be Foreiners and Germans who will eat up the Kings Revenues and spoil the Country wheresoever they come though they should be well paid What havock will they make there when they get no Pay or are not duly paid They will do more mischief then we hope the Army will do We are provident and careful that this Mercenary Army of Two thousand Horse and Twenty thousand Foot shall be taken on and in pay before the Excise be setled In forming the Excise the Country is most likely to rise If the Mercenary Army subjugate the Country then the Soldiers and Projectors shall be paid out of the Confiscations If the Country be too hard for the Soldiers then they must consequently mutiny which is equally advantagious unto us Our superlative design is to work the Protestants as well as the Catholicks to welcom in a Conqueror and that is by this means We hope instantly to dissolve Trades and hinder the building of Shipping in devising probable Designs and putting on the State upon Expeditions as that of Cadiz was in taking away the Merchant Ships so that they may not easily catch and light upon the West-India Fleet c. The Parliament being assembled the Seventeenth day of March His Majesty began with this Speech My Lords and Gentlemen THese Times are for Action Wherefore for Examples sake I mean not to spend much time in Words expecting accordingly that your as I hope good Resolutions will be speedy not spending time unnecessarily or that I may better say dangerously For tedious Consultations at this conjuncture of time are as hurtful as ill Resolutions I am sure you now expect from me both to know the cause of your meeting and what to resolve on Yet I think there is none here but knows that Common danger is the cause of this Parliament and that Supply at this time is the chief end of it So that I need but point to you what to do I will use but few perswasions For if to maintain your own Advices and as now the case stands for the following thereof the true Religion Laws and Liberties of this State and the just Defence of our true
propriety in my own house and not liberty in my person Perspicuè vera non sunt probanda The King hath distributed his Judicial power to Courts of Justice and to Ministers of Justice it is too low for so great a Monarch as the King is to commit men to Prison and it is against Law that men should be committed and no cause shewed I would not speak this but that I hope my Gracious King will hear of it yet it is not I Edw. Cook that speaks it but the Records that speak it we have a National appropriate Law to this Nation diversis ab orbe Brittannis I will conclude with the Acts of the Apostles chap. 25. It is against reason to send a man to Prison and not to shew the cause It is now time to go to the Question Resolved upon the Question Nemine contradicente I. That no Freeman ought to be detained or kept in Prison or otherwise restrained by the command of the King or the Privy-Council or any other unless some cause of the commitment detainer or restraint be expressed for which by Law he ought to be committed detained or restrained II. That the Writ of Habeas Corpus may not be denied but ought to be granted to every man that is committed or detained in Prison or otherwise restrained though it be by the command of the King the Privy-Council or any other he praying the same III. That if a Freeman be committed or detained in prison or otherwise restrained by the Command of the King the Privy-Council or any other no cause of such Commitment Detainer or Restraint being expressed for which by Law he ought to be committed detained or restrained and the same be returned upon a Habeas Corpus granted for the said Party then he ought to be delivered or bailed And then taking into consideration the Property of the Subject in his Goods they came to this Resolution to which there was not a Negative viz. That it is the antient and undubitable right of every Freeman That he hath a full and absolute Property in his Goods and Estate that no Tax Tallage Loan benevolence or other like charge ought to be commanded or levied by the King or any of his Ministers without common consent by Act of Parliament Wednesday March 26. The Propositions tendred the day before by Secretary Cook from his Majesty were now received and read but the Debate thereof was referred to another day The Propositions were these viz. 1. To furnish with men and Victuals 30 ships to guard the narrow Seas and along the Coasts 2. To set out ten other ships for the relief of the Town of Rochel 3. To set out ten other ships for the preservation of the Elbe the Sound and Baltick-Sea 4. To leavy Arms Cloth Victual pay and transport an Army of 1000. Horse and 10000. Foot for Forein Service 5. To pay and supply 6000 l. more for the service of Denmark 6. To supply the Forts of the Office of Ordnance 7. To supply the Stores of the Navy 8. To build 20 ships yearly for the increase of the Navy 9. To repair the Forts within the Land 10. To pay the arrears of the Office of Ordnance 11. To pay the arrears of the Victuallers Office 12. To pay the Arrear of the Treasure of the Navy 13. To pay the Arrears due for the freight of divers Merchants ships imployed in his Majesties Service 14. To provide a Magazine for Victuals for Land and Sea-service And the Commons having a Conference with the Lords about the Petition against Recusants Secretary Cook was appointed to manage the said Conference In the first place he said we acknowledge all due honor both unto the reverend Fathers of the Church and to our Noble Lords in that ye have shined before us as worthy Lights in the encouragement and maintenance of true Religion being the true support of all Dignities and Honors And this forwardness of you is the more remarkable when that viperous Generation as your Lordships justly stiled them do at ease with tooth and nail essay to rend the Bowels of their Mother Give me leave to tell you what I know that these now both vaunt at home and write to their friends abroad They hope all will be well and doubt not to prevail and to win ground upon us And a little to awake the Zeal and Care of our learned and grave Fathers it is fit that they take notice of that Hierarchy which is already established in competition with their Lordships for they have a Bishop consecrated by the Pope This Bishop hath his Subalternate Officers of all kindes as Vicars-General Arch-Deacons Rural-Deans Apparators and such like neither are these nominal or titular Officers alone but they all execute their Jurisdictions and make their ordinary Visitations through the Kingdom keep Courts and determine Ecclesiastical Causes And which is an Argument of more consequence they keep ordinary intelligence by their Agents in Rome and hold correspondence with the Nuntio's and Cardinals both at Bruxels and in France Neither are the Seculars alone grown to this height but the Regulars are more active and dangerous and have taken deep root they have already planted their Societies and Colledges of both Sexes they have setled Revenues Houses Libraries Vestments and all other necessary provisions to travel or stay at home nay even at this time they intend to hold a concurrent Assembly with this Parliament But now since his Sacred Majesty hath extended his Royal arm and since the Lords of his Council have by their Authority caused this nest of Wasps to be digged out of the Earth and their Convocations to be scattered And since your Lordships joyn in courage and resolution at least to reduce this people to their lawfull restraint that they may do no more hurt we conceive great hope and comfort that the Almighty God will from henceforth prosper our endeavors both at home and aboad But now my Lords to come to the chief Errand of this our meeting which is to make known to you the Approbation of our House of that Petition to his Majesty wherein you are pleased to request our concurrence The House hath taken it into serious consideration and from the beginning to the end approve of every word and much commend your happy pen onely we are required to present unto you a few Additions whereby we conceive the Petition may be made more agreeable to the Statutes which are desired to be put in execution and to a former * Petition granted by his Majesty Recorded in both Houses confirmed under the Broad-Seal of England and published in all our Courts of ordinary Justice But these things we propound not as our Resolutions or as matters to raise debate or dispute but commend them onely as our advice and desire being ready notwithstanding to joyn with your Lordships in the Petition as now it is if your Lordships shall not finde this Reason to be of weight This
being agreed unto on Monday the 31 of March the aforesaid Petition was presented by his Majesty to both Houses at the delivery whereof the Lord Keeper spake as followeth Most Gracious Soveraign THe Lords Spiritual and Temporal and Commons in this present Parliament assembled out of due care of the Glory of Almighty God and of the Honor and Safety of your Majesty do with all humbleness and with one unanimous consent present to your Royal hands the most Loyal desires of all their hearts which is set down in a dutifull Petition which is to quicken the Laws against the Perturbers of the Peace of all States We cannot nor do not forget your Majesties most gracious Acts and Answers on the like Petition they are visible to the world to your Majesties honor and comfort We bend our knees and hearts blessing God and your Majesty therefore yet let it not seem needless that we repair again to your Majesty The Husbandman knows what Weeds are not destroyed at one weeding These are growing Evils they are Weeds of a spreading nature And we that come from all parts do think it our duty to tell your Majesty that Gods Vineyard is not yet cleansed And God himself requires that we pray to him often even for what he means and promiseth to bestow on us But my Message comes from the Pen of both Houses And therefore I humbly beseech your Majesty to lend a gracious ear to hear me read the Petition After the reading thereof his Majesty made this short speech My Lords and Gentlemen I Do very well approve the Method of your proceedings in this Parliament A Jove principium hoping that the rest of your Consultatious will succeed the happier And I like the Preamble of my Lord Keeper otherwise I should have a little suspected that you had thought me not so careful of Religion as I have and ever shall be wherein I am as forward as you can desire And for the Petition I answer first in general That I like it well and will use these as well as other means for the maintenance and propagation of that Religion wherein I have lived and do resolve to die But for the particulars you shall receive a more full Answer hereafter And now I will only add this That as we pray to God to help us so we must help our selves For we can have no assurance of his assistance if we do lie in bed and only pray without using other means And therefore I must remember you that if we do not make provision speedily we shall not be able to put one ship to Sea this year Verbum sapienti sat est Afterwards the Lord Keeper signified unto the House That his Majesty had now given his Answer unto the Petition exhibited by both Houses against Recusants and had commanded his Lordship to read the same Answer in this House and Mr Secretary to read it in the House of Commons Whereupon the Clerk read the first Article of the said Petition and the Lord Keeper read his Majesties Answer unto the same and so each Article thereof The which Petition with the Answers follow in haec verba Most Gracious Soveraign WE your most Loyal and obedient Sub●ects the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and Commons in Parliament assembled Having to our singular comfort obtained your Majesties pious and gracious assent for a Publick Fast to appease the wrath of Almighty God kindled against us and to prevent those grievous Iudgments which do apparently press upon us do in all humility present unto your sacred Majesty all possible thanks for the same And because the publick and visible sins of the Kingdom are the undoubted causes of those visible Evils that are faln upon us Amongst which sins as is apparent by the word of God Idolatry and Superstition are the most haynous and crying sins To the end that we may constantly hope for the blessing of God to descend upon this our publick Humiliation by abandoning those sins which do make a wall of Separation betwixt God and us WE most humbly and ardently beg at the hands of your most Sacred Majesty That your Majesty will be pleased to give continual life and motion to all those Laws that stand in force against Iesuites Seminary Priests and all that have taken Orders by Authority of the Sea of Rome by exacting a more due and serious execution of the same Amongst which number those that have highly abused your Majesties clemency by returning into the Kingdom after their vanishment contrary to your Highness express Proclamation we humbly desire may be left to the severity of your Laws without admitting of any mediation or intercession for them And that such of your Majesties unsound and il affected Subjects as do receive harbor or conceal any of their viperous Generation may without delay suffer such Penalties and Punishments as the Laws most justly impose upon them His Majesties Answer unto the first Article of this Petition TO the first Point his Majesty answereth That he will according to your desire give both life and motion to the Laws that stand in force against Jesuites Seminary Priests and all that have taken Orders by Authority of the Sea of Rome and to that end his Majesty will give strict order to all his Ministers for the discovering and apprehending of them and so leave them being apprehended to the trial of the Law And in case after trial there shall be cause to respit execution of any of them yet they shall be committed according to the example of the best times to the Castle of Wisbitch and there be safely kept from exercising their Functions of spreading their Superstitious and dangerous Doctrine and the Receivers and Abettors they shall be left to the Law THat your Majesty would be pleased to command a surer and strait watch to be kept in and over your Majesties Ports and Havens and to commit the care and charge of searching of Ships for the discovery and apprehension aswel of Jesuites and Seminary Priests brought in as of Children and young Students sent over beyond the Seas to suck in the poyson of Rebellion and Superstition unto men of approved fidelity and Religion And such as shall be convicted to have connived or combined in the bringing in of the one or conveying of the other that the Laws may pass upon them with speedy execution His Majesties Answer to the second Article TO the second Article His Majesty granteth all that is in this Article and to this end will give Order to the Lord Treasurer Lord Admiral and Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports that in their several places they be careful to see this Article fully executed giving strict charge to all such as have place and authority under them to use all diligence therein And his Majesty requireth them and all other his Officers and Ministers to have a vigilant eye upon such as dwell in dangerous places of advantage or opportunity for receiving or
transporting of any such as are here mentioned And his Majesty will take it for good Service if any will give knowledge of any such as have connived or combined or shall connive or combine as is mentioned in this Article that Justice may be strictly done upon them THat considering those dreadful dangers never to be forgotten which did involve your Majesties sacred Person and the whole representative body of your Maiesties Kingdom plotted and framed by the free and common access of Popish Recusants to the City of London and to your Majesties Court Your Majesty would be gratiously pleased to give speedy command for the present putting in practise those Laws that prohibit all Popish Recusants to come to the Court or within ten Miles of the City of London as also those Laws that confine them to the distance of five miles from their dwelling Houses and that such by-past Licenses not warranted by Law as have been granted unto them for their repair to the City of London may be discharged and annulled His Majesties Answer to the third Article TO the third His Majesty will take Order to restrain the recourse of Recusants to the Court and also for the other points in this Article his Majesty is well pleased that the Laws be duely executed and that all unlawful Licenses be annulled and discharged THat whereas it is more then probably conceived that infinite sums of moneys have within these two or three years last past been extracted out of the Recusants within the Kingdom by colour of composition and a small proportion of the same returned unto your Majesties coffers not onely to the suddain enriching of private persons but to the emboldning of Romish Recusants to entertain Massing Priests into their private Houses and to exercise all their Mimique Rites of their gross superstition without fear of control amounting as by their dayly practice and ostentation we may conceive to the nature of a concealed Toleration your Majesty would be gratiously pleased to entertain this particular more neerly into your Princely wisedom and consideration and to dissolve this Mystery of Iniquity patched up of colourable Leases Contracts and Preconveyances being but Masks on the one part of fraud to deceive your Majesty and States on the other part for private men to accomplish their corrupt ends His Majesties Answer to the fourth Article TO the fourth Article his Majesty is most willing to punish for the time past and prevent for the future any of the deceits and abuses mentioned in this Article and will account it a good service in any that will inform Himself his Privy Councel Officers of his Revenues Judges or learned Councel of any thing that may reveal this mystery of Iniquity And his Majesty doth strictly command every of them to whom such information shall be brought that they suffer not the same to die but do their uttermost endeavour to effect a clear discovery and bring the Offenders to punishment And to the intent no concealed toleration may be effected his Majesty leaves the Laws to their course THat as the Persons of Ambassadors from forain Princes and their Houses be free for the exercises of their own Religion so their Houses may not be made free Chappels and Sanctuaries unto your Majesties Subjects popishly affected to hear Mass and to participate in all other Rites and Ceremonies of that Superstition to the great offence of Almighty God and scandal of your Majesties People loyally and religiously affected That either the concourse of Recusants to such places may be restrained or at least such a vigilant watch set upon them at their return from those places as they may be apprehended and severely proceeded withal Ut qui palam in luce peccant in luce puniantur His Majesties Answer to the fifth Article TO the fifth his Majesty is well pleased to prohibit and restrain their coming and resort to the Houses of Ambassadors and will command a vigilant watch to be set for their taking and punishing as is desired THat no place of Authority and Command within any the Counties of this your Majesties Kingdom or any Ships of your Majesties or which shall be imployed in your Majesties Service be committed to Popish Recusants or to Non-communicants by the space of a year past or to any such persons as according to direction of former Acts of State are justly to be suspected as the place and Authority of Lords Lieutenants Deputy Lieutenants Iustices of Peace or Captains or other Officers or Ministers mentioned in the Statute made in the third year of the reign of your Father of blessed memory And that such as by Connivence have crept into such places may by your Majesties Royal Command be discharged of the same His Majesties Answer to the sixth Article TO the sixth his Majesty is perswaded that this Article is already observed with good care nevertheless for the avoiding as much as may be all errors and escapes in that kinde his Majesty will give charge to the Lord Keeper that at the next Term he call unto him all the Judges and take Information from them of the state of their several Circuits if any such as are mentioned in this Article be in the Commission of the peace that due reformation may be made thereof And will likewise give order to the Lord Admiral and such others to whom it shall appertain to make diligent enquiry and certificate to his Majesty if any such be in place of Authority and Command in his Ships or Service THat all your Majesties Iudges Iustices and ministers of Iustice unto whose care and trust execution which is the life of your Majesties Laws is committed may by your Majesties Proclamation not onely be commanded to put in speedy execution those Laws which stand in force against Iesuits Seminary Priests and Popish Recusants but that your Majesty would be further pleased to command the said Iudges and Iustices of Assize to give a true and strict account of their proceedings at their returns out of their Circuits unto the Lord Keeper and by the Lord Keeper to be presented unto your Majesty His Majesties Answer unto the seventh Article To the seventh his Majesty doth fully grant it ANd for a fair and clear eradication of all Popery for the future and for the breeding and nursing up of a holy generation and a peculiar People sanctified unto the true worship of Almighty God that until a provisional Law may be made for the training and educating of the Children of Popish Recusants in the grounds and principles of our holy Religion which we conceive will be of more power and force to unite your people unto you in fastness of love Religion and loyal obedience then all pecuniary Mulcts and Penalties that can possibly be devised Your Majesty would be pleased to take it into your own princely care and consideration these our humble Petitions proceeding from hearts and affections loyally and religiously devoted to God and
abroad it is no less then a temporal Bamishment neither is it for his Majesties service to constrain his Subjects to imployment abroad Honor and Reward invites them rather to seek it but to be compelled stands not with our Liberty These Debates as to Confinement produced this resolution That no Freeman ought to be confined by any command from the King or Privy Councel or any other unless it be by Act of Parliament or by other due course or warrant of Law As for the matter of supply the Debate was put off till Friday following Thursday 3. of April Mr. Secretary Cook brought the House this Message from the King HIs Majesty having understood that some rumors were spread abroad of a sharp Message yesterday delivered by me and of some malicious words that the Duke should speak yesterday at the Councel-board he commanded me to tell you of the malice of those falss reports for that nothing fell from the Duke or that Board but what was for the good of this Assembly He would have you observe the malice of those spirits that thus put in these Jealousies Had the Duke so spoken he should have contradicted himself for all of us of the Councel can tell he was the first mover and perswader of this Assembly of Parliament to the King Esteem of the King according to his actions and not these tales His Majesty takes notice of our purpose that on Friday we will resolve upon Supply which his Majesty graciously accepts of and that our free gift without any condition should testifie to the world that we will be as far from incroaching upon his Prerogative as he will be to incroach upon our Liberties and this shall well appear when we present our Grievances to him and then we shall know that he hath no intention to violate our Liberties onely let us not present them with any asperity of words he counts it his greatest Glory to be a King of Freemen not of Villains He thought to have delivered this Message himself but that he feared it would take us too much time Then he added a word of his own Yesterday after dinner we attended his Majesty and he asked us what we had done We said we had entred into the consideration of Supply and that the final resolution was deferred till Friday and that this was done for just reasons to joyn the business of his Majesties and our Countries together and this would further his Majesty and it would give content to the Countrey and that this union here might be spread abroad in the World His Majesty answered For Gods sake why should any hinder them in their Liberties if they did it not I should think they dealt not faithfully with me You may see a true Character of his Majesties disposition let us proceed with courage and rest assured his Majesty will give great ear unto us and let us all joyn to make a perfect union to win the Kings heart we shall find a gracious answer from the King and a hearty cooperation from those that you think to be averse to us UPon the delivery of this Message some stood up and professed they never heard of any such sharp Message or words the day before or that any was so bold as to interpose himself They acknowledged his Majesty had put a threefold Obligation on them First in giving them satisfaction Secondly in giving them assurance which is a great Law that he will protect and relieve them Thirdly in giving them advice as may befit the Gravity of that Assembly and his own Honor So they concluded to carry themselves as their Progenitors before had done who never were marked for stepping too far on the Kings Prerogative and they returned their humble thanks to his Majesty THe day following Mr. Secretary Cook delivered another Message from the King viz. His Majesty hath again commanded me to put you in mind how the eyes and interest of the Christian world are cast upon the good or evil success of this Assembly He also graciously taketh notice of that which is in agitation amongst us touching the freedom of our Persons and propriety of our Goods and that this particular care which he no way misliketh may not retard our resolution for the general good he willeth us chearfully to proceed in both and to express our readiness to supply his great occasions upon assurance that we shall enjoy our Rights and Liberties with as much freedom and security in his time as in any age heretofore under the best of our Kings and whether you shall think fit to secure our selves herein by way of Bill or otherwise so as it be provided for with due respect of his Honor and the publique good whereof he doubteth not but that you will be careful he promiseth and assureth you that he will give way unto it and the more confidence you shall shew in his grace and goodness the more you shall prevail to obtain your own desires Vpon this occasion Mr. Pym spake THat in business of weight dispatch is better then discourse We came not hither without all motives that can be towards his Majesty had he never sent in this message We know the danger of our Enemies we must give Expedition to Expedition let us forbear particulars A man in a journey is hindred by asking too many questions I do believe our peril is as great as may be every man complains of it that doth incourage the Enemy our way is to take that that took away our estates that is the Enemy to give speedily is that that the King calls for A word spoken in season is like an Apple of Silver and actions are more precious then words let us hasten our Resolutions to supply his Majesty And after some debate they came to this unanimous Resolve That five Subsidies be given his Majesty and Mr. Secretary Cook was appointed to acquaint his Majesty with the Resolution of the House Monday the 7. of April Mr. Secretary Cook reported to the House the Kings acceptance of the Subsidies and how his Majesty was pleased to ask by how many voyces they were gained I said but by one His Majesty asked how many were against him I said none for they were voted by one voyce and one general consent His Majesty was much affected therewith and called the Lords in Councel and there I gave them account what had passed besides it gave his Majesty no small content that although five Subsidies be inferior to his wants yet it is the greatest gift that ever was given in Parliament and now he sees with this he shall have the affections of his People which will be greater to him then all value He said he liked Parliaments at the first but since he knew not how he was grown to a distaste of them but was now where has was before he loves them and shall rejoyce to meet with his People often Vpon the giving of the five Subsidies the
Duke of Bucks made a Speech at the Councel Table and Mr. Secretary at that time acquainted the House therewith The Speech was this SIr me thinks I behold you a great King for love is greater then Majesty opinion that the people loved you not had almost lost you in the opinion of the world But this day makes you appear as you are a glorious King loved at home and now to be feared abroad this falling out so happily give me leave I beseech you to be an humble suitor to your Majesty 1. For my self That I who have had the honour to be your Favorite may now give up that title unto them they to be your Favorites and I to be your Servant My second suit is That they having done also well you will account of them as one a body of many members but of all one heart opinion might have made them differ but affection did move them all to joyn with like love in this great gift for proportion although it be less then your occasions may ask yet it is more then ever Subjects did give in so short a time nor am I perswaded it will rest there for this is but as an earnest of their affections to let you see and the world know what Subjects you have that when the honor and the good of the State is ingaged and Aid asked in the ordinary way of Parliament you cannot want This is not the gift of five Subsidies alone but the opening of a Mine of Subsidies that lieth in their hearts This good beginning hath wrought already these effects they have taken your heart drawn from you a Declaration that you will love Parliaments And again this will meet I make no question with such respect that their demands will be just dutiful and moderate for they that know thus to give know well what is fit to ask Then cannot your Majesty do less then out-go their demands or else you do less then your self or them for your Message begot trust their truth and your promises must then beget performances This being done then shall I with a glad heart behold this work as well ended as now begun and then shall I hope that Parliaments shall be made hereafter ●o frequent by the effects and good use of them as they shall have this further benefit to deter from approaching your ears those projecters and inducers of innovation as disturbers both of Church and Commonwealth Now Sir to open my heart and to ease my grief please you to pardon me a word more I must confess I have long lived in pain Sleep hath given me no rest Favors and Fortunes no content such have been my secret sorrows to be thought the man of separation and that divided the King from his People and them from him but I hope it shall appear they were some mistaken minds that would have made me the evil spirit that walketh between a good Master and loyal People by ill offices whereas by your Majesties favor I shall ever endeavour to approve my self a good spirit breathing nothing but the best of services to them all Therefore this day I account more blessed to me then my birth to see my self able to serve them to see you brought in love with Parliaments to see a Parliament express such love to you and God so love me and mine as I joy to see this day Mr. Secretary Cook also at this time repeated the substance of the Kings Answer to the Petition concerning Recusants And after he had done Sir Iohn Elliot expressed the great satisfaction which he apprehended the House in general and himself in special had received touching each particular of his Majesties gracious Answer but shewed his dislike that Mr. Secretary in the close of his Relation made mention of another in addition to his Majesty which formerly hath been a matter of complaint in the House the mixture with his Majesty not onely in the business but in his name Is it said he that any man conceives the mention of others of what quality soever can add incouragement or affection to us in our duties and loyalties towards his Majesty or give them greater latitude or extent then naturally they have or is it supposed that the power or interest of any man can add more readiness to his Majesty in his gracious inclination to us then his own goodness gives him I cannot believe it And as the sweetness and piety of his Majesty which we have in admiration makes me confident in this so the expressions of our duty so perspicuous and clear as already hath been given is my assurance for the other But Sir I am sorry there is this occasion that these things should be argued or this mixture which was formerly condemned should appear again I beseech you Sir let it not be hereafter let no man take this boldness within these Walls to introduce it though I confess for my particular I shall readily commend nay thank that man whose endeavors are applied in such Offices as may be advantageable for the publique Yet in this matter so contrary to the Customs of our Fathers and the honor of our Times I cannot without Scandal apprehend it nor without some Character or Exception pass it by that such interposition may fol the future be left Now let us proceed said he to those services that concern his Majesty and the Subject which I doubt not in the end will render us so real unto him that we shall not need more help to endear us to his favor The Commons having expressed their dutiful affections towards his Majesty in giving him so large a Gift as five Subsidies and having also shewed their care of the Subjects in the liberty of their Person and propriety in their Goods did now prepare to transmit their Resolves to the Lords for their concurrence and several Members were appointed to manage a Conference with the Lords concerning the same We shall briefly touch some Passages of that Conference as to the rational and historical Part thereof omitting to mention Precedents and Book-Cases lest they should prove tedious to the Reader SIr Dudly Diggs began with this Introduction I am commanded to shew unto your Lordships in general that the Laws of England are grounded on Reason more ancient then Books consisting much in unwritten Customs yet so full of Justice and true Equity that your most honorable Predecessors and Ancestors propugned them with a Nolumus mutari and so ancient that from the Saxon days notwithstanding the injuries and ruines of time they have continued in most part the same as may appear in old remaining Monuments of the Laws of Ethelbert the first Christian King of Kent Ina the King of the West Saxons Osfa of the Mercians and of Alfred the great Monarch who united the Saxon Heptarchie whose Laws are yet to be seen published as some think by Parliament as he says to that end ut qui sub uno rege sub una
some satisfaction the proceeding now with our Grievances shall open the stop that hinders his Majesties affairs SIr Humphrey May added That sweetness trust and confidence are the onely weapons for us to deal with our King and that coldness inforcement and constraint will never work our ends If we compass all we desire and have not his Majesties heart what will a Law or any thing else do us good HEreupon it was ordered That a special Committee of eight persons shall presently withdraw themselves and consult together upon some heads and upon the substance of a fair representation to his Majesty which the Speaker shall deliver in his Speech to his Majesty on Monday next if the King please to give access and at the same time to deliver the Petition against billeting of Soldiers Master Speakers Speech to the King on Easter Monday Most gracious and dread Soveraign YOur dutiful and loyal Commons here assembled were lately humble suitors to your Majesty for access to your Royal presence the occasion that moved their desires herein was a particular of importance worthy your Princely consideration which as it well deserves should have been the onely subject of my Speech at this time But since your gracious answer for this access obtained by a message from your Majesty they have had some cause to doubt that your Majesty is not so well satisfied with the manner of their proceedings as their hearty desire is you should be especially in that part which concerns your Majesties present supply as if in the prosecution thereof they had of late used some slackness or delay And because no unhappiness of theirs can parallel with that which may proceed from a misunderstanding in your Majesty of their clear and loyal intentions they have commanded me to attend your Majesty with an humble and summary Declaration of their proceedings since this short time of their sitting which they hope will give your Majesty abundant satisfaction that never People did more truly desire to be indeared in the favour and gracious opinion of their Soveraign and withal to let you see that as you can have no where more faithful counsel so your great designs and occasions can no way be so speedily or heartily supported as in this old and antient way of Parliament For this purpose they humbly beseech your Majesty to take into your Royal consideration that although by antient right of Parliament the matters there debated are to be disposed in their true method and order and that their constant custome hath been to take into their considerations the common grievances of the Kingdom before they enter upon the matter of supply yet to make a full expression of that zeal and affection which they bear to your Royal Majesty equalling at least if not exceeding the best affections of their predecessors to the best of your progenitors they have in this Assembly contrary to the ordinary proceedings of Parliament given your Majesties Supply precedence before the common grievance of the Subject how pressing soever joyning with it onely those fundamental and vital liberties of the Kingdom which give subsistence and ability to your Subjects This was their original order and resolution and was grounded upon a true discerning that these two considerations could not be severed but did both of them intirely concern your Majesties service consisting no less in enabling and encouraging the Subject then in proportioning a Present suiting to your Majesties occasions and their abilities nay so far have they been from using any unnecessary delays as though of the two that of Supply were the latter proposition amongst them the Grand Committee to which both were referred hath made that of your Majesties supply first ready for conclusion And to be sure your Majesties supply might receive no interruption by the other differing from usage and custome in cases of this nature sent up of those that concern the Subjects by parcels some to your Majesty and some to the Lords to the end your Majesty might receive such speedy content as suted with the largest and best extent of their first order Sir You are the breath of our nostrils and the light of our eyes and besides those many comforts which under you and your Royal progenitors in this frame of Government this Nation hath enjoyed the Religion we profess hath taught us whose Image you are and we do all most humbly beseech your Majesty to believe that nothing is or can be more dear unto us then the sacred Rights and Prerogatives of your Crown no person or Councel can be greater lovers of you nor be more truly careful to maintain them and the preserving of those fundamental Liberties which concern the freedom of our persons and propriety of goods and estates is an essential means to establish the true glory of a Monarchy For rich and free Subjects as they are best governed so they are most able to do your Majesty service either in peace or war which next under God hath been the cause of the happy and famous victories of this Nation beyond other Kingdoms of larger Territories and greater number of People What information soever contrary to this shall be brought unto your Majesty can come from no other then such as for their own ends under colour of advancing the Prerogative do indeed undermine and weaken Royal Power by impoverishing the Subjects render this Monarchy less glorious and the People less able to serve your Majesty Having by this that hath been said cleared our hearts and proceedings to your Majesty our trust is that in your Royal Judgement we shall be free from the least opinion of giving any necessary stop to our proceedings in the matter of your supply and that your Majesty will be pleased to entertain belief of our alacrity and chearfulness in your service and that hereafter no such misfortune shall befal us to be misunderstood by your Majesty in any thing We all most humbly beseech your Majesty to receive no information in this or any other business from private relations but to weigh and judge of our proceedings by those resolutions of the House that shall be represented from our selves This rightly and graciously understood we are confident from the knowledge of your goodness and our own hearts that the ending of this Parliament shall be much more happy then the beginning and be to all ages styled the blessed Parliament for making perfect union between the best King and the best People that your Majesty may ever delight in calling us together and we in the comforts of your gracious favour towards us In this hope I return to my first errand which will best appear by that which I shall humbly desire you to hear and being an humble Petition for the House of Commons for redressing of those many inconveniences and distractions that have befallen your Subjects by the billeting of Soldiers in private mens houses against their wills Your Royal progenitors have ever held your Subjects hearts
the best Garrison of this Kingdom and our humble suit to your Majesty is that our faith and loyalty may have such place in your Royal thoughts as to rest assured that all your Subjects will be ready to lay down their lives for the defence of your sacred person and this Kingdom Not going our selves into our Countries this Easter we should think it a great happiness to us as we know it would be a singular comfort and encouragement to them that sent us hither if we might but send them the news of a gratious answer from your Majesty in this particular which the reasons of the Petition we hope will move your most excellent Majesty gratiously to vouchsafe us The Petition concerning the billeting of Soldiers presented to the Kings most excellent Majesty IN all humility complaining sheweth unto your most excellent Majesty your loyal and dutiful Commons now in Parliament assembled That whereas by the fundamental Laws of this Realm every freeman hath and of right ought to have a full and absolute propriety in his Goods and Estate and that therefore the billeting and placing the Soldiers in the house of any such freeman against his will is directly contrary to the said Laws under which we and our Ancestors have been so long and happily governed yet in apparent violation of the said antient and undoubted right of all your Majesties Loyal Subjects of this your Kingdom in general and to the grievous and insupportable vexation and detriment of many Counties and persons in particular a new and almost unheard of way hath been invented and put in practice to lay Soldiers upon them scattered in Companies here and there even in the heart and bowels of this Kingdom and to compel many of your Majesties Subjects to receive and lodge them in their own houses and both themselves and others to contribute toward the maintenance of them to the exceeding great disservice of your Majesty the general terror of all and utter undoing of many of your People insomuch as we cannot sufficiently recount nor in any way proportionable to the lively sense that we have of our Miseries herein are we able to represent unto your Majesty the innumerous mischiefs and most grievous vexations that by this means alone we do now suffer whereof we will not presume to trouble your sacred ears with particular instances onely most gratious Soveraign we beg leave to offer to your gratious view a compassionate consideration of a few of them in particular 1. The service of Almighty God is hereby greatly hindred the People in many places not daring to repair to the Church lest in the mean time the Soldiers should rifle their houses 2. The antient and good government of the Countrey is hereby neglected and almost contemned 3. Your Officers of Iustice in performance of their duties have been resisted and endangered 4. The Rents and Revenues of your Gentry greatly and generally diminished Farmers to secure themselves from the Soldiers insolence being by the Clamor of Solicitation of their fearful and injured Wives and Children enforced to give up their wonted dwellings and to retire themselves into places of more secure habitation 5. Husbandmen that are as it were the hands of the Countrey corrupted by ill example of the Soldiers and encouraged to idle life give over work and rather seek to live idly at another mans charges then by their own labors 6. Tradesmen and Artificers almost discouraged and being inforced to leave thier Trades and to imploy their time in preserving themselves and their Families from cruelty 7. Markets unfrequented and our ways grown so dangerous that the People dare not pass to and fro upon their usual occasions 8. Frequent Robberies Assaults Batteries Burglaries Rapes Rapines Murders Barbarous Cruelties and other most abominable vices and outrages are generally complained of from all parts where these Companies have been and had their abode few of which insolencies have been so much as questioned and fewer according to their demerit punished These and many other lamentable effects most dread and dear Soveraign have by this billeting of Soldiers already fallen upon us your loyal Subjects tending no less to the disservice of your Majesty then to their impoverishing and destruction so that thereby they are exceedingly disabled to yield your Majesty those Supplies for your urgent occasions which they heartily desire and yet they are further perplexed with apprehension of more approaching danger one in regard of your Subjects at home the other of enemies from abroad in both which respects it seems to threaten no small Calamity to the meaner sort of your People being exceeding poor whereof in many places are great Multitudes and therefore in times of more setled and most constant administration of Iustice not easily ruled are most apt upon this occasion to cast off the reins of Government and by joyning themselves with those disordered Soldiers are very like to fall into Mutiny and Rebellion which in faithful discharge of our duties we cannot forbear most humbly to present to your high and excellent wisedom being pressed with probable fears that some such mischief will shortly ensue if an effectual and speedy course be not taken to remove out of the land or otherwise to disband those unruly Companies For the second we do most humbly beseech your Majesty to take into your Princely consideration that many of those Companies besides their dissolute dispositions and carriages are such as do openly profess themselves Papists and therefore to be suspected that if occasion serve they will rather adhere to a forein Enemy of that Religion then to your Majesty their liege Lord and Soveraign especially some of their Captains and Commanders being as Popishly affected as themselves and having served in the Wars on the part of the King of Spain and Arch-Dutchess against your Majesties Allies which of what pernicious consequence it may prove and how prejudicial to the safety of your Kingdom we leave to your Majesties high and Princely wisedom And now upon these and many more which might be alledged most weighty and important Reasons grounded on the maintenance of the Worship and Service of Almighty God the continuance and advancement of your Majesties high honour and profit the preservation of the antient and undoubted Liberties of your People and therein of Iustice Industry Valour which meerly concerns the glory and happiness of your Majesty and all your Subjects and the preventing of calamity and ruine both of Church and Commonwealth We your Majesties most humble and loyal Subjects the Knights Citizens and Burgesses of your House of Commons in the name of all the Commonalty of your Kingdom who are upon this occasion most miserably disconsolate and afflicted prostrate at the Throne of your Grace and Iustice do most ardently beg a present remove of this insupportable burden and that your Majesty would be graciously pleased to secure us from the like pressure in the time to come To the Speakers Speech and this
of the Kings Bench this Law will not bend and when it lights on Subjects fitting if it do not bend it is unjust And there comes in the Law of the Chancery and of Equity this is Application of Law in private mens Causes when it comes to Meum tuum And thus the general Government of Cases with relation to the common State of the Kingdom is from the Council Board and there they are to vary from the Law of the Kingdom Suppose it be in time of Dearth Propriety of Goods may in that time be forced and be brought to the Market We saw the experience of it in Coals in London and the Council Board caused them to be brought forth and sold. In a time of Pestilence men may be restrained If a Schism be like to grow in a Church the State will enquire after the favorers of it if there be fea● of Invasion and it be encouraged by hope of a Party amongst us it is in the power of Government to restrain men to their houses In the Composure of these things there is great difference What differences have been between the Courts of Chancery and Kings Bench It is hard to put true difference between the Kings Prerogative and our Liberties His Majesty saw expence of time would be prejudicial it pleased God to move his Majesty by a Divine hand to shew us a way to clear all our difficulties let us attend to all the parts of it there be Five Degrees and there is more assurance then we could have by any Law whatsoever His Majesty declares That Magna Charta and the other Statutes are in force This is not the first time that the Liberty of the Subject was infringed or was in Debate and confirmed all times thought it safe that when they came to a Negative of Power it was hard to keep Government and Liberty together but his Majesty stopped not there but according to the sense of these Laws That he will govern his Subjects in their just Liberties he assures us our Liberties are just they are not of Grace but of Right nay he assures us he will govern us according to the Laws of the Realm and that we shall finde as much security in his Majesties Promise as in any Law we can make and whatsoever Law we shall make it must come to his Majesties allowance and if his Majesty finde cause in his Government he may not put life to it We daily see all Laws are broken and all Laws will be broke for the Publique good and the King may pardon all Offenders his Majesty did see that the best way to settle all at unity is to express his own heart The Kings heart is the best guarder of his own promise his promise is bound with his heart What Prince can express more care and wisdom Lastly he saith That hereafter ye shall never have the like cause to complain May we not think the breach is made up is not his Majesty ingaged in his Royal word The conclusion is full of weight and he prayes God that as God hath blessed this Kingdom and put it into his heart to come amongst us so to make this day successful The wrath of a King is like the roaring of a Lyon and all Laws with his wrath are to no effect but the Kings favour is like to the dew of the grass there all will prosper and God made the Instruments to unite all hearts His Majesty having thus discharged himself he prayes us to proceed to the business that so much concerns him As his Majesty hath now shewed himself the best of Kings let us acknowledge his Majesties goodness and return to that Union which we all desire But this motion was not received with general acceptation and Sir Benjamin Rudyard replyed to it in these words WE are now upon a great business and the maner of handling it may be as great as the business it self Liberty is a precious thing for every man may set his own price upon it and he that doth not value it deserves to be valued accordingly for mine own part I am clear without scruple that what we have resolved is according to the Law and if any Judge in England were of a contrary opinion I am sure we should have heard of him ere now out of all question the very scope and drift of Magna Charta was to reduce the Regal to a Legal Power in matter of Imprisonment or else it had not been worthy so much contending for It is true That the King ought to have a trust reposed in him God forbid but he should and I hope it is impossible to take it from him for it lies not in the wit of man to devise such a Law as shall comprehend all particulars all accidents but that extraordinary Causes may happen which when they come if they be disposed of for the common good there will be no Law against them yet must the Law be general for otherwise Admissions and Exceptions will fret and eat out the Law to nothing God himself hath constituted a general Law of Nature to govern the ordinary course of things he hath made no Law for Miracles yet there is this observation of them that they are rather praeter naturam then contra naturam and always propter bones fines So the Kings Prerogatives are rather besides the Law then against it and when they are directly to their ends for the publique good they are not onely concurring Laws but even Laws in singularity and excellency But to come nearer let us consider where we are now what steps we have gone and gained The Kings learned Councel have acknowledged all the Laws to be still in force the Judges have not allowed any Judgement against these Laws the Lords also have confessed that the Laws are in full strength they have further retained our resolutions intire and without prejudice All this hitherto is for our advantage but above all his Majesty hath this day himself being publiquely present declared by the mouth of the Lord Keeper before both the Houses That Magna Charta and the other six Statutes are still in force That he will maintain his Subjects in the Liberties of their Persons and Proprieties of their Goods That he will govern them according to the Laws of the Kingdom this is a solemn and binding satisfaction expressing his gracious readiness to comply with his people in their reasonable and just desires The King is a good Man and it is no diminution to a King to be called so for whosoever is a good Man shall be greater then a King that is not so The King certainly is very tender of his present Honor and of his Fame hereafter He will think it hard to have a worse mark set upon him then upon any of his Ancestors by extraordinary restraints His Majesty hath already intimated unto us by a Message That he doth willingly give way to have the abuse of Power reformed by which I
do verily believe he doth very well understand what a miserable power it is which hath produced so much weakness to Himself and to the Kingdom And it is one happiness that he is so ready to redress it For mine own part I shall be very glad to see that old decrepite Law Magna Charta which hath been so long kept and lien bed-rid as it were I shall be glad to see it walk abroad again with new vigor and lustre attended and followed with the other six Statutes questionless it will be a great heartning to all the people I doubt not but upon a debating conference with the Lords we may happily fall upon a fair fit accommodation concerning the Liberty of our Persons and Propriety of our Goods I hope we may have a Bill to agree in the point against imprisonment for Loans or privy Seals As for intrinsecal power and reason of State they are matters in the Clouds where I desire we may leave them and not meddle with them at all left by the way of admittance we may lose somewhat of that which is our own already Yet this by the way I will say of reason of State That in the latitude by which 't is used it hath eaten out almost not onely the Laws but all the Religion of Christendom Now I will onely remember you of one Precept and that of the wisest man Be not over wise be not over just and he gives his reason for why wilt thou be desolate If Justice and Wisdom may be stretcht to desolation let us thereby learn that Moderation is the Vertue of Vertues and Wisdom of Wisdoms Let it be our Master-piece so to carry the business that we may keep Parliaments on foot For as long as they be frequent there will be no irregular Power which though it cannot be broken at once yet in short time it will be made and mouldred away there can be no total or final loss of Liberties as long as they last What we cannot get at one time we shall have at another Upon this debate it was ordered That a Committee of Lawyers do draw a Bill containing the substance of Magna Charta and the other Statutes that do concern the Liberty of the Subject which business took up two whole days Thursday the first of May. MAster Secretary Cook delivers a Message from his Majesty viz. to know whether the House will rest on his Royal Word or no declared to them by the Lord Keeper which if they do he assures them it shall be Royally performed Upon this there was a silence for a good space Then Mr. Secretary Cook proceeded This silence invites me to a further Speech and further to address my self Now we see we must grow towards an issue for my part how confident I have been of the good issue of this Parliament I have certified in this place and elsewhere and I am still confident therein I know his Majesty is resolved to do as much as ever King did for his Subjects All this Debate hath grown out of the sense of our Sufferings and a desire of making up again those Breaches that have been made Since this Parliament begun hath there been any dispence made of that which hath formerly been done when means were denied his Majesty being a yong King and newly come to his Crown which he found ingaged in a War what could we expect in such Necessities His Majesty called this Parliament to make up the Breach His Majesty assures us we shall not have the like cause to complain He assures the Laws shall be established what can we desire more all is that we provide for Posterity and that we do prevent the like suffering for the future Were not the same means provided by them before us can we do more we are come to the Liberty of the Subjects and the Prerogative of the King I hope we shall not adde any thing to our selves to depress him I will not divine I think we shall finde difficulty with the King or with the Lords I shall not deliver my opinion as Counsellor to his Majesty which I will not justifie and say here or at the Councel Board Will we in this necessity strive to bring our selves into a better Condition and greater Liberty then our Fathers had and the Crown into a worse then ever I dare not advise his Majesty to admit of that if this that we now desire be no Innovation it is all contained in those Acts and Statutes and whatsoever else we would adde more is a diminution to the Kings Power and an addition to our own We deal with a wise and prudent Prince that hath a Sword in his hand for our good and this good is supported by Power Do not think that by Cases of Law and Debate we can make that not to be Law which in experience we every day finde necessary make what Law you will if I do discharge the place I bear I must commit men and must not discover the Cause to any Jaylor or Judge if I by this Power commit one without just Cause the burthen falls heavy on me by his Majesties displeasure and he will remove me from my place Government is a solid thing and must be supported for our good Sir Robert Philips hereupon spake this That if the words of Kings strike impressions in the hearts of Subjects then do these words upon this occasion strike an impression into the hearts of us all to speak in a plain language we are now come to the end of our journey and the well disposing of an Answer to this Message will give happiness or misery to this Kingdom Let us set the Commonwealth of England before the eyes of his Majesty that we may justifie our selves that we have demeaned our selves dutifully to his Majesty And so the day following they had further Debate upon that matter the House being turned into a Grand Committee and Mr. Herbert in the Chair Some say that the Subject has suffered more in the violation of ancient Liberties within these few years then in Three hundred years before and therefore care ought to be taken for the time to come Sir Edward Cook said That that Royal word had reference to some Message formerly sent his Majesties word was That they may secure themselves any way by Bill or otherwise he promised to give way to it and to the end that this might not touch his Majesties Honor it was proposed that the Bill come not from the House but from the King We will and grant for us and our Successors and that we and our Successors will do thus and thus and it is the Kings Honor he cannot speak but by Record Others desired the House to consider when and where the late promise was made was it not in the face of both Houses Cruel Kings have been careful to perform their promises yea though they have been unlawful as Herod Therefore if we rest upon his Majesties promise
we may assure our selves of the performance of it Besides we binde his Majesty by relying on his word we have Laws enough it is the execution of them that is our life and it is the King that gives life and execution Sir Thomas Wentworth concluded the Debate saying That never House of Parliament trusted more in the goodness of their King for their own private then the present but we are ambitious that his Majesties goodness may remain to posterity and we are accomptable to a publique trust and therefore seeing there hath been a publique violation of the Laws by his Ministers nothing will satisfie him but a publique mends and our desire to vindicate the Subjects Rights by Bill are no more then are laid down in former Laws with some modest Provision for Instruction Performance and Execution Which so well agreed with the Sense of the House that they made it the subject of a Message to be delivered by the Speaker to his Majesty AMidst those deliberations another Message was delivered from his Majesty by Mr. Secretary Cook That howsoever we proceed in this business we have in hand which his Majesty will not doubt but to be according to our constant professions and so as he may have cause to give us thanks yet his resolution is that both his Royal care and hearty and tender affection towards all his loving Subjects shall appear to the whole Kingdom and all the World that he will govern us according to the Laws and Customs of this Realm that he will maintain us in the Liberties of our Persons and Proprieties of our Goods so as we may enjoy as much happiness as our forefathers in their best times and that he will rectifie what hath been or may be found amiss amongst us so that hereafter there may be no just cause to complain Wherein as his Majesty will rank himself amongst the best of our Kings and shew he hath no intention to invade or impeach our lawful Liberties or Right so he will have us to match our selves with the best Subjects not by incroaching upon that Soveraignty or Prerogative which God hath put into his hands for our good but by containing our selves within the Bounds and Laws of our forefathers without restraining them or inlarging them by new Explanations Interpretations Expositions or Additions in any sort which he telleth us he will not give way unto That the weight of the Affairs of the Kingdom and Christendom do press him more and more and that the time is now grown to that point of maturity that it cannot endure long debate or delay so as this Session of Parliament must continue no longer then Tuesday come sevennight at the furthest In which time his Majesty for his part will be ready to perform what he promised and if the House be not as ready to do that is fit for themselves it shall be their own faults And upon assurance of our good dispatch and correspondence his Majesty declareth That his Royal intention is to have another Session of Parliament at Michaelmass next for the perfecting of such things as cannot now be done This Message was debated the next day being Saturday May 30. whereupon Sir Iohn Elliot spake to this effect The King saith he will rank himself with the best of Kings and therefore he would have us to rank our selves with the best Subjects we will not incroach upon that Soveraignty that God hath put into his hands This makes me fear his Majesty is misinformed in what we go about let us make some inlargement and put it before him that we will not make any thing new as for the time of this Session it is but short and look how many Messages we have so many interruptions and mis-reports and mis-representations to his Majesty produce those Messages Sir Miles Fleetwood continues the Debate and said That this business is of great importance we are to accommodate this The breach of this Parliament will be the greatest misery that ever befell us the eyes of Christendom are upon this Parliament the state of all our Protestant friends are ready to be swallowed up by the Emperors Forces and our own Kingdom is in a miserable straight for the defence of our Religion that is invaded by the Romish Catholicks by the colour of a Commission which is intolerable the defence of our Realm by Shipping is decayed the Kings Revenue is sold and gone where shall the relief be obtained but in Parliament Now we are in the way let us proceed by way of Bill in pursuance of the Kings Message to establish the Fundamental Laws in Propriety of our Goods and Liberty of our Persons It was declared to us that courses by Loan and Imprisonment were not lawful let us touch them in our Bill and that all Precedents and Judgements seeming to the contrary be void and that all Commitments against the Law be remedied and that we be protected against the fear of Commitments In conclusion the Commons agree to an Answer to all the preceding Messages and present it to the King by the mouth of their Speaker The Speakers Speech to the King in Answer to several Messages Most Gracious and Dread Soveraign YOur Loyal and Obedient Subjects the Commons now Assembled in Parliament by several Messages from your Majesty and especially by that your Declaration delivered by the Lord Keeper before both Houses have to their exceeding joy and comfort received many ample expressions of your Princely care and tender affections towards them with a gracious promise and assurance that your Majesty will govern according to the Laws of this Realm and so maintain all your Subjects in the just Freedom of their Persons and Safety of their Estates that all their Rights and Liberties may be by them enjoyed with as much freedom and security in their time as in any age heretofore by their Ancestors under the best of your Progenitors For this so great a favor enlarged by a comfortable intimation of your Majesties confidence in the proceedings of this House they do by me their Speaker make as full return of most humble thanks to your Majesty with all dutiful acknowledgement of your Grace and Goodness herein extended unto them And whereas in one of those Messages delivered from your Majesty there was an expression of your desire to know whether this House would rest upon your Royal Word and Promise assuring them that if they would it should be royally and really performed As they again present their humble thanks for the seconding and strengthning of your former Royal expressions so in all humbleness they assure your Majesty that their greatest confi●●●ce is and ever must be in your Grace and Goodness without which they well know nothing that they can frame or desire will be of safety or value to them Therefore are all humble Suiters to your Majesty That your Royal heart will graciously accept and believe the truth of theirs which they humbly present as
full of truth and confidence in your Royal Word and Promise as ever House of Commons reposed in any of their best Kings True it is they cannot but remember the publique Trust for which they are accomptable to present and future times and their desires are That your Majesties goodness might in Fruit and Memory be the Blessing and Joy of Posterity They say also That of late there hath been publique violation of the Laws and the Subjects Liberties by some of your Majesties Ministers and thence conceive that no less then a publique remedy will raise the dejected hearts of your loving Subjects to a chearful supply of your Majesty or make them receive content in the proceedings of this House From those considerations they most humbly beg your Majesties leave to lay hold of that gratious offer of yours which gave them assurance That if they thought fit to secure themselves in their Rights and Liberties by way of Bill or otherwise so it might be provided with due respect to Gods Honor and the publique Good you would be graciously pleased to give way unto it Far from their intentions it is any way to incroach upon your Soveraignty or Prerogative nor have they the least thought of stretching or enlarging the former Laws in any sort by any new Interpretations or Additions the Bounds of their desires extend no further then to some necessary Explanation of that which is truly comprehended within the just sense and meaning of those Laws with some moderate provision for execution and performance as in times past upon like occasion hath been used The way how to accomplish these their humble desires is now in serious consideration with them wherein they humbly assure your Majesty they will neither lose time nor seek any thing of your Majesty but that they hope may be fit for Dutiful and Loyal Subjects to ask and for a gracious and just King to grant His Majesties Answer was delivered by the Lord Keeper Mr. Speaker and you Gentlemen of the House of Commons His Majesty hath commanded me to tell you that he expected an Answer by your Actions and not delay by Discourse ye acknowledge his Trust and Confidence in your proceedings but his Majesty sees not how you requite him by your confidence of his Word and Actions For what need Explanations if ye doubted not the performance of the true meaning for Explanations will hazard an incroachment upon his Prerogative And it may well be said What need a new Law to confirm an old if you repose confidence in the Declaration his Majesty made by me to both Houses and your selves acknowledge that your greatest trust and confidence must be in his Majesties Grace and Goodness without which nothing ye can frame will be of safety or avail to you Yet to shew cleerly the sincerity of his Majesties intentions he is content that a Bill be drawn for a confirmation of Magna Charta and the other six Statutes insisted upon for the Subjects Liberties if ye shall choose that as the best way but so as it may be without Additions Paraphrases or Explanations Thus if you please you may be secured from your needless fears and this Parliament may have a happy wished for end whereas by the contrary if ye seek to tie your King by new and indeed impossible bonds you must be accomptable to God and the Countrey for the ill success of this meeting His Majesty hath given his Royal Word that ye shall have no cause to complain hereafter less then which hath been enough to reconcile Great Princes and therefore ought much more to prevail between a King and his Subjects Lastly I am commanded to tell you that his Majesties pleasure is That without further Replies or Messages or other unnecessary delays ye do what ye mean to do speedily remembring the last Message that Secretary Cook brought you in point of time His Majesty always intending to perform his Promise to his power NOtwithstanding the intimation of his Majesties good pleasure for a Bill Mr. Secretary Cook Tuesday May 6. again pressed the House to relye upon the Kings Word saying That he had rather follow others then begin to enter into this business loss of time hath been the greatest complaint the matter fallen now into consideration is what way to take whether to relye on his Majesties Word or on a Bill If we will consider the advantage we have in taking his Majesties Word it will be of the largest extent and we shall choose that that hath most Assurance An Act of Parliament is by the consent of the King and Parliament but this Assurance by Word is that he will govern us by the Laws the King promiseth that and also that they shall be so executed that we shall enjoy as much freedom as ever this contains many Laws and a grant of all good Laws nay it contains a confirmation of those very Laws Assurance which binds the King further then the Law can First it binds his affection which is the greatest bond between King and Subject and that binds his Judgement also nay his Honor and that not at home but abroad the Royal Word of a King is the Ground of all Treaty nay it binds his Conscience this Confirmation between both Houses is in nature of a Vow for my part I think it is the greatest advantage to relie on his Majesties Word He further added this Debate was fitter to be done before the House and not before the Committee and that it was a new Course to go to a Committee of the whole House Whereunto it was replied by Sir Iohn Elliot That the proceeding in a Committee is more Honorable and advantagious to the King and the House for that way leads most to Truth and it is a more open way and where every man may adde his reason and make answer upon the hearing of other mens Reasons and Arguments This being the general Sense the House was turned into a Committee to take into consideration what was delivered to the King by the Speaker and what was delivered to them by the Lord Keeper and all other Messages and the Committee was not to be bounded with any former order the Key was brought up and none were to go out without leave first asked In the Debate of this business at the Committee some were for letting the Bill rest but Sir Edward Cooks reasons prevailed to the contrary Was it ever known said he that general words were a sufficient satisfaction to particular grievances was ever a verbal Declaration of the King verbum Regni when grievances be the Parliament is to redress them Did ever Parliament relie on Messages they put up Petitions of their Grievances and the King ever answered them the Kings Answer is very gracious but what is the Law of the Realm that is the question I put no diffidence in his Majesty the King must speak by a Record and in Particulars and not in General Did you ever
know the Kings Message come into a Bill of Subsidies all succeeding Kings will say Ye must trust me as well as you did my Predecessors and trust my Messages but Messages of love never came into a Parliament Let us put up a Petition of Right Not that I distrust the King but that we cannot take his trust but in a Parliamentary way On Thursday 8º Maii the Petition of Right was finished and the Clause of Martial Law was added unto it and it was delivered to the Lords at a Conference for their Concurrence the which Conference was managed by Sir Edward Cook and the same day as to the matter of supply ordered that the two first Subsidies should be paid 10º of Iuly one more 12º of October another on 20º of Decemb. and the last of 1º of March AT the Conference Sir Edward Cook thus expressed himself My Lords it is evident what necessity there is both in respect of your selves and your Posterities to have good success of this business We have acquainted your Lordships with the Reasons and Arguments and after we have had some conference we have received from your Lordships Propositions and it behoves me to give your Lordships some reasons why you have not heard from us before now for in the mean time as we were consulting of this weighty Business we have received divers Messages from our great Soveraign the King and they consisted of five Parts 1. That his Majesty would maintain all his Subjects in their just freedom both of their Persons and Estates 2. That he will govern according to his Laws and Statutes 3. That we should find much confidence in the Royal Word I pray observe that 4. That we shall enjoy all our Rights and Liberties with as much freedom as ever any Subjects have done in former times 5. That whether we shall think it fit either by Bill or otherwise to go on in this great Business his Majesty would be pleased to give way to it These gracious Messages did so work upon our affections that w● have taken them into deep consideration My Lords when we had these Messages I deal plainly for so I am commanded by the House of Commons we did consider what way we might go for our more secure way nay yours we did think it the safest way to go in a Parliamentary course for we have a Maxim in the House of Commons and written on the Walls of our House That old ways are the safest and surest ways And at last we did fall upon that which we did think if that your Lordships did consent with us it is the most ancient way of all and that is my Lords via fausta both to Majesty to your Lordships and to our selves for my Lords this is the greatest Bond that any Subject can have in open Parliament Verbum Regis this is an high point of Honor but this shall be done by the Lords and Commons and assented to by the King in Parliament this is the greatest Obligation of all and this is for the Kings Honor and our Safety Therefore my Lords we have drawn a Form of a Petition desiring your Lordships to concur with us therein for we do come with an unanimous consent of all the House of Commons and there is great reason your Lordships should do so for your Lordships be involved in the same danger And so I have done with the first part and I shall now desire your Lordships leave that I may read that which I have so agreed on Here the Petition of Right was read but we forbear to insert it as yet because there were propositions for alteration and it is not perfect till the Royal assent be given to it From the Eighth to the Twelfth of May all Publique businesses were laid aside On Monday the Twelfth the Lords had a Conference with the Commons where the Lord Keeper made this Speech Gentlemen of the House of Commons MY Lords having a most affectionate desire to maintain that good concurrence that in this Parliament and others hath been of late between both Houses desired this Conference to acquaint you how and in what maner they have proceeded in the Petition of Right that came from this House and to let you know that assoon as they received it they with all care and expedition they possibly could addressed themselves to consider thereof and after good time spent in Debate in the whole House they made a Committee to consider whether retaining of the substance of the Petition there might not be some words altered or put in to make it more sweet to procure it a passable way to his Majesty we know this must be Crowned by the King and good must come to all the Kingdom by this course now taken The Committee hath met and hath propounded some small matters to be altered in some few words to make it passable and not in substance And the Lords having this Reported from their Committee and heard it read in their House resolved of nothing till they have your consent yet they think it fitter to have it propounded to you to consider whether there should be any alteration or no and how the propounded alterations may stand with your liking Concerning the Commitment by the King and the Councel without expressing the cause it was resolved by the Lords to debate it this morning and assoon as they should have debated it they purposed to have your concurrence with them before they resolved it but at instant when they thought to have debated it they received a Letter from his Majesty which they conceive will give a satisfaction to both Houses in the main point My Lords desiring to keep that good concurrence begun desired to communicate that Letter unto you that you might take the same into your considerations as they mean to do themselves This Letter is to be read unto you To the right Trusty and right well-beloved the Lords Spiritual and Temporal of the higher House of Parliament Carolus Rex WE being desirous of nothing more then the advancement of the Peace and Prosperity of our People have given leave to free Debate upon the highest Points of our Prerogative Royal which in the time of our Predecessors Kings and Queens of this Realm were ever restrained as matters that they would not have discussed and in other things we have been willing so far to descend to the desires of our good Subjects as might fully satisfie all moderate mindes and free them from all just fears and jealousies which those Messages which we have heretofore sent into the Commons House will well demonstrate unto the world yet we finde it still insisted upon that in no case whatsoever should it never so nearly concern matters of State or Government we or our Privy Council have power to commit any man without the cause shewed whereas it often happens that should the cause be shewed the service it self would thereby be destroyed and defeated and the cause
alledged must be such as may be determined by our Iudges of our Courts of Westminster in a Legal and ordinary way of Iustice whereas the Causes may be such as those Iudges have not capacity of Iudicature nor Rules of Law to direct and guide their Iudgement in cases of that transcendent nature which hapning so often the very incroaching on that constant Rule of Government for so many ages within this Kingdom practised would soon dissolve the very Foundation and Frame of our Monarchy Wherefore as to our Commons we made fair Propositions which might equally preserve the just Liberty of the Subject so my Lords we have thought good to let you know that without the overthrow of Soveraignty we cannot suffer this Power to be impeached notwithstanding to clear our conscience and just intentions this we publish That it is not in our heart nor will we ever extend our Royal Power lent unto us from God beyond the just rule of Moderation in any thing which shall be contrary to our Laws and Customs wherein the safety of our People shall be our onely aim And we do hereby Declare our Royal pleasure and resolution to be which God willing we shall ever constantly continue and maintain That neither we nor our Privy Council shall or will at any time hereafter commit or command to Prison or otherwise restrain the persons of any for not lending Money to us nor for any cause which in our conscience doth not concern the publique good and safety of us and our people we will not be drawn to pretend any cause wherein our judgement and conscience is not satisfied with base thoughts we hope no man can imagine will fall into our Royal breast and that in all cases of this nature which shall hereafter happen we shall upon the humble Petition of the party or address of our Iudges unto us readily and really express the true cause of their Commitment or Restraint so soon as with conveniency and safety the same is fit to be disclosed and expressed and that in all Causes Criminal of ordinary Iurisdiction our Iudges shall proceed to the Deliverance or Bailment of the Prisoner according to the known and ordinary Rules of the Laws of this Land and according to the Statute of Magna Charta and those other Six Statutes insisted upon which we do take knowledge stand in full force and which we intend not to abrogate and weaken against the true intention thereof This we have thought fit to signifie the rather to shorten any long Debate upon this great question the season of the year being so far advanced and our great Occasions of State not lending many more days for longer continuance of this Session of Parliament Given under our Signet at our Palace at Westminster 20º Maii the Fourth year of our Reign The same day the Kings Letter was communicated to the House of Commons they laid it aside and Sir Thomas Wentworth said it was a Letter of Grace but the people will onely like of that which is done in a Parliamentary way besides the Debate of it would spend much time neither was it directed to the House of Commons and the Petition of Right would clear all mistakes For said he some give out as if the House went about to pinch the Kings Prerogative But the further Debate of this matter took up several days May 17. the Lords propounded at a Conference an Addition to be made to the Petition of Right which was delivered by the Lord Keeper to this purpose THat whereas at the late Conference of both Houses there were some things propounded that came from their Lordships out of a desire the Petition might have the easier passage with his Majesty not intending to violate in any maner the substance of the Petition but it was then thought fit that there was another part of the Petition of as great importance and weight My Lords since the time of that Conference have imployed themselves wholly to reduce the Petition to such a frame and order that may give both to you and them hope of acceptance And after many deliberations and much advice taken my Lords have resolved to represent to you something which they have thought upon yet not as a thing conclusive to them or you and according to their desires having mentioned it in the beginning have held it fit to conclude of nothing till that you be made acquainted with it and that there may be a mature advisement between you and them so that there may be the happier conclusion in all their business This being the determination of the Lords that nothing that is now offered unto you should be conclusive yet they thought it convenient to present it unto you This alteration and not alteration but addition which they shall propound unto you to be advised and conferred upon which is no breach of the frame they think it meet if it shall stand with your liking to be put in the conclusion of the Petition which I shall now read unto you WE present this our humble Petition to your Majesty with the care not onely of preserving our own Liberties but with due regard to leave intire that Soveraign Power wherewith your Majesty is trusted for the Protection Safety and Happiness of the People This is the thing the Lords do present unto you this subject of this Conference concerning the adding of this in the conclusion of the Petition and that they know that this is new and that you cannot presently give an answer to it therefore they desire that you do with some speed consider of it and their Lordships will be ready this afternoon This Addition produced several Speeches LEt us look said he into the Records and see what they are what is Soveraign Power Bodin saith That it is free from any Condition by this we shall acknowledge a Regal as well as a Legal Power Let us give that to the King that the Law gives him and no more I Am not able to speak to this question I know not what it is All our Petition is for the Laws of England and this Power seems to be another distinct Power from the Power of the Law I know how to adde Soveraign to his Person but not to his Power Also we cannot leave to him Soveraign Power we never were possessed of it WE cannot admit of those words with safety they are applicable to all the parts of our Petition It is in the nature of a Saving and by it we shall imply as if we had incroached on his Prerogative all the Laws we cite are without a Saving and yet now after the violation of them we must adde a Saving Also I have seen divers Petitions and where the Subject claimed a Right there I never saw a Saving of this nature THis is Magnum in parvo this is propounded to be a conclusion of our Petition It is a matter of great weight and to speak plainly it
Liberties of the Subject and of the Crown and that the word Leave was debated amongst them and thereby they meant to give no new but what was before for the words Soveraign Power as he is a King he is a Soveraign and must have Power and he said the words were easier then the Prerogative As for the word that which is a relative and referred to that Power that is for the safety of the People and this said he can never grieve any man being thus published it is not Soveraign Power in general but now in confutation of our Reasons he saith Magna Charta was not with a Saving but said he You pursue not the words in Magna Charta and therefore it needs an addition As for the 28 of E. 3. he said there was a Saving and an ill exposition cannot be made of this and both Houses have agreed it in substance already the Commons did it in a Speech delivered by our Speaker and that we said we have not a thought to incroach on the Kings Soveraignty and why may ye not add it in your Petition Upon this Report Mr. Mason readily spake his opinion in maner following IN our Petition of Right to the Kings Majesty we mentioned the Laws and Statutes by which it appeared That no Tax Loan or the like ought to be Levied by the King but by common assent in Parliament That no Freeman ought to be imprisoned but by the Law of the Land That no Freeman ought to be compelled to suffer soldiers in his house In the Petition we have expressed the breach of these Laws and desire we may not suffer the like all which we pray as our Rights and Liberties The Lords have proposed an addition to this Petition in these words We humbly present this Petition to your Majesty not onely with a care of our own Liberties but with a due regard to leave intire that Soveraign Power wherewith your Majesty is intrusted for the Protection Safety and Happiness of your People And whether we shall consent unto this addition is the subject of this days discourse and because my Lord Keeper at the conference declared their Lordships had taken the words of the Petition apart I shall do so too The word Leave in a Petition is of the same nature as Saving in a Grant or Act of Parliament when a man grants but part of a thing he saves the rest when he petitions to be restored but to part he leaveth the rest Then in the end of our Petition the word Leave will imply that something is to be left of that or at least with a reference to what we desire The word Intire is very considerable a Conqueror is bound by no Law but hath power dare Leges his Will is a Law and although William the Conqueror at first to make his way to the Crown of England the more easie and the possession of it more sure claimed it by Title but afterward when there were no powerful pretenders to the Crown the title of Conquest to introduce that absolute Power of a Conqueror was claimed and that Statute of Magna Charta and other Statutes mentioned in our Petition do principally limit that Power I hope it is as lawful for me to cite a Jesuit as it is for Doctor Manwaring to falsifie him Suares in his first Book de Legibus Cap. 17. delivered his opinion in these words Amplitudo restrictio potestatis Regum circa ea quae per se mala vel injusta non sunt pendet ex arbitrio hominum ex ambigua conventione vel pacto inter reges regnum And he further expresseth his opinion that the King of Spain was so absolute a Monarch that he might impose Tribute without consent of his people until about Two hundred years since when it was concluded between him and his people that without consent of his people by Proxies he should not impose any Tribute And Suares opinion is That by that agreement the Kings of Spain are bound to impose no Tribute without consent And this Agreement that Author calls a restraining of that Soveraign Power the Statutes then mentioned in our Petition restraining that absolute Power of Conqueror if we recite those Statutes and say we leave the Soveraign Power intire we do take away that restraint which is the vertue and strength of those Statutes and set at liberty the claim of the Soveraign Power of a Conqueror which is to be limited and restrained by no Laws This may be the danger of the word Intire The next word delivered by the Lords as observeable is the particle That because it was said That all Soveraign Power is not mentioned to be left but onely that with which the King is trusted for our Protection Safety and Happiness But I conceive this to be an exception of all Soveraign Power for all Soveraign Power in a King is for the Protection Safety and Happiness of his People If all Soveraign Power be excepted you may easily judge the consequence all Loans and Taxes being imposed by colour of that Soveraign Power The next word is Trusted which is very ambiguous whether it be meant trusted by God onely as a Conqueror or by the people also as King which are to govern also according to Laws ex pacto In this point I will not presume to adventure further onely I like it not by reason of the doubtful Exposition it admits I have likewise considered the Proposition it self and therein I have fallen upon the Dilemma that this addition shall be construed either to refer unto the Petition or not if it do refer unto the Petition it is meerly useless and unnecessary and unbefitting the judgement of this grave and great Assembly to add to a Petition of this weight If it hath reference unto it then it destroys not onely the virtue and strength of our Petition of Right but our Rights themselves for the addition being referred to each part of the Petition will necessarily receive this construction That none ought to be compelled to make any Gift Loan or such like charge without common consent or Act of Parliament unless it be by the Soveraign Power with which the King is trusted for the Protection Safety and Happiness of his People That none ought to be compelled to sojourn or billet Soldiers unless by the same Soveraign Power and so of the rest of the Rights contained in the Petition And then the most favorable construction will be that the King hath an ordinary Prerogative and by that he cannot impose Taxes or Imprison that is he cannot impose Taxes at his will to imploy them as he pleaseth but that he hath an extraordinary and transcendent Soveraign Power for the protection and happiness of his people and for such purpose he may impose Taxes or billet Soldiers as he pleaseth and we may assure our selves that hereafter all Loans Taxes and Billeting of Soldiers will be said to be for the Protection Safety and Happiness
may be for the most part applied to this Statute as well as to the former I adde these further Answers The first of these two Savings is of the same prisage of Wines which is excepted in the 25 Edw. 1. but in some more clearness for that here the word Wines is expresly annexed to the word Prices which I take for so much to be in Exposition of the former Law And albeit these words and of other goods be added yet do I take it to be but a particular Saving or exception which being qualified with the words Ancient due and accustomed is not very dangerous nor can be understood of Prices or Levies upon Goods of all sorts at the Kings will and pleasure but onely of the old and certain Customs upon Wool Woolfels and Leather which were due to the Crown long before the making of this Statute For the latter of the two Savings in this Act which is of the more unusual nature and subject to the more exception it is indeed general and if we may believe the concurrent Relations of the Histories of those times as well as those that are now Printed as those which remain onely in Manuscripts it gave distaste from the beginning and wrought no good effect but produced such distempers and troubles in the State as we wish may be buried in perpetual oblivion and that the like Saving in these and future times may never breed the like disturbance For from hence arose a Jealousie That Magna Charta which declared the ancient Right of the Subject and was an absolute Law in it self being now confirmed by a latter Act with this Addition of a general Saving for the Kings Right in all things by the Saving was weakned and that made doubtful which was clear before But not to depart from our main ground which is that Savings in old Acts of Parliament before 2 H. 5. are no proof that there were the like Savings in the Petitions for those Acts let me observe unto your Lordships and so leave this point That albeit this Petition whereon this Act of 28 Edw. 1. was grounded be perished yet hath it pleased God that the very Frame and Context of the Act it self as it is drawn up and entred upon the Statute Roll and Printed in our Books doth manifestly impart that this Saving came in by the Kings Answer and was not in the Original Petition of the Lords and Commons for it cometh in at the end of the Act after the words le Roy vent which commonly are the words of the Royal assent to an Act of Parliament And though they be mixed and followed with other words as though the Kings Councel and the rest who were present at the making of this Ordinance did intend the same Saving yet is not that Conclusive so long as by the form of those times the Kings Answer working upon the materials of the Petition might be conceived by some to make the Law effectual though varying from the frame of the Petition The next Reason which the Commons have commanded me to use for which they still desire to be spared from adding this Clause to their Petition is this this offensive Law of 28 E. 1. which confirmed Magna Charta with a Saving rested not long in peace for it gave not that satisfaction to the Lords or people as was requisite they should have in a case so nearly concerning them and therefore about thirty three or thirty four of the same Kings Reign a later Act of Parliament was made whereby it was Enacted That all men should have their Laws and Liberties and free Customs as largely and wholly as they had used to have at any time when they had them best and if any Statutes had been made or any Customs brought in to the contrary that all such Statutes and Customs should be void This was the first Law which I call now to minde that restored Magna Charta to the original purity wherein it was first moulded albeit it hath been since confirmed above twenty times more by several Acts of Parliament in the Reigns of divers most just and gracious Kings who were most apprehensive of their Rights and jealous of their Honors and always without Savings so as if between 28 and 34 E. 1. Magna Charta stood blemished with many Savings of the Kings Rights or Seigniory which might be conceived to be above the Law that stain and blemish was long since taken away and cleared by those many absolute Declarations and Confirmations of that excellent Law which followed in after ages and so it standeth at this day purged and exempted now from any such Saving whatsoever I beseech your Lordships therefore to observe the circumstance of time wherein we offer this Petition to be presented to your Lordships and by us unto his Majesty Do we offer it when Magna Charta stands clogged with Saving No my Lords but at this day when later and better confirmations have vindicated and set free that Law from all exceptions and shall we now annex another and worse Saving to it by an unnecessary Clause in that Petition which we expect should have the fruits and effects of a Law Shall we our selves relinquish or adulterate that which cost our Ancestors such care and labour to purchase and refine No my Lords but as we should hold our selves unhappy if we should not amend the wretched estate of the poor Subject so let us hold it a wickedness to impair it Whereas it was further urged by your Lordships That to insert this Clause into our Petition would be no more then to do that again at your Lordships motion and request which we had formerly done by the mouth of our Speaker and that there is no cause why we should recede from that which so solemnly we have professed To this I answer and confess it was then in our hearts and so it is now and shall be ever not to incroach on his Majesties Soveraign Power But I beseech your Lordships to observe the different occasion and reference of that Protestation and of this Clause That was a general●●nswer to a general Message which we received from his Majesty warning us not to incroach upon his Prerogative to which like dutiful and loving Subjects we answered at full according to the integrity of our own hearts nor was there any danger in making such an Answer to such a Message nor could we answer more truly or more properly But did that Answer extend to acknowledge a Soveraign Power in the King above the Laws and Statutes mentioned in our Petition or controll the Liberties of the Subject therein declared and demanded No my Lords it hath no reference to any such particulars and the same words which in some cases may be fit to be used and were unmannerly to be omitted cannot in other cases be spoken but with impertinency at the least if not with danger I have formerly opened my Reasons proving the danger of this Clause and am
commanded to illustrate the impertinency of adding it to the Petition by a familiar Case which was put in our House by a Learned Gentleman and of my own Robe The Case is this Two Manors or lordships lye adjoyning together and perchance intermixed so as there is some difficulty to discern the true bounds of either as there may be touching the confines where the Liberty of the Subject and the Prerogative of the Crown do border each upon the other to the one of the Manors the King hath clear Right and is in actual possession of it but the other is the Subjects The King being misinformed that the Subject hath intruded upon his Majesties Manor asketh his Subject whether he doth enter upon his Majesties Manor or pretendeth any Title to it or any part of it The Subject being now justly occasioned maketh answer truly to the King that he hath not intruded nor will intrude upon his Majesties Manor nor doth make any Claim or Title to it or any part of it This answer is proper and fair nay it were unmannerly and ill done of the Subject not so to answer upon this occasion Afterwards the King upon colour of some double or single matter of Record seiseth into his Highness hands upon a pretended Title the Subjects Manor The Subject then exhibiteth his Petition of Right or to his Majesty to attain restitution of his own Manor and therein layeth down Title to his own Manor onely were it not improper and absurd in this Case for him to tell the King that he did not intend to make any Claim or Title to his Majesties Manors which is not questioned Doubtless it were This Case rightly applyed will fit our purpose well and notably explain the nature of our Petition Why should we speak of leaving entire the Kings Soveraign Power whereon we incroach not while we onely seek to recover our own Liberties and Priviledges which have been seised upon by some of the Kings Ministers If our Petition did trench actually upon his Majesties Prerogative would our saying that we intended it not make the thing otherwise then the truth My Lords there needeth no Protestation or Declaration to the contrary of that which we have not done and to put in such a Clause cannot argue less then a fear in us as if we had invaded it which we hold sacred and are assured that we have not touched either in our words or in our intentions And touching your Lordships observation upon the word Leave if it be not a proper word to give any new thing to the King sure we are it is a word as dangerous in another sense for it may amount without all question to acknowledge an old Right of Soveraign Power in his Majesty above these Laws and Statutes whereon onely our Liberties are founded a Doctrine which we most humbly crave your Lordships leaves freely to protest against And ●or your Lordships proffering that some Saving should be requisite for preservation of his Majesties Soveraign Power in respect our Petition runneth in larger words then our Laws and Statutes whereon we ground it what is this but a clear co●●ession by our Lordships that this Clause was intended by you to be that Saving for other Saving then this we finde not tendred by you And if it be such a Saving how can it stand with your Lordships other Arguments that it should be of no other effect then our former expression to his Majesty by the mouth of our Speaker But I will not insist upon Collections of this kinde I will onely shew you the Reasons of the Commons why this Petition needeth no such Saving albeit the words of these Statutes be exceeded in the declaratory part of our Petition Those things that are within the equity and true meaning of a Statute are as good Laws as those which are contained in the express Letter and therefore the Statutes of the 42 Edw. 36 H. 3. Rot. Par. N. 12. and other the Statutes made in this time of King Edw. 3. for the Explanati●n of Magna Charta which hath been so often vouched this Parliament though they differ in words from Magna Charta had no Saving annexed to any of them because they inacted nothing more then was contained in effect In that good Law under the words per legale judicium parium suorum aut per legem terrae which by these latter Laws are expounded to import that none should be put to answer without presentment or matter of Record or by due Process or writ Original and if otherwise it should be void and holden for error It hath not been yet shewen unto us from your Lordships that we have in any of our Expressions or Applications strained or misapplied any of the Laws or Statutes whereon we do insist and we are very confident and well assured that no such mistaking can be assigned in any point of our Petition now under question if therefore it do not exceed the true sense and construction of Magna Charta in the subsequent Laws of Explanation whereon it is grounded what reason is there to adde a Saving to this Petition more then to those Laws since we desire to transmit the fruits of these our labors to posterity not onely for the justification of our selves in right of our present and their future Liberties but also for a brave expression and perpetual testimony of that Grace and Justice which we assure our selves we shall receive in his Majesties speedy and clear Answer This is the thing we seek for and this the thing we hoped for and this the thing onely will setle such an unity and confidence betwixt his Majesty and us and raise such a cheerfulness in the hearts of all his loving Subjects as will make us proceed unanimously and with all expedition to supply him for his great occasions in such measure and in such way as may make him safe at home and feared abroad Sir Henry Martin took up the Argument and proceeded as to the rational part thereof IT is necessary to state the question rightly and to set down the true difference between your Lordships and us Now indeed there is no difference or question between your Lordships and us concerning this additional Clause in the nature and quality of a Proposition For so considered we say it is most true and to be received and embraced by us in toto qualibet parte qualibet syllaba yea and were that the question we should adde to the Addition and in stead of due regard say we have had have and ever will have a special and singular regard where to leave entire Soveraign Power but this were to intimate as if we had first cropt it and then left it but our regard was to acknowledge and confess it sincerely and to maintain it constantly even to the hazard of our Goods and Lives if need be To which purpose your Lordships may be pleased to remember that strict Oath every Member of
special Charge and Direction so soon as the said Fleet or the greatest thereof shall be reassembled and joyned together then presently with the first opportunity of wind taking into his Charge also the Ships stayed and prepared at Portsmouth and Plimouth together with such fire Ships and other Vessels as shall be provided for this expedition to return to Rotchel with all possible diligence and do his best endevor to relieve the same Letting his Lordship know that order is taken for the victualling of the Fleet by Petty warrant so long as it remaineth in Harbor for the sparing and lengthening of the Sea victuals And if it so fall out that the Earl of Denbigh do set forward on his voyage towards Rotchel before the whole Fleet shall be joyned with him we pray your Grace to give him such Direction that he may leave order that the Ships which are behind shall follow him with all speed Monday 2 Iune The King came to the Parliament and spake thus in brief to both Houses Gentlemen I Am come hither to perform my duty I think no man can think it long since I have not taken so many days in answering the Petition as ye spent weeks in framing it And I am come hither to shew you that as well in formal things as in essential I desire to give you as much content as in me lies After this the Lord Keeper spake as followeth MY Lords and ye the Knights Citizens and Burgesses of the House of Commons his Majesty hath commanded me to say unto you That he takes it in good part that in consideration of setling your own Liberties ye have generally professed in both Houses that ye have no intention for to lessen or diminish his Majesties Prerogative wherein as ye have cleared your own intentions so now his Majesty comes to clear his and to subscribe a firm League with his People which is ever likely to be most constant and perpetual when the Conditions are equal and known to be so These cannot be in a more happy estate then when your Liberties shall be an ornament and a strength to his Majesties Prerogative and his Prerogative a defence of your Liberties in which his Majesty doubts not but both he and you shall take a mutual comfort hereafter and for his part he is resolved to give an example in the using of his power for the preservation of your Liberties that hereafter ye shall have no cause to complain This is the sum of that which I am to say to you from his Majesty And that which further remains is That you hear read your own Petition and his Majesties gracious Answer The Petition Exhibited to his Majesty by the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and Commons in this present Parliament assembled concerning divers Rights and Liberties of the Subjects with the Kings Majesties Royal Answer thereunto in full Parliament To the Kings most Excellent Majesty HUmbly shew unto our Soveraign Lord the King the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and Commons in Parliament assembled That whereas it is Declared and Enacted by a Statute made in the time of the Reign of King Edward the first commonly called Statutum de Tallagio non concedendo That no Tallage or aide shall be laid or levied by the King or his Heirs in this Realm without the good will and assent of the Archbishops Bishops Earls Barons Knights Burgesses and other the Freemen of the Commonalty of this Realm And by Authority of Parliament holden in the five and twentieth year of the Reign of King Edward the third it is Declared and Enacted That from thenceforth no person should be compelled to make any Loans to the King against his will because such Loans were against Reason and the Franchise of the Land and by other Laws of this Realm it is provided That none should be charged by any Charge or Imposition called a Benevolence nor by such like Charge by which the Statutes before mentioned and other the good Laws and Statutes of this Realm your Subjects have inherited this Freedom That they should not be compelled to contribute to any Tax Tallage Aid or other like Charge not set by common censent in Parliament Yet nevertheless of late divers Commssions directed to sundry Commissioners in several Counties with instructions have issued by means whereof your People have been in divers places assembled and required to lend certain sums of Money unto your Majesty and many of them upon their refusal so to do have had an Oath administred unto them not warrantable by the Laws or Statutes of this Realm and have been constrained to become bound to make appearance and give attendance before your Privy Councel and in other places and others of them have been therefore Imprisoned Consined and sundry other ways molested and disquieted And divers other charges have been layed and levied upon your People in several Counties by Lords Lieutenants Deputy Lieutenants Commissioners for Musters Iustices of Peace and others by command or direction from your Majesty or your Privy Councel against the Laws and free Customs of the Realm And where also by the Statute called The great Charter of the Liberties of England It is declared and enacted That no Freeman may be taken or imprisoned or be disseised of his Freeholds or Liberties or his free Customs or be Outlawed or Exiled or in any manner destroyed but by the lawful Iudgement of his Peers or by the Law of the Land And in the eight and twentieth year of the reign of King Edward the third it was declared and enacted by Authority of Parliament That no man of what Estate or condition that he be should be put out of his Land or Tenements nor taken nor imprisoned nor disherited nor put to death without being brought to answer by due process of Law Nevertheless against the tenor of the said Statutes and other the good Laws Statutes of your Realm to that end provided divers of your Subjects have of late been imprisoned without any cause shewed and when for their deliverance they were brought before your Iustices by your Majesties Writs of Habeas Corpus there to undergo and receive as the Court should order and their Keepers commanded to certifie the Causes of their detainer no cause was certified but that they were detained by your Majesties special Command signified by the Lords of your Privy Councel and yet were returned back to several Prisons without being charged with any thing to which they might make answer according to the Law And whereas of late great companies of Soldiers and Mariners have been dispersed into divers Counties of the Realm and the Inhabitants against their wills have been compelled to receive them into their houses and there to suffer them to sojourn against the Laws and Customs of this Realm and to the great grievance and vexation of the people And whereas also by Authority of Parliament in the 25 year of the reign of King Edward the third
to be applied to the King of England The next kinde of Proof was from his Censures and determinations upon the particular Case of the late Loan which by necessity and parity of reason were likewise applicable to all Cases of the like nature And lest by frailty of memory he might mistake the words or invert the sense he desired leave to resort to his Paper wherein the places were carefully extracted out of the Book it self And then he read each particular Clause by it self pointing to the Page for proof which we here forbear to mention referring the Reader to the Book it self Then he proceeded and said That from this evidence of the Fact doth issue a clear evidence of his wicked intention to misguide and seduce the Kings Conscience touching the observation of the Laws and Liberties of the Kingdom to scandalize and impeach the good Laws and Government of the Realm and the Authority of Parliaments which are two of those Characters of malice which he formerly noted and now inforced thus If to give the King ill Counsel in some one particular Action hath heretofore been heavily punished in this high Court how much more hainous must it needs be thought by ill Counsel to pervert and seduce his Majesties Conscience which is the soveraign Principle of all moral Actions from which they are to receive warrant for their direction before they be acted and Judgement for their reformation afterwards If Scandalum magnatum Slander and Infamy cast upon great Lords and Officers of the Kingdom have been always most severely censured how much more tender ought we to be of that Slander and Infamy which is here cast upon the Laws and Government from whence is derived all the Honor and Reverence which is due to those great Lords and Magistrates All men and so the greatest and highest Magistrates are subject to passions and partialities whereby they may be transported into overhard injurious Courses Which Considerations may sometimes excuse though never justifie the railing and evil speeches of men who have been so provoked it being a true rule That whatsoever gives strength and inforcement to the temptation in any sin doth necessarily imply an abatement and diminution of guilt in that sin But to slander and disgrace the Laws and Government is without possibility of any such excuse it being a simple act of a malignant Will not induced nor excited by any outward provocation the Laws carrying an equal and constant respect to all ought to be reverenced equally by all And thus he derived the Proofs and Inforcements upon the first Article of the Charge The second Article he said contained three Clauses 1. That these refusers had offended against the Law of God 2. Against the supreme Authority 3. By so doing were become guilty of Impiety Disloyalty Rebellion Disobedience and lyable to many other Taxes For proof of all these he said he needed no other evidence then what might be easily drawn from those places which he had read already for what impiety can be greater then to contemn the Law of God and to prefer humane Laws before it what greater disloyalty rebellion and disobedience then to depress supreme Authority to tye the hands and clip the wings of Soveraign Princes Yet he desired their Lordships patience in hearing some few other places wherein the Stains and Taint which the Doctor endeavored to lay upon the Refusers might appear by the odiousness of their comparisons in which he doth labor to rank them The first Comparison is with Popish Recusants yet he makes them the worst of the two and for the better resemblance gives them a new name of Temporal Recusants For this he alledgeth the 1. Sermon Page 31 32. and part of the fifth Consideration by which he would perswade them to yield to this Loan Fifthly If they would consider what advantage this their Recusancy in Temporals gives to the common adversary who for disobedience in Spirituals have hitherto alone inherited that name for that which we our selves condemn in them for so doing and profess to hate that Religion which teacheth them so to do that is to refuse subjection unto Princes in Spirituals the same if not worse some of our side now if ours they be dare to practise We must needs be argued of less Conscience and more Ingratitude both to God and the King if in Temporal things we obey not They in Spirituals deny subjection wherein they may perhaps frame unto themselves some reasons of probability that their offence is not so hainous if we in Temporals shall be so refractory what colour of reason can we possibly finde to make our defence withal without the utter shaming of our selves and laying a stain which cannot easily be washed out upon that Religion which his Majesty doth so graciously maintain and our selves profess The second Comparison is with Turks and Jews in the 2. Sermon Page 47. What a Paradox is c. What a Turk will do for a Christian and a Christian for a Turk and a Jew for both c. the same and much less Christian men should deny to a Christian King The third Comparison is with Corah Dathan and Abiram Theudas and Iudas which is taken out of the second Sermon Page 49. where he labors to deprive those refusers of all merit in their sufferings for this Cause Corah Dothan and Abiram whom for their murmurings God suddenly sunk into Hell fire might as well alledge their sufferings had some resemblance with that of the three Children in the Babylonian Furnace and Theudas and Iudas the two Incendiaries of the people in the days of Caesars tribute might as well pretend their Cause to be like the Maccabees Thus he ended the second Article of the Charge upon which he said were imprinted other two of these six Characters of malice formerly vented That is a wicked intention to increase his Majesties displeasure against his good Subjects so refusing and to alienate his heart from the rest of his People Both which were Points so odious that he needed not to adde any further inforcement or illustration The third Article conteined three Clauses 1. That Authority of Parliament is not necessary for the raising of Aids and Subsidies 2. That the slow proceedings of such Assemblies are not fit to supply the urgent necessity of the State 3. That Parliaments are apt to produce sundry Impediments to the just designs of Princes and to give them occasion of displeasure and discontent For proof of all which he alledged two places conteining the two first of those six Considerations which are propounded by the Doctor to induce the refusers to yield to the Loan in the first Sermon Page 26 27. First if they would please to consider that though such Assemblies as are the highest and greatest Representations of a Kingdom be most Sacred and Honorable and Necessary also to those ends to which they were at first instituted yet know we must that ordained they were not to this end to
being stopped and stopped in such maner as we are enjoyned so we must now leave to be a Councel I hear this with that grief as the saddest Message of the greatest loss in the world but let us still be wise be humble let us make a fair Declaration to the King OUr sins are so exceeding great said Sir Iohn Elliot that unless we speedily return to God God will remove himself further from us ye know with what affection and integrity we have proceeded hitherto to have gained his Majesties heart and out of a necessity of our duty were brought to that course we were in I doubt a misrepresentation to his Majesty hath drawn this mark of his displeasure upon us I observe in the Message amongst other sad particulars it is conceived that we were about to lay some aspersions on the Government give me leave to protest That so clear were our intentions that we desire onely to vindicate those dishonors to our King and Countrey c. It is said also as if we cast some aspersions on his Majesties Ministers I am confident no Minister how dear soever can Here the Speaker started up from the seat of the Chair apprehending Sir Iohn Elliot intended to fall upon the Duke and some of the Ministers of State said There is a command laid upon me that I must command you not to proceed whereupon Sir Iohn Elliot sat down I Am as much grieved as ever said Sir Dudley Diggs Must we not proceed let us sit in silence we are miserable we know not what to do Hereupon there was a sad silence in the House for a while which was broken by Sir Nathaniel Rich in these words WE must now speak or for ever hold our peace for us to be silent when King and Kingdom are in this calamity is not fit The question is Whether we shall secure our selves by silence yea or no I know it is more for our own security but it is not for the security of those for whom we serve let us think on them some instruments desire a change we fear his Majesties safety and the safety of the Kingdom I do not say we now see it and shall we now sit still and do nothing and so be scattered Let us go together to the Lords and shew our dangers that we may then go to the King together Others said That the Speech lately spoken by Sir Iohn Elliot had given offence as they feared to his Majesty WHereupon the House declared That every Member of the House is free from any undutiful Speech from the beginning of the Parliament to that day and Ordered That the House be turned into a Committee to consider what is fit to be done for the safety of the Kingdom and that no man go out upon pain of going to the Tower But before the Speaker left the Chair he desired leave to go forth and the House ordered that he may go forth if he please And the House was hereupon turned into a grand Committee Mr. Whitby in the Chair I Am as full of grief as others said Mr. Wandesford let us recollect our English hearts and not sit still but do our duties two ways are propounded To go to the Lords or to the King I think it is fit we go to the King for this doth concern our Liberties and let us not fear to make a Remonstrance of our rights we are his Counsellors there are some men which call evill good and good evil and bitter sweet Justice is now called Popularity and Faction THen Sir Edw. Cook spake freely We have dealt with that duty and moderation that never was the like Rebus sic stantibus after such a violation of the Liberties of the Subject let us take this to heart In 30. E. 3. were they then in doubt in Parliament to name men that misled the King they accused Iohn de Gaunt the Kings Son and Lord Latimer and Lord Nevel for misadvising the King and they went to the Tower for it now when there is such a downfal of the State shall we hold our tongues how shall we answer our duties to God and men 7. H. 4. Parl. Rot. numb 31 32.11 H. 4. numb 13. there the Councel are complained of and are removed from the King they mewed up the King and disswaded him from the Common Good and why are we now retrived from that way we were in why may we not name those that are the Cause of all our evils In 4. H. 3. 27. E. 3. 13. R. 2. the Parliament moderateth the Kings prerogative and nothing grows to abuse but this House hath power to treat of it What shall we do let us palliate no longer if we do God will not prosper us I think the Duke of Buckingham is the cause of all our miseries and till the King be informed thereof we shall never go out with honour or sit with honour here that man is the Grievance of Grievances let us set down the causes of all our dysasters and all will reflect upon him As for going to the Lords that is not via Regia our Liberties are now impeached we are concerned it is not via Regia the Lords are not participant with our Liberties Mr. Selden advised that a Declaration be drawn under four heads 1. To express the Houses dutiful carriage towards his Majesty 2. To tender their Liberties that are violated 3. To present what the purpose of the House was to have dealt in 4. That that great Person viz. the Duke fearing himself to be questioned did interpose and cause this distraction All this time said he we have cast a mantle on what was done last Parliament but now being driven again to look on that man let us proceed with that which was then well begun and let the Charge be renewed that was last Parliament against him to which he made an Answer but the particulars were sufficient that we might demand judgement on that Answer onely IN conclusion the House agreed upon several heads concerning innovation in Religion the safety of the King and Kingdom misgovernment misfortune of our late designs with the causes of them And whilest it was moving to be put to the question that the Duke of Buckingham shall be instanced to be the chief and principal cause of all those evils the Speaker who after he had leave to go forth went privately to the King brought this Message THat his Majesty commands for the present they adjourn the House till to morrow morning and that all Committees cease in the mean time And the House was accordingly adjourned AT the same time the King sent for the Lord Keeper to attend him presently the House of Lords was adjourned ad libitum the Lord Keeper being returned and the House resumed his Lordship signified his Majesties desire that the House and all Committees be adjourned till to morrow morning AFter this Message was delivered the Lords
House fearing a sudden dissolution fell into consideration of the weak estate of the Kingdom and of our Friends and Allies abroad of the great strength of the House of Austria and the King of Spains ambition aspiring to an universal Monarchy and his present great preparations for war Hereupon the House was moved to name a select Committee to represent these things to his Majesty with the danger like to insue to this Kingdom if the Parliament be dissolved without a happy conclusion But being satisfied by the Lords of the privy Councel that there was no such cause of fear as the House apprehended the naming of a Committee was for that time deferred Having met in our Collections with a Letter of Mr. Allureds to old Mr. Chamberlain of the Court of Wards and being a concurrent proof to the Passages this day in the House We have thought fit here to mention it viz. Sir YEsterday was a day of desolation among us in Parliament and this day we fear will be the day of our dissolution Upon Tuesday Sir John Elliot mo●ed that as we intended to furnish his Majesty with money we should also supply him with Counsel which was one part of the occasion why we were sent by the Countrey and called for by his Majesty And since that House was the greatest Councel of the Kingdom where or when should his Majesty have better Counsel then from thence So he desired there might be a Declaration made to the King of the danger wherein the Kingdom stood by the decay and contempt of Religion the insufficiency of his Generals the unfaithfulness of his Officers the weakness of his Councels the exhausting of his Treasure the death of his men the decay of Trade the loss of Shipping the many and powerful Enemies the sew and the poor Friends we had abroad In the enumerating of which the Chancellor of the Dutchy said it was a strange language yet the House commanded Sir John Elliot to go on then the Chancellor desired if he went on that himself might go out whereupon they all bad him begon yet he stayed and heard him out and the House generally inclined to such a Declaration to be presented in an humble and a modes● manner not prescribing the King the way but leaving it to his Iudgment for reformation So the next day being Wednesday we had a Message from his Majesty by the Speaker that the Session should end on Wednesday and that therefore we should husband the time and dispatch the old businesses without entertaining new intending to pursue their Declaration they had this Message yesterday morning brought them which I have here inclosed sent you which requiring not to cas● or lay any aspersion upon any Minister of his Majesty the house was much affected to be so restrained since the House in former times had proceeded by finding and committing John of Gaunt the Kings Son and others and of late have medled with and sentenced the Lord Chancellor Bacon and the Lord Treasurer Cranfield Then Sir Robert Philips spake and mingled his words with weeping Mr. Prynne did the like and Sir Edward Cook overcome with passion seeing the desolation likely to ensue was forced to sit down when he began to speak through the abundance of tears yea the Speaker in his Speech could not refrain from weeping and shedding of tears besides a great many whose great griefs made them dumb and silent yet some bore up in that storm and incouraged others In the end they desired the Speaker to leave the Chair and Mr. Whitby was to come into it that they might speak the freer and the frequenter and commanded no man to go out of the House upon pain of going to the Tower Then the Speaker humbly and earnestly besought the House to give him leave to absent himself for half an hour presuming they did not think he did it for any ill intention which was instantly granted him then upon many Debates about their Liberties hereby infringed and the eminent danger wherein the Kingdom stood Sir Edward Cook told them he now saw God had not accepted of their humble and moderate carriages and fair proceedings and the rather because he thought they dealt not sincerely with the King and with the Countrey in making a true Representation of the causes of all these miseries which now he repented himself since things were come to this pass that he did it not sooner and therefore he not knowing whether ever he should speak in this House again would now do it freely and there protested that the author and cause of all those miseries was the Duke of Buckingham which was entertained and answered with a chearful acclamation of the House as when one good Hound recovers the scent the rest come in with a full cry so they pursued it and every one came on home and laid the blame where they thought the fault was and as they were Voting it to the Question whether they should name him in their intended Remonstrance the Sole or the Principall cause of all their miseries at home and abroad The Speaker having been three hours absent and with the King returned with this Message That the House should then rise being about eleven a clock and no Committees stould sit in the afternoon till to morrow morning What we shall expect this morning God of Heaven knows We shall meet timely this morning partly for the businesse sake and partly because two days since we made an Order that whosoever comes in after prayers payes twelve pence to the poor Sir excuse my hast and let us have your prayers whereof both you and we have here need So inscribling haste I rest Affectionately at your service Thomas Alured This 6. of June 1628. The Message mentioned in this Letter of the 6. of Iune is already before expressed Friday 6. Iune Mr. Speaker brings another Message from the King the day following IN my service to this House I have had many undeserved favours from you which I shall ever with all humbleness acknowledge but none can be greater then that testimony of your confidence yesterday shewed unto me whereby I hope I have done nothing or made any representation to his Majesty but what is for the honour and service of this House and I will have my tongue cleave to my mouth before I will speak to the disadvantage of any Member thereof I have now a Message to deliver unto you Whereas his Majesty understanding that ye did conceive his last Message to restrain you in your just Priviledges to complain of any of his Ministers These are to declare his intentions that he had no meaning of barring you from what hath been your Right but only to avoid all scandals on his Councel and Actions past and that his Ministers might not be nor himself under their names taxed for their Counsel unto his Majesty and that no such particulars should be taken in hand as would ask a longer time of consideration then what
he hath prefixed and still resoves to hold that so for this time all Christendom might take notice of a sweet parting between him and his people Which if it fall out his Majesty will not be long from another meeting when such if there be any at their leisure and convenience may be considered Mr. Speaker proceeded I will observe somewhat out of this Message ye may observe a great inclination in his Majesty to meet in this House I was bold yesterday to take notice of that liberty ye gave me to go to his Majesty I know there are none here but did imagine whither I went but that I knew ye where desirous and content that I should leave you I would not have desired it give me leave to say this Message bars you not of your Right in matter nay not in manner but it reacheth to his Councels past and for giving him Councel in those things which he commanded It is not his Majesties intentions to protect any Abetter of Spain The end of this was that we might meet again sweetly and happily The House of Lords likewise received this Message by the Lord Keeper MY Lords his Majestie takes notice to your great advantage of the proceedings of this house upon the hearing of his Majesties message yesterday He accounts it a fair respect that ye would neither agree of any Committee or send any Message to his Majesty though it were in your own hearts but yeild your selves to his Majesties Message and defer your own resolutions till you meet again at the time appointed by his Majesty Yet his Majesty takes it in extream good part to hear what was in your heart and especially that ye were so sensible of the inconvenience that might ensue upon the breach of this Parliament Which if it had happened or shall hereafter happen his Majesty assures himself that he shall stand clear before God and men of the occasion But his Majesty saith ye had just cause to be sensible of the danger considering how the estate of Christendom now stands in respect of the multitude and strength of our Enemies and weakness on our part All which his Majesty knows very exactly and in respect therereof called this Parliament the particulars his Majesty holds it needless to recite especially to your Lordships since they are apparant to all men Neither will it be needfull to reiterate them to his Majesty whose cares are most intentive upon them and the best remedy that can be thought on therein is if his Subjects do their parts Therefore his Majesty gives you hearty thanks and bad me tell you that nothing hath been more acceptable to him all the time of this Parliament then this dutiful and discreet carriage of your Lordships which he professeth hath been a chief motive to his Majesty to suspend those intentions that were not far from a resolution Sir Robert Philips assumed the Debate upon the Message delivered by the Speaker and said I rise up with a disposition somewhat in more hope of comfort then yesterday yet in regard of the uncertainty of Councels I shall not change much In the first place I must be bold without flattering a thing nor incident to me to tell you Mr. Speaker you have not only at all times discharged the duty of a good Speaker but of a good man for which I render you many thanks Another respect touching his Majesties Answer to our Petition First if that Answer fall out to be short I free his Majesty and I believe his Resolution was to give that that we all expected But in that as in others we have suffered by reason of interposed persons between his Majesty and us But this day is by intervenient accidents diverted from that but so as in time we go to his Majesty Therefore let us remove those jealousies in his Majesty of our Proceedings that by som● men over-grown have bin mispresented we have proceeded with temper in confidence of his Majesties goodness to us and our fidelity to him and if any have construed that what we have done hath been out of feare let him know we came hither free men and will ever resolve to endure the worst and they are poor men that make such interpretations of Parliaments in this way and method we proceeded and if any thing fall out unhappily it is not King Charles that advised himself but King Charles misadvised by others and misled by misordered Councel it becomes us to consider what we were doing and now to advise what is fit to be done We were taking consideration of the State of the Kingdome and to present to his Majesty the danger he and we are in i● since any man hath been named in particular though I love to speak of my betters with humility let him thank himself and his Councels but those necessary jealousies gives us occasion to name him I assure my self we shall proceed with temper and give his Majesty satisfaction if we proceed in that way his Majesties message is now explanatory in point of our liberties that he intends not to barre us of our rights and that he would not have any aspersion cast on the Councels past let us present to his Majesty shortly and faithfully and declare our intentions that we intend not to lay any aspersion upon him but out of a necessity to prevent the eminent dangers we are surrounded with and to present to him the affaires at home and abroad and to desire his Majesty that no interposition of mis-information of men in fault may prevaile but to expect the issue that shall be full of duty and Loyalty The Commons sent a message to the Lords that they would joyne in an humble request to the King that a clear and satisfactory answer be given by his Majesty in full Parliament to the petition of Right whereunto the Lords did agree Afterward the House was turned again into a Committee and considered of some more heads to be inserted into the Declaration or Remonstrance as the designe to bring into this Nation Forreign Forces under the command of Dolbeir And Burlemack was called into the House who confessed he received thirty thousand pound by Privy seal for the buying of Horses that one thousand of them are levied that those Horse and their Riders are to come over and Armes are provided for them in Holland but he ●eares a Countermand is gone to stay them The Privy Seal is in these Words CHarles by the Grace of God King of England Scotland France and Ireland Defender of the Faith c. To the Treasurer and under Treasurer for our Exchequer for the time being Greeting We do hereby will and command you out of our Treasury remaining in the receipt of our said Exchequer forthwith to pay or cause to be paid unto Philip Burlemack of London Merchant the summe of thirty thousand pounds to be paid by him over by Bill of Exchange into the Low-Countreys and Germany unto our Trusty and
that under some colourable pretence might secretly by this as by other wayes contrive to change the frame both of Religion and Government and thereby undermine the frame both of Religion and Government and thereby undermine the safety of your Majesty and your Kingdomes These men could not be ignorant that the bringing in of Strangers for aid hath been pernitious to most States where they have been admitted but to England fatal We do blesse God that hath given your Majesty a wise understanding heart to discern of those courses and that such power produceth nothing but weaknesse and calamity And we beseech your Majesty to pardon the vehemencie of our expression if in the Loyal and zealous affections we bear to your Majesty and your service we are bold to declare to your Majesty and the whole world that we hold it far beneath the heart of any free English man to think that this victorious Nation should now stand in need of German Souldiers to defend their own King and kingdom But when we consider the course formerly mentioned and these things tending to an apparent change of Government the often breaches of Parliament whereby your Majesty hath been deprived of the faithful Councel and free Aids of your people by taking off Tonnage and poundage without graunt thereof by Act of Parliament ever since the beginning of your Majesties Reigne to this present The standing Commission granted to the Duke of Buckingham to be general of an Army in the Land in the time of peace the discharging of faithful and sufficient Officers and Ministers some from Iudicial places and others from the Offices and authorities which they formerly held in the Common-wealth We cannot but at the sight of such an apparant desolation as must necessarily follow these courses out of the depth of sorrow lift up our cryes to heaven for help and next under God apply our selves unto your sacred Majesty who if you could hear so many thousands speaking together do joyntly implore speedie help and Reformation And if your Majesty would be pleased to take a further view of the present state of your Realme We do humbly pray you to consider whether the miserable disasters and ill successe that hath accompanied all your late designes and actions particularly those of Cales and the Isle of Ree and the last expedition to Rochel have not extreamlie wasted that stock of Honor that was left unto this kingdome sometimes terrible to all other Nations and now declining to contempt beneath the meanest Together with our Honours we there lost those and that not a few who had they lived we might have some better hope of recovering it again our valiant and expert Collonels Captaines and Commanders and many thousand common Souldiers and Marriners Though we have some cause to think that your Majesty is not as yet rightly informed thereof and that of six or seven thousand of your Subjects lost at the Isle of Ree Your Majesty received information but of a few hundreds And this dishonour and losse hath been purchased with the consumption of above a million of Treasure Many of the Forts are exceeding weak and decayed and want both men and Munition And here we cannot but with grief consider and complaine of a strange improvidence we think your Majesty will rather call it treacherie That your store of powder which by order of your Privy Councel dated the tenth of December 1626. should be constantly three hundred Last besides a continual supply of twenty Last a month for ordinary expences and were now fit as we conceive to be double the proportion is at this time in the Tower the present Warrants being served but nine Lasts and forty eight pounds in all which we tremble to think of And that notwithstanding this extreame scarcity of powder great quantities have been permitted to be sold out of your Majesties Store to particular persons for private Gain Whereof we have seen a certificate six Last sold sithence the 14th of January last and your Majesties store being unfurnished of powder which by a contract made with Mr. Evelyn by advise of your Lords in Parliament ought to be supplyed monthly with twenty last at the rate of three pound ten shillings ten pence a Barrel Your Majesty hath been forced to pay above seven pound a Barrel for powder to be brought in from beyond Seas for which purpose twelve thousand foure hundred pounds was impressed to Mr. Burlemack the last year and that powder not so good as that by Contract your Maiesty should have by one third part All which are most fearful and dangerous abuses But what the poverty weaknesse and misery of your kingdome is now grown unto by decay of Trade and destruction and losse of Ships and Marriners within these three years we are almost afraid to declare And could we by any other means have been sure that your Majesty should any other way have had a true Information thereof We should have been doubtful to have made our weaknesse and extreamity of misfortune in this kinde to appear But the importunate and most pitiful complaints from all the parts of the kingdome near adjoyning to the Sea in this kinde would rend as we think the stoniest heart in the world with sorrow and the sense we have of the miserable condition your Kingdome is in by reason thereof especially for that we see no possible means being now shortly to end this Session how to help the same adds such a weight of grief unto our sad thoughts as we have not words to expresse it But for your Majesties more exact information therein We beseech you be pleased to peruse the Kalender of particulars which with the Remonstrance we most humblie present unto your Majestie One reason amongst many of this decay of Trade and losse of ships and Marriners is the not guarding of the narrow Seas the regality whereof your Majestie hath now in a manner wholly lost being that wherein a principal part of the Honor and safety of this Kingdome heretofore consisted And now having absolutely neglected it the Town of Dunkirk doth so contiually rob and spoile your Subjects that we can assure your Majesty if some present and effectuall remedy be not forthwith provided the whole Trade of this Kingdome the shipping marriners and all belonging thereunto will be utterly lost and consumed The principal cause of which evils and dangers we conceive to be the excessive power of the Duke of Buckingham and the abuse of that power And we humbly submit unto your Majesties excellent Wisdome whether it be safe for your self or your Kingdoms that so great power as rests in him by Sea and Land should be in the hands of any one Subject whatsoever And as it is not safe so sure we are it cannot be for your service it being impossible for one man to mannage so manie and weightie affaires of the Kingdome as he hath undertaken besides the ordinary duties of those offices which he holds some of which
well performed would require the time and industry of the ablest men both of Counsel and Action that your whole Kingdome will affoard especially in these times of common danger And our humble desire is further that your most excellent Majesty will be pleased to take into your Princely consideration whether in respect the said Duke hath so abused his power it be safe for your Majesty and your Kingdom to continue him either in his great Offices or in his place of nearness and Councel about your sacred Person And thus in all humility aiming at nothing but the honour of Almighty God and the maintenance of his true Religion the safety and happiness of your most excellent Majesty and the preservation and prosperity of this Church and Common-wealth We have endeavoured with faithfull hearts and intentions and in discharge of the duty we owe to your Majesty and our Countrey to give your Majesty a true Representation of our present danger and pressing calamities which we humbly beseech your Majesty graciously to accept and take the same to heart accounting the safety and prosperity of your people your greatest happiness and their love your Richest Treasure A rufull and lamentable spectacle we confess it must needs be to behold those Ruines in so fair an House So many diseases and almost every one of them deadly in so strong and well tempered a body as this kingdom lately was But yet we will not doubt but that God hath reserved this Honor for your Majesty to restore the safety and happiness thereof as a work worthy so excellent a Prince for whose long life and true felicity we daily pray and that your fame and never dying Glory may be continued to all succeeding Generations HEreupon a Message was sent to his Majesty desiring access to his Person with the Remonstrance and the Speaker was appointed to deliver it who much desired to be excused but the House would not give way thereunto The House also sent up the Bill of Subsidy unto the Lords Soon after the King sends a Message by Sir Humphrey May that he means to end this Session on the 26. of Iune whereupon the Commons fall upon the Bill of Tunnage and Poundage In the mean time this ensuing Order concerning the Duke was made in the Starchamber upon the signification of his Majesties pleasure In Interiori Camera Stellatâ 16. Junii Anno quarto Caroli Reg. FOrasmuch as his Majesty hath been graciously pleased to signifie unto his Highness Atturney General that his Royal pleasure is that the Bill or information Exhibited into this Court against the Right Honourable George Duke of Buck. for divers great offences and misdemeanours objected against him for that his Majesty is fully satisfied of the innocency of that Duke in all those things mentioned in the said information as well by his own certain knowledge as by the proofs in the Cause shall therefore together with the said Dukes Answer thereunto and all other proceedings thereupon be taken off the File that no memory thereof remain of Record against him which may tend to his disgrace It is therefore Ordered that the said Information or Bill the Answer thereunto and all other Proceedings thereupon be forthwith taken from the File by his Majesties said Atturney General according to his Majesties pleasure therein to him signified under his hand and now remaining in the custody of the Register of this Court Dated this present 16. day of Iune 4. Caroli Exam. per Jo. Arthur 16. Iunii 1628. ON this very day the Duke signified unto the House that he is informed that one Mr. Christopher Eukener of the House of Commons hath affirmed that his Grace did speak these words at his own Table Viz. Tush it makes no matter what the Commons or Parliament doth for without my leave and authority they shall not be able to touch the hair of a Dogg And his Grace desired leave of their Lordships that he might make his Protestation in the House of Commons concerning that Speech And to move them that he which spake it of him being a Member of that House might be commanded to justifie it and his Grace heard to clear himself Their Lordships considering thereof ordered that the Duke shall be left to himself to do herein what he thinks best in the House of Commons Whereupon the Duke gave their Lordships thanks and protested upon his Honour that he never had those words so much as in his thoughts Tho which Protestation the Lords Commanded to be entred that the Duke may make use thereof as need shall be The Duke also charged one Mr. Melvin for speaking words against him Viz. First That Melvin said That the Dukes plot was that the Parliament should be dissolved and that the Duke and the King with a great Army of Horse and Foot would war against the Commonalty and that Scotland should assist him so that when war was amongst our selves the Enemy should come in for this Kingdom is already sold to the Enemy by the Duke 2. That the Duke had a stronger Councel then the King of which were certain Jesuites Scotishmen and that they did sit in Councel every night from one of the clock till three 3. That when the King had a purpose to do any thing of what consequence soever the Duke could alter it 4. That when the Ordnance were shipt at St. Martins the Duke caused the Souldiers to go on that they might be destroyed 5. That the Duke said he had an Army of 16000. Foot and 1200. Horse 6. That King Iames his blood and Marquess Hamiltons with others cries out for vengeance to heaven 7. That he could not expect any thing but ruine of this Kingdom 8. That Prince Henry was poisoned by Sir Thomas Overbury and he himself served with the same sauce and that the Earl of Somerset and others could say much to this 9. That he himself had a Cardinal to his Uncle or near Kinsman whereby he had great intelligence About the same time the Lord Keeper reported to the House of Lords what his Majesty said touching the Commission of Excise Viz. That their Lordships had reason to be satisfied with what was truly and rightly told them by the Lords of the Councel that this Commission was no more but a warrant of advice which his Majesty knew to be agreeable to the time and the manifold occasions then in hand but now having a supply from the loves of his people he esteems the Commission useless and therefore though he knows no cause why any jealousie should have risen thereby yet at their desires he is content it be cancelled and he hath commanded me to bring both the Commission and Warrant to him and it shall be cancelled in his own presence The day following the Lord Keeper reported that his Majesty had cancelled the Commission and the Warrant for putting the Seal thereunto and did there openly shew it and a Message was sent to the Commons to
Subjects by being secure from all undue Charges be the more incouraged chearfully to proceed in their course of Trade by the increase whereof your Majesties Profit and likewise the strength of the Kingdom would be very much augmented But not being now able to accomplish this their desire there is no course left unto them without manifest breach of their duty both to your Majesty and their Countrey save onely to make this humble Declaration That the receiving of Tunnage and Poundage and other Impositions not granted by Parliament is a breach of the Fundamental Liberties of this Kingdom and contrary to your Majesties Royal answer to the said Petition of Right And therefore they do most humbly beseech your Majesty to forbear any further recieving of the same and not to take it in ill part from those of your Majesties loving Subjects who shall refuse to make payment of any such Charges without Warrant of Law demanded And as by this forbearance your most excellent Majesty shall manifest unto the world your Royal Iustice in the observation of your Laws So they doubt not but hereafter at the time appointed for their coming again they shall have occasion to express their great desire to advance your Majesties Honor and Profit MR. Noy after the reading hereof moved the House that his Majesty might be requested that the Merchants might ship their goods without a Cocket otherwise they do forfeit their goods Iune 26. The Speaker being sent for to the King at Whitehall came not into the House till about nine a clock And after Prayers the Remonstrance concerning Tunnage and Poundage being ingrossed was a reading in the House and while it was a reading the King sent for the Speaker and the whole House and the King made a Speech as followeth IT may seem strange that I came so suddenly to end this Session before I give my assent to the Bills I will tell you the cause though I must avow that I owe the account of my actions to God alone It is known to every one that a while ago the House of Commons gave me a Remonstrance how acceptable every man may judge and for the merit of it I will not call that in question for I am sure no wise man can justifie it Now since I am truly informed that a second Remonstrance is preparing for me to take away the profit of my Tunnage and Poundage one of the chiefest maintenances of my Crown by alleadging I have given away my right thereto by my Answer to your Petition This is so prejudicial unto me that I am forced to end this Session some few hours before I meant being not willing to receive any more Remonstrances to which I must give a harsh Answer And since I see that even the House of Commons begins already to make false constructions of what I granted in your Petition least it be worse interpreted in the Countrey I will now make a Declaration concerning the true intent thereof The profession of both Houses in the time of hammering this Petition was no ways to trench upon my Prerogative saying they had neither intention or power to hurt it Therefore it must needs be conceived that I have granted no new but only confirmed the Antient Liberties of my Subjects Yet to shew the clearness of my intentions that I neither repent nor mean to recede from any thing I have promised you I do here declare my self that those things which have been done whereby many have had some cause to expect the Liberties of the Subjects to be trenched upon which indeed was the first and true ground of the Petition shall not hereafter be drawn into example for your prejudice and from time to time in the word of a King ye shal not have the like cause to complain But as for Tonnage and Poundage it is a thing I cannot want and was never intended by you to ask nor meant by me I am sure to grant To conclude I command you all that are here to take notice of what I have spoken at this time to be the true intent and meaning of what I granted you in your Petition But especially you my Lords the Judges for you only under me belongs the interpretation of Laws for none of the Houses of Parliament either joint or separate what new Doctrine soever may be raised have any Power either to make or declare a Law without my consent After this Speech ended the Bill of Subsidie was delivered to the Speaker standing at the Bar in the Lords House who made a short Speech and shewed that it was the greatest gift that ever was given in so short a time And so craving pardon for the errors of the House and his own which he knew to be very many he desired the King to give his Royal Assent The King came so suddenly and unexpectedly to the House that the Lords were not in their Robes and the Commons had given no direction or Order for the Speaker to deliver the Bill of Subsidies Neither was it brought down to the Commons House as it was used but the Bills were read and the Bill for the Sabbath for Recusants children for Alehouse-keepers for continuance of Statutes for the Clergies Subsidie for the Lay of Subsidie all passed But for the Bill for explanation of the Statutes 3. Iac. about Leases of Recusants Lands The King said that in this short time he had not time sufficient to consider thereof but he said he found many Errors therein though the Title be faire and if at the next meeting they would amend those Errors it should pass Many private Bills passed also and after they were all read their Titles and the Kings Answer to them which to the publique Bills was Le Roy le veult to the private Soit fait come il est desire The Lord Keeper said it is his Majesties pleasure that this Session now end and that the Parliament be prorogued till the twentieth of October next At this Parliament which begun at Westminster the 17. of March Anno Regni R. Caroli 3. These Acts were passed FIrst An Act for further reformation of sundry Abuses committed on the Lords day called Sunday 2. The Petition exhibited to his Majesty by the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and Commons in this present Parliament Assembled concerning divers Rights and Priviledges of the Subject with the Kings assent thereunto in full Parliament 3. An Act for repressing of all unlicenced Alehouses 4. An Act to restrain the sending over of any to be popishly bred beyond the Seas 5. An Act for establishing of Suttons Hospital c. 6. An Act for the Establishing of the Tenants Estates of Bromfield and Yale in the County of Denbigh c. 7. An Act for the continuance and repeal of divers Statutes c. 9. An Act for five entire Subsidies granted by the Clergy 10. An Act concerning the Title c. of Earl of Arundel and for the annexing of the Castle of Arundel
and other Lands to the said Title of Earl of Arundel 11. An Act to assure the Joynture of the Lady Francis Nevil and to enable the Lord Abergavenny to sell Lands 12. An Act concerning the Lands of William Earl of Devon 13. An Act to confirm the Estates of the Lord Morlies Tenants in Tatham and Gressingham 14. An Act for reestating of Lands of William Morgan Esq and discharging the trust concerning them 15. A Declararation of the Commons against Doctor Manwaring 16. An Act to enable Dutton Lord Gerrard to make a Joynture to any Wife that he shall hereafter marry and to provide for younger children and the securing of Portions for Alice Frances and Eliz. Gerrard sisters of the said Lord Gerrard 17. An Act for restitution in blood of Carew Rawleigh Esq and to confirm Letters Patents made to the Earl of Bristol by King James 18. An Act for the Naturalizing of Isaac Ashley Henry Ashley Thomas Ashley and Bernard Ashley sons of Sir Jacob Ashley Knight 19. An Act for Naturalizing of Samuel Powel 20. An Act for the naturalizing of Alexander Levingston Gent. 21. An Act for the naturalizing of John Trumbal and of William Beere Edward Beer and Sidney Beere and Samuel Wentworth 22. An Act for the amendment of a word miswritten in an Act made An. 21. Iac. R. to enable Vincent Lowe Esq. to sell Lands c. 23. An Act for naturalizing of Sir Robert Ayton Knight 24. An Act for confirmation of Letters Patents made by King James to John Earl of Bristol 25. An Act for naturalizing of John Aldersey Mary Aldersey Anne Aldersey Eliz. Aldersey and Margaret Aldersey c. 26. An Act for the naturalizing of Daniel Delingue Knight 27. An Act for the naturalizing of Sir Robert Dyel Kt. and George Kirk Esquire 28. An Act for the naturalizing of James Freese In the Interval between the two Sessions there happened many remarkable passages DOctor Manwarings Sermons intituled Religion and Allegiance were suppressed by Proclamation the King declaring that though the grounds thereof were rightly laid to perswade obedience from Subjects to their Sovereign and that for conscience sake yet in divers passages inferences and applications thereof trenching upon the Laws of this Land and proceedings of Parliaments whereof he was ignorant he so far erred that he had drawn upon himself the just censure and sentence of the High Court of Parliament by whose judgement also that Book stands condemned Wherefore being desirous to remove occasions of scandal he thought fit that those Sermons in regard of their influences and applications be totally suppressed Then a Proclamation came forth declaring the Kings pleasure for proceedings with Popish Recusants and directions to his Commissioners for making compositions for two parts of three of their Estates which by Law were due to his Majesty neverthelesse for the most part they got off upon easie tearms by reason of compositions at undervalues and by Letters of Grace and protection granted from time to time to most of the wealthiest of them This was seconded with another Proclamation commanding that diligent search be made for all Priests and Jesuites particularly the Bishop Calcedon and others that have taken Orders by authority from the See of Rome that they be apprehended and committed to the Goale of that County where they shall be found there to remaine without Bayle or Mainprize till they be tryed by due course of Law and if upon trial and conviction there shall be cause to respit the execution of any of them they shall not lie in the Common Goals much lesse wander about at large but according to the example of former times be sent to the Castle of Wisbitch or some other safe prison where they shall remain under strait and close custody and be wholly restrained from exercising their function and spreading their superstitious and dangerous doctrines Hereupon the Privy Councel wrote to the Bishop of Ely a Letter of the tenour following WHereas his Majestie hath beene informed that the Romish Priests Jesuites and Seminaries lurking in this Kingdome do obstinately and maliciously continue their wonted practises to supplant the true Religion established and to seduce his people from obedience stirre up sedition and subvert the State and Government so far as it lieth in their power his Majesty hath therefore commanded us to signifie unto your Lordship that it is his expresse will and pleasure according to his Declaration in Parliament and his Royal Proclamation since published you shall forthwith prepare and make ready the Castle of Wisbitch in the Isle of Ely to receive and lodge all such Priests Jesuites and Seminaries and other prisoners as shall be hereafter sent thither and there treat and governe them according to such instructions and directions as shall be prescribed by this board The Jesuites taken in Clarken-well being then in several prisons it was ordered by the Councel they should all be removed to Newgate and such of them as were not as yet convicted and condemned should be proceeded against untill they were condemned and then that they all should be sent to the Castle of VVisbitch according to the Proclamation in that behalf and the Attorney General was required to take course to entitle the King to the goods taken in the house which was designed for a Colledge and accordingly they were proceeded against and but onely one convicted which proceeding was questioned in the ensuing Session of Parliament And upon Information that there was a greater concourse of Recusants in or near London then had been usual at other times the Privy Councel sent to the Lord Mayor to require him to cause diligent search to be made within the City and Liberties thereof and to finde out what Recusants did inhabit or remaine there as House-keepers Inmates or Lodgers or in any manner and to return a certificate to the board both of their names and qualities distinguishing which were Trades-men that were there by occasion of their Trades according to to the Statute in that behalf and which were of no Trade but resorted thither from other parts of the Kingdom Iuly 15. being St. Swithins day Sir Richard VVeston Chancellor of the Exchequer was made Lord Treasurer of England and the same day was Bishop Laud translated to the Bishoprick of London About the same time Master Montague formerly mentioned was designed to the Bishoprick of Chichester upon the decease of Bishop Carleton Neverthelesse his Appello Caesarem was thought fit to be called in the King declaring that out of his care to maintain the Church in the unity of true Religion and the bond of peace to prevent unnecessary disputes he had lately caused the Articles of Relgion to be reprinted as a rule for avoiding diversities of opinions and considering that a Book written by Richard Montague now Bishop of Chichester intituled Apello Caesarem was the first cause of those disputes and differences which since have much troubled the quiet
objections against his Majesties Speech the last day of the last Session as trenching upon the liberty of the Subject in these and the like cases the Privy Councel of the House were to be instructed how to demean themselves and to advise all fair and possible means to have a good agreement between his Majesty and his people But in case the House proceed upon any of the particulars before mentioned and draw towards a resolution that the Privy Councel who are of the House do intimate that these Debates will tend to a breach and will not be admitted of and the King thereupon to declare himself presently that he will not suffer such irregular courses of proceeding SO soon as the Parliament Reassemble on Tuesday the 20. of Ianu. In the first place the Commons inquired whether the Petition of Right with his Majesties Answer unto it were inrolled in the Parliament Rolls and the Courts of Westminster as his Majesty promised them the last Session and they found his Majesties Speech made the last day of the Session entred by his Majesties command together with the Petition and Norton the Kings Printer being called into the House and demanded by what Warrant the Additions besides his Majesties Answer to the Petition of Right were Printed he said there was a Warrant as he thought from the K. himself and being demanded whether there were some Copies Printed without additions he said there were about 1500. but they were suppressed by Warrant and Mr. Attourney General commanded that no more of them should be Printed and that those that were first Printed should not be divulged The next thing taken into consideration was the violation of the Liberties of the People since the end of the last Session even contrary to the Petition of Right some having been since the time committed and a Command sent to the Sheriff not to execute a Replevin when mens Goods and Merchandises have been taken away and it was instanced in the Case of Mr. Rolls a Merchant and known to be a Member of the House to whom it was said by some of the Officers of the Custome House If all the Parliament were in you we would take your goods Whereupon Sir Robert Philips made this Speech BY this Information you see how unfortunate these times are and how full time it was for this Assembly to meet to serve his Majesty and to serve their Countrey and I am confident that coming hither with fulness of affection to our King and Countrey all will conduce to a happy conclusion and to the Kings honour Indeed our own great and weighty affairs wound deep cast your eyes which way you please you shall see violations on all sides look on the liberty of the Subject look on the priviledge of this House let any say if ever he saw or read the like violations by inferiour Ministers that over do their command they knew the party was a Parliament man nay they say if all the Parliament were in you this we would do and justifie it If we suffer the Priviledge of Parliament and Liberty of Subjects to be thus violated for fear of complaint we give a wound to the happiness of the Kingdom The course of Iustice is interrupted and an Order in the Exchequer made for the stay of the goods and since there is a seisure upon the approach of Parliament of goods amounting to five thousand pounds for a pretended duty of two hundred pounds Custome Its time to look about us In the first year of King James by reason of the sicknesse that there was the Parliament was prorogued and then there were some so bold as to take this Tunnage and Poundage and then we questioned the men tha● demanded it Let us proceed with affection of duty and make up breaches let a Committee be appointed for the examination of these proceedings This businesse was referred to a Committee and the Officers of the Custome House who had seized these Merchants goods were ordered to be sent for and whilst they were in Debate of this businesse the King sent a Message to the House and willed them to desist from further Debate of those matters concerning Tunnage and Poundage till the next day in the afternoon at which time he would speake with them at the Banqueting House at Whitehall Where his Majesty made this Speech THe care I have to remove all Obstacles that may hinder the good correspondency between me and this Parliament is the cause I have called you together at this time the particular occasion being a complaint made in the Lower House And for you my Lords I am glad to take this and all other occasions whereby you may clearly understand both my words and actions for as you are neerest in Degree so you are the fittest Witnesses unto Kings The complaint I speak of is for staying mens goods that denyed Tunnage and Poundage this may have an easie and short conclusion if my words and actions be rightly understood for by passing the Bill as my Ancestors have had it my by-past actions will be included and my future proceedings authorized which certainly would not have been stuck on if men had not imagined that I had taken these duties as appertaining to my Hereditary Prerogative in which they are much deceived for it ever was and still is my meaning by the gift of my people to enjoy it and my intention in my Speech at the ending of the last Session concerning this point was not to challenge Tunnage and Poundage as of right but de bene esse shewing you the necessity not the right by which I was to take it untill you had granted it to me assuring my self according to your general professions you wanted time not will to give it me Wherefore now having opportunity I expect that without losse of time you make good your professions and so by passing of a Bill put an end to all the Questions arising from this Subject especially since I have cleared the onely Scruple that can trouble you in this businesse to conclude Let us not be jealous one of the others actions for if I had been easily moved at every occasion the Order you made on Wednesday last might have made me startle there being some shew to suspect that you had given your selves the liberty to be the Inquisitors after complaints the words of your Order being somewhat too largely pend but looking into your actions I find you only here complainers not seeking complaints for I am certain you neither pretend nor desire the liberty to be Inquisitors of mens actions before particular complaint be made This I have spoken to shew you how slow I am to believe harshly of your proceedings likewise to assure you that the Houses Resolutions not particular mens speeches shall make me judge well or ill not doubting but according to my example you will be deaf to ill reports concerning me till my words and actions speake for themselves that so
all Ages who shine in vertue and are firm for our Religion but the contrary Faction I like not I remember a character I have seen in a Diary of E. 6. that young Prince of famous memory where he doth expresse the condition of the Bishops of that time under his own hand writing That some for sloath some for age some for ignorance some for luxury and some for Popery were unfit for Discipline and Government We see there are some among our Bishops who are not Orthodox nor sound in Religion as they should be witness the two Bishops complained of the last meeting of the Parliament I apprehend such a feare that should we be in their power we may be in danger to have our Religion overthrown some of these are Masters of Ceremonies and they labour to introduce new Ceremonies into the Church Yet some Ceremonies are useful give me leave to joyn that I hold it necessary and commendable that at the repetition of the Creed we should stand up to testifie the resolution of our hearts that we will defend the Religion which we profess and in some Churches it is added they did not only stand upright with their bodies but with their Swords drawn Let us go to the ground of our Religion and lay down a Rule on which all others may rest then when that is done it will be time to take into consideration the breakers and offendors of that Rule Hereupon after some Debate the Commons entered into this Vow The Vow of the House of Commons in Parliament WEE the Commons in Parliament Assembled do Claim Protest and Avow for truth the sence of the Articles of Religion which were established by Parliament in the thirteenth year of our late Queen Elizabeth which by the publique Act of the Church of England and by the generall and currant Expositions of the Writers of our Church have been delivered unto us And we reject the sence of the Jesuites and Arminians and all others wherein they differ from us Friday the thirtieth of January 1628. Both Houses joyn in Petitioning the King for a Fast. MOst Gracious Soveraign It is the very earnest desire of us your most dutiful Subjects the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and Commons in this Parliament Assembled that this meeting may be abundantly blessed with all happy successe in the great affairs of Church and State upon which we are to consult and that by a cleare understanding both of your Majesties goodness unto us and of our ever faithfull and Loyal hearts to your Majesties Royal Person and service all jealousies and distractions which are apparent signs of Gods displeasure and of ensuing mischief being removed there may this Session and for ever be a perfect and most happy union and agreement between your Majesty and all the Estates of this Realm But acknowledging that neither this nor any other blessing can be expected without the especiall favour of Almighty God upon the observation of the continued increasing miseries of the Reformed Churches abroad whose cases with bleeding hearts we compassionate as likewise of those punishments already inflicted And which are like in great measure to fall upon our selves we have just cause to conceive that the Divine Majesty is for our sins exceedingly offended against us wherefore we do in these and all other pious respects most Dread Soveraign humbly beseech your most excellent Majesty by your Royal consent and Commandment that not only our selves but all people of your Kingdom may be speedily enjoyned upon some certain day by your Majesty to be prefixed by publique Fasting and Prayer to seek reconciliation at the merciful hands of Almighty God So that the prayers of the whole Kingdom joyned with your Majesties most Princely care and the faithful hearts and endeavours of this great Councel assembled may procure honour to Almighty God in the preservation of his true Religion much honour to your Majesty prosperity to your people and comfort to your Majesties Friends and Allies The Kings Answer to the Petition MY Lords and Gentlemen The chief Motive of your Petition being the deplorable Condition of the Reformed Churches abroad is too true And our duty is so much as in us lieth to give them all possible help But certainly fighting will doe them more good then fasting though I doe not wholly disallow of the latter yet I must tell you that the custome of fasting every Session is but lately begun and I confesse I am not fully satisfied with the necessity of it at this time Yet to shew you how smoothly I desire your businesse to go on eschewing as much as I can Questions or jealousies I doe willingly grant your request herein but with this Note That this shall not hereafter be brought into president for frequent Fasts except upon great occasions And for form and time I will advise with my Lords the Bishops and then send you a particular Answer Soon after the House of Commons presented a Declaration to the King touching their resolutions to give precedency to Religion MOst Gracious Sovereign We have within these three dayes received from your Majesty a Message putting us in minde of our present entring upon the consideration of a Grant of Tunnage and Poundage but the manner of possessing the House therewith being disagreeable to our Orders and Priviledges that we could not proceed therein And finding our selves in your Majesties name pressed in that businesse and that we should give precedency thereunto we cannot but expresse some sence of sorrow fearing that the most hearty and forward affections wherewith we desire to serve your Majesty are not clearly represented unto you besides such is the solicitous care we have in preserving our selves in your Majesties most gracious and good opinion that it cannot but breed much trouble in us when ever we find our selves as now we are enforced to spend that time in making our humble Apologies from whence doe usually arise long Debates which we conceive might very profitably be applyed in the greater Services of your Majesty and the Common-wealth which we did with all humble diligence apply our selves unto and finding the extream dangers wherewith our Religion is threatned clearly presenting it unto our thoughts and considerations We thought and we think we cannot without impiety to God disloyalty to your Majesty and unthankfulnesse to those from whom we are put in trust retard our proceedings until something be done to secure us in this maine point which we prefer above our lives and all earthly things whatsoever And here we do with all humble thankfulnesse acknowledge your Majesties most pious care and Princely Intentions to suppresse both Popery and Arminianism the Professor of the one being an open enemy 〈◊〉 the maintainer of the other a subtil and more dangerous underminer of the Religion of Almighty God established within your Realmes and Dominions The truth of which our whole Religion or any part thereof as being sufficiently known and received generally here
in these words We cannot safely give unless we be in possession and the proceedings in the Exchequer nullified as also the information in the Star-Chamber and the annexion to the Petition of Right for it will not be a gift but a confirmation neither will I give without the removal of these interruptions and a Declaration in the Bill that the King hath no right but by our free gift if it will not be accepted as it is fit for us to give we cannot help it if it be the Kings already we do not give it Hereupon the House ordered that the Barons of the Exchequer be sent unto to make void their injunction and order concerning the staying of Merchants goods to which the Barons returned this answer Whereas the Honourable House of Commons by order of the 12. of this instant February have appointed that notice shall be given to the Lord Treasurer Chancellor Barons of the Exchequer of a Declaration made by Sir Iohn VVolstenholme Abrah Dawes and Rich. Carmarthan in the House of Commons that the goods that the Merchants brought into the Kings Store-house and laid up there for his Majesties use were detained as they conceive onely for the duty of Tunnage and Poundage and other sums comprized in the Book of rates which notice was given to the end the said Court of Exchequer might further proceed therein as to justice shall appertain Now the Lord Treasurer Chancellour and Barons out of their due respect to that honourable House and for their satisfaction do signifie that by the Orders and Injunctions of the said Court of Exchequer they did not determine nor any way touch upon the right of Tunnage and Poundage and so they declared openly in Court at the making of these Orders neither did they by the said Orders or Injunctions barr the Owners of those goods to sue for the same in a lawful course but whereas the said Owners endeavoured to take the same goods out of the Kings actual possession by Writs or Plaints of Replevin which was no lawful action or course in the Kings case nor agreeable to his Royal Prerogative therefore the said Court of Exchequer being the Court for ordering the Kings Revenue did by those Orders and Injunctions stay those Suits and did fully declare by the said Orders that the owners if they conceived themselves wronged might take such remedy as the Law alloweth Richard Weston Iohn Walter Tho. Trevor Lo. Newburgh Iohn Denham George Vernon The Answer of the Lord Treasurer and Barons instead of satisfaction expected by the House was looked upon as a justification of their Actions whereupon a motion was made to go on to consider of their proceedings and whether ever the Court of Exchequer held this course before for staying of Replevins and whether this hath been done by Prerogative of the King in his Court of Exchequer A report was made from the Committee concerning the pardons granted by the King since the last Session to certain persons questioned in Parliament and the reporter informed the House that they do finde upon examination that Dr. Sibthorpe and Mr Cosens did solicite the obtaining of their own pardons and that they said the Bishop of Winchester would get the Kings hand to them and it did also appear to the Committee that the Bishop of Winchester did promise the procuring of Mr. Montagues pardon that Dr. Manwaring solicited his own pardon and that the Bishop of Winchester got the Kings hand to it Mr. Oliver Cromwell being of this Committee informed the House what countenance the Bishop of Winchester did give to some persons that preached flat Popery and mentioned the persons by name and how by this Bishops means Manwaring who by censure the last Parliament was disabled for ever holding any Ecclesiasticall dignity in the Church and confessed the Justice of that Censure is nevertheless preferred to a rich Living If these be the steps to Church preferment said he what may we expect A Petition from the Booksellers and Printers in London was also presented complaining of the restraint of Books written against Popery and Arminianism and the contrary allowed of by the only means of Dr. Laud Bishop of London and that divers of the Printers and Booksellers have been sent for by Pursuivants for ●rinting Books against Popery and that Licensing is only restrained to the Bishop of London and his Chaplains and instanced in certain Books against Popery which were denyed to be Licenced Upon which occasion Mr. Selden declared that it is true there is no Law to prevent the Printing of any Books in England only a Decree in Star-Chamber and he advised that a Law might be made concerning Printing otherwise he said a man might be Fined Imprisoned and his Goods taken from him by vertue of the said Decree which is a great Invasion upon the Liberty of the Subject The House of Commons being informed that an Information was preferred in the Star-Chamber against Richard Chambers and others concerning some matters that fell out about their refusal to pay Tunnage and Poundage since the last Session of Parliament because the same was not granted by Act of Parliament they referred the same to a Committee to examine the truth of their proceedings and that whither they ought not to have priviledge of Parliament in regard they had then a Petition depending in Parliament to protect them against the said proceedings and Sir William Acton Sheriff of London being examined before the Committee concerning some matters about the Customers and not giving that cleare Answer which he ought and as the House conceived he might have done was therefore committed to the Tower of London And a Question mas made in the House at that time whether the House had at any time before committed a Sheriff of London to prison to which Mr. Selden made Answer that he could not call to mind a president of sending one Sheriff of London to prison but he well remembred a president of sending both the Sheriffs of London to the Tower and instanced the Case Friday February 13. the Parliament fell into consideration of the great increase of Popery and it was moved to examine the releasing of the Jesuites that were arraigned at Newgate whereof one onely was condemned though they were ten in number and they all Priests and had a Colledge here in London about Clerken-well these men said some could not attempt these acts of boldness but that they have great countenancers Hereup●n Secretary Cook declared that a Minister of State having notice of these ten persons and this Colledge intended to be kept at Clarkenwell acquainted his Majesty with it and I should not discharge my duty if I should not declare how much his M●jesty referred it to the especial care of the Lords of the Councel who examining the same sent those ten persons to Newgate and gave order to Mr. Attourney to prosecute the Law against them He further added
would not deliver the Goods he answered If he said he would not it was because he could not Mr. Selden hereupon said If here be any near the King that doth mis-present our Actions let the curse light on them not on us and believe it it is high time to vindicate our selves in this case else it is in vain for us to sit here It was hereupon resolved by question That this shall be presently taken into consideration and being conceived to be a business of great consequence it was ordered that the house be dissolved into a Committee for the more freedom of debate and that no Member go out of the House without leave during the sitting of the Committee Mr. Noy was of opinion That the Customers had neither Commission nor command to seize therefore without doubt the House may proceed safely to the Question that the priviledge is broken by the Customers without relation to any commission or command from the King which motion was seconded by Mr. Nathaniel Rich. Munday the 23 of February the same business continued under debate and some were for a bare restitution of the Goods taken others for impleading those who took them as Delinquents in the mean time Mr. Secretary brought this message from the King That it concerns his Majesty in a high degree of justice and honour that truth be not concealed which is that what the Customers did was by his own direct order and command at the Council-board himself being present and though his Majesty takes it well that the house have severed his interest from the interest of the Customers yet this will not clear his Majesties honour if the said Customers should suffer for his sake This message was grounded upon this ensuing Order made the day preceding by the King in full Council At White-hall the 22 of February 1628. THis day his Majesty in full council taking knowledge of the debate in the house of Commons the day before concerning the Officers of his Customs and of the respect used by the Committee to sever the private interest of the said Officers from that of his Maj●sty holding it to concern him highly in justice and honour to let the truth in such a point touching his servants to be either concealed or mistaken did there declare That what was formerly done by his Farmers and Officers of the Customs was done by his own direction and commandment and by direction and commandment of his Privy-Council himself for the most part being present in Council and if he had been at any time from the Council-board yet he was acquainted with their doings and gave full direction in it and therefore could not in this sever the act of his Officers from his own Act neither could his Officers suffer for it without high dishonour to his Majesty This being particularly voted by the whole Council was the general assent of them all and accordingly Mr. Secretary Cook had order to deliver a Message the next day from his Majesty to the house of Commons The Kings Commission to the Lord Treasurer and Barons of the Exchequer and to the Customers of the Ports was to this effect C. R. WHereas the Lords of our Council taking into consideration our Revenue and finding that Tonnage and Poundage is a principal Revenue of our Crown and has been continued for these many years have therefore ordered all those duties of Subsidie Custome and Impost as they were in the 21 of King Iames and as they shall be appointed by us under our Seal to be levied know ye that we by advice of our Lords declare our will that all those duties be levied and collected as they were in the time of our father and in such manner as we shall appoint and if any person refuse to pay then our will is That the Lord Treasurer shall commit to prison such so refusing till they conform themselves and we give full power to all our officers from time to time to give assistance to the Farmers of the same as fully as when they were collected by Authority of Parliament Soon after report was made from the grand Committee that they took into their consideration the violation of the Liberty of the house by the Customers and at last they resolved that Mr. Rolls a Member of the house ought to have priviledge of person and goods but the command of the King is so great that they leave it to the house After the passing of this vote the Kings late message by Mr. Secretary Cook was taken into consideration Some took occasion to say That these interruptions proceeded from some Prelates and other Abettors of the Popish party who feare to be discovered and would provoke to a breach to which Sir Humphry May reply'd We have Oyl and Vinegar before us if you go to punish the Customers as Delinquents there is Vinegar in the Wound Think rather of some course to have restitution others said Delinquency cannot be named but presently a breach must be intimated when we do that which is just let there be no fear nor memory of Breaches and let us go to the Delinquency of the men Hereupon Sir Iohn Elliot made a Speech and therein named Dr. Neal the Bishop of Winchester and the great Lord Treasurer in whose person said he all evil is contracted I find him acting and building on those grounds laid by his Mr. the Great Duke and his spirit is moving to these interruptions and they for fear break Parliaments lest Parliaments should break them I find him the head of all the great party the Papists all Jesuits and Priests derive from him their shelter and protection c. A little interruption being here given he proceeded further in his Speech and afterwards the Speaker was moved to put the Question then proposed by the House but he refused to do it and said That he was otherwise commanded from the King Then said Mr. Selden Dare not you Mr. Speaker put the Question when we command you If you will not put it we must sit still thus we shall never be able to do any thing they that come after you may say They have the Kings command not to do it we sit here by the command of the King under under the Great Seal and you are by his Majesty sitting in his Royal Chair before both Houses appointed our Speaker and now you refuse to perform your Office Hereupon the House in some heat adjourned until Wednesday next On Wednesday the 25 of February both Houses by his Majesties command were adjourned till Munday morning the second of March Munday the second of March the Commons meet and urge the Speaker to put the Question who said I have a command from the King to adjourn till March the tenth and put no Question and endeavoring to go out of the Chair was notwithstanding held by some Members the House foreseeing a dissolution till this ensuing
Protestation was published in the House viz. Whosoever shall bring in Innovation of Religion or by favour or countenance seek to extend or introduce Popery or Arminianism or other opinion disagreeing from the Truth and Orthodox Church shall be reputed a Capital Enemy to this Kingdom and Commonwealth 2. Whosoever shall counsel or advise the taking and levying of the Subsidies of Tunnage and Poundage not being granted by Parliament or shall be an Actor or Instrument therein shall be likewise reputed an Innovator in the Government and Capital Enemy to the Kingdom and Commonwealth 3. If any Merchant or Person whatsoever shall voluntarily yeeld or pay the said Subsidies of Tunnage and Poundage not being granted by Parliament he shall likewise be reputed a Betrayer of the Liberties of England and an Enemy to the same Hereupon the King sent for the Sergeant of the House but he was detained the Door being lockt then he sent the Gentleman Usher of the Lords House with a Message and he was refused admittance till the said Votes were read and then in much confusion the House was adjourned to the tenth of March according as it was intimated from his Majesty Nevertheless his Majesty by Proclamation dated the second of March declares the Parliament to be dissolved The passages of this day and the preceding day in Parliament are hereafter more fully related in the proceedings in the Kings Bench. By the King A Proclamation about the dissolving of the Parliament WHereas We for the general good of our Kingdom caused our high Court of Parliament to assemble and meet by prorogation the 20 day of January last past sithence which time the same hath been continued And although in this time by the malevolent dispositions of some ill affected persons of the House of Commons We have had sundry Iust Causes of offence and dislike of their proceedings yet We resolved with patience to trie the uttermost which we the rather did for that We found in that House a great number of sober and grave Persons well-affected to Religion and Government and desirous to preserve unity and peace in all parts of Our Kingdom And therefore having on the five and twentieth day of February last by the uniform advice of our Privy-Council caused both Houses to be adiourned until this present day hoping in the mean time that a better and more right understanding might be begotten between Us and the Members of that House whereby this Parliament might have a happy end and issue And for the same intent We did again this day command the like Adiournment to be made until the tenth day of this Month It hath so happened by the disobedient and seditious carriage of those said ill affected persons of the House of Commons That We and Our Regal Authority and Commandment have been so highly contemned as our Kingly Office cannot bear nor any former age can paralel And therefore it is Our full and absolute resolution to dissolve the same Parliament whereof We thought good to give notice unto all the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and to the Knights Citizens and Burgesses of this present Parliament to all others whom it may concern That they may depart about their needful affairs without attending any longer here Nevertheless We will that they and all others shall take notice that We do and ever will distinguish between those who have shewed good affection to Religion and Government and those that have given themselves over to faction and to work disturbance to the peace and good order of Our Kingdom Given at our Court at Whitehal this second day of March in the fourth yeer of Our Reign of Great Britan France and Ireland This Proclamation was not published till after the tenth of March. The day following Warrants were directed from the Council to Denzil Holles Esq Sir Miles Hobert Sir Iohn Elliot Sir Peter Hayman John Selden Esq William Coriton Walter Long William Stroud Benjamin Valentine commanding their personal appearance on the morrow At which time Mr. Holles Sir Iohn Elliot Mr. Corriton Mr. Valentine appearing and refusing to answer out of Parliament what was said and done in Parliament were committed close prisoners to the Tower and Warrants were given the Parliament being still in being for the sealing up of the studies of Mr. Holles Mr. Selden and Sir Iohn Elliot Mr. Long and Mr. Stroud not then nor of some time after appearing a Proclamation issued out for the apprehending of them On the tenth of March being six days after the commitment of the said Members his Majesty being set in his Royal Throne with his Crown on his head and in his Robes and the Lords in their Robes also and divers of the Commons below the Bar but not their Speaker neither were they called his Majesty spake as followeth My Lords I Never came here upon so unpleasant an occasion it being the dissolution of a Parliament therefore men may have some cause to wonder why I should not rather chuse to do this by Commission it being a general maxime of Kings to leave harsh Commands to their Ministers themselves only executing pleasing things yet considering that Iustice as well consists in reward and praise of vertue as punishing of vice I thought it necessary to come here to day and to declare to you and all the world that it was meerly the undutiful and seditious carriage in the Lower House that hath made the dissolution of this Parliament and you My Lords are so far from being any causers of it that I take as much comfort in your dutiful demeanour as I am justly distasted with their proceedings yet to avoyd their mistakings let me tell you that it is so far from me to adjudge all the House alike guilty that I kn●w that there are many there as dutiful Subjects as any in the world it being but some few Vipers among them that did cast this mist of undutifulness over most of their eys yet to say truth there was a good number there that could not be infected with this contagion insomuch that some did express their duties in speaking which was the general fault of the House the last day To conclude as those Vipers must look for their reward of punishment so you My Lords must justly expect from me that favour and protection that a good King oweth to his loving and faithful Nobility And now my Lord Keeper Do what I have commanded you Then the Lord Keeper said My Lords and Gentlemen of the House of Commons the Kings Majesty doth dissolve this Parliament Whilst the King is preparing a Declaration of the causes and motives which induced him to dissolve this Parliament let us see what followed hereupon The discontents of the common people upon this Dissolution were heightned against the powerful men at Court and the Kings most inward Counsellors for some few days after two Libels were found in the Dean of Pauls yard one against Bishop Laud to this effect
they or any of them had been true as indeed they were not should or could be at that time entertained or pursued in any legal or Parliamentary way but meerly and onely to express and vent his and their own Malice and Dis-affection of your Majesty and your happy Government And your Majesty upon the said second day of March now last past having signified Your Royal pleasure unto the said Sir Iohn Finch then the Speaker of that House That the said House should then be presently adjourned until the tenth day of the said Moneth of March without any further speech or proceedings at that time and the said Speaker then delivered Your Majesties pleasure and commandment to the said House accordingly and declared unto them Your Majesties express charge and command unto him That if any should notwithstanding disobey Your Majesties command that he must forthwith leave the charge and wait upon Your Majesty unto which commandment of Your Majesty and signification of Your Royal pleasure in that behalf for a present adjournment of the House the greatest number of the Members of that House in their duty and Allegeance unto your Majesty were willing to have given a ready Obedience as the Lords Spiritual and Temporal of the Lords House upon the very same day upon the like signification made unto them of your Majesties pleasure by your Lord Keeper of your Great Seal of England the Speaker of that House had done yet so it is May it please your most Excellent Majesty That the said Sir Iohn Ellyot for the satisfying of his own malice and disloyal affections to your Majesty and by the confederacy and agreement aforesaid and in a high contempt and disobedience unto your Majesties command aforesaid and with set purpose to oppose your Majesties said command did stand up and several times offered to speak Whereupon the said Speaker in obedience to your Majesties said command endeavoring to have gone out of the chair the said Denzil Holles and Benjamin Valentine being then next the Speakers chair and the one of them on the one hand and the other of them on the other hand of the Speaker where they so placed themselves of purpose on that day out of their disobedience to your Majestie and by the confederacy and agreement aforesaid violently forcibly and unlawfully and with purpose to raise a tumult in the said House kept and held the said Speaker in the said chair against his will and the said Speaker again endeavoring to leave the chair and having then gotten out of the chair they the said Denzil Holles and Benjamin Valentine laid violent hands upon the said Speaker forcibly and unlawfully and by strong hand thrust him into his chair again and then the said Sir Iohn Ellyot again stood up and used these speeches viz. We have prepared a short Declaration of our intentions which I hope shall agree with the honour of the House and the Justice of the King and with that he threw down a paper into the floor of the said House desiring it might be read and the said Denzil Holles Benj. Valentine and all other the Confederates aforesaid in disobedience and high contempt of your Majesties said command called and cryed out to have the same paper read But some others of the House spake to the contrary that it might not be read and the House thereupon by reason of the disorderly behaviour of the said Confederates was much troubled many pressing violently and tumultuously to have the said paper read and others dutifully and obediently urging the contrary to the great disquiet and discomfort of many well-affected Members of that House And the said William Corriton in this distemper demeaned himself so passionately and violently that he then and there violently forcibly and unlawfully assaulted and stroke Winterton Gent. then being a Member of the said House and divers of the Members of the said House being then desirous and endeavoring to have gone out of the said House the said Sir Miles Hobert did of his own head lock the door of the said House and kept the key thereof and imprisoned the Members of the said House being then in the said House against their wills so that none of them could go out And the said William Strode for the further expressing of his malignity and undutifulness towards your Majesty and in pursuance of the agreement and confederacy aforesaid openly moved and with much earnestness urged that the said paper or declaration might be first read to the end as he then in great contempt of your Royal Majestie said that we meaning the Members of the house may not be turned off like scattered sheep and sent home as we were last Sessions with a scorn put upon us in print meaning thereby the words which your Majesty in your own Person spake at the ending of the last Session and caused the same to be printed and the said Stroud in a very disorderly manner further moved That all those who would have the said paper read should stand up which divers of them thereupon did do accordingly and he the said Stroud amongst others did stand up and in this heat of contention and height of disobedience by the confederacy aforesaid to have the said paper read the said Sir Peter Hayman with rough and reproachful words reproved the said Speaker for being constant and resolute in his obedience to your Majesty in not putting the reading of the said paper to the Question as by all the said Confederates with many Reasons and Arguments he was urged to do and the said Sir Peter Hayman then further said That the said Speaker was made an Instrument to cut up the Liberty of the Subjects by the roots But when by no means the said Speaker would be drawn to transgress your Majesties Royal command aforesaid and lest the said paper should not be read the said Iohn Selden moved that the Clerk of the said House might read the same and when the said Sir John Ellyot found that he and his Confederates aforesaid could not procure the said paper to be read he the said Sir Iohn Ellyot to the end he might not lose that opportunity to vent and publish those malitious and seditious Resolutions which he and his Confederates had collected and prepared as aforesaid took back the said paper again and then immediately in the said house said I shall non express that by Tongue which this paper should have done and then spake these words The miserable condition we are in both in matters of Religion and Policy makes me look with a tender eye both to the Person of the King and to the Subjects and then speaking of them whom he intended to be ill Instruments in this State at whom he principally aimed he said There are amongst them some Prelates of the Church the great Bishop of Winchester and his fellows it is apparent what they have done to cast an aspersion upon the honor and piety and goodness of the King These are
not all but it is extended to some others who I fear in guilt of Conscience of their own desert do joyn their power with that Bishop and the rest to draw his Majesty into a jealousie of the Parliament amongst them I shall not fear to name the great Lord Treasurer in whose person I fear is contracted all that which we suffer If we look into Religion or Policy I find him building upon the ground laid by the Duke of Buckingham his great Master from him I fear came those ill Counsels which contracted that unhappy conclusion of the last session of Parliament I find that not only in the affections of his heart but also in relation to him and I doubt not to fix it indubitably upon him and so from the power and greatness of him comes the danger of our Religion For Policy in that great Question of Tunnage and Poundage the interest which is pretended to be the Kings is but the interest of that person to undermine the Policy of this Government and thereby to weaken the Kingdom while he invites strangers to come in to drive out Trade or at least our Merchants to trade in strangers bottoms which is as dangerous Therefore it is fit to be declared by us that all that we suffer is the effect of new counsels to the ruine of the Government of the State and to make a protestation against all those men whether greater or subordinate that they shall all be declared as Capital Enemies to the King and Kingdom that will perswade the King to take Tunnage and Poundage without grant of Parliament and that if any Merchants shall willingly pay those Duties without consent of Parliament they shall be declared as Accessaries to the rest Which Words of the said Sir Iohn Elliot were by him uttered as aforesaid falsly and malitiously and seditiously out of the wickedness of his own affections towards your Majesty and your gratious and religious Government and by the Confederacie Agreement and Privity of the ●aid other Confederates and to lay a slander and scandal thereupon and not with a purpose or in way to rectifie any thing which he concei●ed to be amiss but to traduce and blast those persons against whom he ●ad conceived malice for so himself the same day in that house said and laid down as a ground for that he intended to say That no man was ever blasted in that house but a curse fell upon him And further so it is may it please your most excellent Majesty That when the said Sir Iohn Elliot had thus vented that malice and wickedness which lay in his heart and as appeareth by his own words were expressed in the said paper which was prepared as aforesaid the said Walter Longe out of his inveterate malice to your Majesty and to your Affairs and by the confederacy aforesaid then and there said That man who shall give away my Liberty and Inheritance I speak of the Merchants I note them for Capital Enemies to the Kingdome And lest the hearers should forget these wicked desperate Positions laid down as aforesaid and to the end the same might have the deeper impression and be the more divulged abroad to the prejudice of your Majesty and of your great Affairs and to the scandal of your Government the said Denzil Holles collected into several heads what the said Sir Iohn Elliot had before delivered out of that paper and then said Whosoever shall counsel the taking up of Tunnage and Poundage without an Act of Parliament let him be accompted a capital Enemy to the King and Kingdom And further What Merchant soever shall pay Tunnage and Poundage without an Act of Parliament let him be counted a Betrayer of the Liberty of the Subjects and a Capital Enemy of the King and Kingdom Which Positions thus laid the said Denzil Holles neither being Speaker nor sitting in the Chair as in a Committee by direction of the House but in an irregular way and contrary to all course of orderly proceedings in Parliament offered to put these things so delivered by him as aforesaid to the Question and drew from his confederates aforesaid an applause and assent as if these things had been voted by the house And further so it is may it please your most excellent Majesty That the disobedience of the said Confederates was then grown to that height that when Edward Grimston the Serjeant at Arms then attending the Speaker of that house was sent for by your Majestie personally to attend your Highness and the same was made known in the said house the said Confederates notwithstanding at that time forcibly and unlawfully kept the said Edward Grimston locked up in the said house and would not suffer him to go out of the house to attend your Majesty and when also on the same day Iames Maxwel Esquire the Gentleman-Usher of the Black Rod was sent from your Majesty to the said Commons house with a message immediately from your Majesties own person they the said Confederates utterly refused to open the door of the house and to admit the said Iames Maxwel to go to deliver his message After all which the said house was then adjourned until the said tenth day of March then following and on the said tenth day of March the said Parliament was dissolved and ended In consideration of all which premises And for as much as the contempt and disobedience of the said Sir John Ellyot and other the confederates aforesaid were so great and so many and unwarranted by the priviledge and due proceeding of Parliament and were committed with so high a hand and are of so ill example and so dangerous consequence and remain all unpardoned Therefore they pray'd a process against them to answer their contempts in the high Court of Star-Chamber Memorandum That the 29. of May Anno quinto Car. Reg. these words viz. After all which the said House was then adjourned until the said tenth day of March and on the said tenth day of March the said Parliament was dissolved and ended were added and inserted by order of the Court immediately before In tender consideration c. At the same time Sir Robert Heath the Kings Atturny General preferr'd an Information in the Star-Chamber against Richard Chambers of the City of London Merchant wherein first he did set forth the gracious Government of the King and the great Priviledges which the Merchants have in their Trading by paying moderate duties for the goods and merchandises exported and imported and setting forth that the raising and publishing of undutiful and false speeches which may tend to the dishonour of the King or the State or to the discouragement or discontentment of the subject or to set discord or variance between his Majesty and his good People are offences of dangerous consequence and by the Law prohibited and condemned under several penalties and punishments That nevertheless the said Richard Chambers the 28. day of September last being amongst some other merchants
called to the Councel-board at Hampton Court about some things which were complained of in reference to the Customs did then and there in an insolent manner in the presence or hearing of the Lords and others of his Majesties Privy Council then sitting in Counsel utter these undutiful seditious and false words That the Merchants are in no part of the World so skrewed and wrung as in England That in Turky they have more incouragement By which words he the said Richard Chambers as the Information setteth forth did endeavor to alienate the good affection of his Majesties Subjects from his Majesty and to bring a slander upon his just Government and therefore the Kings Attorney prayed process against him To this Mr. Chambers made answer That having a Case of silk Grogerams brought from Bristol by a Carrier to London of the value of 400. l. the same were by some inferior Officers attending on the Custome-house seized without this Defendants consent notwithstanding he offered to give security to pay such Customs as should be due by Law and that he hath been otherwise grieved and damnified by the injurious dealing of the under-Officers of the Custome-house and mentioned the particulars wherein and that being called before the Lords of the Council he confesseth that out of the great sence which he had of the injuries done him by the said inferior Officers he did utter these words That the Merchants in England were more wrung and screwed then in forreign Parts Which words were onely spoken in the presence of the Privy-Council and not spoken abroad to stir up any discord among the people and not spoken with any disloyal thought at that time of his Majesties Government but onely intending by these words to introduce his just Complaint against the wrongs and injuries he had sustained by the inferiour Officers and that as soon as he heard a hard construction was given of his words he endeavoured by petition to the Lords of the Council humbly to explain his meaning that he had not the least evil thought as to his Majesties Government yet was not permitted to be heard but presently sent away prisoner to the Marshalsea and when he was there a prisoner he did again endeavour by petition to give satisfaction to the Lords of the Council but they would not be pleased to accept of his faithful explanation which he now makes unto this honourable Court upon his Oath and doth profess from the bottom of his heart That his speeches onely aimed at the abuses of the inferiour Officers who in many things dealt most cruelly with him and other Merchants There were two of the Clerks of the Privy-Council examined as Witnesses to prove the words notwithstanding the Defendant confessed the words in his Answer as aforesaid who proved the words as laid in the Information And on the sixth of May 1629. the Cause came to be heard in the Star-Chamber and the Court were of opinion that the words spoken were a comparing of his Majesties Government with the Government of the Turks intending thereby to make the people believe that his Majesties happy Government may be tearmed Turkish Tyranny and therefore the Court fined the said Mr. Chambers in the sum of 2000 l. to his Majesties use and to stand committed to the prison of the Fleet and to make submission for his great offence both at the Council-board in Court of Star-Chamber and at the Royal Exchange There was a great difference of opinion in the Court about the Fine and because it is a remarkable Case here followeth the names of each several person who gave sentence and the Fine they concluded upon viz. Sir Francis Cottington Chancellour of the Exchequer his opinion was for 500 l. Fine to the King and to acknowledge his offence at the Council-board the Star-Chamber-Bar and Exchange Sir Tho. Richardson Lord chief Justice of the common pleas 500 l. Fine to the King and to desire the Kings favour Sir Nicholas Hide Lord chief Justice of the Kings Bench 500 l. and to desire the Kings favour Sir Iohn Cook Secretary of State 1000 l. Sir Humphry May Chancellour 1500 l. Sir Thomas Edmons 2000 l. Sir Edward Barret 2000 l. Doctor Neal Bishop of Winchester 3000 l. Doctor Laud Bishop of London 3000 l. Lord Carlton principal Secretary of State 3000 l. Lord Chancellour of Scotland 2000 l. Earl of Holland 1500 l. Earl of Doncaster 1500 l. Earl of Salisbury 1500 l. Earl of Dorset 3000 l. Earl of Suffolk 3000 l. Earl of Mountgomery Lord Chamberlain 1500 l. Earl of Arundel Lord High Marshal 3000 l. Lord Montague Lord Privy Seal 3000 l. Lord Connoway 2000 l. Lord Weston Lord Treasurer 3000 l. Lord Coventry Lord Keeper of the Great Seal 1500 l. So the fine was setled to 2000 l. And all except the two Chief Justices concurred for a submission also to be made And accordingly the copy of the submission was sent to the Warden of the Fleet from Mr. Atturny General to shew the said Richard Chambers to perform and acknowledg it and was as followeth I Richard Chambers of London Merchant do humby acknowledge that whereas upon an Information exhibited against me by the Kings Atturney General I was in Easter Term last sentenced by the Honourable Court of Star-Chamber for that in September last 1628. being convented before the Lords and others of his Majesties most Honourable Privy-Council Board upon some speeches then used concerning the Merchants of this Kingdom and his Majesties well and gracious usage of them did then and there in insolent contemptuous and seditious manner falsly and maliciously say and affirm That they meaning the Merchants are in no parts of the world so skrewed and wrung as in England and that in Turky they have more incouragement And whereas by the sentence of that Honorable Court I was adjudged among other punishments justly imposed upon me to make my humble acknowledgment and submission of this great offence at this Honorable Board before I should be delivered out of the Prison of the Fleet whereto I was then committed as by the said Decree and Sentence of that Court among other things it doth and may appear Now I the said Richard Chambers in obedience to the Sentence of the said Honorable Court do humbly confess and acknowledg the speaking of these words aforesaid for the which I was so charged and am heartily sorry for the same and do humbly beseech your Lordships all to be Honorable intercessors for me to his Majesty that he would be graciously pleased to pardon that graet error and fault so committed by me When Mr. Chambers read this draught of submission he thus subscribed the same All the abovesaid Contents and Submission I Richard Chambers do utterly abhor and detest as most unjust and false and never to death will acknowledge any part thereof Rich. Chambers Also he under-writ these Texts of Scripture to the said Submission before he returned it That make a man an offender
per Annum by raising a certain value upon their Lands and some other impositions which requiring a long Discourse by it self I will omit it here setting it down in my Instructions it will save your Majesty at least One hundred thousand pounds per Annum to make it pain of death and confiscation of goods and lands for any of the Officers to cousen You which now is much to be feared they do or else they could not be so rich and herein to allow a fourth part benefit to them that shall find out the cousenage Here is not meant Officers of State as the Lord Treasurer c. being Officers of the Crown The summe of all this account amounteth unto two Millions or Twenty hundred thousand pounds per Annum Suppose it be but one Million and a Half as assuredly your Majesty may make by these courses set down yet it is much more then I promised in my Letter for your Majesties service Besides some sums of mony in present by the courses following Imprimis By the Prince's Marriage to make all the Earls in England Grandees of Spain and Principi with such like priviledges and to pay twenty thousand pounds apiece for it 2. As also if you make them Foeditaries of the Towns belonging to their Earldoms if they will pay for it besides as they do to the King of Spain in the Kingdom of Naples And so likewise Barons to be made Earls and Peers to pay ninteen thousand pounds a piece I think might yield five hundred thousand pounds and oblige them more sure to his Majesty 3. To make choice of two hundred of the richest men of England in estate that be not Noble-men and make them Titulate as is used in Naples and paying for it that is a Duke thirty thousand pounds a Marquis fifteen thousand pounds an Earl ten thousand pounds and a Baron or Viscount five thousand pounds It is to be understood that the antient Nobility of Barons made Earls are to precede these as Peers though these be made Marquesses or Dukes this may raise a Million of pounds and more unto your Majesty To make Gentlemen of low quality and Francklines and rich Farmers Esquires to precede them would yield your Majesty also a great sum of mony in present I know another course to yield your Majesty at least three hundred thousand pounds in mony which as yet the time serveth not to discover untill your Majesty be resolved to proceed in some of the former courses which till then I omit Other courses also that may make present mony I shall study for your Majestie 's service and as I find them out acquaint you withall Lastly to conclude all these discourses by the application of this course used for your profit That it is not onely the means to make you the richest King that ever England had but also the safety augmented thereby to be most secure besides what shewed in the first part of this Discourse I mean by the occasion of this Taxation and raising of monies your Majesty shall have cause and means to imploy in all places of the Land so many Officers and Ministers to be obliged to you for their own good and interest as nothing can be attempted against your Person or Royall State over land but some of them shall in all probability have means to find it out and hinder it Besides this course will detect many disorders and abuses in the publick Government which were hard to be discovered by men indifferent To prohibite gorgeous and costly apparell to be worn but by persons of good quality shall save the Gentry of the Kingdom much more mony then they shall be taxed to pay unto your Majesty Thus withall I take my leave and kiss your gratious hands desiring pardon for my error I may commit herein Pasc. 5. Caroli Regis B. R. The Reports of the following Arguments were taken by Mr. Widdrington of Gray's-Inn UPon the Habeas Corpus out of this Court to bring here the body of one William Stroud Esq with the cause of his imprisonment to the Marshall of the Kings Bench it was returned in this manner That William Stroud Esq was committed under my custody by vertue of a certain Warrant under the hands of twelve Lords of the Privy Councill of the Lord the King the tenour of which Warrant followeth in these words You are to take knowledge that it is his Majesties expresse pleasure and commandment that you take into your custody the body of William Stroud Esq and keep him close-prisoner untill you shall receive other order either from his Majesty or this Board for so doing this shall be your Warrant Dated the 2 d of April 1629. And the Direction thereof was To the Marshall of the King's Bench or his Deputy He is likewise held in prison by vertue of a certain Warrant under the hand of the King himself the tenour of which Warrant followeth in these words Carolus Rex Whereas you have in your custody the body of William Stroud Esq committed by the Lords of Our Privy Councill by Our speciall command you are to take notice that his commitment was for notable contempts by him committed against Our Self and Our Government and for stirring up of Sedition against Us For which you are to detain him in your custody and keep him close-prisoner untill Our pleasure be further known concerning his deliverance Given at Greenwich the 7 th of May 1629. in the 5 th year of Our Reigne And the direction was To Our Marshall for Our Bench for the time being And these are the causes of the taking and detaining of the foresaid William Stroud c. And upon another Habeas Corpus to the Marshall of the Houshold to have the body of Walter Long Esq he made the same Return as above Ask of the Inner Temple of Counsell with Mr. Stroud moved That the Return was insufficient The Return consists upon two Warrants bearing severall Dates which are the causes of the taking and detaining of the Prisoner For the first Warrant which is of the Lords of the Councill that is insufficient because no cause is shewn of his commitment which is expresly against the resolution of the Parliament and their Petition of Right in the time of this King which now is to which he had likewise given his assent so his taking by vertue of the said Warrant is wrongfull And for the second Warrant it is insufficient also and that notwithstanding that it be the Kings own for the King himself cannot imprison any man as our Books are to wit 16 H. 6. F. Monstrance de faits 1 H. 7.4 Hussey reports it to be the opinion of Markham in the time of Edw. 4. and Forrescue in his Book de laudibus Legum Angliae cap. 18. And the reason given is because no action of false imprisonment lies against the King if the Imprisonment be wrongfull and the King cannot be a wrong doer The Statute
are but in the case of Premunire By the Statute of 13. Eliz. chap. 1. for the avoiding of contentious and seditious Titles to the Crown it is enacted by the said Statute That he that shall declare the Successor of the King shall forfeit the moity of his goods c. so that the said offence although it be seditious is not treason by the Common Law nor is made treason by the Statute of 25. E. 3. nor by the Statute of 13 Eliz. By the Statute of 23 Eliz. chap. 2. he that speaks seditious or slanderous news of the Queen shall lose his ears or pay 200 l. and the second offence is made Felony The Statute of 35 Eliz. chap. 1. 〈…〉 seditious Sectaries which absent themselves from the Church they are to be punished 10 l. by the month Out of all which Statutes it may be collected that the word Sedition is taken variously according to the subject in hand And C. 4. Lord Cromwell's case Seditious is referred to doctrine There are offences more high in their nature than sedition which were not treason unlesse so declared by act of Parliament Every rebellious act is sedition yet if such Acts be not within the Statute of 23 Ed. 3. they are not treason 17 R. 2. chap. 8. Insurrection of villains and others is not made treason which proves that before this Act it was not treason And this Act of 17 R. 2. is repealed by the Statute of 1 H. 4. By the Statute of 3 and 4 E. 6. chap. 5. to assemble people to alter the Lawes is made treason if they continue together an houre after Proclamation made This assembly of people was sedition at the Common Law and the very assembly if they after dissolve upon Proclamation made is not treason by the said Statute By the Statute of 14 Eliz. chap. 1. it is made Felony malitiously and rebelliously to hold from the Queen any Castles c. but because this relates not to the Statute of 25 E. 3. it is not treason 2. It seems clearly that this Case is within the Petition of Right in which Magna Charta and the Statutes of 25 and 28 E. 3. are recited The grievance there was That divers have been imprisoned without any cause shewed to which they might make answer according to the Law And upon this Return nothing appears to be objected to which he might answer It appears not what that Act which is called Sedition was This is the very grief intended to be remedied by this Statute To this he cannot answer according to Law It appears not whether this were a seditious act trespasse or slander or what it was at all The words are Sedition against the King This helps not for every offence is against the King against his Crown and dignity that which disturbs the Common-wealth is against the King seditious doctrine is sedition against the King as is before said In 28 H. 6. vide Postrat fol. 19. the Lords and Commons desire the King that William de la Pool may be committed for divers treasons and sundry other heinous crimes and the Petition held not good because too generall Whereupon they exhibit particular Articles against him And therefore upon the whole matter he concluded and prayed that Mr. Long might be discharged from his imprisonment On another day Barckley and Davenport the Kings Sergeants argued for the King That this Return was sufficient in Law to detain them in prison Barckley began and said That the case is new and of great weight and consequence and yet under favour the prerogative of the King and the liberty of the Subject are not mainly touched therein for the case is not so generall as it hath been made but particular upon this particular Return The liberty of the Subject is a tender point the right whereof is great just and inviolable The prerogative of the King is an high point to which every subject ought to submit I intend not to make any discourse of the one or the other I will onely remember what the King hath determined upon them both in his speech which he made upon the Petition of right to wit That the Peoples liberties strengthen the Kings prerogative and that the Kings prerogative is to defend the Peoples liberties Thi● 〈◊〉 settle the hearts of the people concerning their liberty The way which I intend to treat in my Argument is to answer to the objections and reasons which have been made and to give some reasons whereby this Return shall be sufficient The objections which have been made are reducible to four heads 1. By what the prisoner here shall be said to be committed and detained 2. That this Commitment is against the Petition of right 3. That the Cause which is here returned is generall and incertain 4. That the offences mentioned in the Return are but Finable and therefore notwithstanding them the party is bailable For the first it hath been objected that the commitment here was by the Lords of the Privy Councill and the signification of this cause is by the King himself But I say that there is a further matter in the Return for the Lords of the Councill do it by the command of the King and they onely pursue this command I will not dispute whether the Lords of the Councill have power to commit an offender or no it is common in experience 33 H. 6.28 Poign●● case is expresse in it And in the Petition of right it is admitted that they may commit And this is not alledged there for a grievance but the grievance there was because the particular charge of commitment was not shewed Some Books have been objected to prove that the King though in person cannot commit any person 16 H. 6. F. Monstrance de faits 182. But the authority of that Book vanisheth if the case be put at large which was in trespasse for cutting of Trees The Defendant said That the place where c is parcell of the Mannor of D. whereof the King is seised in Fee and the King commands us to cut And the opinion of the Court was that this is no plea without shewing a specialty of the command of the King And there the whole Court saies That if the King command me to arrest a man whereby I arrest him he shall have trespasse or imprisonment against me although it be done in the presence of the King That the following words are to be understood as the principal case was of one command of the King by word and then such command by word to arrest a man is void And 1 H. 7.4 was objected Hussey saies that Markham said to King Edw. 4. that he cannot arrest a man for suspition of Treason or Felony because if he do wrong the party cannot have his action To this I say That the Book there is to be understood of a wrongfull arrest for there is spoken of an action of false imprisonment and a wrongfull arrest cannot be made by the
King 2. It stands not with the dignity of the King to arrest any man C. 4. 73. The King makes a Lease for years rendring rent with condition of re-entry for non-payment he shall take advantage of the condition without any demand and the reason there given is that a decorum and conveniency might be observed So it is not befitting for the King in person to arrest any man but the King may command another to do it Bracton lib. 2. de acquirendo rerum Dominio fol. 55. sayes That the Crown of the King is to do justice and judgment and facere pacem without which the Crown it self cannot subsist Severall constructions are to be made upon those severall words and the last words facere pacem imply that the King hath a coercive power Britton f. 1. amongst the Errata The King said in person Because we are not sufficient in person to do every thing We divide the charge into many parts We are the peoples Iustice and a Iustice implies one that hath power to do justice in every kind to wit by imprisonment or otherwise 20 H. 7.7 C. 11.85 it is said That the King is the chief Iustice. And Lambert in his Justice of Peace fol. 3. saies That in antient Histories the chief Iustice of England is called Capitalis Justicia Prima Justicia after the King in England So that the King hath the same power of Iustice as the Chief Iustice had This imprisonment here which is before conviction for any offen● is not used towards the Subject as imprisonment for any fault but is rather an arrest or restraint to avoid further inconveniencies 14 H. 7.8 A Iustice of Peace may arrest men riotously assembled for prevention of further mischief And the Book also saies That he may leave his servants there to arrest men for safeguard of the peace It is a case well known that if a house be set on fire every man may pull down the next house for prevention of greater mischief so it seems concerning the Incendiaries of the State they ought to be restrained and supprest lest others should be stirred up by them to the same combustion 22 ass 56. and 22 E. 4.45 in false imprisonment the Defendant justifies because the Plantiff was mad and out of his wits and that he had done some harm and that he had bound and beat him to avoid further harm which might have happened by his madnesse And the justification was held good So it is in matter of Government to avoid commotions the King ought to use his coercive power against those that are enraged The objection was that this course was against the Petition of Right But I answer That this case is out of the words of that Petition the words of the Petition were Whereas by the Statute called The great Charter and by the Statute of 28 E. 3. no free-man may be taken or imprisoned yet against the tenour of the said Statute c. divers of your subjects have of late been imprisoned without any cause shewed and when for their deliverance c. they were brought before the Iustices by Writs of Habeas corpus there to undergo and receive as the Court should order and their Keepers commanded to certifie the cause of their deteyner and no cause was certified but that they were detained by your Majesties speciall command signified by the Lords of your Council and yet were returned back to severall prisons without being charged with any thing to which they might make answer according to Law These last words are observable Without being charged with any thing to which they might make answer These words do not refer to the Return of the Habeas Corpus for the cause returned therein cannot be traversed 9 H. 6. 54. but the Court took it as true But the setting forth of the cause and the answer to the same cause is to be upon other proceedings to wit upon the indictment for the offence or otherwise And there is great difference between the return of a Writ to which a man may answer and the return of an Habeas corpus 10 E. 4. 3 H. 7.11 are that if the Sheriff return Rescous all certainties of every circumstance ought to be shewed because it is fitting that a thing certain be brought into judgment And upon shewing of the grievance as above the Petition is that no free-man in any such manner as before is mentioned be imprisoned or detained such and it hath relation to such imprisonment which is mentioned in the premises And imprisonment mentioned in the premises of the Petition is where no cause at all was mentioned then where any cause is shewed is out of the Petition and that such is the word relative appears by C. 11 62. where many cases are put to the same purpose which see The third objection was That the Return was generall and uncertain The Counsell on the other side had divided the words of the Return but that is to offer violence thereunto for an exposition shall not be made by fractions but upon the whole matter For the first words notable contempts It hath been said that the addition of the word notable is but to make a flourish But I say That notable is not the emphasis of the Return but it onely expresseth the nature of the offence and yet notable is a word observable by it self in the Law and implyes that the thing is known and noted By 27 E. 1. Sheriffs shall be punished that let notorious offenders to bayl and by the Statute of 4 H. 4. chap. 3. a notorious or common thief shall not make his purgation and 26 E. 3.71 in a trespasse for fals imprisonment the Defendant said That the Plantiff came into the Town of Huntington and because he was seen in the company of R. de Thorby who was a notorious thief he as Bailiff of Huntington took him upon suspition I confesse that for contempts is generall yea it is genus generalissimum and within the Petition of Right but the words are against Our Self It hath been said That this might be by irreverent words or gestures and Our Government It hath been said that this might be by contempt to the Kings Writ or by Retraxit as Beechers case is To this I answer That those words which are spoken to one purpose ought not to be wrested to another and this is against the common meaning of the words C. 4. Thou art a murderer the Defendant shall not afterwards explain it to be a murderer of Hares for the highest murder is intended So here the highest Government is intended 4. It hath been objected that for stirring up of sedition against Us may perhaps be but an offence Finable But those words joyned with the former words shew this to be an offence of the highest nature sedition is a speciall contempt And although sedition in it self may be but a generall offence yet here it is Sedition against Us and Our Government which makes
stirring of sedition Seditio as an approved Author saies imports discordiam to wit when the members of one body fight one against another The Lord of St. Albans who was lately the Lord Chancellor of England and was a Lawyer and great States-man likewise and well knew the acceptation of this word Sedition in our Law hath made an Essay of Sedition and the Title of the Essay is Of Seditions and Tumults the whole Essay deserves the reading And there is a Prayer in the Letany From sedition and heresie c. So that there Sedition is taken as a kind of Sect. This being the naturall signification of the word then the next labour shall be to see if any thing in our Law crosse this exposition And it seems clearly that there is not 2 H. 4. cap. 15. And it is in the Parliament-Roll numb 48. against Lollards who at that time were taken as hereticks saies That such Preachers which excite and stir up to sedition shall be convented before the Ordinary c. There sedition is taken for dissention and division in doctrine And this is not made treason by the said Statute although the said Statute be now repealed by the Statute of 25 H. 8. c. 4. 1 and 2 Phil. Mar. c. 3. which is in Rastall Newes 4. which is an act against seditious words and newes of the King and Queen which is a great misdemeanor and yet the punishment appointed to be inflicted by the said Statute is but the Pillory or a Fine of 100 l. And the said Statute by the Statute of 1 Eliz. c. 16. was extended to her also which Statute now by her death is expired which I pray may be observed 13 Eliz. cap. 1. against those who seditiously publish who are the true heirs of the Crown that they shal be imprisoned for a year c. And 13 Eliz. c. 2. the seditious bringing in of the Pope's Buls is made treason which implies that it was not so at the Common Law 23 Eliz. c. 2. If any person shal devise write or print any book containing any fals seditious and slanderous matter to the stirring up or moving of any rebellion c. every such offence shal be adjudged Felony And in an Indictment upon the said Statute which see Cook 's Entries f. 352.353 there are the words rebellionem seditionem movere and yet it is but felony 35 Eliz. c. 1. made against seditious Sectaries Also there are certain Books and Authorities in Law which expresse the nature of this word Sedition C. 4.13 the Lord Cromwell's case In an action for those words You like of those that maintain seditions against the Queens proceedings the Defendant pleaded That he intended the maintenance of a seditious Sermon and this was adjudged a good plea and ●ustification From which it followes that the Seditious Sermon mentioned in the Declaration and the maintaining of sedition against the Queen is all of one signification for if they might have been taken in a different sense the justification had not been good Phillips and Badby's case which is in C. 4. 19. a. which was objected by Serjeant Berkley makes strongly for me for there an action upon the case was brought by a person for those words Thou hast made a seditious Sermon and moved the people to sedition this day And although it were there adjudged that the action lay yet the reason of the Iudgment is observable which was because the words scandalize the Plaintiff in his profession which imply that if they had not scandalized him in his profession no action would have lain And ordinary words if they scandalize a man in his profession are actionable as to say to a Iudge that he is a corrupt man or to a Merchant that he is a Bank-rupt although if they were spoken to another man they would not bear an action And although the Book say that no act followed there yet if the matter objected had been treason the very will had been punishable and by consequence a great slander But it is observed that words which imply an inclination onely to sedition are not actionable as Seditious knave but inclination to treason is treason therefore words which imply it are actionable And also for divers words an action upon the case will lye which induce not treason or felony as for calling a woman Whore by which she loseth her marriage and such like Then sedition is no offence in it self but the aggravation of an offence and no Indictment as I have said afore was ever seen of this singly by it self Tr. 21. E. 3. roll 23. Sir John Garbut's case which was put before by Mason the Indictment was in prejudice of his Crown and in manifest sedition and yet the offence there was but a Robbery It is true that upon his arraignment he stood mute therefore the Roll is that he was put to penance that is so strong and hard pain and this proves that it was not treason for if a man arraigned of treason stand mute yet the usuall judgment of treason shall be given on him And it is true also that he cannot have his Clergy because insidiator viarum was in the Indictment which if it was outs the party of his Clergy untill the Statute of 4 H. 4. c. 2. as is observed in C. 11. Poulter's case And upon the same Roll of 21 E. 3. there are four other Indictments of the same nature where Seditiosè is contained in them Anno 1585 Queen Elizabeth sent a Letter which I have seen by the hands of the noble Antiquary Sir Robert Cotton to the Maior of London for the suppressing of divers seditious Libels which were published against her Princely Government and yet in the conclusion of the Letter it appears that they were onely against the Earl of Leicester and this was to be published onely by Proclamation in London 5 H. 4. numb 11. and 13. The Earl of Northumberland preferred a Petition to the King in Parliament in which he confesseth that he had not kept his Majesties Laws as a liege subject and also confesseth the gathering of power and the giving of Liveries Wherefore he petitioned the worship of the King for so are the words for his grace The King upon this Petition demanded the opinion of the Lords of Parliament and of the Iudges assistant if any thing contained within the said Petition were treason or no and it was resolved by them all that nothing as it is mentioned in the said Petition was treason but great misdemeanors and yet truly though not fully there mentioned it was a great rebellion and insurrection But they adjudged according to the said Petition as you are now to judge upon the Return as it is made here In Mich. 33 Cawdry's case Sedition and Schism were described As schism is a separation from the unity of the Church so sedition is a separation from the unity of the Common-wealth And an Author saies that a seditious person differs from a
Moneys disbursed for the War delivered to the Commons p. 236. The Commons present a Remonstrance to the King p. 247. And send a Message to the Duke p. 251. Afterwards prefer an Impeachment against him p. 307. Managed at a Conference by Eight Members p. 306 307 308 c. Their Message to secure the Duke p. 361. Discontented at the Commitment of Sir John Elliot p. 362. Their Protestation concerning him and Sir Dudley Diggs p. 364 365. A great contest in the House of Peers concerning the imprisonment of the Earl of Arundel p. 367 368 c. The Commons dissatisfied that the Duke is chosen Chancellor of Cambridge p. 376 377. The Lords Petition to the King to stay the dissolving of the Parliament p. 402. A Commission to dissolve the Parliament p. 403. The Commons Remonstrance p. 404 405 c. The Kings Declaration against the Commons Remonstrance Appendix p. 1. A Speech to the Parliament without doors p. 485. A Grand Committee setled p. 494. Debates in Parliament as to grievances p. 496. The Parliament Debates the business of the Habeas Corpus p. 502. Arguments about it p. 503 504 c. A Conference about the Petition of Right p. 533. Their petition about the Billeting of Soldiers p. 548. Archbishop Abbot his Speech concerning the Petition of Right p. 552. Propositions tendered by the Lords instead of the Petition of Right p. 553. The Commons dissatisfied with the Propositions p. 554. They meet the 20 of January p. 655. Make enquiry about the Petition of Right and the violation thereof ibid. A Report from the Committee concerning Religion p. 658. The Vow of the House of Commons p. 666. Several debates about Tonnage and Poundage ib. The King commands the Speaker not to put the Question p. 670. Debates thereupon ibid. The Speaker held in the Chair ib. The King sends the Usher of the Black-Rod and he is not admitted ibid. The King grants Warrants to apprehend several Members of Parliament p. 671. His Speech at the dissolution of the Parliament p. 672. Members of Parliament are examined before the Lords of the Council ibid. Questions propounded by the Iudges concerning the imprisoned Members ibid. Paul Sir George p. 244 Pembroke Earl p. 217 Pennington Captain p. 179 334 335 Petition of right p. 597 598 Perrot Sir James p. 55 Phillips Sir Robert p. 55 498 505 543 559 655 Plague increaseth in London p. 175 Number of them who died Anno 1625. Popes assent to the Match p. 66. His Letter to the Duke of Buckingham p. 80. His Dispensation comes clogged p. 84. Pope Urban to King James p. 93. To Prince Charls p. 98 Preachers directions concerning them p. 64 65. Proclamation against Preaching and Disputing p. 416 Privy-Seals p. 420 Projects for raising money App. 12 Proxies in the House of Peers p. 273 Puritans p. 22 a. 171. Described by Sir Jo. Lamb p. 424 425 Pym Mr. p. 55 339 531 568 604 Q. QUeen Anne dieth p. 10 R. RAwleigh Sir Walter his life sought by Gundomar p. 4. And is Sacrificed to satisfie Spain p. 9. A Letter concerning him ibid. Romish Recusants Immunities granted to them p. 14. The King sollicited for favor to them p. 36 37. A Petition and Remonstrance against them p. 40 41. The Kings Answer thereunto p. 46. The King shews further favor to them p. 52. Excused p. 53. Articles in favor of them p. 89. Pope Urbans Letter on behalf of the Romish Religion p. 95 98. They promote the Match with Spain p. 102 103 King James his Letter concerning a Petition against them p. 140. The Petition it self p. 141. The Kings Answer to the Petition p. 143. Recusants taken at Clerkenwell p. 478. A Conference against them p. 510. Debates in Parliament against them and Priests arraigned at Newgate p. 668. Petition of Right p. 597 598. Rhee Island p. 431 466. Several Passages there p. 467 468 469. Richardson Sir Thomas p. 23. Rich●●● Sir Nathaniel p. 55 361 614 Rochel p. 178 411 430 467 594 595 647 648 Rolls Merchant p. 654 665 666 Rous Mr. p. 593. His Speech concerning Religion p. 657. Rudyard Sir Benjamin p. 497 557 629 S. SAckvile Sir Edward p. 15 16 31 Sectaries p. 22 a. Selden Mr. p. 55 314 528 536 569 615 631 640. Brought upon a Habeas Corpus p. 689 692. Seymor Sir Francis p. 495. Sherborne Mr. Sherland Master p. 345 346 c. Sheriffs Oath excepted against pag. 201. Ship Vantguard employed against Rochel p. 178. Ships to be set out by Port Towns pag. 419. Ships Arrears for Fraight pag. 470. Sibthorp Dr. complains against the Puritans p. 424. His Sermon concerning Loan p. 426. See 440 448. Smith Richard Bishop of Calcedon sent into England p. 158 159 645. Soveraign Power p. 50 a. 567 568 569 570 571 572 573 c. Spain vide Digby Speaker vide Crew Sir Thomas Finch Sir Hennage Finch Sir John Spinola p. 14 15. Stafford Captain p. 15. Star Blazing appears p. 8. Opinion thereupon ibid. Star-Chamber Informati●● against Members of Parliament p. 675. Order there concerning the Duke p. 638. Stroud Mr. brought upon a Habeas Corpus p. 675. Appendix p. 18. T. TErm adjourned to Reading p. 201. Turner Dr. A Physitian his Queries ibid. His explanation p. 222 226. V. VAlentine Mr. his Case Append 49 Vassal Mr. his Goods seised on about Custom p. 653. Proceeded against in Star-Chamber ibid. His Plea to the Information ibid. Votes for Reparation Appendix 56 57 Vere Sir Horatio p. 14 15 40. Villers Sir Edward p. 23. Undertakers ibid. W. WAlter Sir William pag. 223. Wandesford Mr. p. 356 546 615. Warwick Earl sent to secure Langor-point p. 199. Wentworth Sir Thomas p. 496 527 529 544 560 568. Weston Sir Richard p. 12 f. 23 56 66 129 219. Made Lord Treasurer p. 646. Williams Dr. Sworn Keeper of the Great Seal p. 36 39 52. Excuses the Kings favor to Recusants p. 61 62 63 151 164 176. Refuses to proceed against the Puritans p. 424. A Passage of the Information in Star-Chamber against him p. 425. Wilmot Captain p. 15 Wimbleton Viscount p. 198 Y. YElverton Sir Henry accused by the Commons pag. 31. His Speech thereupon ibid. At which King James is offended p. 32. His particular Answer in Serie Temporis ibidem King James again offended with him p. 33. His Sentence and Restauration p. 34. Z. ZUinga Don Balthazar pag. 38 59. FINIS A CATALOGUE of such BOOKS as are Printed for and sold by Mr. George Thomason at the Rose and Crown in St. Pauls Church-yard SAncti Johannis Chrysostomi opera Graecè octo voluminibus Etonae Folio Purchas his Pilgrimage or Relations of the World and the Religions observed in all ages and places discovered from the Creation unto this present containing a Theological and Geographical History of Asia Africa and America with the Islands adjacent c. By Samuel Purchas Folio Hakluytus Posthumus or Purchas his Pilgrimes containing a History of the World in Sea
Soldiers commanded not to disband Trade prohibited with Spain Trained Bands exercised Part of Michaelmas Term adjourned The Term at Reading Hopes of a Parliament Sir Edward Cook High Sheriff his exceptions to the Sheriffs Oath The Seal taken from Bishop Will●ams sequestred formerly and given to Sir Thomas Coventry A Parliament Summoned Recusants to be Excommunicated The King resolved to leave Mr. Montague to the Parliament Preparations for the Kings Coronation A Proclamation for all that have Forty pound per annum to come and receive the Order of Knighthood A Thanksgiving for the Plagues ceasing Number of those who died of the Plague The Ceremonies at the Kings Coronation Archbish. P.P. The Kings Answer A Second Parliament meets The Lord Keepers Speech Sir Hennage Finch chosen Speaker His Speech Grievances taken into consideration Grievances laid open Articles against Mr Montague People prohibited for going to Mass at Ambassadors Houses The Atturney's Letter to the Judges concerning Recusants The Council of War for the Palatinate questioned in the House of Commons The Earl of Pembroke at a Conference presseth Supply Reports from the Committee concerning Evils and Remedies A Committee of the Lords House to consider of the safety of the Kingdom comunicated to the Commons Not well resented The Kings Letter to the Speaker Sir Richard Westons Message The Commons Answer to the Kings Message by Sir Richard Weston The Kings Reply Doctor Turners Queries against the Duke Another Message from the King by Sir Richard Weston Dr. Turners Explanation Dr. Turners Letter to the Speaker Sir W. Walters opinion of the Cause of Grievances Sir Iohn Eliot pursues the Argument against the Duke Three Subsidies and Three Fifteens Voted Debate concerning the Duke resumed The Kings Speech March 29. The Lord Keepers Speech The King proceeds The Duke at a Conference explains the Kings late Speech and the Lord Keepers Declaration The Duke renders an account of his Negotiation in the Low-Countreys The Lord Conway vindicates the Duke A List of Moneys disbursed for the War The Lords Petition touching Precedency chalenged by Scots and Irish Nobles The Lord Conways Letter to the Earl of Bristol The Earl of Bristols Letter to the Lord Conway The Earl of Bristol petitions the House of Lords The Petition referred to the Committee of Priviledges The Kings Letter to the Earl of Bristol The Earl of Bristol Petitions the Lords upon receipt of his Writ A Message from the King to the House of Lords The Marshal of Middlesex's Petition touching Priests The Commons Remonstrance to the King in Answer to his Majesties and the Lord Keepers Speech The House adjourned for a week Private advice given to the Duke The Bishops commanded to attend the King The Dukes answer to a Message from the Commons reported Glanviles report from the Committee The Kings Message touching new matter against the Duke The Earl of Bristol brought to the bar of the Lords House Articles against the Earl of Bristol The Earl of Bristols expressions at the time of his Accusation The Earl of Bristols speech at the Bar of the Lords House at the delivery of his Articles against the Duke He layes open his Case to the Parliament The Lord Chamberlain attests the truth of what the Earl had said The Earl proceeds The Earl of Bristols Articles against the Duke The Earl of Bristols Articles against the Lord Conway A Message from the King to the Lords concerning Bristol's Articles against the Duke The Reasons The Earl of Bristols Speech by way of Introduction before he gave in his Answer His Service to the Palatinate when he was Ambassador to the Emperor His Service to the Palatinate before his Ambassie to the Emperor His arrival in Spain and behavior there His carriage concerning the Match Means to shew that the Match was intended by the Spaniard Bristol not the cause of the Delays in Spain He never disswaded the King to take Arms. He advised both King and Prince to a Protestant Match He never moved his Majesty to set Priests at liberty A Declaration signed by my Lord Conway in behalf of Roman Catholicks He perswaded not the Prince to change his Religion He advised both King and Prince if they will Match with a Catholick rather to Spain then France but cheifly to a Protestant Princess He constantly professed the Protestant religion King Iames proposeth a Match to the Prince Palatine between his eldest son and the Emperors daughter The Earls Reasons why he was forward to consummate the Match til warrant came to the contrary The restitution of the Palatinate promised by the King of Spain and Olivarez The advantages of the Spanish Match to England The Commons Articles against the Duke His ingrossing many Offices Plurality of Offices His buying of Offices His buying the Cinque 〈◊〉 the Lord Zouch The first Article enlarged by Mr. Herbert The second and third enlarged by him His neglect of guarding the Seas His taking a Ship called St Peter of Newhaven The fourth Article enlarged by Mr Selden The Fifth Articles enlarged by Mr Selden His delivering Ships into the hands of the King of France Those ships to be used to his knowledge against Rochel Mr. Glanvile enlargeth the Sixth Article Mr. Glanvile inlarges the Seventh and Eighth Articles Mr. Pym enlargeth the 11. Article The 10. Article enlarged His imbezling and engrossing the Kings money and Lands Mr Sherland enlarges the Ninth Article He enlargeth the Twelfth Article The Thirteenth Article enlarged by Mr. Wandesford Sir Ioh ●ll●●●● speech concluding the Dukes Impeachment Sir Iohn Elliot and Sir Dudley Diggs committed to the Tower Private Suggestions to the King in behalf of the Duke Kings Speech concerning the Duke The Commons Message by Sir Nath. Rich to seeure the Duke The Dukes Speech against the Commons The Commons discontented at the imprisonment of their Members Sir Dudley Carleton's Speech The Commons Protestation touching words imputed to Sir Dudley Diggs Sir D. Diggs released out of prison protests he never spake the words charged on him The King is satisfied that the words were not spoken The Duke dissatisfied Thirty six Lords protest they heard not the words supposed to be spoken at a Conference S●r Iohn Elliot is released out of the Tower Is charged by Sir Dudley Carlton for his Speech against the Duke He dischargeth himself The Lords Petition to the King about the Earl of Arundel imprisoned in the time of Parliament The Kings Message to the Lords touching the Earl of Arundel The Lords resolved to maintain their priviledges A Remonstrance and Petition of the Peers in behalf of the Earl of Arundel The Kings first Answer to the Remonstrance and Petition The King promiseth to answer the said Remonstrance The Lords are urgent for an Answer The King returns another Answer to the Lords touching the Remonstrance Another Petition to the King touching the Earl of Arundel The King takes exception at the Petition The Lords desire to know of his Majesty to what part of the Petition he takes
exception The Petition presented again and the word present left out The Kings answer to the Petition so ordered The Kings Answer to the Petition Another Petition of the Lords touch● the Earl of Arundel The Kings Answer to this Petition The Lords adjourn in disgust till the morrow His Majesties Message to the Lords Upon this Message the Lords adjourn for a seven-night Another Message to the Lords from his Majesty concerning the Earl of Arundel The Lords adjourn again Another Message from the King to the Lords concerning the Earl of Arundel Another Message to the Lords from his Majesty The Earl of Arundel released comes to the House The Duke chosen Chancellor of Cambridge during his Impeachment The Earl of Berk-shire's Letter to Mr. Chester touching Votes conferred upon him in the Choice of the Chancellor of Cambridge The Commons Answer His Majesties Reply The Dukes Letter of Acknowledgement to the University of Cambridge The Kings Letter to the said University The Duke of Buckinghams Speech to the Lords House before he gave in his Answer His Answer and Plea to the Impeachment of the House of Commons His Charge touching Plurality of Offices His Charge touching his buying the Admirals place The Charge touching his buying the Wardenship of the Cinque Ports The Charge touching his not guarding the Seas The Charge touching the unjust stay of the Ship of Newhaven called the St. Peter after Sentence The Charge touching his Extortion of Ten thousand pounds from the East-India Company with the abuse of the Parliament The Charge touching his putting the Ships into the hands of the French Since the Dukes Answer delivered into the House he hath himself openly declared to their Lordships That for the better clearing of his Honor and Fidelity to the State in that part of his Charge which is objected against him by this Seventh Article he hath been an earnest and humble Suiter to his Majesty to give him leave in his Proofs to unfold the whole Truth and Secret of that great Action and hath obtained his Majesties gratious leave therein and accordingly doth intend to make such open and clear Proof thereof that he nothing doubteth but the same when it shall appear will not onely clear him from blame but be a Testimony of his care and faithfulness in serving the State The Charge touching his practice of the employment of them against Rochel The Charge touching the compelling the Lord R. to buy Honor. The Charge touching his selling of places of Judicature The Charge touching his procuring of Honors for his poor Kinred The Charge touching his exhausting intercepting and mis-employing the Kings Revenue The Charge touching his transcendent presumption in giving Physick to the King The Kings Letter to the Speaker touching speedy supply to his Majesty The Commons Petition to the King concerning Recusants The Commons Answer to his Majesties Letter by the Speaker * Mr Glanvile The Kings Declaration of the Causes of assembling and dissolving the two last Parliaments The King takes notice of the intended Remonstrance in a Proclamation Another Proclamation against preaching or disputing the Arminian Controversies pro or con The King commands an Information to be preferred against the Duke in Star-Chamber The King forbids to solicite any Suit prohibited in the Book of Bounty The Council order all Customs to be paid And Forfeitures arising from Recusants A Commission to compound with Recusants A Proclamation to make the Kings Revenue certain The King sends to the Nobles to lend him liberally He demands of the City the Loan of One hundred thousand pounds The Port Towns are to furnish Ships The Ports of Dorsetshire send an excuse The City of London desire an Abatement of their Ships Are checkt by the Council Privy Seals issued out A Fast observed Commissions to Deputy Lieutenants to Muster Try and Array men Inhabitants withdrawn from Ports and Sea Towns required to return Ships sent to the River of Elbe A Fleet prepared The King of Denmarks Declaration why he takes up Arms against the Emperor A Battel between the Dane and the Emperor The overthrow of the King of Denmark an Inducement to the raising of Moneys by Loan A Declaration concerning Loan-Money Private Instructions to the Commissioners for the general Loan Billeting of Soldiers Commissions for Martial Law The Lords to advance the Loan Sir Randolph Crew removed from his place for not furthering the Loan Informations sent to the Council Table against the Bishop of Lincoln The Bishop refuses to proceed Ex Officio against the Puritans * Meaning the Petition against Recusants at Oxford Puritans described by Sir Iohn Lamb. Information in Star-Chamber against the Bishop of Lincoln Bishop Laud his Dream The interpretation thereof Six thousand English in the Service of the Vnited Provinces Sir Charls Morgan General of the English forces Some do refuse the Loan though others offered to lend the refusers money so they would but subscribe They are ordered to be pressed for Soldiers The Refusers to lend were severely deal with An. 1627. Dr. Sibthorps Sermon concerning the Loan Dr. Manwaring in two Sermons promotes the Loan Distastes and jealousies between England and France The French dismissed Ill resented in France Private Transactions to engage in a War against France The King of Great Britains Declaration concerning a War with France The Duke of Buckingham Admiral and General His Commission The Duke sets ●ail with the Fleet and Army The Rochellers are fearful to admit the English Yet call an Assembly and heard Sir William Beechers Message The Rochellers still timerous A well affected party in Rochel The Duke communicates his design to Sobiez The Duke lands his Army at the Isle of Rhee A ●ore ●ight at the landing The Army stays five days after the fight A Fort neglected to be taken in The French astonished at the landing of the English The Duke comes before the Fort at St. Martins Blocks up the Cittadel Gentlemen secured and confined for refusing to part with money upon the Loan Sir John Elliots Petition to the King concerning the Loan Archbishop Abbot in disfavor The Commission to Sequester Archbishop Abbot from all his Ecclesiasti●al Offices The Archbishops Narrative concerning his disgrace at Court His Age when this befel him His indisposition kept him from Court and exposed him to censure The Duke offended with the Archbishop for not stooping to him The Archbishop is foretold of the Dukes displeasure Sibthorps Sermon for Loan Money The Dukes design in having this Sermon sent to the Archbishop to Licence it Mr Murrey sent from the King with the Sermon to the Archbishop to have it Licenced by himself The discourse by way of Dialogue between the Archbishop and Mr. Murrey on that occasion The Archbishops Reasons why he could not Licence it His Majesty returns Answer by Mr. Murrey to those Reasons of the Archbishop The Archbishop desires Bishop Laud may be sent to him to treat of that Sermon The Archbishop sends his Objections to the Court
the zeal of our true Religion in which we have béen born and wherein by Gods grace we are resolved to die the safety of Your Majesties person who is the very life of Your people the happiness of Your Children and Posterity the honor and good of the Church and State dearer unto us then our own lives having kindled these affections truly devoted to Your Majesty And séeing out of our duty to Your Majesty we have already resolved to give at the end of this Session one intire Subsidy for the present relief of the Palatinate onely to be paid in the end of February next which cannot well be effected but by passing a Bill in a Parl●●mentary course before Christmas We most humbly beséech Your Majesty as our assured hope is that You will then also vouchsafe to give life by Your Royal Assent to such Bills as before that time shall be prepared for Your Majesties honor and the general good of Your people And that such Bills may be also accompanied as hath béen accustomed with Your Majesties Gracious Pardon which procéeding from Your own méer Grace may by Your Highness direction be drawn to that Latitude and Extent as may best sort with Your Majesties bounty and goodness And that not onely Felons and Criminal Offenders may take benefit thereof but that Your good Subjects may receive ease thereby And if it shall so stand with Your good pleasure That it may extend to the relief of the old Debts and Duties to the Crown before the First year of Your Majesties Reign to the discharge of Alienations without Licence and misusing of Liveries and Oustre le Maine before the first Summons of this Parliament and of concealed Wardships and not suing of Liveries and Oustre le Maines before the Twelfth year of Your Majesties Reign Which gratious Favor would much comfort Your good Subjects and ease them from vexation with little loss or prejudice to Your own profit And we by our daily and devout Prayers to the Almighty the Great King of Kings shall contend for a blessing upon our endeavors and for Your Majesties long and happy Reign over us and for Your Childrens Children after You for many and many Generations The House had sufficient cause to set forth the danger of true Religion and the Miseries of the Professors thereof in Foreign parts when besides the great wound made in Germany and the cruelties of the prevailing House of Austria the Protestants in France were almost ruined by Lewis the Thirteenth being besieged at once in several places as in Montauban by the King and in Rochel by Count Soysons and the Duke of Guise And for their relief the King of England prevailed nothing by sending of Sir Edward Herbert since Baron of Cherbury and after him the Viscount Doncaster Ambassador for Mediation The King having Intelligence of the former Remonstrance wrote his Letter to the Speaker To Our Trusty and Welbeloved Sir Thomas Richardson Knight Speaker of the House of COMMONS Mr Speaker WE have heard by divers Reports to our great grief That our distance from the Houses of Parliament caused by our indisposition of health hath imboldned the fiery and popular Spirits of some of the House of Commons to argue and debate publickly of the matters far above their reach and capacity tending to our high dishonor and breach of Prerogative Royal. These are therefore to command you to make known in our Name unto the House That none therein shall presume henceforth to meddle with any thing concerning our Government or deep matters of State and namely not to deal with our dearest Sons Match with the Daughter of Spain nor to touch the honor of that King or any other our Friends and Confederates And also not to meddle with any mans particulars which have their due motion in our ordinary Courts of Iustice. And whereas we hear they have sent a Message to Sir Edwin Sandis to know the reasons of his late restraint you shall in our Name resolve them That it was not for any misdemeanor of his in Parliament but to put them out of doubt of any question of that nature that may arise among them hereafter you shall resolve them in our Name That we think our self very free and able to punish any mans misdemeanors in Parliament as well during their sitting as after Which we mean not to spare hereafter upon any occasion of any mans insolent behavior there that shall be ministred unto us And if they have already touched any of these points which we have forbidden in any Petition of theirs which is to be sent unto us it is our pleasure that you shall tell them That except they reform it before it come to our hands we will not deign the hearing nor answering of it Dated at New-Market 3 Dec. 1621. Hereupon they drew up another Petition which they sent accompanied with the former Remonstrance Most Dread and Gratious Soveraign WE your most humble and loyal Subjects the Knights Citizens and Burgesses Assembled in the Commons House of Parliament full of grief and unspeakable sorrow through the true sence of your Majesties displeasure expressed by your Letter lately sent to our Speaker and by him related and read unto us Yet comforted again with the assurance of your grace and goodness and of the sincerity of our own intentions and procéedings whereon with confidence we can relie In all humbleness beséech your most Excellent Majesty that the loyalty and dutifulness of as faithful and loving Subjects as ever served or lived under a gratious Soveraign may not undeservedly suffer by the mis-information of partial and uncertain Reports which are ever unfaithful Intelligencers But that your Majesty would in the clearness of your own Iudgment first vouchsafe to understand from our selves and not from others what our humble Declaration and Petition resolved upon by the Universal voice of the House and proposed with your gratious Favor to be presented unto your Sacred Majesty doth contain Upon what occasion we entred into consideration of those things which are therein contained with what dutiful respect to your Majesty and your service we did consider thereof and what was our true intention thereby And that when your Majesty shall thereby truly discern our dutiful affections you will in your Royal Iudgment frée us from those heavy charges wherewith some of our Members are burthened and wherein the whole House is involved And we humbly beséech your Majesty that you will not hereafter give credit to private Reports against all or any of the Members of our House whom the whole have not censured until your Majesty have béen truly informed thereof from our selves And that in the mean time and ever we may stand upright in your Majesties grace and good opinion than which no worldly consideration is or can be dearer unto us When your Majesty had Reassembled us in Parliament by your Royal Commandment sooner then we expected and did vouchsafe by the mouths
of thrée honorable Lords to impart unto us the weighty occasions moving your Majesty thereunto and from them we did understand these particulars That notwithstanding your Princely and pious endeavors to procure peace the time is now come that Janus Temple must be opened That the voice of Bellona must be heard and not the voice of the Turtle That there was no hope of peace nor any truce to be obtained no not for a few days That your Majesty must either abandon your own Children or engage your self in a War wherein consideration is to be had what Foot what Horse what Money will be sufficient That the Lower Palatinate was seised upon by the Army of the King of Spain as Executor of the Ban there in quality of Duke of Burgundy as the Upper Palatinate was by the Duke of Bavaria That the King of Spain at his own charge had now at least five Armies on foot That the Princes of the Union were disbanded but the Catholick League remained firm whereby those Princes so dissevered were in danger one by one to be ruined That the estate of those of the Religion in Foreign parts was miserable and that out of these considerations we were called to a War and forthwith to advise for a supply for kéeping the forces in the Palatinate from disbanding and to foresee the means for raising and maintaining the Body of an Army for the War against the Spring We therefore out of our zeal to your Maiesty and your Posterity with more alacrity and celerity than ever was presidented in Parliament did Address our selves to the service commended unto us And although we cannot conceive That the honor and safety of your Maiesty and your Posterity the Patrimony of your Children invaded and possessed by their enemies the welfare of Religion and State of your Kingdom are matters at any time unfit for our déepest consideration in time of Parliament And though before this time we were in some of these points silent yet being now invited thereunto and led on by so iust an occasion we thought it our duties to provide for the present supply thereof and not onely to turn our eyes on a War abroad but to take care for the securing of our peace at home which the dangerous increase and insolency of Popish Recusants apparently visibly and sensibly did lead us unto The consideration whereof did necessarily draw us truly to represent unto your Maiesty what we conceive to be the causes what we feared would be the effects and what we hoped might be the remedies of these growing Evils among which as incident and unavoidable we fell upon some things which séem to touch upon the King of Spain as they have relation to Popish Recusants at home to the Wars by him maintained in the Palatinate against your Maiesties Children and to his several Armies now on foot yet as we conceived without touch of dishonor to that King or any other Prince your Maiesties Confederate In the Discourse whereof we did not assume to our selves any power to determine of any part thereof nor intend to incroach or intrude upon the Sacred Bounds of Your Royal Authority to whom and to whom onely we acknowledge it doth belong to resolve of Peace and War and of the Marriage of the most Noble Prince your Son But as your most loyal and humble Subjects and Servants representing the whole Commons of your Kingdom who have a large Interest in the happy and prosperous estate of your Majesty and your Royal Posterity and of the flourishing estate of our Church and Commonwealth did resolve out of our Cares and Fears truly and plainly to demonstrate these things to your Majesty which we were not assured could otherwise come so fully and clearly to your knowledge and that being done to lay the same down at your Majesties féet without expectation of any other Answer of your Majesty touching these higher points then what at your good pleasure and in your own time should be held fit This being the effect of that we had formerly resolved upon and these the Occasions and Reasons inducing the same Our humble suit to your Majesty and confidence is That your Majesty will be gratiously pleased to receive at the hands of these our Messengers our former humble Declaration and Petition and vouchsafe to read and favorably to interpret the same and that to so much thereof as containeth our humble Petition concerning Iesuits Priests and Popish Recusants the Passage of Bills and Granting your Royal Pardon you will vouchsafe an Answer unto us And whereas your Majesty by the general words of your Letter séemeth to restrain us from intermedling with Matters of Government or Particulars which have their motion in the Courts of Iustice the generality of which words in the largeness of the extent thereof as we hope beyond your Majesties intention might involve those things which are the proper Subjects of Parliamentary occasions and discourse And whereas your Majesty doth séem to abridge us of the Antient Liberty of Parliament for Fréedom of Spéech Iurisdiction and Iust Censure of the House and other procéedings there wherein we trust in God we shall never transgress the bounds of Loyal and Dutiful Subjects a Liberty which we assure our selves so Wise and so Iust a King will not infringe the same being our antient and undoubted Right and an Inheritance received from our Ancestors without which we cannot fréely debate nor clearly discern of things in question before us nor truly inform your Majesty In which we have béen confirmed by your Maiesties most gratious former Spéeches and Messages We are therefore now again inforced in all humbleness to pray your Maiesty to allow the same and thereby to take away the Doubts and Scruples your Maiesties late Letter to our Speaker hath wrought upon us So shall we your loyal and loving Subiects ever acknowledge your Maiesties Iustice Grace and Goodness and be ready to perform that service to your Maiesty which in the true affection of our hearts we profess and pour out our daily and devout Prayers to the Almighty for your Maiesties long life happy and religious Reign and prosperous Estate and for your Royal Posterity after you for ever The King having rejected the first Petition gave to the later this Answer following WE must here begin in the same fashion that we would have done if the first Petition had come to our hands before we had made a stay thereof which is to repeat the first words of the late Queen of famous memory used by her in answer to an Insolent Proposition made by a Polonian Ambassador unto her that is Legatum expectabamus Heraldum accipimus For we had great reason to expect that the first Message from your House should have been a Message of Thanksgiving for our continued gratious behavior towards our people since your last Recess not onely by our Proclamation of Grace wherein were contained Six or seven and thirty Articles all of several