portrait of Thomas Sutton Obijt Decemb. 12ᵒ. 1611 Aetati ˢ Suae 79. Thomas Sutton. Deo Dante Dedit. F.H. Van Hove. Sculp. Domus Carthusiana: OR AN ACCOUNT OF THE MOST NOBLE FOUNDATION OF THE CHARTERHOUSE NEAR Smithfield in LONDON. BOTH Before and since the REFORMATION. WITH THE Life and Death of Thomas Sutton Esq the FOUNDER thereof. And his last WILL and TESTAMENT. To which are Added several Prayers, fitted for the Private Devotions and Particular Occasions of the Ancient Gentlemen, etc. By SAMVEL HERNE, Fellow of Clare-Hall in CAMBRIDGE. Bona Fama est propria Possessio Defunctorum. LONDON, Printed by T.R. for Richard Marriott, and Henry Brome, at the Gun in St. Paul's Churchyard, the West end, MDCLXXVII. IMPRIMATUR, Antonius Saunders, Reverendissimo Archi-Episcopo Cantuariensi à Sacris Domesticis. TO THE MOST REVEREND FATHER in GOD, GILBERT, Lord Archbishop of Canterbury, his Grace, etc. TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE, RIGHT REVEREND, AND MOST WORTHY GOVERNORS OF THE . May it please your Lordships, AS your Honours bear a particular Relation to that Goodly and Noble Foundation, whereof I design to give an Account: I had been unjust if I had deprived your Lordships of the Patronage of That, which is confirmed unto you by a Royal Hand; for which you have his Majesty's Letters Patent. Therefore, in your most Noble Breasts is justly lodged the Right and Management of this glorious and weighty Benefaction: and the Trust is so judiciously seated, that all Wise men conclude, our Generous Founder added more Glory to the Reformed Religion, by choosing such Honourable Patrons, than ever he could expect from the single Instance of his own Bounty; and so he is become a double Benefactor. I find, since the first Foundation, a considerable accession of Revenues, added by the care and diligence of your Lordship's Wisdom: as also a numerous Train of Excellent Orders, made for the better Government and Regulation of the Members therein contained. After all this, I could not satisfy myself, why all these Great and Magnificent Actions should lie dormant, and be buried within the narrow bounds of this Religious House, and not appear to the World in their full Beauty and Proportion: Nor could I render any tolerable Account of this long continued Silence, unless your Lordship's labour to be as Eminent for Humility, and a generous Contempt of Glory, as you have approved yourselves for Fidelity and Conduct. Upon this Account I am bound to beg your Honour's Pardon, seeing I not only begin this way to Trespass; but also add another Crime, by presuming to undertake a Labour so much above my feeble Strength and Capacity: However, I am resolved in some measure to have a regard to my Duty (as well as I can) and recommend that to Posterity, which it would be a Sin to conceal. For I must needs declare, I could do no less than pay this humble Acknowledgement to the lasting Glory of our Founder, the deserved Honour of your Lordships, and the Memory I own to that Place, wherein I had the Happiness to be Educated. How often has the warm Influence of your Religious Cares visited these Walls of Retirement? and refreshed the fainting Spirits of the poor Inhabitants: This cannot but make you the happy Returns of Joy and Glory hereafter. For the Interrogations at the last Day will relate to those Duties, which now are the kind Purposes, and constant Entertainment of your Souls. That Heaven would graciously bestow on your Lordships, a long Life, and a continued Happiness, with all the Blessings of this, and the endless Joys of that World to come, is the hearty Prayer of Your Honour's most humble and most faithful Servant, Samuel Herne. THE PREFACE. I Serve no other ends in piecing together these few Collections, than to give an honest Instance of my Duty and Thankfulness: for wherever any Obligation lies upon a man, common honesty leads him to endeavour to pay the Debt. Now, seeing it is impossible for me, according to my small Talon, to discharge the Total Sum, I am resolved, as much as in me lies, to make this public Acknowledgement, viz. to be just and thankful. For the Apostle makes Ingratitude the Compendium of all Impiety, 2 Tim. 3.2. in these two words, unthankful, unholy. Thus you see the plain reason why I bestow my thoughts upon the Memory of this Great man: to whom I, and many others own all we can express, (not that I reflect upon the silence of any man, who, for aught I know, may in his private Closet give more substantial Testimonials of his Thankfulness, than I can, by this faint endeavour, in a public way) besides, though in general, all men, who receive favours, are bound to be thankful; yet I am apt to think, every single man has as much right to choose the way of expressing his Thanks, as he has a propriety to his Complexion and Fortunes. In digging up the Foundations of Ancient and Religious Houses, 'tis usual to find Urns and old Relics of Men and Times; sometimes the uncorrupted Carcase of a great and celebrated Person: These and the like Curiosities are thought worthy to be exposed to common view; if so, this I hope may in part excuse my present Attempt. For occasionally searching in the Dust and Foundation of the present ; now and then I could not but meet with a Leg or an Arm, some strokes of the Ancient Model, some few fragments of the old Foundation: But at last I met with the Original Grants and Charters for this Carthusian Monastery, in the most elaborate Works of that Excellent Antiquary of our Age, Mr. Dugdale. Why therefore should I be so rude, as not to take notice of Sir Walter de Manny, whose Memory the very worms dare not assault? Brit. p. 117. Says Cambden. Fuerant Regnante Hen. 8. (fas sit meminisse) avitae pietatis monumenta, etc. Ille autem, quasi Torrens rupto aggere, irruit; Orbe stupente, & Anglia ingement, omnia funditus prostravit: p. 311. Latifundia sibi arripuit, quae piissimo instituto, ad Dei gloriam consecrata, & in Sacerdotum Eleemosynis, Pauperum refectione, captivorum Redemptione, & Ecclesiarum reparationibus, per Ecclesiae scita expendenda, etc. I know an Attempt of this Nature is an Employment far beneath men of singular Parts and high Achievements, yet in the advancement of Knowledge some body must moil and drudge, some Persons must clear, and labour in the Foundation, who, though they seem buried alive, and make no flourishes above ground, yet they prove full as useful and beneficial to mankind. Thus men awake Antiquity, by searching into Dormitories, and places of long repose: thus they bring Mortar and unpolisht stone to be made smooth by a more curious hand, to be placed in order by the sk●ll of the Great Surveyer. Much of the same nature I conceive these lose and rude Collections to be, and that they would puzzle the skill of another Inigo to bring them into shape and figure. That which some Historians complain of, is my comfort; they say, to write soon after the matter of fact, is to tread too close upon the heels of time, etc. I am glad I speak to the face of Time, for many Persons are now alive, who knew the Founder, he having been dead not above 66 years; so that if it be my misfortune to transcribe any Errors, I hope they may be discerned, and I will engage they shall thankfully be amended. Some small pleasure and satisfaction may possibly be found in things of this nature; for I have heard say, that he, whose understanding is not elder than himself, looseth the noblest Inheritance of his Ancestors, and stick's in the worst kind of minority. Some wise men therefore have thought Works of this nature very necessary for the improvement of Virtue and Goodness; for, Example is observed to have more force and virtue among men, than the Legislative Power, the Fundamental Laws of States and Kingdoms: what penal Laws, Courts of Judicature, the Rods and the Hatchet, are designed to effect by Legal Force and Compulsion, that Example will perform, with the unresisted eloquence of its own nature, without the formidable Retinue of Guards and Tumult: According to the Kings of Israel, so varied the Worship of God, for, Examples are the Springs from whence human actions derive their motion. The power of the Laws may pursue and seize upon the body; but Example surprises and attacks the soul; it invades and charms the mind with the secret Magic of love and imitation: It represents virtue to the world, not in faint and languishing colours, but moving, full of life and vigour: It propounds Reason not as imperious and tyrannical in its precepts, but eloquent and attractive in its Operations. Thus the great difficulty of Obedience is mastered, and made easy by our desire of imitation. I thought therefore it would not be amiss (when I undertook this innocent diversion at spare hours) to propound our great Founder to the World, as a mighty Example of Charity and Benevolence. For it is no small Honour to our Country, that we can give such a famous Instance of the warmth & richness of its Soil, when, without any auxiliary Charity, by the scattering of a single Hand, it has brought forth so much piety, such unparallelled Benevolence. Yet these great men meet with some strokes of misfortune, from the ruder Ages wherein they live; for as the highest Mountains are most subject to the storms of Thunder, and the batteries of Hail: so these who are placed on high, are the usual marks at which the Instruments of Envy and Malice are leveled: Some men love to look on the knotty side of the Arras, and take little notice of the comely figure that is wrought upon the right side of the Hang. The same indignities and affronts were offered to our generous Founder, or at least, it was so suspected (which are fully wiped off in the body of his life) But what will not the licentious Stage traduce? when Socrates himself was the unexpected subject of Aristophanes' Buffonery. I wish we could find many Suttons so long lived to their Country, by their Fame and Munificence; and so long lived to themselves by their temperance and sobriety. If he seemed to the world something too sparing, this may suffice at present; Si non errâsset, fecerat ille minùs. The Instances I bring of the Carthusian Order, are faithfully taken from Petrus Suitor, one of their own Fraternity. If any Person be more curious, Lib. de vita Carth. be may read Johannes Morocurtius' Poem upon the Life of Bruno, in four Books, printed at Antw. 1540 4 o. and now to be found in the Oxford Library. The helps I found in the composure of Sutton's life, were many of them scattered here and there, laid hold on rather by chance than direction; For the World has not been so kind to this Great man, as to represent him to the open view, with those graceful lines and fair advantages his Actions really have deserved. Sir Richard Baker, Dr Heylin, and Mr. Fuller say little of him, and that little very full of mistakes, for they call him Richard Sutton, and affirm he lived a Bachelor, and so by his single life had an opportunity to lay up a heap of money; whereas his dear wife is, with much honour and respect, mentioned in his Will. Others give him bad words, say he was born of obscure and mean Parents, and married as inconsiderable a wife, and died without an Heir: but then to give some reason for his Wealth (having no time nor desire to inquire into the means of his growing rich) to cut short the business, they resolve all into a Romantic Adventure; they say it was all got at a lump by an accidental shipwreck, which the kind waves drove to shore, and laid at his feet, whilst the fortunate Sutton was walking pensively upon the barren Sands. They report, in the Hulk Coals were found, and under them an inestimable Treasure, a great heap of Fairy wealth. This, I fancy, may go for the Fable, and his farming the Coal-mines (as may be seen hereafter) for the Moral. The Errors of the former, and dreams of the latter, will be sufficiently discovered by the following History of his Life; some Remarks whereof I had from creditable and worthy men, bred in this Foundation long ago: Others by a Commemoration Sermon of Mr. Burrel's, preached in a fit time to declare the truth; for several of the first list of Governors were then living, and one of the Founder's Executors, viz. Sir Richard Sutton. This I have by me in print. I had likewise assistance from the Records of the House, and lastly from an Anonymous and Imperfect MS. left, not long since, in the Booksellers hands, which did me very good service. I shall now only offer a word or two in the behalf of good Works, and then proceed to the Historical part. Nothing is more pleasing to him, who is the Giver of good Gifts unto men, than to see his own Blessings rightly placed, and bestowed upon Objects of pity and compassion; Moreover, by this we show our thankfulness to God; for, the truest Notion of Gratitude, is never to give an occasion that our Benefactor should repent that he bestowed his Bounty upon us. By Charity also we do good to men, we oblige and endear our Neighbour; we imitate the good Angels, nay our Saviour himself, who went about all Judea doing good; though his Estate and Kingdom was not in this World, yet among his few Disciples, he chose one an Almoner to scatter his Benevolence, and to distribute his small Treasure: Love and Charity are as necessary to the well-being of States and Communities in the Body Politic, as union of parts is in the material and Philosophical World. Furthermore, by acts of mercy and pity, we are kind to our own selves; for no good man can, without grief, behold the gaping wounds of a poor Lazarus, this makes his bowels yearn, and his own Soul bear a part in sorrow, so that by healing his sores, and binding up his wounds, by relieving his pain, and refreshing his spirits, he eases his own mind, and does an office of kindness to himself: and this seems to be the proper sense of the Prophet, When thou seest the naked, cover him; that thou hid not thyself from thine own flesh. Lastly, nothing more secures our Interest in Heaven, nor gives a fairer Title to the blessed Mansions above; for the Scripture informs us, that at the great and terrible day of Judgement inquiry will be made, Whether we have fed the hungry, and clothed the naked? visited the sick, and redeemed the prisoner? for Charity is so requisite, in order to our well being in the other world, that Abraham would hardly think himself now in heaven, had he not a Lazarus in his bosom. It may be these Arguments were the cause of so much good, that is found of this nature in the world; for I believe we read of few or no Hospitals before the Plantation of Christian Religion. Nor is this a private fancy of my own, but partly gathered from the silence of former Ages in reference to these works of Charity; and partly from several barbarous Instances of State-policy, which were enjoined to prevent the necessity of such Structures, and Provisions for needy people. These were customary in many Countries, and gravely prescribed by Aristotle himself, in these words; Lib. 7. Pol. cap. 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. which may be thus Englished; As for the destroying or bringing up of Children, there should be a Law that none might bring up any, who were imperfect or lame in any of their Limbs; and for the avoiding of too great a number of Children (if it be not permitted by the Laws of the Country to expose them) it is requisite to set down how many a man may have; and if any have more than that prescribed number, there must be used some means that the fruit may be destroyed in the Mother's womb. Several, who were sick and weakly, having no means of subsistence, and hopes of human pity, did make Sale of their lives, that upon their recovery, both they and their Posterity should be slaves to him that was at the expense of the Relief. If any person happened to be lame or blind, he thought it in vain to endeavour to move the compassion of barbarous and self-ended men; therefore their custom was to lay violent hands upon themselves, to put a period to their miserable lives and wretched fortunes. This was the lamentable effect of Pagan uncharitableness. But when once Constantine the Great appeared, enabled with the Riches and Authority of Empire, he bravely redressed all these horrid and inhuman practices, Euseb. Hist. Lib. 10. and erected many structures for to entertain and refresh the sons and daughters of pity and compassion. This excellent example Julian the Apostate could not but applaud and imitate, as may be seen by his Letters sent to the Proconsul's and City's of Asia, persuading them to follow the examples of Christians in this matter; and though he reigned alone scarce two years, yet he left many monuments of Charity behind him. After these Reigns, the good and pious Emperors were strangely forward in this way of Charity, and their Benefactions became almost incredible. Nay, the very Turks now are famous for it; and it seems not only a good act of kindness and piety among them, but also a wise forecast, and prudent consideration. For no Turk is solicitous to provide for the future condition of his family, lest he should provoke the jealousy of the Grand Seignour, and be crushed in a moment; therefore they usually leave their Children to cut out their own Fortunes, who, if they should prove maimed or sickly, are in these places provided for. They have one Hospital at the entrance of Mare Majore, coming from Bosphorus, which was founded by Solyman's Daughter, the Wife of Rustan Bassa, and by her endowed with 8000 Ducats per An. There is another built by a certain Bassa in the Isle of Phermena, not far from Delos, in Greece, in the Reign of Mahomet 2d. who conquered Constantinople; it is endowed with 12000 Ducats per Ann. A third is at Constantinople, begun by Mahomet 2d. and finished by Bajazet his son; it enjoys 60000 Ducats per An. These, with many others in the Turkish Dominions, are erected to entertain sick and lame people, men who are unfit for labour, and whose conditions require Relief. The Governors of their Hospitals usually walk out, and desire wearied Travellers, and that sort of people which commonly line the Highways, to repair hither, and accept of the kindness and refreshments of the charitable House. Many of them are, by their Establishments, to receive persons of any Religion, which is certainly a generous instance of kindness and civility. Near these Foundations commonly a Mosque or Temple is erected; as now upon Mount Sinai, and elsewhere; for those that are relieved are required to pray there for the Soul of the Founder: the place where they intent to raise such a work of Charity, is frequently made choice of in some solitary and retired place, to avoid vain glory. Their Charity likewise extends to the Inhabitants of the Airy and Watery Elements, for they hire men to feed fishes in common Rivers, and with expense purchase the Release of encaged Birds. We read likewise of five goodly Hospitals in Fez; and of a Persian King, who caused a Mosque to be built in Armenia, at the foot of that Mountain whereon Noah's Ark rested: this is a Receptacle for men of all sorts of Religions and Complexions, Christians and Turks, Moors and Arabs: here all are entertained three days and three nights, with much kindness and freedom; and for its maintenance it is endowed with 40000 Ducats per Ann. Thus we may observe the rise and spreading of these Instances of Benefaction; how much it redounds to the honour of Christian Religion, that as it at first out of its excellent Principles began this work, so now it does continue it, and provokes the emulation of all Countries. For the honour of our own Nation, I shall conclude with the words of Dr. Willet in that part of his Synopsis, p. 1243. called the Catalogue of Good Works, in the Defence of Protestant Charity. I trust I have made it good, that more Charitable Works have been done in these 60 years of the Gospel, than in the like time in Popery; I think they cannot show in any Age almost a Million bestowed in Works of Charity; more than forty Hospitals, above twenty Free schools and more than ten Colleges and Churches. Thus (says he) is the slanderous objection of the Papists answered, who said, That Protestants do no Good Works, but are rather Enemies to them. THE . IN that fatal year, When Prodigies familiar were: Ills and Distempers in the East began, And nimbly over Europe ran: When living men amazed, beheld the dead, And Carcases o'er all the world were spread: Thou, Walter Manny, Cambray's Lord, The bravest man that blind Age could afford, Didst take compassion on the wand'ring Ghosts Of thy departed Friends; Didst consecrate to th' Lord of Hosts, Thy Substance for Religious Ends. Thy Bounty, at the best Gave only scattered ashes rest. Sutton took care o'th' better part And did consummate it with wondrous Art, By the large Issues of his boundless heart. We grant, ye both to us from heaven were sent, Yet one's a dead, t'other a living Monument. 2. Where sorrow dwelled, and tears bedewed the earth, From whence the bitterest weeds derived their birth; Where grief and sighs were thickest found, And Death had Chambers under ground, Where sad Relations sorrowed all around. In that very House of mourning, now The sweetest Charms of life do grow: Therefore no more can we Call this a Vale of Misery. No more let History say, It is a Charnel house, or Golgotha: Unless we mean, where skulls, with cost and pains, Have been enriched with wisdom, and with brains. 3. Vainglorious Rome! Can Heaven be purchased, and the Joys above, By what you dream will meritorious prove? We have the noblest Instance here at home. Sutton, the best of Givers, whose large mind, By no Red-lettered Model was confined, He has erected in the Highest Sphere The largest, and the noblest Mansion there, Where thy great Babel never will appear. 4. We heard and read of Charity before, That England was its magazine and store: When our Forefathers strove Religiously who should exceed in Love; Who should attempt the greatest Good: Till a misguided Zeal did so abound, And cover all the richer ground, That numerous streams did swell into a Flood. They broke the Banks, which should their force withstand, And proved injurious to the neighbouring Land. 5. Then the Reformation came, and drained our Channels dry; It gave Religion a new Name, and served to clear our sky: A while few kind showers were found To fall upon the British ground. The late abuse of Charity withheld Some time its useful growth; That Superstition might not yield A Nursery of Ignorance and Sloth: The ground was rank, and therefore all that fell Of rain and moisture here below, About the Convent and the lazy Cell, Did into useless Thorns and Thistles grow. 6. But since we hear that Charity (Just like the Orange Tree) From a distant Climate come, Leaving a warmer Air at home, Ventured on our Inhospitable Isle, Before she knew we had so clean a Soyl. At first this Stranger was scarce known, In City, Country, Camp or Town; She lived abroad, she stood aloof Far from any Mansion-house: She found the searching Air unkind and cold, She seemed to languish in the stiffer Mould. This wasn't a place for her to thrive, No not a place to live, All over shivering and timorous; Therefore she begged the favour of a warmer Roof. 7. All pale and wan, she lay upon the ground, Gasping for want of breath: Her Eyes began to close, her Pulse to cease, Her trembling Soul to steal away in peace, The common symptoms of approaching death. Yet when the Searchers came, they found That she was only in a swound: Chase her Lim●… benumbed with cold, The Native heat App●●●d and kindly did great. She workest And in a plea●● honour told All she had seen above, How every Region there is filled with love: She saw the Throne, And Him that sat thereon; The eternal Springs from whence doth flow All the good we find below: Spying poor Lazarus in the Patriarch's breast, She knew 'twas Heaven, the place of everlasting rest. Then from a tedious Trance she did revive▪ And i● a Demonstration that we live. 8. Rome's blind Devotion, like the Mole, Before did work and labour under ground; As if Religion had its birth From the hollow Caverns of the Earth: Where you may find the Cloistered Soul In Superstitious fetters bound. The purest Lamp of Life they place In solitary shade below; In the dark enteries of Hell, Those dens and vaults, where Snakes and Adders dwell: As if the greatest part of Christian Race Were born to shameful misery and wo. These Romish Bats live in a daily fright, Ever avoiding human sight; A strange Religion which abhors the light! 9 But our Great Patron void of all The trifling Fopperies of Rome; Their sly Reserves, and whispering Wall, The grand Reproach of Christendom. He bravely has secured our just Retreat, The Reputation of the British State, And placed Religion in its proper Seat: And now Triumphant Arches may be spared, When such a lasting Monument is reared. So God has placed the Rainbow in the sky A memorandum of the Flood, To advertise Mortality, At once that he is just and good 10. The Youth and Aged, as they lay Objects of pity in thy way, Besought a helping hand: Children untaught to make their moan, And old Age almost speechless grown, When succour they demand; Point not to Thee in vain, To read those lines of sorrow, which complain With Lazarus, they begged a Crum, Or Belizarius, a small Sum, But thy large Alms did an Exchequer drain. Alas! thy free and generous mind Disdained to be confined: When thou dost give, 'Tis that whereon whole Nations might live, Like Macedon's great Man, when thou dost pity, Thou stretchest out thy hand, and giv'st a City. 11. What Argument could draw Thee hence, To gratify the Reason, or the Sense? What pure and endless joys must that man find, Who freely left to us a Paradise behind? A Paradise, wherein we see No tempting Eve, and no forbidden Tree: All things are open, all are free to taste, All masculine, and innocent, and chaste; Here's nothing naked and forlorn, Exposed to punishment or scorn: All things are clad; and thus it Paradise exceeds, Instead of Figleaves we have nobler Weeds. 12. Plenty here has chose her seat, Here all things needful and convenient meet: Every week are hither sent Inhabitants o'th' watery Element. When I met Creatures in a throng, And found they hither came, Seeing so vast a number crowd along; Methought they went to Eden for a Name. 13. Thy very Wilderness is fruitful too; Every Walk, and every Grove, Bears the fresh characters of Love. Here's nothing wild; all things increase and thrive: In just obedience to you, That which was barren, now has learned to give. O bounteous Heaven! at thy Command, Fourscore Patriarches here Wander many a year, Until they move unto the promised Land. 14. Here they from Heaven are said, By an Almighty hand are led, No Pharaoh them to trouble: Yet still they have the Pillar and the Cloud, All that is useful and 〈◊〉 good; Only their Tents ant Portable. Their greener years were spent in war, Each Nestor bears a loyal scar. But now the field is won, All war's noise and tumults cease, They all retire, no clashings heard, But from each grey and reverend beard, The sacred Oil doth in abundance run: Like Brethren, they live long lives in peace. 15. Here Crashaw's pious Muse was bred, In this Religious place lived she; Free from disquiet and complaint, Which trouble, and distract the busy head; Such peaceful paths his Infancy did tread. Here the great Cowley's Poet, and his Saint, Was taught the Elements of Speech and Piety. Cowley, he was the Subject of thy Pen; That Pen, which did bewail the end Of thy most dear, and most lamented Friend: For thou didst but desire, (when he was snatched from us frail men) A modest portion of his sacred fire. Yet some may say thy Charity was blind, Because it has thy modesty outran; For thou hast proved so kind T'embalm and bless that very man, Who left Religion and his Friend behind. 'Tis true, alas! had he not stepped aside, But in his Mother's bosom died; Had his Muse not wanton been, Nor fled unto Loretto's shrine, He might have long since this begun From smaller Numbers his eternal Song. 16. Here our first James, that wore the British Crown, Wearied with acclamations, and the toil Of travel, to unite this long divided Isle; Entered, withal the Noble Train he ●ed, Within these walls three nights he laid his thoughtful head; Until he did advance into the Town, Until another Palace was prepared. As Princes came from far to view the Throne Of Mighty Solomon; So Scotland's King moved many a tedious mile, Drawn with the Fame of this Great Pile: He came, and saw more than ever he had heard. 17. Exactly on the South I saw A comely Structure show its head; And when I questioned, whose abode It was? I heard the Law And Gospels read: I saw twice forty Elders: drawing nigher, I heard the Music of the sacred Choir: And then I knew it was the House of God. 18. The Image of thy boundless Soul, Where e'er our gazing eyes do roll, Is the fair object of our view: To Youth, untaught to number years, To active youth well near its prime, In glorious Visions it appears: The Aged too still dream of you, Although they're even worn out with time. Here Innocence and Piety, Are fed and nursed by Charity; Here the tender Plants do grow, A handsome and a graceful show. There the tall and Aged Oak In patience waits the fatal stroke: Which, as it falls, must lie Until it approach Eternity. 19 Sickness and death are almost strangers here, No ill-foreboding Comet dare appear; Whilst Nedham's nigh they cannot kill, No Carthusian blood can spill. In vain they tempt his known and mighty skill; In vain they make a needless strife: All, that belongs to human life, To every Limb, to every Nerve, To fortify, repair, and long preserve, He knows it all: And then for shame, why do we call The Seat of Health an Hospital? H'as traced the Infant from the womb, Through all his changes, to the Tomb: H'as planted here the Tree of Life, that Fate Has no Commission for to enter: Here no contagious ills dare venture, While this great Aesculapius guards the Gate. 20. He that Robs thy Treasury of Love, Shall feel the Scourge of Heaven above: And (as to Scripture) if we strive to add, 'Tis thought a Crime a most as bad; For than our Benefactions are in vain, We empty Cockles in the boundless Main. To thee alone (Great Sir) we pay this Right Of Thanks: Thy arge and crowded Store Will entertain no more; No, not the Widow's Mite: And yet thy Charity's not bestowed in vain, For many Ages hence it will be found again: Thy Bread is cast upon, and covers all the Main. 20. The Influence of thy mighty Zeal Does warm these Northern parts, Dissolves the Ice, and softens all our hearts: Thy Love amazes all the Roman Spies, It warms our Clime, and dazzles all our Eyes: And, what is more, in this fair solitude, Thou, by a Miracle Dost now instruct and feed a multitude. So that if Saints above can understand, and see How things are acted in this Vale of Misery: Thy Charity to us must still increase, For there, they say, 'twill never cease: Though all thou hadst on Earth was given, Yet thou hast Blessings to bestow On us poor Mortals here below, As thou art made Lord Almoner of Heaven. The CONTENTS. Of the Old Foundation. AN Account of the Rise and Original of the Carthusian Order, Cap. 1. Page 1. Of the Rules and Constitution of the Order, c. 2. p. 7. Of their Transplantation and Number in England, c. 3. p. 12. Of the , or Carthusian Monastery near Smithfield, c. 4. p. 15. Of their Fabulous Miracles, c. 5. p. 22. King Edward the Third's Licence or Grant for the Foundation of the Monastery, p. 30. Bulla Urbani Papae. p. 32. Of the New Foundation. Sutton's Life, p. 37. The Occasions of his growing Rich, p. 40. Knott the Jesuits unjust Censure of him, p. 45. Sutton's Death and Funeral Solemnities, p. 54. Bishop Hall's incomparable Letter to stir him up to Charity, p. 59 An Act of Parliament to erect the Hospital at Hallingbury in Essex, p. 69. King James' Letters Patent to alter the Situation, p. 85. Ecclesiastical Preferments in the governor's disposal, p. 87. Simon Baxter, Heir in Law to the Founder, enters an Action of Trespass against the Governors, p. 88 The Cas●●●…atea on both sides, p. 89. Sir Francis Bacon's Letter to King James, to overthrow the Foundation, p. 96. The Opening of the House, p. 109. An Establishment made, whereby all the Officers and Members in the House are to be regulated, p. 110. Concerning Assemblies and Committees, p. 116. The Election and Duty of a Master, p. 120. Of the Preacher, p. 123. Of the Physician, p. 125. The Register and Solicitor, p. 126. The Receiver, p. 129. The Manciple. p. 130. Schoolmaster and Usher, p. 135. The Auditor, p. 141. Allowances to the Members, p. 145. A Confirmation of the King's Letters Patent, by an Act of Parl. for the removal of the Hospital, p. 154. The first List of Governors, p. 70. The names of the present Governors, p. 176. A Patent for a Governor, p. 177. Of the number and nature of the Members maintained, p. 181. The Warrant for a Pensioner, p. 182. How to obtain a place for an old Man or Youth, p. 189. A Warrant for a Lad, p. 190. An Account of the increase and present state of the Revenues of the House, p. 193. The Founder's Will, p. 200. Orders for the Pensioners, p. 231. Carthusian monk Ordinis Carthusiani Monachus. F. H. Van. Hove fec Of the Old FOUNDATION OF THE . CHAP. I. An Account of the Rise and Original of the Carthusian Order. IN the year of our Lord 1082, at what time Gregory the Seventh was Bishop of Rome, and in the Sixteenth year of the Reign of King William the Conqueror, we are told there happened in Paris a very strange and wondrous accident: the Relation whereof I find much after this manner. Bruno a German, born at Cologne, of an ancient and worthy Family, by his studious life and successful endeavours, obtained so great a reputation among learned Men, that he was at length prevailed with to visit France, where he was honourably chosen Philosophy Professor of the University of Paris: Not long after chancing to be present at the Funeral Solemnities of one of his dear Friends, a Man, as far as mortal eye could discern, of a fair and untainted reputation: On a sudden, whilst they were celebrating the Office for the Dead, and were come to that part of it, Respond mihi: the Corpse began to move, and raise itself upon the Bier, and was heard at several distances of time to utter these lamentable words; I am arraigned at the Bar of God's Justice: my final Sentence is already past: And I am condemned to Eternal Torments. 'Tis easy to imagine what a great Consternation this unexpected Revelation wrought in the minds of the People; but especially it troubled his familiar and learned Friend Bruno, who could not but be surprised with grief and melancholy: thinks he, if so virtuous and religious a man can perish, and be for ever undone, what must become of me? If my loving and faithful Companion, who was eminent for Justice and Piety, if so fair a complexioned Soul scarcely can be saved, where shall I, who am unrighteous, appear? If the sight of one damned Person so much disturbs all men who behold him; if one single instance of God's vindictive Justice create so much confusion in our Spirits, then how painful will be the torments of the lowest Hell, where crowds and throngs, where an innumerable company of despairing Souls lie panting under the heavy load of sin, and do in vain echo forth one another's fruitless Lamentation? If the condemnation of another so much concerns and ruffles my discomposed mind, than what a storm must I expect, when my trial does approach, and punishment lieth at my own door? After this, or the like conflict with himself, Bruno resolves to alter the frame and course of his life, and to that end prevails with six more Spectators to join with him: by name, Laudvinus, two Stephens, Hugo (who was also their Chaplain) and two Laics, Andrew and Garinus. These seven religiously determined to retire from the World; to absent themselves from the noise and hurry of business and tumult, and to seek some convenient place where they might spend the remainder of their days, in Exercises of Piety and Devotion, in Corporal Austerities, and in a severe and mortified course of Life. After some travel they came into the Diocese of Grenoble, to a place called Carthuse, in the Mountainous parts of a vast Wilderness, whereof they obtaining an assignation, by the consent of the Bishop they erected a Monastery. The following Poem was written in Old time by one of their Order, which I here insert for the satisfaction of the Curious. Miraculum, quod Instituto huic initium praebuisse dicitur, à quodam Monacho ità describitur. SIste viator, & hos oculis percurrito versus, Mira leges, cuivis exhorrescenda, salutis Cui sit cura suae, Historiâ testata fideli; Fors vitae his ratio melior sumetur agendae. Anno octogeno supra mille, atque secundo, Paris●is; Doctor pietatis nomine clarus, Doctrinaeque simul, moritur: mox funus honore Justo quo fieret, quisquis celebratior urbe Tota erat, huc adiit: intentis omnibus unà Funebri officio; defunctus vertice paulum Sublato è feretro, clarâ tristique profatur Voce:" Dei justo sum Judicio accusatus. Obstupuere animis, oculisque, atque auribus omnes, Quippe ad inauditum, tamque admirabile monstrum. Proin statuunt corpus tumulandum luce sequenti, Quâ multò affluxit populus numer osior, ortâ; Sollicita attoniti nimirum corda tremore. Rursum effertur humo condendus mortuus, Ecce Erecto est sursum capite haec in verba locutus: " Justa Dei de me dudum Sententia lata est. Jam magis atque magis cunctis horrescere mentes, Corda pavere magis novitatis nescia mirae. Alterum & usque diem conservandum esse cadaver Consultò placuit, populus quo consluit omnis: Indocti, docti, juvenesque, senesque, puellae, Matronaeque graves, meritò rumore stupendo Exciti, officium jam Funebre tertiò adornant. Stant cuncti, arrectique comas, artusque trementes, Cum propè putre caput jam attollitur altius, atque Flebiliter tremula prorupit voce suprùmum. " Justo judicio Christi sum condemnatus. Demum inopina viri tam docti, tamque probati Damnati, cunctos valdè sententia terret, Incertos quid agant, desperantesque remittit Nennullos, multa, aiunt, Judicium Dei abyssus. Bruno vir eximius Doctrina & Religione, Consternatus eo, qui omni admirabilis Urbi Extiterat vivus, qui se quisque alter Olympo Esse videbatur dignanduc, judice Christo, Damnato, rationem aliam disquirere vitae Festinat: comites alii sex se associarunt: Deserit extemplo populumque, Urbemque frequentem; Post ad Eremitae casulam devenit, ab illo Judicii horrorem aeterni quì evadere possit, Scitatur: mox is respondet verba Prophetae, " Ecce elongavi fugiens loca sola habitavi, Omnes unus amor statim succendit Olympi; Itur ad Hugonem, qui erat inter Episcopus omnes Unus amore Dei flagrans, populique salutis Commissi cura, noctésque diésque fatigans. Quid veniant paucis exponunt ordine verbis, Secessum votis orant ardentibus aptum. Multa Dioecesi illius loca inhospita nôrant, Desertósque vacare foris habitacula montes. Audit vota lubens, facilísque precantibus ultro Unà abit in montem, cui adhuc Carthusia nomen, Viderat is siquidem pridem per somnia Christum, Aedificare sibi pergratam his montibus aedem: Seque hùc Steliarum septem splendente ducatu Accersi: proin hic communi protinus aere Tecta vi●is, Templúmque Deo properata locantur. Hic bonus Hugo à Deo versatur, saepe libénsque, Ut crebrò officii monitus discedere, nolens, Invitus san●, Brunon● urgente, relictas Cogatur pasturus oves, ita Sancta placebat Consuetudo hominum superis devota seorsum. Jure ergo Duos parili celebramus honore, Ut Carthusiaci veneranda exordia coetus: Qui dedit hos versus, saltem hoc mercedis habeto, Lector uti dicas, pia mens in pace quiescat. CHAP. II. Of the Rules and Constitution of the Order. AS soon as ever these seven Pilgrims were entered into the City, Hugh the Bishop dreams that he saw seven Stars fallen at his feet; which afterwards climbed over divers Mountains, and then stood still in a certain horrid and obscure place. At this time it was that they happily arrived at his Palace, and obtaining leave to confer with him, they discover the intentions of their journey, and humbly desire the Directions of so great and good a man, for the prosecution of their designs. About the distance of ten miles from the City of Grenoble, arises a certain high Mountain in a wild manner encompassed with Woods and Thickets; which is called Carthuse, (from whence this Order takes its name, as another does from Mount Carmel) The ascent to this Hill is so difficult, that it is reckoned an Emblem of the way to Heaven; so high, so steep it is, and craggy: Nature has bestowed upon this Monastery a double Entrance, the one is called the Carthusian Bridge, where two hilly Banks raise themselves to an incredible height, and join at the top. The other is full of danger and wonders, being a wearisome and uneasy passage four miles long between two rocky and mountainous rise. Hither came these seven Converts with much pains and difficulty under the happy conduct of the aforesaid Bishop; and here was to be the Plantation of Bruno's Piety and Holiness: The Bishop gravely pronounces En Vester hic locus. And then they kneel down, and offer up the Sacrifice of Praise and Thanksgiving to Almighty God. The Reasons why a Mountain was made choice of, rather than a Valley, to be the Habitation of this Order, are many: for say they, we are now nearer Heaven: here the Patriarches of old did inhabit: when Abram went to Sacrifice, he ascended the Mountain: and thus did Lot when he escaped the anger of the Lord: Moses went up to the Mountain to receive the Law: here lived Elias, and the Sons of the Prophets. This Mountain they compare to Mount Sinai, because here Bruno gave them their Rules and Constitution: sometimes to Mount Oreb, for the renown of their Zeal and Charity: to Seir, because they are fortunate, and have spread over most parts of Christendom: to Moriah (mons visionis) because there the Holy Father beheld the Seven Stars: to Mirre (mons amaritudinis) because of their severe discipline and rigour of life: to Mount Zion, Tabor, and Olivet, etc. These are the usual Comparisons, chief founded upon their Marginal Notes of Humour and Fancy. As for the number Seven, it must not pass without some figurative Comment. These are the Seven Angels with the Seven Trumpets, Rev. 8.6. to declare War and Destruction to the sinful World. The Seven Steps that were seen in Ezekiel's Vision; the Seven Candlesticks to enlighten the World; and lastly the Eyes of the Lamb. I shall not farther take notice of their playing with this wise number, but proceed to their Orders. They are obliged to wear Shirts made of Hair: never to feed upon flesh: on Fridays to eat nothing but bread and water: to live asunder in particular Cells; and thither to have their Diet singly brought them: except on some certain Festival days, when they dine together: not to entertain any Converse with each other, but upon statutable times: none to go out of the Monastery but the Superior and Procurator, and they only to solicit the concerns of the Covent: from this rigorous way of Life, some imagine the name of their Order to be derived from Caro tusa, now Cartuse, from their Austerities and Mortification of the Flesh. Their Habit is a white lose Coat, with a Cowl of the same; but when they go abroad, they have a Case of black Stuff over it: their Heads are shaved, just as the Benedictines are: Their particular Cells are low built, and do contain three or four several Rooms, on the ground-floor only; having behind each of them a little Garden environed with a high Wall: their Diet is brought to them by Lay-brothers, and put in at a little Door in the Wall, near the entrance thereof: unto which there is a Lock, the Key whereof is kept by him that serves them. At the Hours of Public Prayers they meet in the Choir: Women are not permitted to come within the Precincts of their Monastery; nor a man to speak with any of them, without special licence given by the Superior. The Lay Brothers are not shaved, but their Hair on the Head is cut short, and round, their Habit being the same with the Monks, saving the Scapular; which reacheth but a little below the middle, and is girt close to them. Which Institution by Bruno was, as Polydore affirms in the Year 1080. but others, upon better grounds, affirm in 1084. As to their Diurnal and Nocturnal Offices, they observe the Rule of St. Benedict. As for their Number, they have not anciently exceeded Thirteen, in any one Convent: they often glory in this Number upon these Accounts: As first, because it includes the Decalogue and Trinity: than it bears an allusion to Jacob and his Sons: as also to our Blessed Saviour and his twelve Disciples. This Order frequently I find listed under the Patronage of St. John the Baptist. CHAP. III. Of their Transplantation and Number in England. 1. Coenobium Withamense. THey first were brought hither by King Henry the Second, Anno 1181. and the Seven and twentieth year of his Reign: at which time he founded a Monastery for them at Witham in Somersetshire; whereof Hugh Bishop of London was the first Prior. This Convent was founded to the Honour of the Blessed Virgin, St. John the Baptist, and All Saints. 2. Hentonense. In the Four and twentieth of Henry the Third, the Lady Ela Countess of Salisbury, at Henton in Wiltshire. 3. La Salutation Mere Dieu. That at the . For this I design a particular Chapter. 4. Beauvaleense. In the time of Edward the Third, 1343. Nicholas Cantilupe Lord of Ilkeston, founded a Religious House for Carthusian Friars, at a place called Fair valley in Nottinghamshire. 5. Coenobium Sanctae Annae. In the Reign of Richard the Second, 1381. we find another founded by William de la Souche, called the Monastery of St. Anne near Coventry. 6. Kingstonense. In the same King's Reign Michael de la Pool, Lord of Wingfield, Founded another of these Convents at Kingston upon Hull in Yorkshire, 1378. 7. Mont-Gracense. In the time of Richard the Second, Thomas de Holland, Duke of Surrey, Earl of Kent, and Lord of Wake, founded another at a place called Mount-grace in Yorkshire: And dedicated it to the Assumption of the Mother of God▪ 8. Eppeworthense. At Eppeworth, beyond the Isle of Axiholme in Lincolnshire, was erected the fourth Carthusian Monastery of this King's Reign, wherein they did most flourish: it was built for the Honour of the Visitation of the Mother of God. 9 Sheenense. Anno Dom. 1514. Henry the Eighth erected the last Monastery of the Carthusians hard by his own Manor House Sheen, in the County of Surrey, and called it, The House of Jesus of Bethlehem of Sheen. CHAP. IU. Of the , or Carthusian Monastery near Smithfield. With an Account of the particular occasion, and Author of the Foundation. THE Founder hereof was the brave and renowned Man at Arms, Sir Walter de Manny, Lord of the same place, and born in the Diocese of Cambray, now one of the Seventeen United Provinces: He was first Banneret, and then made by King Edward the Third the 46 th'. Ashmole Inst. Gart. Knight of the Garter; (not as Speed, one of the Founders) His Arms three Cheverons Sable, the Field Or. I shall begin with the first mention of him in our Chronicles, and so trace him down to this his Noble and Magnificent Benefaction. Edu. 3. Anno 11ᵒ. He was sent Ambassador to the French King; which was no mean Employment for him, either as he was a Gentleman or a Stranger: In this Voyage he courageously lands his men on the Isle of Agnes, on purpose to revenge the Death of some English men, who not long before were slain by the Inhabitants, when they came for fresh water: Here he made a general slaughter; and takes the Earl of Flanders his Brother, Captain of the Island, Prisoner. His next martial performance, was in company of Henry Earl of Derby, Duke of Lancaster, into Gascoign and Guienne: where these two only attended with Five hundred men at Arms, and some few Archers, did mighty things, vanquished the Enemy, and recovered many walled Towns and Castles. It chanced that the Countess of Montfort, Sister to Lovis Earl of Flanders, like an undaunted Virago, put on Armour, and leads and encourages her People, to repel the common Foe: She desires aid of the King of England, and hath it granted under the conduct of no less a man, than the Lord Walter de Manny: Not long after, the King himself fight with the French, that he might not be known in Person, puts himself and the Prince under the Colours and Defence of the same Invincible Warrior. This may suffice for a small description of his Strength and Valour, I shall now proceed to the occasion of this singular Instance of his Piety and Beneficence. He lived in an Age wherein all things seemed as wonderful as himself: Ann. 1345. on the Conversion of St. Paul, a great Earthquake shook Germany, wherewith many Villages and Castles fell down, likewise Stones mixed with Rain fell out of the Air: Moreover, the same day many public and private Houses fell at Venice: afterwards the Earth was shaken more or less fifteen days: whereof it happened that almost all Women with Child were delivered before their time. And after this a noisome Pestilence (called Inguinaria) invaded the People; the venom of the Disease was so deadly, that scarce one in an hundred escaped alive. It began first in Scythia, there raged along the Coasts of the Sea Pontus and Hellespont; at length through Greece and Illyria, it came into Italy. 1346. A great Vapour coming from the North-part, to the great fear of the Beholders, was seen in the Air, and fell on the Earth. And the same year certain small Beasts in great number fell from the Element in the East; through whose corruption and stench there ensued a great Plague, which for three years reigned over the whole World: First creeping into Asia, from India; was vehement in England, Florence, Germany, and all Europe: The Jews were thought guilty of it, by poisoning Fountains, and therefore they were burned every where. 1349. The Eighth of the Calends of Febr. in Noricum, on that side it is joined with Pannonia, Illyrium, Dalmatia, Carinthia, and Istria; there was a great Earthquake in the Evening, which lasted forty days: Six Cities and Castles were overthrown, and swallowed up. In London the Plague was so vehement, that in a place called Charter-house-yard, were buried of the better sort of People Sixty thousand, says Cambden in his Britannia. (Middlesex. p. 311. Ibi floruit opulenta Carthusianorum aedes à Gualtero Manny Hannonio posita: Qui summa cum laude sub Edu. 3. bello Gallico meruit: Celeberrimúmque fuit eo loco ante Caemeterium, in quo grassante peste, 1349. Londino sepulta fuerunt plusquam quinquaginta hominum millia, quod inscriptione ibi in aere p●steris fuit testatum. In this dismal time it pleased God to stir ●p the heart of this Noble Knight to have respect to the danger that might fall, in the time of this Pestilence, then begun in England, if the Churches and Churchyards in London might not suffice to bury the multitude: Wherefore he purchased a piece of ground near St. John's street, called Spittle-Croft, without the Barrs in West-Smithfield, of the Master and Brethren of St. Bartholomew Spittle, containing Thirteen Acres and a Rod, and caused the same to be Enclosed and Consecrated by Ralph Stratford Bishop of London, at his own proper Cost and Charges. In which place in the year following (Stow reports) were buried more than Fifty thousand Persons, as is affirmed by the King's Charter, and by this following Inscription which he read upon a Stone Cross, sometime standing in the Charter-house-yard. An. Dom. M. CCC. XL. IX. Regnante magna Pestilentiâ consecratum fuit hoc coemeterium, In quo, & infra septa praesentis Monasterii, sepulta fuerunt mortuorum corpora plusquam quinquaginta millia: praeter alia multa abhinc usque ad praesens, Quorum animabus propitietur Deus. Amen. Here, not long after, he caused a Chapel to be built, wherein Offerings were made, and Masses said for the Souls of so many Christians departed. And afterwards, Ann. 1371. he founded an House of Carthusian Monks, which he built in Honour of the Salutation of the Mother of God, as may be seen at large in the King's Charter, and the Pope's Bull, which I have annexed. This Pestilent Disease continued in one place or another, till the Year 1357. at which cessation the Bishop of Norwich, the Earl of Northampton, Earl of Stafford, Sir Richard Talbot, and Sir Walter de Manny, sailed over into France to make a Peace, which they did for a year only. But after many long and happy years, when the Prince of Wales, eldest Son to Edward the Third, died at Bourdeaux, the Prince with his Wife, and other Son Richard, came over into England, then in the year 1371. died our worthy Hero at London, and was buried in the Monastery of the Chartreux, which he had built, leaving behind him only one Daughter, married to John Earl of Pembroke. Thus departed the generous Soul of this pious Founder, thus he desired to sleep in peace among his Carthusians in the Fields, (as 〈◊〉 M. ss. terms them in the Cott. Libr.) and left such a Monument of his Bounty to Posterity, that I suppose it no Crime to make this Honourable mention of Him: For at the Dissolution of Religious Houses, this was valued at Six hundred forty two pounds four pence half penny. If any person be offended at what is said, because he lived in a dark and gloomy Age, I refer him to the Preface of that great Man Cambden, in his Britannia. Sunt, ut audio, qui Monasteria & eorum Fundatores à me memorari indignantur: dolentu● audio, sed cum bonâ illorum gratiâ dixerim: iidem indignentur, imo forsan oblivisci uèlint & majores nostros Christianos fuisse, & nos esse: cum non alia Christianae eor um pietatis, & in Deum devotionis certiora, & illustriora uspiam extiterint monumenta: nec alia fuere plantaria, unde Christiana Religio, & bonae literae apud nos propagentur, utcunque saeculo corrupto averruncanda filix in illis plus nimio succreverit. CHAP. V Of their Fabulous Miracles. AS we ought not to detract from the Good Works and Piety of our Forefathers; so likewise we are as much obliged to avoid the Snares and Superstitious Fancies wherewith they were entangled: therefore here I intent fairly to lay down some of their dear and profitable Miracles in the same form and Character as I find them registered by themselves. Peter Suitor is so mightily taken with all the Circumstances of this Order, that he gave himself the trouble to write a large History of his Brethren. O heavenly and miraculous Carthusians! whose Dormitory or Cell, is a representation of Noah's Ark, which rested upon the top of Ararat! This is the Ark of the Testament, wherein is not only contained, but practised too, all the Ten Commandments! 'Tis manners to begin first with the Founder of their Order, and give him his share of Miracles, whither true or false let the Reader judge. Bruno was scarce cold in his Grave, before his dead Corpse showed more Virtue than the living Man, for hard by his blessed Tomb, a rare Medicinal Spring appears, which hath power to cure all manner of Distempers: This is methodically recorded for the Fountain of Health, and of all the succeeding Miracles. In the days of Guigo, the Fifth Carthusian Prior, happened this following Miracle: When a very devout Brother of this Convent (his Name is modestly concealed) in the dead time of a Tempestuous Night, lay in his bed thoughtful and serious, meditating on things above, a throng of Devils, in the shape of grisly Boars and wild Hogs, rush violently into his Cell, and there make a hideous and frightful noise, standing all around the panting and almost expiring Saint, preparing their keen and monstrous Teeth to rend and devour him: you must imagine that the honest Friar fell to his Beads, tumbled over his Conjuring Ave Maria's, and crossed himself all over, to save every Limb and Member; (alas! the most senseless and vain preparation for another World) this would not do, for another rough and ghastly Daemon, of a large and unwonted size enters the Room with cruel State, with all the Pomp and Formalities of Death: (the Historian supposes he was Lucifer) This formidable Fiend, with flaming Eyes viewing his Herd of Infernal Swine, not yet having seized upon their Prey, he thus rebukes them with a terrible voice, Quid facitis segnes? cur istum necdum rapuistis miseri? in frusta cur nondum discerpsistis? But when they plead want of power to effect the Contents of their Commission; he adds, I myself, the Black Prince of Darkness, will perform that work which your Cowardice could not accomplish: Then rashly unsheathing his black and murdering Talons, he draws near, and with a barbarous grin, discovers a double rank of bloody Executioners: yet before the trembling Friar could be in the pounces of the Bird of Prey, Lo the Blessed Virgin darts like Lightning from her abode in Heaven, to rescue Her Carthusian Darling and Devotee: entering the Cell, she brandishes her white Wand, gives the Word, and they all are compelled to repair to the Shades beneath: Then after a holy Exhortation, that he should persevere, and live more rigidly, she, like one of the Poetical Goddesses▪ arduum repeti●t Olympum. If these Stories are swallowed, and go down glibly, than the next shall have a dash of Design and Profit: Now for Prayers for the Dead, and Invocation of Saints. This same Carthusian piously undertakes to instruct a young Man in the Doctrine and Principles of Christianity, to the eternal good and salvation of his Soul: nothing could be more good and innocent, nothing more flexible and towardly than this small Disciple, so that it pleased God to think him fit for Heaven, and to take him to himself: the loss of so pretty and sweet a Companion could not but disquiet the Religious Tutor. He prays and macerates himself with self denial and rigid discipline; his grief so far increased upon him, that the good natured Lad took compassion of his old melancholy Master. He descends from his Habitation above, wrapped up in a flame of Light, and thus revives his fainting mind; O most kind and loving Father, what ails thee? done't look so cloudy and mopish: do not you know that I am your Foster-child? look upon me and talk with me as you used to do: Thus much comfort I can impart unto you, that, if you inquire concerning my present state and condition, your chaste love, your undeserved compassion, the virtue of your frequent and earnest Prayers have lifted me up into Heaven: And now I am settled in that Condition wherein I can repay all your Spiritual cares, now I am in a capacity to be beneficial to you: And so he vanished. Now, lest single Miracles should prove a sign of Barrenness, take a whole Cluster together. One Anceline, a Member of the same Order, after death trebles the wonder. First of all, when they were burying this precious Saint, when all things appeared mournful and solemn, a sudden flash of heavenly flame kindled all the Lamps of the Church (which were only lighted on great days) and made a most brave and glorious show. Not long after a Noble youth, who was troubled with an Ague and the Falling-sickness, was perfectly cured by drinking the Wine with which his dead Body was cleansed: This would hardly have been swallowed, without a good draught. Nay, they affirm that the very Cup retained its juggling Virtue a great while. At last, this Anceline had so perfectly learned his trade of Wonder-working, that he could forestall the Resurrection. For when a young Child, three years old, was by an unhappy accident drowned, the Parents immediately bring him to this most famous Sepulchre, by the virtue of which he is revived, snatches up a Staff in his hands, bow's civilly like a good Boy, and away he marches. Pray now let England come in for a share, shall our first Carthusian Prior die ingloriously, and be buried in dull silence? Vous Avez: Hugo Prior of Witham (afterwards Bishop of Lincoln) was not there attending on thy Funeral two Kings, many Earls, three Archbishops, fourteen Bishops, one hundred Abbots, and Miracles Innumerable? So, so; enough for one Man. Yet France would fain have robbed us of the Virtue of this Saint, by placing his Statue near the Walls of Paris, which ruin'd all the Physicians in France, by curing all sick Persons who passed by. Now for a Trial of Skill more than ordinary. I would not give a Farthing for him, if he were not Master of his Art; if he could not lay the Spirits he has raised; if he cannot, like the Philosopher, dismiss the Magnetical Troops, by rubbing his Steel upon the contrary Pole: The Scene opens. There chanced to die a certain Carthusian Friar, a man of so much holiness and integrity of Life, that Miracles grew as thick about his Tomb, as the Briars and Thistles which Alexander found about that of Achilles; he performed so many Miracles after his death, by curing the blind and the lame, as many Distempers as a Bill of Mortality contains: Insomuch that it proved to be of a very bad Consequence; for there was so great a conflux of People, and they so importunate to enter, that the Convent had but little time to serve God in, and perform the Rules of their Order. Upon which account, one Janceline, the Tenth Prior of Cartuse, undertakes to lay this inconvenient and troublesome Spirit, after this manner: These are the words. In virtute Sanctae Obedientiae praecipio, Fili, ut eam, quam vivus obedientiam obseruâsti, etiam nunc exhibeas, nec miraculum amplius ullum deinceps facere praesumas. It seems the busy Imp was but an ordinary Member in the Fraternity, and therefore was bound to his Canonical Obedience. One Tornerius Johannes, upon the complaint of a Countryman, that he had unadvisedly cast some Writings of concern into the Fire, bid him go to the Flames, and take them up again whole and entire; and commanded him withal to tell no man of the Miracle: And the Profane Historian adds, But he spread it so much the more. Now listen to a visible Stretcher; A certain young Man at Mentz in Germany, being a while upon trial in a Carthusian Convent, disliked it, and resolved to leave the Order, and return to his Secular Condition: But before he left them, he thought it convenient to pay his Adoration to the Blessed Virgin; as he was taking his Farewell, the Picture was visibly seen to whirl round, and turn its back in disdain upon the Apostatised Novice: These are his words; Cum autem quasi extremum valedicturus eam salutaret, Imago ipsa visibiliter se regyrans', suum conspicienti Novitio dorsum vertit. Carthusiense Coenobium in Suburbio Londinensis Civitatis, La Salutation More Dieu, nuncupatum. Licentia Edvardi tertii de Fundatione ejusdem. Rex omnibus ad quos, etc. Salutem. Vol. 1. Monast. Anglic. pag. 961. SCiatis, quod de Gratiâ nostrâ special; concessimus & Licentiam dedimus pr● nobis & Haeredibus nostris, quantum in nobis est, Dilecto & Fideli nostro Waltero Domino de Manny Militi, quod Ipse & soli suo proprio, viz. in quodam loco extra Barram de West-Smithfield, London, vocat. New cherche hawe, quod quidem solum de nobis non tenctur in capite, quandam demum Monachorum Ordinis Cartusiensis, viz. de quodam Priore & certis Monachis ibidem, La Salutation de Mere Dieu, in honore Dei & B. Mariae Virginis Fundare, & 20 acres terrae cum pertinentiis de sol● praedicto, unà cum quâdam Capellâ & aliis Domibus supra terram praedictam aedificatis, dare possit & assignare praefatis Priori & Monachis, & Successoribus suis pro inhabitatione suâ ibidem facienda, ad Missas, Orationes, & alia Divina Servitia, pro salubri statu nostro, & ipsius Walteri & Margaretae Uxoris ejus, dum vixerimus; & pro animâ nostrâ, & pro animabus Progenitorum & Haeredum nostrorum: nec non animabus eorundem Walteri & Margaretae, Antecessorum, & Haeredum suorum, cum ab hac luce abstracti fuerimus, & animabus Aliciae de Henaud, & Michaelis Northburgh, nuper Episcopi Londinensis, ac omnium Benefactorum ipsius Walteri, & omnium Fidelium defunctorum in Capella, & domibus praedictis juxta Ordinationem ipsius Walteri inde faciendam, celebrandas, & faciendas in perpetuum. T. Rege. Apud Westm. 6. die Febr. Bulla VRBANI Papae. Urbanus Episcopus Servus Servorum Dei, Ex autographo in Curiâ Augment. Dilectis Filiis, Priori, & Conventui novae Domus, Matris Dei, prope Londonias, Ordiins Cartusiensis, Salutem & Apostolicam benedidictionem. EXhibita nobis pro vestra parte petitio continebat, quod dudum faelicis recordationis Clementi Papae Sexto, Praedecessori nostro, exposito, quod quondam Walterus de Manny Miles, Cameracensis Dioecesis, tempore quo mortalitas hominum vigebat in partibus Anglicanis, locum, seu fundum quendam prope Londonias acquisiverat, quem de licentiâ Ordinarii, in Coemeterium pro sepulturâ Pauperum, dedicari, & capellam in eodem fundo aedificari fecerat, opere sumptuoso: in quo Collegium 12 capellanorum, & unius qui praesset iisdem, ordinare de bonis propriis, & sufficienter dotare disposuerat; ac eidem Praedecessori supplicato, ut eidem militi fundandi & dandi Licentiam hujusmodi concedere dignaretur: Idem Praedecessor Episcopo Cantuariensi, & Episcopo Londinensi, non expressis nominibus, vel eorum alteri, dando per suas Literas Facultatem, Collegium juxta Ordinationem utriusque, vel alterius ipsorum, de Perpetuis Capellanis, vel Ministris usque ad dictum vel alium minorem numerum, prout eidem militi videretur; ac Persona, quae eidem Collegio praeesset faciendum in dictâ Capellâ, fundandi tamen dote sufficienti dictae Capellae, de bonis ipsius militis, primitùs assignata, jure Parochialis Ecclesiae, & cujuslibet alterius semper salvo, ad Instantiam ejusdem militis duxerat concedendum. Ac Insuper uniendi, ea vice eidem Collegio instituto prius & dotato, tria Beneficia Ecclesiastica in Regno Angliae consistentia, quorum fructus centum librarum sterlingorum summam, secundum taxationem decimae, non excederunt, ad cujuscunque Patronatum spectantia, Patronorum ad id consensu accedente, prout in iisdem Literis ejusdem Praedecessoris pleniùs continetur: Et demum prout eadem Petitio subjungebat, bonae memoria Michael Episcopus Londinensis & idem Miles, praedicto Collegio nondum instituto, Conventum duplicem Monachorum Ordinis Cartusiensis in loco praedicto mutato proposito dicti Militis, fundaverunt. Quare nobis humiliter supplicare fecistis quatenus iisdem Archiepiscopo & Episcopo, similem uniendi domui seu conventui vestro Beneficia Ecclesiastica cum cur â, vel sine cur â, ad summam ducentarum librarum Sterlingorum, secundum taxationem Decimae ascendentia, in dicto Regno consistentia; ad quorumcunque etiam Laicorum patronatus pertineant, dummodo Patronorum ad id accedat assensus, & ipsa Beneficia dictam summam non excedant, facultatem concedere dignaremur: Nos igitur, vestris in hac parte Supplicationibus inclinati, Venerabili Fratri Archiepiscopo Cantuariensi uniendi hac vice, duntaxat authoritate Apostolicâ, Ecclesias Parochiales, seu Beneficia Ecclesiastica, ad quorumcunque, etiam Laicorum, Patronatus pertinentia, dummodo Patronorum ad id accedat assensus, & jus Patronatus post Unionem vobis remaneat, ac eorum fructus, Redditus, & Proventus ducentarum librarum Sterlingorum secundum taxationem decimae, valorem annuum non excedant, dictósque Priorem & Conventum, vel Procuratores suos e rum nomine, post unionem hujusmodi, cedentibus vel decedentibus Rectoribus ipsorum, & Beneficiorum, qui tunc fuerint, vel aliàs Beneficia ipsa quomodocumque dimittentibus; in Beneficiorum ac jurium, ac pertinentiarum praedictorum corporalem possessionem inducendi, & defendendi Inductos, amotis quibuslibet detentoribus ab iisdem, ac faciendi ipsis Priori & Conventui, de ipsorum Beneficiorum Fructibus, redditibus, proventibus, congruas portiones ad ipsius Archiepiscopi vel Ordinarii arbitrium, (super quo ipsius Archiepiscopi & Ordinarii conscientiam oneramus, taxandas; ex quibus si sint Ecclesiae Parochiales, perpetui●l icarii per Priorem, qui erit pro tempore, & conventum dictae domus, ad Beneficia eadem praesentandi, commodè sustentari, jura Episcopalia solvere, & alia iis incumbentia onera sustentare: Contradictores Authoritate nostrâ, appellatione postposita, compescendo, non obstantibus si aliquis super provisionibus sibi faciendis de hujusmodi vel aliis Beneficiis Ecclesiasticis in illis partibus, Speciales vel Generales, Apostolicae Sedis, vel Legatorum ejus Literas impetravit, estamsi per eas ad inhibitionem, reservationem, & decretum, vel aliàs quomodolibet, sit processam: Quas Literas & Processus habttos, & quos per eos post unionem hujusmodi habert conttgerit, ad dicta Beneficia volumus extendi. Sed nullum per hoc iis quoad assecutionem aliorum beneficiorum praejudicium generari & quibuslibet Privilegits, Indulgentiis. & Literis Apostolicis, Generalibus vel Specialibus, quorumcunque tenerum existant, per quae praesentibus non expressa, vel totaliter non inserta effectus earum impediri valeat quom ●olibet, vel differri, & de quibus quorumque totis tenoribus habenda sit in Literis nostris mentis specialis, plenam & liberam tenore praesentium potestatem concedimus. Datum Romae. Apud Sanctam Marinum trans Tyberim pridié Idus Decembris, Pontificatûs nostri Anno primo. An Account of Sutton's Foundation, with his Life and Death. THOMAS SUTTON Esquire, Founder of King James his Hospital in the , was born at Knaith in Lincolnshire, in the year of our Lord 1531. which was the Four and twentieth year of Henry the Eighth. Though he was born, rather to give Honour to his Family, than to borrow any from it; yet his Blood was conveyed to him through many noble Saxon Veins, in Cheshire, Lancashire, and Worcestershire: For, notwithstanding the Danish and the Norman Conquests, yet in the time of the latter, we find one of this Family Sheriff in those Parts, a Person of a fair and honourable esteem in the World: And this advantage a Man well descended has above all others, unless he degenerate, that the Great Actions of his Ancestors will not let him sleep until he has outdone the Original. The Course of this Ancient Family (like the River Alpheus) a while ran silently under Ground, while at last it sprang up in Lincolnshire, in the time of Henry the Seventh, under Dudley, as notorious for Cruelty and Exactions, as our Founder is for Mercy and Compassion. His Father was Edward Sutton, Son of Thomas Sutton, Servant to Edward the Fourth. His Mother was Jane Stapleton, the Daughter of Robert Stapleton Esquire, of the most Generous and Worthy Family of the Stapleton's in Yorkshire. Ancestors, not so low, that his Descent should be a shame to his Virtues; nor yet so great, but that his Virtue might be an Ornament to his Birth. Mr. Cox (afterwards Dr. Cox, Almoner to King Edward the Sixth, and Bishop of Ely under Queen Elizabeth) brought him up three years at Eton, four years in Magdalen and Jesus Colleges in Cambridge; to each of whose Children, surviving at his Death, Mr. Sutton gave 10 l. for a Legacy: and as a thankful Acknowledgement of the Benefits he received from those places of good Learning, he nobly bequeathed 500 to each College. Soon after he was placed in Lincolns-Inne, as a Student, that he might want no part of Learning becoming a Gentleman. Not long after, almost tired with a Sedentary life, desire of Travel increasing with his Knowledge, he went to visit Foreign Nations, and obtained the perfection of several Languages. Half of a year he tarries in Spain, two in Italy, one in France, and then he passes into Holland, and the Low-Countries; from whence, after a year or two spent in the Italian Wars (for he was at the Sacking of Rome, under the Duke of Bourbon) he returned, accomplished with experience and observation: Then he was admitted to the Earl of Warwick and the Earl of Leicester's service. To the former he was a Steward, to the latter a Secretary; and to both he approved himself so able and faithful, that they declared him fit for more Public Employments: as after appeared by their helping him to Farm the Northern Coal-mines, and that upon no other Security than his own Word. He was quickly spied out by his wise and noble Sovereign Queen Elizabeth (one, who knew where to bestow her Favours, and who deserved her Bounty) by her he was made Master of the Ordnance at Barwick, which Office he enjoyed Fourteen years; in token whereof there are two Pieces of Ordnance carved in Stone, and set upon the Chimney-piece, in the great Hall in the . Then he was chosen Paymaster to the Northern Army; and afterwards one of the Commissioners for the Sequestration of the Lands of the Northern Rebels: in opposition to whom, he shown himself a wise Man in disposing so advantageously of the Berwick Forces: And a valiant Man in his Actions and Conduct. Some years after he became Victualler to the Navy, and some Garrisons in the Low-Countries; one of which was Ostend, which, by the help of some Fishermen, he relieved very strangely, and to his own great Advantage: to which Town he left in his Will 100 l. Lastly, he was a Commissioner for Prizes, under the Earl of Nottingham, Lord High Admiral of England, who gave him Letters of Mart against the Spaniard, from whom he took a Ship richly laden, worth Twenty thousand pounds. Having by these profitable Employs laid the Foundation of a good Estate, upon some misunderstanding between him and the Northern Nobility, he retires to London, to enjoy and improve it; where his Riches increased, and came upon him like a Tide, by the just Arts and Methods which he used. He brought with him to London the Reputation of a mighty moneyed Man, insomuch that it was reported, That his Purse returned from the North fuller than Queen Elizabeth's Exchequer: (here he was made a Freeman, Citizen, and Girdler of London.) His Payments were thought as sure as her Pensions; the readiness of his money, and the fairness of his dealing, laid the grounds of a mighty Reputation; for now he is looked upon by all men, he has the first refusal of the best Bargains, of Sales, and Mortgages, which were more frequent in a dead time of Money, as that was. Here possibly he got acquaintance with several Lords Servants, whom he remembers in his last Will, and piously relieves them. He was also resorted to by Citizens for money; and indeed Mr. Sutton became the Banker of London: being called upon so much, that he was persuaded to help others too, in the putting out of their money. Once he thought of setting up a Bank in London, like that in Amsterdam; where People might take up money, at so moderate an Interest, as should not eat out their Labour, nor waste the heart and life of Trade, by making the care, pains, and ingenuity of the Borrower, sweat, and toil, for the sole benefit of the Lender: Therefore he lodged a 100 l. in some honest men's hands to lend to poor people, weekly or monthly, by small sums upon good pawns, while he lived; and when he died, he left 1000 l. to the Chamber of London, to be yearly lent to Ten young Tradesmen without Use. Besides, he ordered his Executors to abate half a years Interest to all his Debtors, when they called in his money. Thus did this great Man wax rich and known, which made him to some evil-minded persons, the object of Envy: and he finds not the Shadow of that Charity in the World, which he showed in Substance and Reality. Some urge that he served himself too much upon the hopes many had entertained of being his Heirs: by receiving those Gifts, which some covetous Friends, miserunt in hamô, by easily purchasing those Lands which they expected should return with Interest. I do not understand the unreasonable presumption of men, to name and adopt themselves their Neighbour's Heirs, and, if they confirm it not, they shall be branded with Injustice: The Wisdom of the Serpent is as well required, as the Innocency of the Dove. He that strives to outreach his Friend, is justly caught in his own Snares. Others strongly believe he was the Subject of Ben. Johnson's mirth: Which (if it were true) is no real Scandal to this good Man, when all things just and honourable, sacred and of good report, are shamefully exposed to the lewd affronts of a bold and licentious Stage. Besides, 'tis probable the Poet never intended what they think. For in that Age several other men were pointed at, and who was the true Person, was then a matter of doubt. If the Poet designed to injure the Fame of Sutton, he was first of all an ungrateful Wretch, to abuse those hands which afforded him Bread, for he allowed him a constant Pension: And secondly, he disowned his very Handwriting, which he sent to our Founder, in Vindication of himself in this matter. In the late unhappy times, another sort of Enemy appears, and will hardly suffer this pious Benefactor to lie quiet in his Grave: The Revenue made a great noise, and proved something melodious to the ears of the commanding Party; therefore they endeavour to find out a way to subvert the House, Foundation and all. No better Plea than the old Popular Argument (used before against his Sacred Majesty Charles the First, of ever blessed memory) Popery, Popery: 'Tis presently whispered about, That Sutton died a Papist; That the House was built upon naughty, Popish ground; That all the Walls were full of Tapers and Crosses; That it was designed to Jesuitical ends and Purposes; That there was a great Vault underneath, which reached almost to Islington, and (for aught they knew) it might be full of Powder and Malignants, Plots and Superstition, all conspiring against the Good Old Cause. At this time, Edward Cresset Master of the Hospital, by his Interest in that Party, interposed, and laid that storm, for which he received public Thanks from the Lords the Governors, Anno 1660. This Freak hardly deserves consideration, especially proceeding from that sort of men. Mr. Sutton was too well known for this Project to take effect: He was an Honest and Religious Protestant, constant and exemplary upon all occasions at the Public Service of God, regular and strict in Family Duties, accustomed to Prayer, reading the Scriptures, and very solicitous in his choice of a Holy and Learned Chaplain: His thoughts were usually Heaven-ward; in his Ejaculations frequently desiring God, That as he had bountifully blessed him with a plentiful Estate, so he would be pleased to direct him in the disposal of it. This he has been often overheard to say, walking in his Garden. His Thoughts were not only Divine, but his usual Company were Ministers of God's Word; for there is no Writing scarce of his, to which there is not the hand of a Divine or two: Or else he visited the Fatherless and Widows, the Impotent and Indigent, and in a great measure kept himself unspotted from the World. Now that which seems most wonderful is this, That men professing the Protestant Religion, should endeavour to pull down one of the greatest Monuments of the Reformed Religion, it being the common Argument whereby we use to prevent the Papists extravagant Relations of Good Works. Had he been a Redletter Man, Mr. Knott the Jesuit (in his Answer to Dr. Potter's Book, called Charity Mistaken) would never have vented this following Reproach: But he must be crucified between these two: Do your Hospitals deserve so much as to be named? Have you any thing of that kind, in effect, of particular note? saving the few mean Nurseries of idle Beggars, and debauched People; except Sutton 's Hospital, which (as I have been informed) was to receive no profit, till his death: who also died without Children, Brother, Sister, or known Kindred; so that per adventure, it was escheated to the King, etc. At length he says, He could tell us of the Annunciata at Naples, which spends Three hundred thousand Crowns, viz. above Eight thousand pounds, per Annum, feeds and cures One thousand sick persons; Nurses and entertains Three thousand Sucking-childrens, etc. Then he gives a hint of another famous Hospital in Rome, called Sancto Spirito. To both which Instances Mr. Fuller does as reproachfully reply, by saying, That the Infamous Disease of Naples might well cause the erection of so mighty a Structure; and as for that at Rome, the wonderful plenty of unlawful Issues, Children basely born, did require so great a Receptacle. I question not but both are too blame for where ever we find any sparks of goodness and piety, though they lodge in the breast of a Turk or Jew, Papist or Protestant, yet it is but common Justice to afford every man his due praise. 'Tis easy also to discover the Jesuits mistakes: for first Mr. Sutton intended to reside upon his Benefaction, as Master of it; though it pleased God sooner to take him to himself, to admit him into the Land of Promise. Then his Kindred were known far and near, for Simon Baxter, Son of his Sister Dorothy, endeavoured to overthrow the Settlement of the Estate, as being next Heir in Law; as after may be seen at large. His other Objections concerning penuriousness, shall be answered in another place. Here now I could to purpose recriminate, but that I am sensible it is disingenuous and uncharitable; and widens the Breaches of Christendom. Let the froward World endeavour to defame and calumniate, to bespatter all that is good and laudable; yet certainly, we ought to rise up in the Vindication of him, who taught us to speak, to proclaim his Charity by which we live; to commend that Temperance, which affords us affluence and plenty; to admire his Self-denial, who was to do little less than a Miracle, to feed a Multitude. There are few such Usurers who design to receive their interest in Heaven; few such Benefactors, whose comprehensive Bounty embraces all Mankind, from the Cradle almost, to the greyest Head; from the tender and helpless Youth, to the most Impotent and Infirm old Age. Had our Founder gained that by unlawful Usury, which he disposed to pious uses (which is a sin almost to suppose, unless we had evidence) yet Restitution is the best sign, and the greatest testimonial of sincere Repentance; and where particular Restitution cannot be made to the parties wronged, God requires it should be given to relieve the poor. Thus Zacheus, Luke 19.8. upon his Repentance and Conversion, made an Overture of Restauration to all that he had wronged, nay fourfold, and gave half of his Estate to Souls that were in want; this is recorded for our Example. But this Accusation can lay no hold on Mr. Sutton; for his Estate was gotten by Trade and Offices, and never laid out for Interest until his years admonished him to quit his business, and leave it for younger and more active people, who could not undertake it unless he lent them money: and what Injury did he to any man to let him have that at 6 l. per Cent. which he was able to improve to 30 or 40 per Cent. Besides in his latter time his money was chief laid out upon Annuities. It was observed, that when he lent money, he would inquire how it was spent, and if he found that it was laid out for Necessaries, Food, and Raiment, he never could be persuaded to take any Use. No doubt but he risen by the Steps of Thrift and Frugality, by being diligent in a lawful Calling; nor was he Prodigal because he intended to be Magnificent. Observe this Story which is told of his Parsimony: Whilst he was busied in Foreign Trade and Commerce with other Nations, he contracted a Familiar Acquaintance with a Merchant, his Companion in Travel; who, though he did equal Sutton in Trade, yet had not so well learned the Elements of Thrift: For when on a Journey, he called for his Pint of Wine, Sutton called for a Gill: and for every other Liquor doubled the Quantity. At length this Merchant dies, and by Computation leaves an Estate of Fifty thousand pounds; which Report coming to Sutton's Ears, he said, Alas! I always pitied him, I thought he would die no rich man. This was, in the person of his Friend, to correct the Surfeits and Extravagancies of a Profuse Age: For a rich man is no way happier than another man, but that he has more Opportunities ministered unto him of doing more good than his Neighbours. Therefore Diogenes asked of the Thrifty man but a half penny, of the Prodigal a pound; the former, he said, might give him often, but the latter would shortly have nothing to give. Good Husbandry is the fuel of Liberality. He chose rather to deny himself in his Superfluities, to retrench vain Expenses, that he might be able to refresh others in their day of sorrow; not to rake from others wants, that he might riot, and rejoice in their miseries. The Fame and Credit of our Generous Founder, brought him to share in many Offices at the Court, and at the Custom-house, where they had occasion for his money: for when an Industrious man has once raised his Fortunes to a considerable pitch, he there grows rich apace, by sharing in the constant Labours of many of the under sort of men. He was a sharer in several public Farms, a Partner in Foreign Adventures, especially in Muscovy and Hamburgh; insomuch that he had no less than Thirty Agents abroad. Thus he toiled and wrought, as if he coveted all; and gave away, and he desired nothing: He looked upon himself a● if he desired Steward of the Great God, thriving, as all should, not for himself but others: unwilling to lavish, what he could spare from his own occasions, on Pride or Ambition, the Luxury and Vanity of a trifling World, when God appointed it, to be the Portion of his Fellow-Creatures. Mr. Sutton, according to the Methods of Wise men, who mean to be wealthy, appointed his Ordinary Expenses to be but half of his Incomes, when they were at the lowest; and when they increased he ordered a third part, and at the highest, he determined to be charitable to an eighth part, or thereabouts, while living: When his Estate was Two thousand pound per Ann. he designed one Thousand for himself and Family, in House-keeping and Board-wages; Two or Three hundred pounds for Charity; Four hundred pounds for Law and Physic, and many other necessaries; the rest for extraordinary Emergencies, not thinking it any way dishonourable, to have a Personal Inspection over his own Affairs. He was happy in a Wife, as well as Estate, which was advanced by her near Twenty thousand pounds. She was the Lady Popham, and so enjoyed the Wealth of great Rich Popham. He had no Issue by his Beloved Wife, for God Almighty had designed him a numerous train of Children, to be adopted into his Family, and nursed up tenderly, as if they came from his own Loins. His Addresses were manly and taking, his Discourse clear and full of Eloquence: He did not interrupt his Resolutions with fearfulness and too much caution, nor deprive himself of the great Instrument of Action, Trust, or Belief. These good Qualifications, with the glad Circumstances of a large Fortune, and a long Age, near 80 years, in a Peaceable and Flourishing Reign (after the troublesome days of Queen Mary; and before the late unhappy Rebellion) could not but conspire to make him Considerable. The Benefices that were in his Patronage, he dearly bought, that he might bestow them upon men fit to be burning and shining Lights in the Church of God; One of which Divines was Dr. Fish of Hallingbury in Essex, who has often testified Mr. Sutton's Integrity in this point: He received his Presentation of Him, Ann. Dom. 1610. and heard him say, That he never desired any thing of a Minister of God's Word, but his Prayers, and the due performance of his Office. He was a good Parishioner where he had Land and no Living; as well as a good Patron where he had both: encouraging all People by his early presence at Church; doing good Offices, as repairing Churches, and decently adorning those holy Places, where God has said his Name shall dwell. He was remarkable for the Compassion and Relief he bestowed on the Widows and Children of good Ministers: and this more particularly incited to by the excellent Examples he had seen of Charity of this Nature in the Low-Countries. He was very Temperate, moderating his natural Appetite by Abstinence; he was sober and vigilant, and moderate in all his Recreations: The outward Ornaments of his Body were clean and becoming, neither starched or curious, neither careless or nice. These were not so properly the Comforts of his Soul, as the Sweetness of his Life; hence proceeded health of Body, clean Strength, a good Complexion, and a graceful and treatable Disposition. As a Master, he was careful and diligent to inquire how his Servants performed their Labours, for the dust of the Master's Shoes, is the compost to improve the Soil: and his Love appeared to his Servants by making a comfortable provision for them; for at this day, many of the Tenants to the House, are descended from those who were Servants to the Founder; and the common Reason they give of their good Bargains, is; That they hold them as Rewards of their Ancestors Service. Yet it lies in the power of the Governors to advance the Rent, which in some places has been done, though with great moderation; and this rather to quicken than dishearten the Tenants. It is not intended by this Character of Mr. Sutton, that he should be free from all blemish; that he should be another Bonaventure, in whom, some affirm, Adam did not sin. All things have a mixture of corruption here below, nay, it is riveted in our very Nature: The fairest Figure must have some flaws, and the most beautiful Image some unhappy strokes; therefore he, as all other men, was subject to the like Passions: Whatever were his failings, common Charity should endeavour to hid his Infirmities, who was content to spread his Garments over so great a multitude. After a numerous train of Worthy and Religious Actions, in a good old Age, within One of 80 years, he died at Hackney, in the County of Middlesex, Decemb. 12. Ann. Dom. 1611. He had for some time laboured under a Feverish Distemper, which wasted him away, and brought him into a lingering Consumption; this, attended with frequent and sharp fits of the Stone, and violent assaults of the Colic, made him Surrender up his Soul to that God, on whose power the Life of all Depends. From Hackney, he was removed, Decemb. 16. to Dr. Law's House (one of the Executors mentioned in his Will) in Paternoster Row, and from thence was conveyed to his Grave with all the Pomp and Solemnity, which might become the Funeral of so great a Man: Six thousand people attended his Corpse through the City, whose passage lasted six hours; until they came to Christ-Church, where his Body lay till his Foundation at the was finished (which was about Three years) Ann. Dom. 1614 from whence he was in a decent manner removed, Decemb. 12. in the aforesaid year: Upon which day is duly kept an Anniversary Commemoration, a Sermon is appointed with a Gratuity to the Preacher. The first who preached on that Occasion was Mr. Percival Burrell, Minister of the House, upon Luke 7.5. He hath built us a Synagogue: The Sermon was primed Ann. Dom. 1629. After Sermon the Auditors repair to the Public Hall, where the Bounty and Magnificence of our Noble Founder is gracefully set forth in a Latin Oration, by a Youth of the Foundation, whom Sutton has taught to speak. Thus have we brought our Founder to his place of Rest; where, in the Chapel, on the North side, is a Noble Monument, Erected by his Overseers, with this following Inscription on a fair Marblestone, in Golden Letters. Sacred to the Glory of God. In grateful Memory of Thomas Sutton Esquire, late of Castle-Camps, in the County of Cambridge, at whose only Cost and Charges this Hospital was Founded, and Endowed with large Possessions, for the Relief of poor Men and Children: He was Born at Knaith in the County of Lincoln, of Worthy and Honoured Parentage: He lived to the Age of 79 Years, and Deceased Decemb. 12. 1611. Let us now consider what particular Motives were applied to persuade and mould the mind of this good Man to design this Great Benefaction: as also what Objections and Inconveniences were proposed to hinder the Progress of the Work. Dr. Willet, who lived at Barkway, not far from Mr. Sutton, and was much consulted by him, would often say, That his Thoughts had eaten his Bowels, had he not unbosomed some of them to his Friends. The Doctor advised him to be a Benefactor to Chelsey College; a Place intended for the convenience and maintenance of Learned Divines, who should study and write Controversies against the Papists, Erected Ann. Dom. 1610. Dr. Sutcliff Dean of Exeter, was the first Master; Mr. William Gambden Clarencieux, and Mr. John Heywood Dr. in Law, Historians, were fellows of the College: The Reversion of some Lands in Chelsey, held in Lease by the Earl of Nottingham, was all the Encouragement this College found; whose Endowment Dr. Willet proposed to Mr. Sutton, or the erection of a new College to that purpose of his own. Another Proposition of the Doctors was taken out of King James his Letter to the Archbishop for the digging of a Trench out of the River Lee, to erect Engines and Water-works, to convey Water in close Pipes under ground, unto the City of London, and the Suburbs thereof, by an Act of Parliament, 7. Jacobi. But both these proved ineffectual: Then Mr. Hall, Minister of Waltham in Essex, afterwards made Bishop of Exeter, sent him this following Letter. Sir, I Trouble you not with reasons of my writing, or with excuses: if I do ill, no plea can warrant me; if well, I cannot be discouraged with any Censures. I crave not your pardon, but your acceptation: It is no presumption to give good Counsel, and Presents of Love fear not to be ill taken of Strangers: my Pen and your Substance are both given us for one end, to do good: these are our Talents, how happy are we, if we can improve them well! suffer me to do you good with the one, that with the other you may do good to many, and most to yourself: you cannot but know, that your full hand and worthy purposes have possessed the World with much expectation: What speak I of the World! whose honest and reasonable claims yet cannot be contemned with honour, nor disappointed with dishonour. The God of Heaven hath lent you this abundance, and given you these gracious thoughts of Charity, of Piety, looks long for the Issue of both, and will easily complain of too little, or too late: your Wealth and your Will are both good; but the first is only made good by the second: for if your hand were full, and your heart empty, we, who now applaud you, should justly pity you: you might have Riches, not Goods, not Blessings; your Burden should be greater than your Estate, and you should be richer in sorrows, than in metals. For (if we look to no other world) what gain is it to be keeper of the best Earth? that which is the common Coffer of all the rich Mines, we do but tread upon; and account it vile, because it doth but hold and hid those Treasures: whereas the skilfullest Metallist, that findeth and refineth those precious Veins for Public use, is rewarded, is honoured: the very basest Element yields Gold. The Savage Indian gets it, the Servile Apprentice works it, the very Midianitish Camel may wear it; the miserable worldling admires it, the covetous Jew swallows it, the unthrifty Ruffian spends it; what are all these the better for it? only good use gives praise to Earthly Possessions: hearing therefore you own more to God, that he hath given you an heart to do good: a will to be as rich in good Works, as great in Riches; to be a Friend to this Mammon, is to be an enemy to God; but to make Friends with it is Royal and Christian: His Enemies may be wealthy, none but his Friends can either be good, or do good: Dam & acc●pe, saith the Wise man. The Christian who must imitate the high pattern of his Creator, knows his best Riches, to be Bounty. God, who hath all gives all; reserves nothing: and for himself he well considers, that God hath not made him an owner, but a servant; and a servant of servants not of his goods, but of the giver: Not a Treasurer, but a Steward, whose praise is more, to have laid out well, than to have received much: The greatest gain therefore that he affects, is an even reckoning, a clear discharge: which since it is obtained by disposing, not by keeping, he counts reservation loss, and just expense his trade, and joy. He knows, that well done faithful Servant, is a thousand times more sweet a Note, than Soul take thine ease: for that is the voice of the Master recompensing; this of the servant presuming: and what follows to the one, but his Master's joy? and what to the other, but the loss of his Soul? Blessed be that God, which hath given you an heart to forethink this, and in this dry and dead Age a will to honour him with his own; and to credit his Gospel with your Beneficence. Lo! we are upbraided with barrenness: your name hath been publicly opposed to these challenges; as in whom it shall be seen, that the truth hath friends, that can give: I neither distrust nor persuade you, whose Resolutions are happily fixed on purposes of good; only give me leave to hasten your pace a little, and to excite your Christian forwardness to begin speedily, what you have long and constantly vowed. You would not but do good, why not now? I speak boldly the more speed, the more comfort: neither are the times in our disposal, nor ourselves. If God had set us a Day, and made our Wealth inseparable, there were no danger in delaying now our uncertainty either must quicken us, or may deceive us. How many have meant well and done nothing, and lost the Crown with lingering? whose destinies have prevented their desires; and have their good motions the wards of their Executors; not without miserable success: to whom, that they would have done good, is not so great a praise, as it is dishonour, that they might have done it: then Wrecks are our Warnings: we are equally mortal, equally fickle. Why have you this respite of living, but to prevent the Imperious necessity of Death? It is a woeful and remediless complaint, the end of our days hath overrun the beginning of our good Works: Early beneficence hath no danger; many joys: for the conscience of good done, the Prayers and Blessings of the Relieved, and the Gratulations of Saints, are as so many perpetual Comforters, which can make our life pleasant, and our death happy; our evil days good, our good better: all these are but lost with delay: few and cold are the Prayers for him that may give: and in lieu, our good purposes foreslowed are become our tormentors: upon our Deathbed little difference is betwixt good deferred, and evil done: good was meant, who hindered it? will our Conscience say: There was time enough, means enough, need enough, what hindered? did fear of envy, distrust of want? alas! what Bugs are these to fright men from Heaven? as if the envy of keeping were less than bestowing: as if God were not as good a Debtor, as a Giver. He that gives to the Poor, lends to the Lord, says Solomon. If he freely give us what we may lend, and grace to give, will he not much more pay us what we have lent? and give us, because we have given? that is his bounty, this is his justice: O happy is the man that may be a Creditor to his Maker! Heaven and Earth shall empty, before he want a Royal Payment: if we dare not trust God while we live, how dare we trust men, when we are dead? Men, that are still deceitful, and light upon the Balance: light of truth, and heavy of self-love: how many Executors have proved the Executioners of honest Wills? how many have our eyes seen, that after most careful choice of Trusty Guardians, have had their Children and Goods so disposed, as if the Parent's Soul could return to see it, I doubt whether it would be happy: How rare is that man, who prefers not himself to his dead Friend, profit to truth? who will take no advantage of the Impossibility of the account? Whatever therefore men either show or promise, happy is that man that may be his own Auditor, Supervisor, Executor: as you love God and yourself, be not aefraid of being happy too soon. I am not worthy to give so bold advice, let the Wiseman Syrach speak for me; Do good before thou die, and according to thine ability stretch out thine hand, and give: defraud not thyself of thy good day; and let not the Portion of thy good desires pass over thee: Shalt thou not leave thy travels to another, and thy labours to them that will divide thy Heritage? Or let a wiser than he speak, viz. Solomon: Say not, to morrow I will give, if thou now have it: for thou knowest not what a day will bring forth. It hath been an old Rule of Liberality, He gives twice, who gives quickly: whereas slow benefits argue uncheerfulness, and lose their worth: who lingers his receipts, is condemned as unthrifty: he who knoweth both, saith, It is better to give, than to receive. If we are of the same spirit, why are we hasly in the worst, and slack in the better? Suffer you yourself therefore, Good Sir, for God's sake, for the Gospel's sake, for the Church's sake, for your Soul's sake, to be stirred up by these poor lines, to a resolute and speedy performing of your worthy intentions. And take this as a loving Invitation sent from Heaven, by an unworthy Messenger: you cannot deliberate long of fit Objects for your Beneficence, except it be more for multitude, than want: the Streets, yea, the World is full. How doth Lazarus lie at every door? how many Sons of the Prophets in their meanly provided Colleges, may say, not mors in ollâ, but fames? how many Churches may justly plead that which our Saviour bade his Disciples, The Lord hath need? and if this infinite store hath made your choice doubtful, how easy were it to show you, wherein you might oblige the whole Church of God to you? and make your memorial both eternal and blessed: or if you had rather, the whole Commonwealth? But now I find myself too hold, and too busy, in thus looking to particularities: God shall direct you, and if you follow him, shall Crown you. Howsoever, if good be done, and that betimes, He hath what he desired, and your Soul shall have more than you can desire. The Success of my weak, yet hearty Counsel, shall make me as rich, as God hath made you, with all your abundance. God bless it to you, and make both our Reckon cheerful in the Day of our Common Audit. Never man received Advice more kindly than Mr. Sutton, and blessed God for the return of his Prayers in the Garden. He never was inclinable to Dr. Willet's former Proposal, upon these accounts: he understood the Patrons of Chelsey College were few, nor was his design to be an additional Benefactor, but a Founder. Besides, he plainly saw those Enemies to the work, who thought they lay in secret: and what was more, he perceived it was looked upon with a jealous Eye by the Universities, as a disparagement to them. Then, other Divines and Churchmen thought they were undervalved, because the Fellows of this Foundation were likely to gain Privileges prejudicial to them. And lastly, the Politic Statesmen did dislike the Project, suspecting Court Divinity, and History, from a College. This is supposed to be the place meant by the Incomparable Cowley, in his excellent Instructions towards the Institution of a College. Nor to add a City-Hospital could he be induced (though much solicited) the poor of those places being likely to be well provided for, by the daily Legacies of such, who were not in any capacity to do so great things as himself. Being thus solicited by others to perform that, which he had long since resolved within himself; and having observed how many hopeful Youths miscarried for want of competent Means for their Education; and how many ancient Gentlemen, having the same tender Breeding with their Elder Brothers, yet have but the slender Fortunes of a Younger Brother; that they were too generous to beg, not made for work (whose ingenuous Natures were most sensible of want, and least able to relieve it) but were cast away, and brought to misery for want of a comfortable Subsistence in their Old Age: Therefore he resolved to prevent, by his memorable Charity, as far as he could, these growing inconveniences. The blind Devotion of former Ages had so abused the ends and designs of Charitable Works, that King Edward the First (as well as Theodosius the Emperor) made a Law of Mortmain;) whereby it is made unlawful for any man to bestow Land of such a value to any Religious or Charitable use without licence from the King, of Mortmain in Parliament. This Law of Amortization in the Emperor's time, much grieved many good men: For St. Jerome thus complains to Nepotian, I am ashamed to say it, the Priests of Idols, Stage-players, and Common Harlots, are made capable of Inheritance, and receiving Legacies, only Ministers of the Gospel are barred by the Law thus to do, and that not by Persecutors, but Christian Princes: neither do I complain of the Law, but am sorry we have deserved it. To the same purpose is that of St. Ambrose, Ep. 31. deploring the State of the Clergy. Upon the account of this Law, Mr. Sutton was forced to petition his Majesty K. James and the Parliament, March 10. 1609. for leave and licence to erect and endow an Hospital in the Town of Hallingbury Bouchers, in the County of Essex. An Act of Parliament granted to Thomas Sutton Esq to erect an Hospital at Hallingbury in Essex, etc. Humbly beseecheth your Majesty, your loyal and dutiful Subject Thomas Sutton of Balsham in the County of Cambridge Esquire, That it may please your most excellent Majesty, and the Lords Spiritual and Temporal, and the Commons in this present Parliament assembled, to enact, ordain, and establish, And be it enacted, ordained, and established by the Authority aforesaid, That in the Town of Hallingbury, otherwise called Hallingbury Bouchers in the County of Essex, there may be builded and erected (at the costs and charges of your Suppliant) one meet, fit and convenient House, Buildings, and Rooms, for the abiding and dwelling of such a number of poor people, men and children, as your Suppliant shall name, limit and appoint to be lodged, harboured, abide, and be relieved there; And for the abiding, dwelling, and necessary use of one Schoolmaster and Usher to instruct the s●m children in reading, writing, and Latin and Greek Grammar, and of one Divine and godly Preacher to instruct and reach all the rest of the same House in the knowledge of God and his Word, And of one Master to govern all these persons of, in, or belonging to the same House; And that the same shall and may be called and named the Hospital of King James, founded in Hallingbury in the County of Essex, at the humble petition and at the only costs and charges of Thomas Sutton Esquire, And that the right reverend Father in God Richard, now Archbishop of Canterbury, and his Successors Archbishops there, Thomas Lord Ellesmere Lord Chancellor of England, and such as after him shall succeed to be Lord Chancellors or Lord Keepers of the great Seal of England, for and during the time they shall so continue or be in the same office, Robert Earl of Salisbury Lord High Treasurer of England, and such as after him shall succeed to be Lord Treasurers of England, for and during the time they shall continue or be in the same Office, The Reverend Father in God Lancelot Bishop of Ely, and his Successors Bishops there, Richard Bishop of Rochester, and Dean of the Cathedral Church of Westminster, and his Successors of and in the same Deanery of Westminster, Sir Thomas Foster Knight, one of the justices of your Majesty's Court of Common Pleas usually holden at Westminster, Sir Henry Hobart Knight, your Majesty's Attorney General, John Overall Doctor of Divinity, Dean of the Cathedral Church of Saint Paul in London, and his Successors Deans there, Henry Thursby Esquire, one of the Masters of your Majesty's Court of Chancery, Thomas Fortescue, Thomas Paget, Geffrey Nightingale, and Richard Sutton Esquires, John Law and Thomas Brown Gentlemen, and such others as shall be from time to time for ever hereafter chosen and nominated in and to the places and steads of such of them as shall decease, by your Suppliant during his life, And after his decease by the most part of them which then shall be Governors of the said Hospital, to be and succeed in and to the place and places of him and them deceasing, shall and may be the Governors of the said Hospital, and of the Members, Goods, Lands, Revenues and Hereditaments of the same at all times hereafter for ever. And that the same Governors and Hospital shall for ever hereafter stand and be incorporated, established, and founded in name and in deed a body politic and corporate, to have continuance for ever, by the name of the Governors of the Hospital of King James, founded in Hallingbury in the County of Essex, at the humble petition, and at the only cost and charges of Thomas Sutton Esquire, and that they the said Governors may have a perpetual succession, and that by that name they and their Successors may for ever hereafter have, hold, and enjoy the Manors, Lordships, Messages, Lands, Tenements, and Hereditaments hereafter mentioned, without any licence or pardon for any alienation of them or any of them, and without any licence of or for Mortmain, or any other Law or Statute to the contrary notwithstanding, That is to say, your Suppliants Manors and Lordships of Southminster, Norton, Little Hallingbury, alias Hallingbury Bouchers, and Much Stambridge in the County of Essex, with all their and every of their Rights, Members, and Appurtenances whatsoever, And also all those your Suppliants Manors and Lordships of Buslingthorpe and Dunnesby in the County of Lincoln, with their and either of their Rights, Members, and Appurtenances whatsoever, And also all those your Suppliants Manors of Salthorpe, alias Saltrop, Chilton, and Black-grove, with their and every of their Rights, Members, and Appurtenances in the said County of Wilts, And also all those your Suppliants Lands and Pasture Grounds called Blackgrove, containing by estimation two hundred Acres of Pasture, with the Appurtenances in Blackgrove and Wroughton in the said County of Wilts, And also all that your Suppliants Manor of Mihenden, otherwise called the Manor of M●hunden in the Parishes of Wroughton, Lydgerd, and Tregoce, in the said County of Wilts, And all that your Suppliants Manor of Elcombe and the Park called Elcombe Park in the said County of Wilts, And all that your Suppliants Manor of Wattlescote, otherwise called Wigglescote, otherwise called Wiglescete, otherwise called Wikelscete, in the County of Wilts, And all that your Suppliants Manor of Wescote, otherwise called Wescete, with the Appurtenances in the said County of Wilts, And also all those your Suppliants Lands and Pastures, containing by estimation one hundred Acres of Land, and threescore Acres of Pasture, in Wiglescote and Wroughton in the said County of Wilts, And also all that your Suppliants Manor of Uffcote with the Appurtenances in the said County of Wilts, And all those your Suppliants two Messages, and one thousand acres of Land, two thousand acres of Pasture, three hundred acres of Meadow, and three hundred acres of Wood with the Appurtenances in Brodehinton in the said County of Wilts, And also all those your Suppliants Manors and Lordships of Camps, otherwise called Comps, otherwise called Campes-Castle, otherwise called Castle-Campes, situate, lying, being and extending in the Counties of Cambridge and Essex, or in either of them, or elsewhere within the Realm of England, And also all that your Suppliants Manor of Balsham in the County of Cambridge, with all and singular the Rights, Members, and Appurtenances thereof whatsoever, And also all that your Suppliants Message and Lands situate and being in the Parishes of Hackney and Tottenham in the County of Middlesex, or in either of them, with their and either of their Rights, Members, and Appurtenances whatsoever, which said Message was lately purchased of Sir William Bower Knight, and the Lands in Tottenham now or late in the tenure or occupation of William Benning Yeoman, and also all and singular the Manors, Lordships, Messages, Lands, Tenements, Reversions, Services, Meadows, Pastures, Woods, Advowsons', Patronages of Churches, and Hereditaments of your Suppliant whatsoever, situate, lying, or being within the said Counties of Essex, Lincoln, Wilts, Cambridge, and Middlesex, or any of them, with all and every their Rights, Members, and Appurtenances whatsoever: And also all your Suppliants Letters Patents, Indentures, Deeds, Evidences, Bonds and Writings concerning the Premises, or any of them, And all such Conditions, Warranties, Vouchers, Actions, Suits, Entries, Benefits, and Demands as shall or may be had by any person or persons upon, or by reason of them, or any of them, except those your Suppliants Manors or Lordships of Littlebury and Hadstock in the said County of Essex: And except all your Suppliants Lands, Tenements and Hereditaments in Littlebury and Hadstock aforesaid, or in either of them, And that the said Governors and their Successors by the same name shall and may have power, ability, and capacity, to demise, lease, and grant their Possessions and Hereditaments, and every of them, And to take, acquire, and purchase, And to sue and be sued, And to do, perform, and execute all and every other lawful act and thing, good, necessary and profitable for the said incorporation, in as full and ample manner and form to all intents, constructions, and purposes, as any other incorporations or body politic or corporate, fully and perfectly founded and incorporated, may do, And that the same Governors and their Successors for the time being, may have and use a common Seal for the making, granting, and demising of such their demises and leases, and for the doing of all and every other thing touching or in any wise concerning the said Incorporation, In which Seal shall be engraven the Arms of the said Thomas Sutton your Suppliant: And also that it may he further enacted by the Authority aforesaid, and be it enacted by the Authority aforesaid, That your Suppliant during his life, and the said Governors and their Successors for the time being, or the most part of them, after his decease, shall and may have full power and lawful authority to break, altar, and change the said Seal: And that your said Orator during his life, and the said Governors and their Successors for the time being, or the most part of them, after his decease, shall and may have full power and authority to nominate and appoint, and shall and may nominate and appoint, when and as often as he and they shall think good, such person and persons as he and they shall think meet to be Master, Preacher, Schoolmaster, Usher, poor Men, poor Children, and Officers of the said Hospital, And when any of them by death, resignation, deprivation, or otherwise, shall become void, shall and may within one month next after such avoidance, by writing under their said Common Seal, nominate and appoint one or more learned, godly, discreet and meet men and persons to be Master, Preacher, Schoolmaster, Usher, poor Men, poor Children, and Officers in the places of them, and every of them so deceasing, resigning, or otherwise becoming void, And that in case the said Governors and their Successors for the time being, or the most part of them, shall not within one month after such avoidance make such nomination and appointment as aforesaid, That then, and so often, and in every such case, from and after the decease of your said Orator, it shall and may be lawful to your Majesty, your Heirs and Successors, by your Letters Patents under the Great Seal of England, to nominate and appoint some meet, godly, and learned men in and to the places void by such default of the said Governors and their Successors for the time being, or the most part of them, as is aforesaid: And that it shall and may be lawful to and for the said Master, Preacher, Schoolmaster, Usher, poor People, poor Children, and Officers of the said Hospital to remain, assemble, be, and cohabit together in the said House, Buildings, and Hospital: And that it may be further enacted by the Authority aforesaid, And be it enacted by the Authority aforesaid, That your said Suppliant during his Life, and that the said Governors and their Successors for the time being, or the most part of them, after his decease, shall an may have full power and authority, under the said Common Seal, to make, ordain, set down, and prescribe such Rules, Statutes, and Ordinances for the order, rule, and government of the said Hospital, and of the said Master, Preacher, Schoolmaster, Usher, poor Men, poor Children, and Officers, and their Successors, and for their and every of their stipends and allowances, for or towards their or any of their maintenance and relief, as to your said Suppliant during his life, and the said Governors and their Successors for the time being, or the most part of them, after his decease, shall seem meet and convenient, And that the same Orders, Rules, Statutes, and Ordinances so by him, them, or any of them made, set down, and prescribed as aforesaid, shall be and stand in full force and strength in Law, the same not being repugnant nor contrary to your Majesty's Prerogative Royal, nor to the Laws or Statutes of this your Majesty's Realm of England, nor to any Ecclesiastical Canons or Constitutions of the Church of England then in force and use: And that your Suppliant during his life, and the said Governors and their Successors for the time being, or the most part of them, and such of them as your Suppliant shall thereto appoint and nominate, shall and may, after the decease of your said Suppliant, have full power and authority to visit the said Hospital, and to order, reform, and redress all disorders and abuses in and touching the government and disposing of the same, And further to censure, suspend, and deprive the said Master, Preacher, Schoolmaster, Usher, poor Men, poor Children, and Officers for the time being, and every or any of them, as to him and them shall seem just, sit, and convenient, So always that no visitation, act, or thing, in or touching the same, be had, made, or done other than by your Suppliant during his life, or the said Governors and their Successors for the time being, or the most part of them, after his decease, or by such of them as your Suppliant shall thereunto nominate and appoint: And also, that it may be further enacted by the Authority aforesaid, and be it enacted by the Authority aforesaid, that the said Preacher and Minister of the Word of God, which shall be placed in the said Hospital to and for the uses and purposes aforesaid, from time to time hereafter shall and may enter into, have, hold, and enjoy the Rectory and Parsonage of Hallingbury aforesaid, in and to his own proper use and behoof, for and during so long time as he shall be Preacher and Minister there, without any other presentation or admission, institution or induction, And that no Lease shall hereafter be made of the said Parsonage, or of any part or portion thereof, other than such as shall determine and end when and as soon as any such person as shall be the Preacher or Minister of and in the said Hospital, when the same Lease shall be made, shall decease or resign, leave or be put out and removed from his said place of Preacher or Minister of and in the said Hospital, Saving always and reserving to your Majesty, your Heirs and Successors, and to all and every other person and persons, bodies politic and corporate, their Heirs and Successors, other than your Suppliant and his Heirs, and the person and persons from whom the same were purchased and their Heirs claiming only as Heirs, all such Estate, Right, Title, Condition, Claim, Possession, Rents, Services, Commons, Demands, Actions, Remedies, Recoveries, Terms, Interests, Forfeits, Commodities, Advantages and Hereditaments whatsoever, which they or any of them shall or may have, or of right aught to have, of, in, to, or out of the premises, or any of them, or any part thereof, as if this Act had never been had or made, Other than Fine or Fines of or for any Alienation of the premises, or any part or parcel thereof, And other than respites of homage, or Fines for Nonpayment of respite of homage, at any time hereafter to be demanded, And other than Title and Right of Liberty or Liberties to enter into the same, or any of them, for or by reason of any Statute heretofore made for, concerning, or against any Alienation or Mortmain, prout per eundem actum inter alia plenius apparet. Not long after, Mr. Sutton changed his mind, and was desirous to purchase my Lord of Suffolk's House near Smithfield formerly a Carthusian Monastery, Founded (as before is mentioned at large) by Sir Walter de Manny: At the dissolution of Abbeys by King Henry the Eighth, at the rasing of Convents, a peculiar Clause was added to the Commission, impowering them particularly to rate the in London, which amounted to 642 l. 0 s. 4 d. ob. yearly. And the Prior was enjoined to renounce the Pope's Supremacy, and acknowledge the King, but he chose rather to lose his life, and was hanged at the Gate. Then this Monastery and Duke's Place was bestowed upon Sir Thomas Audly Speaker to that Parliament which dissolved these Houses. It passed from him with his sole Daughter Margaret, by marriage to Thomas Howard Duke of Norfolk, and so by Descent to Thomas Earl of Suffolk. This was the place which Mr. Sutton thought convenient for his intended Foundation, and the rather because it had been formerly employed to Religious ends. At length he purchas it it by the Name of Howard House, otherwise called The late dissolved , near Smithfield in Middlesex, consisting of Four or Five Courts, a Wilderness, Gardens, Orchards, and Walks thereunto belonging, with Pardon Church-yard, and the two Messages adjoining, called Willbeck, with all Buildings, Closets, Ways, Waters, Services, Rents, Wages, Felons Goods, Outlaws, Fugitives, Liberties, Reversions, Emoluments and Appurtenances, known to belong to the said House, or other the mentioned Premises, paying down for the same Thirteen thousand pounds, May 9 Jacobi. 9 1611. And on the 22 of June following settled the Hospital designed by the aforesaid Act at Hallingbury, by Letters Patents at the . The Letters Patents under the Great Seal are in my Lord Coke's Reports. The Sum of the Letters Patents of King JAMES for erecting Sutton's Hospital at the . 1. THE Purchase is mentioned, bought of the Right Honourable Thomas Earl of Suffolk. 2. The conceived to be a fit place than Hallingbury. 3. The Governors are incorporated, and have full Authority to purchase, take, receive, etc. 4. Sixteen Governors appointed by Name. 5. The Master to be one. 6. The Governors to have a Common Seal. 7. Not to transfer the Lands to any other use, nor to let longer Leases than for 21 years. 8. If any Governor dies, or is removed, the residue surviving are to remain Incorporate; and the Major part have power to elect, nominate, choose, and appoint a Successor. 9 Election of a new Governor to be made within two months after a Vacancy. 10. The Governors have full power to assign and appoint such number of poor Men and Officers as they shall think fit. 11. The number of Old Gentlemen and Children, to increase, and they maintained, according to the increase of the Revenues. 12. Mr. Sutton during his life, with the Governors to execute. 13. The King to nominate a Governor, after default made by the Governors for two months. 14. Governors impower'd to make Statutes under the Common Seal. 15. They may visit, punish, or displace the Master, Preacher, or other Officers of the Hospital. 16. The Hospital, Master, Preacher, and other Officers, exempted and freed from all visitations, punishment, and correction, to be had, used, or exercised, in or upon them, or any of them, by the Ordinary of the Diocese for the time being, or by any other person whatsoever, but the Founder and Governors. (This last Instance is quoted by the Learned Selden, Lib. 1. de Synedriis, cap. 13. p. 541. treating of the power of Excommunication, where he seems to favour Erastianism; Exemplum est illustre in Fundationis Ptochodochii Suttonianis juxta Londinum Instrumento, etc.) Ecclesiastical Preferments in the Governors' Disposal. 1. At the Charterhouse, 2. Balsham, 3. Castle-Camps, 4. Horsehead 5. Hallingbury, 6. Dunsby, 7. South-Minster, 8. Cold-Norton, 9 Little Wigborow, The Present Incumbents. Mr. Patrick. Dr. Templer. Mr. Hall. Mr. Eade. Mr. Sherwell. Mr. Johnson. Mr. Ford, Mr. Turbridge. By these Letters Patent, the Governors are charged to give and bestow the Spiritual Promotions upon those Scholars who have been bred in the House, and are qualified for them, before any other persons whatsoever. In pursuance of the Letters Patents, Mr. Hutton, Clerk, Vicar of Littlebury, was appointed by Mr. Sutton, to be the first Master after himself: and then ordered a Conveyance of the Estate to the Governors: both which Instruments are at large in my Lord Coke's Rep. lib. 10. Thus far our Noble Founder proceeded in his life time; but it pleased God to take him to himself three years before all things were completed, therefore they are mistaken, who report he was an actual Master in this his Foundation. But scarce was the Founder cold in his Grave, before troubles and disturbances arise, and many private persons intent to share the Revenues: For one Simon Baxter, Mr. Sutton's only Sister's Son, encouraged by some hungry and corrupt persons, who were to partake with him in the Spoil, attempted, as next Heir, to take Possession of the , and the whole Estate annexed to it: But failing in his attempt, by the vigilancy and care of one Richard Bird (first Porter of the Charter house, and appointed by the Founder himself) he enters an Action of Trespass against the Executors of Mr. Sutton, and the Governors. The last day of Trinity Term, 10. Jacobi, in the King's Bench, for a violent Entry made by the said Executours and Governors, May 30. the same year. The Case had in it divers points of Law started to overthrow the Settlement, which are here summed up. 1. Objection, By the Parliament, 7. Jac. the Hospital was founded at Hallingbury in Essex: the Incorporation after by the King's Letters Patents is void, and the is not given by the said Statute, because Sutton purchased it afterwards. 2. Sutton, who had Licence to Found an Hospital, before the Foundation died. 3. The King cannot name the House and Land of Sutton to be an Hospital, because in alieno solo. 4. Every Corporation ought to have a place certain, but here the Licence is to found an Hospital in or at the , before that Sutton made it certain, there was no Incorporation: Also the place of Incorporation ought to be certain, by means and bounds, and a place not known will not serve. 5. The King intended to make a Corporation presently, which cannot be, before that Sutton name a Master: Governors cannot be, until there be poor in the Hospital. 6. The Foundation cannot be with the words Fundo, Erigo, etc. and before such a Foundation, a stranger cannot give Lands unto it. 7. Sutton calls it in his Will, His intended Hospital. 8. The Master was named at Will, when he ought to be for Life, and have Freehold in the Land: Also the Hospital must be founded before a Master be named. 9 The Bargain and Sale made by Sutton is void: 1. Because the money paid by the Governors in their private capacities, shall not be considered as in their public capacities. 2. The Habendum is to them upon trust, which cannot be in a Corporation. 3. Because no Hospital before was founded as this. 10. The King cannot make Governors of a thing not in being. To which was Answered, 1. The Preamble of the Act, whereby, and in many places of the Act, it appears that the Incorporation was to be in futuro, when it shall be erected; and the Statute doth not give Lands unto it, but power to give without Licence of Alienation or Mortmain: And it appeareth by the Letters Patents, that the Erection precedes the Licence. 2. The Licence is to him, his Heirs, Executors, at any time hereafter; and the words of the Incorporation are in the present, and so the Incorporation precedes the Execution of this Licence. 3. Though the King gave the Name, yet it was upon Sutton's previous consent, for the King did it at his suit. 4. The King makes an Hospital of the Premises, for that it is certain: and to that which was said, a place uncertain cannot be an Hospital; it was answered, The was named: To the Essence of a Corporation these things are requisite. 1. Lawful Authority to Incorporate by Common Law, as the King himself, by lawful Authority of Parliament by the King's Charter, and lawful Prescription. 2. The Persons, either Natural or Political. 3. A Name. 4. A Place. 5. Words sufficient, but not restrained to a strict sense. 5. A Corporation may be without a Head, as if the King Incorporate a Town, and give power for the choice of a Mayor, they are a Corporation before Election. 6. It is a sufficient Corporation, though the Hospital be but in potentiâ; for the Temple was a Corporation in the time of Henry the First, and yet was not built till Henry the Second time: But here the House was built before. 7. The first Founder in Law is Donour, when the King gives the Name, and designeth the Place; the Donation most properly belongs to the Founder: But if the King leaveth out the nomination of the Party, there many times (though not of necessity) he useth the words Fundo, Erigo, etc. But in truth the Corporation is made by the King's Charter, and the Founder is but an Instrument. 9 The money paid by some of the Governors in their private capacity, is good: but the payment was as Governors, and so they are acquitted: 2. a Rent was reserved, which was a good consideration: 3. a Bargain and Sale was to be upon Confidence and Trust. 10. They may plead that they are seized in fore, although then it be not in esse; In Answer to the Precedents, some are Explanatory, and some Negatory, ex Consuetudine Clericorum. This being the Case, it was argued shrewdly on the Plaintiff's side, By Sir Francis Bacon Solicitor General. Mr. Gualther of the Temple. And Mr. Yeluerton of Gray's Inn. And on the Defendants side, the Hospital, etc. By Mr. Hubbard Attorney General. Mr. Hutton Sergeant at Law. Mr. Coventry of the Inner Temple. But, nevertheless, an Adjournment was made of it, from the King's Bench to the Exchequer Chamber, where it was solemnly argued by the Judges of the Land: Sir Robert Hutton. Sir Augustine nichols. Sir John Doderidge. Sir Humphrey Winoh. Sir Edward Bromely. Sir John Crook. Sir James Altham. Sir George Snig. Sir Peter Warberton. Sir Laurence Tanfield Lord Chief Baron. Sir Edward Coke Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas. Sir Thomas Fleming Lord Chief Justice of the King's Bench, was then sick, and so not present. Here it was judged (with the great applause of all that heard it) for the Defendants, the Governors of the Hospital. The Plaintiff, being but a man of ordinary quality, was judged to have reason to be content with a tolerable provision for him, suitable to his degree: viz. he had allotted to him the Manor of Turback in Lancashire, consisting of a fair ancient House, two Parks, and large Demeans, plentifully stored with Timber; valued at 350 l. per Annum Rent of Assize, together with a Rectory, worth 100 l. per Annum in the same County; and 300 l. by Will. Thus was this great Difference at Law decided: 1. For the Honour of the Protestant Religion, that has produced such a Work of Piety and Charity, as never was in the Christian World, all things considered; for it was the Erection of one Private man, who bequeathed a mighty Estate to this pious Use. 2. It was for the glory of the King, to whom, ex congruo, & condigno, it was dedicated, that it might bear his Name, engage Him in its Institution, and His Royal Successors, in its future Patronage and Maintenance. 3. For the increase of Piety, that men in this Age, be not deterred from Good Works. 4. That Justice and Mercy might come together, Righteousness and Peace kiss each other. That every Person may have his due esteem, we are to understand, that much is owing to the lasting memory of Sir Edward Coke, who, like a firm Rock, stood between that and danger, he outweathered the storm, and broke the fury of interested and mercenary Eloquence. At one time it was almost crushed, by the hungry hopes and violence of some Self-seeking Courtiers, which made that Oracle of Law more warm and positive in his Determinations. He endeavoured, and brought it to pass, and he deserves a Monument of greater Honour among us, than he found in the Church of Norwich: And if it were lawful to annex the Succession of a Governor to any (but the Royal) Family: 'Twere pity the Name of so Honourable a Patron should ever be out of the List, of the Right Honourable the Lords and Governors of the . Among those who were Enemies to this Religious design, I find Sir Francis Bacon writing this following Advice to King James: Vide Resuscit. May it please your Majesty, I Find it a positive Precept in the Old Law, That there should be no Sacrifice without Salt: The Moral whereof (besides the Ceremony) may be, That God is not pleased with the Body of a good Intention, except it be seasoned with that Spiritual Wisdom and Judgement, as it be not easily subject to be corrupted and perverted. For Salt in the Scripture is both a figure of Wisdom, and lasting: this cometh into my mind, upon this act of Mr. Sutton, which seemeth to me as a Sacrifice without Salt; having the Materials of a good Intention, but not powdered with any such Ordinances and Institutions as may preserve the same from turning corrupt; or at least from becoming unsavoury, and of little use: For though the choice of the Feoffees be of the best, yet neither can they always live; and the very nature of the work itself, in the vast and unfit proportion thereof is apt to provoke a mis-imployment: it is no diligence of theirs (except there be a digression from that Model) that can excuse it from running the same way that Gifts of the like condition have heretofore done: For to design the , a Building fit for a Prince 's Habitation, for an Hospital, is all one, as if one should give in Alms, a rich embroidered Cloak to a Beggar: And certainly a man may see, tanquam quae oculis cernuntur, that if such an Edifice, with Six thousand pounds Revenue, be erected into one Hospital, it will in a small time degenerate, to be made a preferment of some great Person to be Master, and he to take all the sweet, and the Poor to be stinted, and take but the Crumbs; as it comes to pass in divers Hospitals of this Realm, which have but the names of Hospitals, and are but wealthy Benefices, in respect of the Mastership; but the poor, which is the propter quid, little relieved: And the like hath been the Fortune of much of the Alms of the Roman Religion, in the Great Foundations, which being begun in Vainglory and Ostentation, have had their Judgement upon them to end in corruption and abuse. This Meditation hath made me presume to write these few Lines to your Majesty, being no better than good wishes, which your Majesty's great Wisdom, may make something, or nothing of. Wherein, I desire to be thus understood, that if this Foundation (such as it is) be perfect and good in Law: then I am too well acquainted with your Majesty's Disposition, to advise any course of power or profit, which is not grounded upon a right. Nay further, if the defects be such, as a Court of Equity may remedy and cure: Then I wish that, as St. Peter's Shadow did cure Diseases, so the very shadow of a good intention may cure the defects of that Nature: But if there be a Right, and Birthright planted in the Heir, and not remediable by Courts of Equity, and that Right be submitted to your Majesty, whereby it is both in your power and grace what to do: then do I wish, that this rude Mass and Chaos of a good Deed, were directed rather to a solid Merit, and durable Charity, than to a blaze of Glory, that will but crackle a little in Talk, and quickly extinguish: And this may be done, observing the Species of Mr. Sutton's intent, though varying in individuo; for it appears that he had in notion, a triple good, an Hospital, a School, and maintaining of a Preacher; which individuals refer to these three General Heads, Relief of the Poor, Advancement of Learning, and Propagation of Religion. Now then, if I set before your Majesty, in every of these three kinds, what it is that is most wanting in your Kingdom, and what is like to be the most fruitful and effectual use of such a Beneficence, and least like to be perverted; that, I think, shall be no ill scope of my labour, how meanly soever performed; for out of Variety represented, Election may be best grounded. Concerning the Relief of the Poor; I hold, some number of Hospitals, with competent Endowments, will do far more good than one Hospital of an Exorbitant Greatness: for though the one Course will be more seen, yet the other will be more felt: For if your Majesty erect many, besides the observing of the ordinary Maxim, Bonum, quo communius, eò melius, choice may be made of those Towns and places, where there is most need: and so the Remedy may be distributed as the Disease is dispersed. Again, greatness of Relief accumulated in one place, doth rather invite a swarm and surcharge of poor, than relieve those that are naturally bred in that place; like to ill tempered Medicines, that draw more humour to the part, than they evacuate from it: but chief I rely upon the Reason I touched in the beginning, That in these great Hospitals, the Revenues will draw the Use, and not the Use the Revenues; and so through the Mass of Wealth, they will swiftly tumble down in a mis-employment. And if any man say, That in the two Hospitals in London, there is a Precedent of Greatness concurring with good Employment; let him consider, that those Hospitals have Annual Governors; that they are under the Superior care and policy of such a State, as the City of London; and chief, that their Revenues consist not in Certainties, but in Casualties and free Gifts: which Gifts would be withheld, if they appeared once to be perverted; so as it keepeth them in a continual good behaviour and awe, to employ them aright: None of which points do match with the present Case. The next Consideration may be, Whether this intended Hospital, as it hath a more ample Endowment, than other Hospitals have, should not likewise work upon a better Subject than other poor: as that it should be converted to the relief of maimed Soldiers, decayed Merchants, Householders, aged and destitute Churchmen, and the like; whose Condition being of a better sort than lose People and Beggars, deserveth both a more liberal stipend and allowance, and some proper place of Relief not intermingled, or coupled with the basest sort of poor; which Project, though specious, yet in my judgement will not answer the design in the event, in these our times: For certainly, few men in any Vocation, who have been Somebody, and bear a mind somewhat according to conscience, and remembrance of that they have been, will ever condescend to that Condition, as to profess to live upon Alms, and to become a Corporation of declared Beggars; but rather will choose to live obscurely, and, as it were, to hid themselves with some private Friends: So that the end of such an Institution will be, That it will make the place a receptacle of the worst, idlest, and most dissolute Persons of every Profession, and to become a Cell of Loiterers, cast Serving men, and Drunkards, with scandal, rather than fruit, to the Commonwealth: And of this kind, I can find but one Example with us, which is the Alms Knights of Windsor, which Particular would give a man small encouragement to follow that Precedent. Therefore the best effect of Hospitals, is, to make the Kingdom, if it were possible, capable of that Law, That there be no Beggar in Israel: for it is that kind of People that is a Burden, an Eye sore, a Scandal, and a Seed of peril and tumult in the State. But chief it were to be wished, that such a Beneficence towards the relief of the Poor, were so bestowed, as not only the mere and naked Poor should be sustained; but also that the honest Person, which maketh hard means to live, upon whom the Poor are now charged, should be in some sort relieved: for that were a work generally acceptable to the Kingdom, if the public Hand of Alms might spare the private hand of Tax: and therefore, of all other Employments of that kind, I commend most, Houses of Relief and Correction; which are mixed Hospitals, where the Impotent Person is relieved, and the sturdy Beggar buckled to work; and the unable Person also not maintained to be idle (which is ever joined with Drunkenness and Impurity) but is sorted with such work as he can manage and perform: and when the uses are not distinguished, as in other Hospitals, whereof some are for Aged and Impotent, some for Children, and some for Correction and Vagabonds, but are general and promiscuous; so that they may take off Poor of every sort from the Country, as the Country breeds them: And thus the Poor themselves shall find the Provision, and other People the Sweetness of the abatement of the Tax. Now if it be objected, That Houses of Correction in all places have not done the good expected: as it cannot be denied, but in most places they have done much good; so it must be remembered that there is a great difference, between that which is done by the distracted government of Justices of Peace, and that which may be done by a settled Ordinance, subject to a regular Visitation, as this may be: and besides the want hath been commonly in Houses of Correction, of a competent and certain Stock for the Materials of Labour, which in this Case may be likewise supplied. Concerning the Advancement of Learning, I do subscribe to the Opinion of one of the wisest and greatest Men of your Kingdom, That for Grammar Schools, there are already too many, and therefore no Providence to add, where there is excess. For the great number of Schools, which are in your Highness' Realm, doth cause a want, and likewise an overthrow; both of them inconvenient, and one of them dangerous: for by means thereof they find want in the Country and Towns, both of Servants for Husbandry, and Apprentices for Trade; and on the other side, their being more Scholars bred than the State can prefer and employ, and the active part of that life, not bearing a proportion to the preparative, it must needs fall out, that many persons will be bred, unfit for other Vocations, and unprofitable for that in which they were bred up, which fills the Realm full of indigent, idle, and wanton people, which are but Materia reram novarum. Therefore, in this point, I wish Mr. Sutton's intention were exalted a degree, that, that which he meant for Teachers of Children, your Majesty should make for Teachers of Men: wherein it hath been my ancient Opinion and Observation, That in the Universities of this Realm (which I take to be the best endowed in Europe) there is nothing more wanting towards the flourishing state of Learning, than the honourable and plentiful Salaries of Readers in Arts and Professions; in which point, as your Majesty's Bounty already hath made a beginning, so this occasion is offered of God to make a proceeding; surely, Readers in the Chair, are as Parents in Sciences, and deserve to enjoy a Condition not inferior to their Children, who embrace the practical part, else no man will sit longer in the Chair, than till he can walk to a better preferment: And it will come to pass, as Virgil saith, Et Patrum invalidi referent jejunia Nati. For if the principal Readers, through the meanness of their entertainment, be but men of superficial Learning, and that they shall take their places but in passage, it will make the Mass of Sciences want the chief and solid dimension, which is depth, and to become but pretty and compendious habits of Practice. Therefore I could wish that in both the Universities, the Lectures, as well of the three Professions, Divinity, Law, and Physic, as of the three Heads of Science, Philosophy, Arts of Speech, and the Mathematics, were raised to 100 l. per Annum a piece; which though it be not near so great, as they are in some other places, where the greatness of the reward doth whistle for the ablest men out of all Foreign parts to supply the Chair; yet it may be a Portion to content a worthy and able man, if he be likewise contemplative in nature, as those Spirits are that are fittest for Lectures: Thus may Learning in your Kingdom be advanced to a further height; Learning (I say) which under your Majesty, the most learned of Kings, may claim some degree of Elevation. Concerning propagation of Religion, I shall in few words set before your Majesty three Propositions; none of them devices of my own, otherwise than that I ever approved them: Two of which have been in agitation of speech, and the third acted. The first is a College for Controversies, whereby we shall not still proceed single, but shall, as it were, double our Files; which certainly will be found in the Encounter. The second is a Receipt (I like not the word Seminary, in respect of the vain Vows, and implicit Obedience, and other things tending to the perturbation of States involved in that term) for Converts to the Reformed Religion, either of Youth, or otherwise: For I doubt not, but there are in Spain, Italy, and other Countries of the Papists, many whose hearts are touched with a sense of those corruptions, and an acknowledgement of a better way; which grace is many times smothered and choked, through a worldly consideration of necessity and want; men not knowing where to have Succour and Refuge: This likewise I hold a work of great Piety, and of great Consequence; that we also may be wise in our Generation, and that the watchful and silent night may be used as well for sowing good Seed, as of Tares. The third is, the Imitation of a Memorable and Religious Act of Queen Elizabeth, who finding a part of Lancashire to be extremely backward in Religion; and the Benefices swallowed up in Impropriations, did by Decree in the Duchy, erect four Stipends of 100 l. per Annum a piece for Preachers, well chosen to help the Harvest, who have done a great deal of good in the parts they have laboured: Neither do there want other Corners in the Realm, that would require for a time the like extraordinary help. Thus have I briefly delivered unto your Majesty my Opinion touching the Employment of this Charity, whereby that Mass of Wealth, which was in the Owner little better than a stack or heap of Muck, may be spread over your Kingdom, to many fruitful Purposes, your Majesty planting and watering, and God giving the increase. Those, who ever understood the temper of this Learned Man, may easily perceive that at this time there were Baits enough laid for his partiality, that such a mind as his, could not but be biased, nay, now he was to contest for opposition's sake: This made him busy and importunate, eager at the Bar, and earnest in his Addresses to the King. The Motives that encouraged him to espouse the Plaintiff's Quarrel, in short were these. 1. The comfortable expectation of a great share of the Revenues. 2. Because he was not named by Sutton, as one of the trusties for the Foundation: which very reflection, Mr. Laws the Executor used to him much about the Trial. 3. He and Sir Edward Coke could never agree, and therefore no wonder if they differed in this Affair: an Instance whereof I find in a Letter of his of Expostulation to Sir Edward, wherein, he says, He took a Liberty to disgrace his Law, Experience and Discretion, etc. I shall not undertake to answer the particular Arguments in the Letter, but only briefly take thus much notice of it. First, The Simile of Salt and Sacrifice amounts to no more than this; That we can do nothing perfectly, but yet we must do as well as we can, and in acts of Mercy every man is the proper Judge of his own Discretion. Secondly, He urges, the Honourable trusties cannot live for ever: but yet, at their decease, their Equals are chosen in their Room. What else is urged, is rather a large and studied Essay of the end of Charity, than a thing proper to this Affair. But the greatest Vindication of Mr. Sutton, and his Magnificent Charity, is the Foundation itself, which notwithstanding the Envy and Opposition against it, and the difficulty, after Six thousand pounds expense in sitting, the healthful, pleasant, and large Mansion, for those that were to dwell in it, on Monday next after Michaelmas-day, Octob. 3. 1614 three years after the death of the Founder, was opened by his vigilant and faithful Executors, at which time the Captains and Gentlemen, Scholars and Officers entered this new and stately Hospital, to the Glory of God, the Honour of his Majesty, and Mr. Sutton the effectual Founder thereof, the Credit of the Protestant Religion, for the good Example of the Rich, the comfort of the Poor, the Reputation of the Executors and Governors, and the Joy of all good Minds to behold it: so that it might well be said, in the Settlement thereof, as it was in the Solemnity of the Roman Jubilees, Come, and see a work, the like to which, none alive ever saw, and no man alive is ever like to see again. Some years after I find an Establishment made, with many Excellent Orders, at an Assembly June 21. 1627. and signed with King CHARLES the First's own Hand. . THE Hospital of King JAMES founded in in the County of Middlesex, at the humble Petition and only Costs and Charges of Thomas Sutton Esquire; this Style shall be inviolably observed and expressed in the same formal words upon all Evidences, Conveyances, Leases, and Writings of Records. There shall be an Anniversary Commemoration of the Founder kept every 12th day of December, with Solemn Service, a Sermon, and such increase of Commons as we allow upon other Festival days by our Establishment hereafter ensuing. The Governors jointly taken make the Head of this Body Corporate: The poor Brothers and Scholars, and such Officers as are mentioned only in the King's Letters Patents, shall be styled Members of the Foundation, and shall be chosen within two months after the Vacancy, according to the express words of the Letters Patents. All other Officers of the Revenue or Household, not particularly mentioned in the Letters Patents aforesaid, shall be accepted, reputed and taken as Members of Arbitrary Election, and it shall be in the Governors' Power to make their number more or less, and to choose them sooner or later, as to their Wisdoms shall seem best for the good of the Hospital. No Member of the Foundation, or of Arbitrary Election, that is lodged in the House, shall be a married man, either at the time of his admission, or after; and if he be, he shall be deprived of his place, and of all Fees and Profits thereto belonging (except Dr. Wright the present Physician, and John Clarke the present Receiver, and John Wotton the present Auditor. The disproportioned and improper Titles for an Hospital, of an Attorney General, Surveyor General, Receiver General, and Steward of the House and Household, shall quite be abolished, and those Officers shall upon all Writings and Accounts be styled as hereafter followeth in these our Ordinances. All possible care shall be taken, and diligence used to obtain an Act at the next Parliament, for the Confirmation of the Foundation of King James' Hospital, founded in in the County of Middlesex, at the humble Petition and only Costs and Charges of Thomas Sutton Esq And this care and diligence is imposed upon the Master and Solicitor, as they will answer the contrary at their peril. The Common Seal shall be kept in the Evidence-house, and under four Keys, to remain in their Custody that now have them, till the Governors dispose thereof otherwise: And then the same to be kept as shall be directed; provided always that the Master of the Hospital for the time being shall have the keeping of one Key. The Statutes and Ordinances for the good Government of the Hospital, concluded upon by the Governors, and ratified by the Common Seal, shall be fairly and twice engrossed in Parchment, whereof the Original, with the Common Seal affixed, shall be safely kept in the Evidence-house, and the other being a true Copy, shall be fairly bound up in a Book, to remain in the Master's custody, and to be brought to the Table at every Assembly. The Keys of the Evidence-house shall be in their custody who now keep them, till the Governors dispose otherwise thereof, and then shall remain according to such disposition; Provided always that the Master for the time being shall keep one: And no Writings shall be delivered out to the Solicitor, but with a Note of the particulars registered in a Book under the Master's hand, and a Note taken under his hand that receives them for the Re-delivery. There shall be a Ledger Book, fairly written in Parchment, wherein shall be entered the true Copy of all the Deeds, Evidences, Surveys old and new, Counterparts of Leases old and new, Bonds, Orders, Decrees, and all other Writings touching the Hospital Lands, and the same shall be ranged in their proper Classes of every several Manor, Township, or other place. There shall be two Iron Chests, one in the Receivers custody for keeping the Hospital Revenues, whereof he shall give account quarterly to the Master: another with three several Locks and Keys, two in the custody of the Master and Receiver, and the third in the custody of whom the Governors shall please; to abide always in the Evidence-house, for keeping the Surplus remaining at the years end, whereof the Receiver shall be accountant by a fair Declaration, examined and engrossed in Parchment by the Auditor, and signed with their three hands, and then safely laid up in the Evidence-house. There shall be two other Copies of the said Declaration fairly written and signed by the Master, Receiver, and Auditor, whereof the Auditor shall keep one to justify the Account, and the Receiver another for his full Discharge, which shall be as good, lawful, and sufficient Acquittance and Discharge, as if the same were sealed with our Common Seal. In time of a General Visitation or dangerous Mortality by the Plague, the Master, with the consent of four of the Governors, or more, shall dissolve the House in this manner: The Officers, Servants, and poor Brothers that are able to travel, he shall dismiss for such sitting time, not exceeding half a year, as he shall think convenient, with their full allowance of Diet and Wages paid in hand; and if the danger continue, the advance of allowance shall be continued. The impotent and unable, by sickness or age, he shall leave under the care and charge of the Manciple, or his sufficient Deputy, with two elder Grooms to make Provisions, and three old women lodged in the House, during the time, to attend them. Such Scholars as have Parents or near Friends able to receive and maintain them, shall be carefully sent home at the charge of the House to be kept, and sent back at their Friends charge, when the danger is past, the times free, and the House open: As for those that are destitute of Friends or Means they shall be sent out and maintained by the Hospital: For all which Disbursments the Receiver shall impress money to the Manciple by Warrant from the Master under his Hand. The Hospital shall be sufficiently furnished with Buckets, Fire-hooks, Ladders, Ropes, and other necessary Implements against any casualty by Fire, either in or Precincts thereof. What other Orders soever the Governors, or the Major part of them, shall make at an Assembly for the good of the Hospital, and sign them with their own Hands in the Assembly Book, shall stand in as full force and power as if they had been inserted with these, and ratified with the Common Seal. All other things ordered and enacted by the King's Letters Patents for the confirmation of the Foundation of the Hospital of K. James, founded in , in the County of Middlesex, at the humble Petition and only Costs and Charges of Thomas Sutton Esq as also all other Orders and Decrees of this Instrument, ratified by our Common Seal, shall be inevitably kept and observed. The Assemblies and Committees. THere shall be two set and certain Assemblies, one in December, to take the years Account, view the state of the Hospital, and determine and order any business occurring: The other in June or July, to dispose of the Scholars to the Universities or Trades, to make Election both of poor men and poor Scholars into places vacant, as also to determine and order any other business. If the Major part of the Governors meet at an Assembly, and the greater part of them present determine and give order for any thing propounded, than that Assembly shall stand good, and those Orders shall be in force, otherwise not: And also all Elections and Expulsions made at such a full Assembly shall stand good, otherwise they shall be held unlawful, and it shall be the Master's duty to disavow them till the Governors' pleasure be further known the next Assembly. All Grants, Leases, and Presentations, and all Elections of all Officers mentioned in the Charter, and likewise of the Register, Receiver, Auditor, Chapel Clerk, Organist and Manciple, as also of all poor men and poor Scholars, shall be in the power of the Governors only, and they shall not elect above Eighteen poor Men, or Eighteen poor Scholars at any one Assembly. No Patent or Fee shall be granted for life to any Officer whatsoever, but durante beneplacito. No poor Man or poor Scholar shall be admitted but into the next place after him that is or shall be pre-elected, and they shall not come one over the others head, any powerful means or importunity to the contrary notwithstanding. The Orders and Constitutions of every Assembly shall be engrossed in the Assembly Book by the Register, and signed by the Governors present at that Assembly within forty days: All which Orders and Constitutions the Master, Register, and other Members, Officers, Ministers and Servants of the House whom it may concern, shall observe and obey, as they will answer the contrary at their peril. Other Assemblies shall be accidentary upon the occasion of the Death or Resignation of a Governor, Officer of the Foundation, or Incumbent upon any Spiritual Living, being of the Patronage of the Hospital, to elect or present another in his place, wherein it is provided that the Spiritual Live be conferred upon persons capable, and such as do, or have done actual Service to the House, or have been Members thereof, before any others. A Committee of five at the least shall be chosen for the whole year at the Assembly in December, whereof any three, the Master being one, may proceed in any business left to the Committees: And they shall yearly, between Easter and Midsummer, assisted with some learned Men, make a Visitation of the School, and certify the Table at the Assembly following of the state thereof, and which Scholars between the Age of Sixteen and Eighteen, are fit to be preferred to the Universities, and there maintained by the Hospital; which not. Those Scholars sent to the Universities, if they continue there, and follow their Studies, shall be allowed each of them Sixteen pounds yearly Pension, at the four usual Feasts, by even and equal portions, for Eight years: But in case they discontinue sooner, their Pension shall cease; Provided always they shall not exceed the number of Four and twenty such Pensioners at any one time. Such as are to be bound Apprentices, shall have Sixteen pounds a piece in gift towards their setting out, whereof four Marks shall be to apparel the Apprentice, and twenty Marks to his Master, which money, both for Maintenance at the Universities, and putting out to Trades, shall be disbursed by the surviving Executor of the Founder, during his life, and after by such as the Governors shall appoint in that behalf; Provided that the Tradesman shall first enter into Thirty pounds' Bond to the Governors for good usage of the Apprentice, and teaching him his Trade. Such Scholars as the Governors at an Assembly shall appoint to Universities or Trades, with the allowance before specified, their Parents or nearest Friends that are able shall be sent unto to provide them of Places accordingly, before Michaelmas-day than next following, and if they shall fail therein, upon lawful warning given them, than those Scholars shall be dismissed, and made uncapable of any allowance in or from the Hospital: Concerning such Scholars whose Parents or Friends are unable, the House shall provide places for them. Lastly, the said Committees shall take in their Consideration all business of importance referred unto them by the Governors at an Assembly; As also all such things as the Master of the Hospital shall communicate unto them for their advice and assistance, to digest and prepare them, that they may be presented in writing to the Solicitor, and propounded at the next meeting of the Governors. The Master. ELection shall be made of a Master that is a learned, discreet, and meet man, according to the express words of the Foundation, unmarried, and aged above Forty years. He shall neither have, nor accept of any place of Preferment or Benefit, either in Church or Commonwealth, whereby he may be drawn from his Residence, Care, and Charge of the Hospital; and if he do, in such case, he shall leave that place, or be displaced if he refuse to leave it. He shall have the Oeconomical Government of the House and Household, during the Governors' pleasure, and to put upon any Officer a Mulct, not exceeding the value of a week or fortnight's Commons, which shall be continued, unless the Governors, at the next Assembly, shall see cause, and give order to the contrary: And also to fine any poor Brother at four shillings four pence, or eight shillings eight pence, upon any misdemeanour, in his discretion deserving the same, any further punishment he shall not inflict; but upon continuance of their transgression and incorrigibility, he shall inform the Governors at the next Assembly, by them to be more severely and condignly chastised by way of Mulct, Expulsion, or otherwise, as to their Wisdoms shall seem best and most just for the Offenders Correction, and terror of others. All other inferior Servants of the Household shall be put in or out at the discretion of the Master, but he shall have this power in subordination to the Governors, and his actions shall be alterable by their Censure and Revocation upon just Cause of Complaint. He shall not increase or decrease any Diets, Stipends, Fees, or Wages in the House or School, under, or above the Rates set down in our Establishment hereafter ensuing, as he will answer the contrary upon pain of paying the Surcharge himself, and incurring the Gevernours' displeasure in case any allowance be shortened. Masters of the House since the Foundation. 1. John Hutton Clerk. 2. Mr. Andrew Pern. 3. Peter Hooker Clerk. 4. Francis Beaumond Esquire. 5. Sir Robert Dallington. 6. George Gerard Esquire. 7. Edward Gresset Esquire. 8. Sir Ralph Sidenham. 9 Martin Clifford Esquire. The Preacher, HE shall be qualified, both for his Learning and good Conversation of Life, to be capable and fit for the place, aged about Thirty years, a Master of Arts of Seven years standing at the least, and one that hath been a preaching Minister the space of four years or more. The first and chiefest care and charge that we impose upon the Master and Him, is, for the Service of God, that they, and all the Officers, poor Brothers, Scholars, and Servants of the Household, frequent the Chapel daily at the accustomed time of Divine Service: The like shall be observed by the Schoolmaster, Usher, and poor Scholars of the Foundation, upon every Sunday, Holiday, and Vigil in the Afternoon: And that there be a Sermon every Sunday at Morning Prayer, either by him the said Preacher, or some other deputed by him. The Master and Preacher shall have in care and charge, to see that the whole Household, and those of the School of the Age of Sixteen years and upwards, shall receive the Blessed Sacrament yearly, at the three Solemn Feasts of Christmas, Easter, and Whitsuntide, unless they be satisfied by some lawful excuse and just cause of their failing, otherwise the party denying or delaying shall be liable to the Master's Chastisement, and the Governors further Censure. The Master and Preacher shall have Superintendancy over the Chapel Clerk, Organist, and Sexton, to see if each of them carefully perform the Duties of his place; the one in Reading of Divine Service at the hours accustomed, assisting the Preacher at the Communion and burying the Dead: The second, in teaching the poor Scholars to Sing, and playing on the Organs at set times of Divine Service; The third in keeping the Chapel in a cleanly, comely, and decent manner, and carefully performing all other Services belonging to such a place, otherwise they and every of them, shall be subject to the Master's Punishment. Preachers since the Foundation. 1. Mr. Harsnet. 2. Mr. Parker. 3. Mr. Ford. 4. Mr. percival Burrell. 5. Mr. William Middleton. 6. Mr. Daniel Toughtevil. 7. Mr. Foxely. 8. Mr. Clark. 9 Mr. William Adderly. 10. Mr. George Griffith. 11. Dr. Timothy Thirscross. 12. Mr. Patrick. The Physician, HE shall be qualified with the Degree of a Doctor in that Profession, and shall have his yearly Fee of twenty pounds confirmed unto him; he shall make choice of his Apothecary, and not exceed the Sum of Twenty pounds a year for Physic Bills, according to the Rate set down in our Establishment; otherwise the Governors reserve the power to themselves to make choice of another that will accept of these Conditions, or to determine whether they will have any Physician in Ordinary Fee, or not. Physicians ever since the Foundation. 1. Mr. Thomas Barker. 2. Dr. Barker, his Son. 3. Dr. Laurence Wright. 4. Dr. Bates. 5. Dr. Gabriel Beavoir. 6. Dr. castle. 7. Dr. Walter Needham. The Register and Solicitor. HE shall be lodged and dieted in the Hospital, a Man of good Conversation, well practised in following Law Causes, a good Penman, ready, diligent, and faithful in all such Employments as the Governors or Master shall put him upon. His Employment shall be to Summon all Assemblies, to Register their Orders and Decrees in the Assembly Book, to draw all Patents and Leases, make them ready for the Common Seal, and enrol them in the Book of Entries, to draw all Leases for the Gvernours, and wait upon them for the signing and dispatch; to attend the Hospital Council, and take their Direction upon any occasion of Law business, and having the Masters Warrant to follow the same withal dexterity and diligence; to call in Arrearages of Rents, and make seizure or reentry for default of payment by Warrant of the Governors; to take all Petitions and present them to the Table; to take Bond for the teaching, well using and maintenance of poor Scholars made Apprentices; and by the Master's order and direction to put in suit the Bonds forfeited, either for Nonpayment of Debts, not performance of Covenants, or for any other cause whatsoever; and to prosecute and answer all Suits in Law whatsoever, for, and concerning the said House and Hospital. He shall not directly nor indirectly contract for the preferring of poor men, or Boys into the Hospital, nor with any of the Tenants for renewing their Leases; such business shall immediately be preferred by Petition to the Governors only, and then presented by him to the Table, and if he be a Transgressor herein, he shall forfeit his place. He shall not cancel or deface any Orders concluded at an Assembly, and signed by the Governors there present, upon peril of losing his place. He shall not presume to receive or meddle with any moneys accrueing due to the Hospital by way of Fine, Rent, or Debt however. Registers ever since the Foundation. 1. Mr. Thomas Heyward. 2. Mr. Samuel Martin. 3. Mr. John yeoman's. 4. Mr. Brent. 5. Mr. Cresset, afterwards Master. 6. Mr. John Holland. 7. Mr. William Taylour. 8. Mr. William Massey. 9 Mr. Spelman. 10. Mr. Lightfoot. The Receiver. HE shall not enter into the Execution of his Office before he give good Security by ten several Bonds of two hundred pounds a piece, wherein himself, with two sufficient Sureties in every Bond, shall stand bound to the Governors for the faithful executing his Place, and discharging his Account; he shall deliver out no moneys but only to the Manciple for Diet, unless he have order and warrant from the Master. He shall, according to such Letters of Attorney as are or shall be made in that behalf, make public demand of Rents due by the Hospital Tenants, upon the days expressed in the Conditions of their Leases, and shall take witness thereof, that such further course may be taken for satisfaction, as shall seem good to the Governors. At Michaelmas every year, when his Account shall be given up, he shall have two hundred pounds imprested to him by the Master out of the Surplus remaining that year, or out of the House Stock, which impressed shall be for expense for Diet and other Charges till Michaelmas Rend come in, repaying the said money into the Iron Chest of the Hospital Stock, at, or before the end of November than next coming. Receivers ever since the Foundation. 1. Mr. Smith. 2. Mr. David Lewis. 3. Mr. John Clark. 4. Mr. Andrew Hill. 5. Mr. Alexander Lawson. 6. Sir John Payn. 7. Mr. Payn. The Manciple, HE shall put in Bond of One hundred pounds, with one sufficient Surety, for discharging himself by a just and allowed Account of all such Sums of money as the Receiver shall from time to time impressed unto him, upon the Master's warrant, for the Affairs of the Hospital. He shall attend his Service in the Kitchen till all the Tables be served, and taken away, and then he shall take his Meals with the inferior Officers and Grooms at their accustomed Table, and Rate established in these our Ordinances following. He shall keep a Book of the weekly expense in Diet, carry it to the Auditors to be examined; he shall within four days after the week is expired, bring it to the Master to be perused and signed by him, and whom else he will call. He shall not disburse or lay out any Sum or Sums of money for any Provisions for the Hospital (save only the Provision of Diet) without the Masters warrant, wherein also he shall not exceed the Rates set down in our Establishment ensuing; nor shall he buy any such Provisions in the Market, or elsewhere, but with ready money; And if he shall disburse any thing contrary to these Orders, it shall not be allowed him upon his Account: Besides, he shall be answerable for his Disobedience. He shall take a true and perfect Inventory twice in every year of all the Goods, Movables, and Utensils, of, and throughout the Hospital, and give Account thereof to the Master, that he may lay the imbezelling or loss to every Officer, Groom, or poor Brother, to whom it was entrusted, satisfying the House out of their Wages at his discretion, and giving order for repairing and renewing such Stuff as shall be so lost, or by long wearing become no more useful. The poor Brothers. THey shall not exceed the Number of Fourscore. They shall not be holden qualified and capable of the place, unless they be such as are within the Intention of the King's Letters Patents of the Foundation, namely Gentlemen by Descent, and in Poverty, Soldiers that have born Arms by Sea or Land, Merchants decayed by Piracy or Shipwreck, or Servants in Household to the King and Queen's Majesty, and none of these to be under the Age of Fifty years at the time of their Admission; and it shall be the Master's Charge to certify the Table when they are propounded at an Assembly, if he know any thing of any man standing in Election to the contrary. He that hath been maimed in the Wars, either at Sea or Land, and not in any fray or private quarrel, being also a Subject of the King's Dominions, shall be capable of the place at Forty years' Age or upwards; But if he be not maimed, though otherwise well deserving, he shall not be capable of the place unless he be Fifty years old at the least: Nor shall any be admitted whose Body is tainted with any Leprous, Unclean, or Infectious Disease. None shall be admitted or elected that hath competent Means to sustain him; and if at or after his admittance he shall be found to have an Estate in value worth two hundred pounds or coming in, viis & modiis, to the value of Four and twenty pounds per Annum during his Life, his place shall be void. No poor Brother shall be admitted till the next Quarter day after his place is void, and till he bring two pair of new Sheets with him, or that the House provide them for him, in Discharge whereof the Receiver shall deduct the price out of his Wages, due the first two Quarters, by even and equal portions, and upon his account clear the House of that charge. No poor Brother shall have leave to pass the Seas upon what pretence soever, but by petition to the Governors, and signed with six of their hands, in which case and time of absence, he shall only be allowed his Wages, and have his place reserved for him, other allowances for Commons he shall not have. They shall not go into the Country to visit Friends, or upon any other business, without the Master's leave, and that but for two Months at the farthest, in which case and time of absence, they shall be allowed two third parts of their Commons in money, but no part of their Wages shall be abated, but if they go abroad either with leave or without, and fall under Arrest, or any other danger whereby their return is slayed, in such case they shall have no means or allowance from the Hospital, either for Commons or Wages, only their place shall be reserved for them till the Governors' pleasure be further known: And moreover, no Brother shall presume to pass the Out-gates of the Hospital in their Livery Gowns, upon pain of paying a months' Commons out of their Quarter's wages. They shall not undertake the following of other men's Causes and Suits, nor procure the molestation, trouble, or expense of other the King's Subjects, by their suggestions or informations, upon pain of paying what Mulct the Master, by these our Ordinances, can impose upon them, and abiding the Governors further pleasure. All other Duties to be performed after their Admission, as daily frequenting the Chapel, Reverend behaviour at Prayers, civil fashion of feeding, cleanly and decent Clothing, neat and wholesome Lodging, friendly and brotherly conversing and living together, shall be referred to the Master's discretion to direct, and to the power we have given him to Correct. The School. THE Scholars of the Foundation shall not exceed the Number of Forty; nor shall any be admitted but such as the Schoolmaster shall find and approve to be well entered in Learning, answerable to his Age at the time of his admittance. The Schoolmaster shall be of Twenty seven years' Age at the least, a Master of Arts, of good Reputation, both for his Life and Learning in the Latin and Greek Tongues. The Usher shall likewise be well qualified for his place, having taken degree of Bachelor of Arts two years at least before his Election, Aged twenty four years: And if there be such in either University (no discontinuers) and that have formerly been Members of this Hospital, they shall (coeteris paribus) be chosen before any others. The Schoolmaster shall have charge to admit no poor Scholar without one new Suit of Apparel, besides that he wears, two new Shirts, three new pair of Stockings, three new pair of Shoes, and Books for the Form he is to be in, or money to buy them; and if he fail therein, the charge of repairing the wants shall be discounted out of his own Wages. He shall have Certificate by good proof from the place whence they come of the just Age of every Boy to be admitted, and he shall admit none under the Age of Ten years, and above Fourteen, as he will answer the contrary. He shall keep a Book of all such admissions, as also of all Scholars sent to the University, or Trade, with a particular and punctual setting down the day and year of their coming in, going out. They shall keep the accustomed hours of six in Summer, and Seven in Winter, for their coming to School, and Eight and Three in the Forenoon and Afternoon for their Collations, and of Six in Summer and Winter, if the time of Meals will permit, for their leaving off; not failing both Morning and Evening to begin and end their Studies with the Latin Prayers and Collects now used. He shall read none but approved Authors, Greek and Latin, as are read in the best esteemed Free-Schools, and to see those of the Upper Form furnished with Greek Testaments for their use in the Chapel. Besides the Scholars weekly exercise, they of the highest Form shall every Sunday set up in the great Hall four Greek and four Latin Verses a piece, upon any part of the Second Lesson appointed for that day, for the Master of the Hospital, or any Stranger, to view and examine: As also two shall be weekly appointed for reading the Chapters, and saying Grace at every Meal in both the Halls. It shall be his care, and the Ushers charge, to teach the Scholars to Cipher and cast an Account, especially those that are less capable of Learning, and sittest to be put to Trades. He and the Usher shall be diligent in the daily attendance on their Charge, and shall not Journey into the Country without the Master's leave: Nor shall they take into their Tuition above Sixty other Scholars, unless they entertain another under Usher out of their own Means, and to be dieted and lodged out of the Hospital: Nor shall they receive for teaching those of the Foundation any Fee or Wages from their Friends. They shall be careful and discreet to observe the Nature and Ingeny of their Scholars, and accordingly instruct and correct them: In Correction they shall be moderate; in Instruction diligent: Correcting according to the quality of the Fault in matter of Manners, and according to the capacity of the Fault in matter of Learning. All other Duties of their place they shall faithfully perform; namely, to see that the Scholars be of modest and mannerly behaviour, well and decently clothed, orderly and seasonably dieted, cleanly and wholesomly lodged: And that the Matron, Butler, Taylor, and Groom perform their duties to these purposes, otherwise their Tutors to be censured by Us the Governors, and their Servants to be punished by the Master of the Hospital. Schoolmasters. 1. Mr. Nicholas Grey. 2. Mr. Robert Grey, his Brother. 3. Mr. William Middleton. 4. Mr. Robert Brooks. 5. Mr. Samuel Wilson. 6. Mr. John Bonchee. 7. Mr. Norris Wood 8. Mr. Thomas Watson. Ushers. 1. Mr. Bagley. 2. Mr. Robert Grey. 3. Mr. Middleton. 4. Mr, Brooks. 5. Mr. Anthony Andrews. 6. Mr. John Byrch. 7. Mr. Samuel Wilson. 8. Mr. John Martin. 9 Mr. Norris Wood 10. Mr. John Stephens. 11. Mr. Edmund Sly. 12. Mr. Thomas Watson. 13. Mr. Rowland Buckeridge. 14. Mr. Thomas Walker. Officers of the Revenues. Steward of Courts. NO Steward of Courts shall take any greater Fee than Five shillings for his Copy and entering it into the Roll, unless it express uses made over by Will, in which Case his Fee shall be Ten Shillings. All Stewards of Courts shall bring or send into the , within three months after the Court holden, the Roll thereof, fairly written in Parchment, with the Fine set down in the Margin, and signed with his own hand: They shall also deliver the Tenant his Copy within forty days after the Court holden, if the Tenant demand it, and pay for it according to the Rate aforesaid. Stewards. 1. Mr. John Mocket. 2. Mr. Joseph Ward. 3. Mr. Abel Allen. This Office is now turned into the Manciple's. Auditor. HE Shall quarterly examine the Receivers Book of Receipts of the Revenues and Disbursments for the Hospital, to see if the one agree with the Rental, and the other be disbursed by the Masters warrant; and upon proof by Examination under his hand of every particular, the Book shall be signed by the Master. He shall weekly examine the Manciple's Book of Disbursments for Diets, and what else he lays out, to see if the one agree with the Establishment, and the other be done by warrant, and upon due Examination to approve them under his hand, before they be signed by the Master. Upon Balancing all Accounts of Receipts and Disbursement at the years end, he shall draw the Declaration by us formerly enjoyed in these our Orders, that at the Assembly in Decemb. a perfect and yearly view may be taken of the state of the Hospital. Auditors. 1. Mr. John Wotton. 2. Mr. Henry Wotton. 3. Mr. Henry Playford. 4. Mr. Spour. Bailiffs. NO Bailiff shall be chosen of any Manor or Manors, unless he dwell there, or within five mile's distance at the farthest. All Bailiffs shall put in Bond of Two hundred pounds apiece, with two Sureties for paying in the moneys by them levied either for free Rents or Profits of Courts; and they shall not meddle with the Receipt of any Farm-rents, upon pain of forfeiting their Bond. All Bailiffs shall bring in all free and customary Rents within forty days after the Quarter day; also all Profits and Perquisits of Courts within the said time of forty days after the day assigned by the Steward for payment thereof. Leases. UPon a Lease hereafter to be granted, no Tenant shall have respite for payment of his Rent above Forty days after the Quarter-day, wherein he ought to pay it by his Lease. All Lease Rents shall be paid by Tenants at the , so shall all free and customary Rents, with Profits and Perquisits of Courts, be there likewise paid by the Bailiffs. All Lessees shall be tied by Covenant to dwell upon their Farms, and not to put them over but to Wife and Children, without Licence procured by Petition at the Table, and signed by the Major part of the Governors there present; and no Licence shall be granted them but for the remainder of years limited by the former Lease, and at the same Rent, and enjoining the under Tenants to dwell thereupon. In every Lease hereafter to be granted of any of the Hospital Lands or Tenements in any Manor where a Court Baron is used to be kept, there shall be comprised in every such Lease a Covenant on the Lessees part, To do suit of Court there, and to be obedient to the Orders therein to be made, touching, or by reason of the Lands and Tenements. No Lease shall be made till within Three years before the expiration of the old Lease, unless it be upon surrender of the old Lease: Nor shall it be granted for Lives, or longer time than One and twenty years. No Fine shall be taken upon letting or renewing any Lease; but such an Improvement of Rent as shall seem best to the Governors, and for the good of the Hospital. Surveys. THere shall be two Surveys made of all such Lands belonging to the Hospital, as are not already surveyed, and the same shall be faithfully transcribed into a Book expressing the yearly Rent now paid, and the yearly value by Survey, which Book shall be brought to the Table at every Asssembly, that upon the expiring or renewing of Leases, the Governors may increase or abate the Rents, as to their Wisdoms shall seem best for the good of the Hospital. An Establishment for the Diets, Liveries, Stipends, Wages, and other Charges and Expenses of the Hospital of King JAMES, founded in , in the County of Middlesex, at the humble Petition, and only costs and charges of Thomas Sutton Esquire, to be strictly observed, and not any way exceeded, viz. For weekly Diet. l. s. d. EIght at the Master's Table allowed for Bread, Beer, Diet, and Detriments iiii. Fourscore at the Brother's Table allowed for Bread, Beer, Diet, and Detriments seven. xiii. iiii. Forty two at the Scholar's Table allowed for Bread, Beer, Diet, and Detriments. vi. xviii. three ob. Ten at the Manciples Table allowed for Bread, Beer, Diet, and Detrements xliiii. two. Two of the Kitchen, and one Porter xiii. Five Attendants for the Master's Table, for Bread and Beer v. x. For weakly Beavors. l. s. d. Eight at the Master's Table allowed it in kind at the rate of xiiii d. a man ix. iiii. Five Attendants allowed it in kind at the same rate v. x. Forty Scholars, one Butler, and one Groom, allowed it in kind at six to a Mess, with iiii d. allowance xuj. iiii. Fourscore Brothers are allowed it in money by the Establishment seven. Ten at the Manciples Table, two of the Kitchen, and one Porter, allowed it in money iii. In all Diets and Beavors, viz. weekly xxxiii l. vi s. i d. ob. In all Diets and Beavors, viz. yearly M. viic. xxxi l. xviii s. vi d. ob. For exceeding days. l. s. d. Twenty three Exceeding days, namely, Christmas-day, St. Stephen, St. John, Innocents', New years, Epiphany, Candlemas, Shrove-sunday, and Tuesday, Kings-day, Queens-day, Lady-day, Easter-day, Monday and Tuesday, Ascension, Whitsunday, Monday and Tuesday, Midsummer, Michaelmas, All Saints, Fifth of November, and Twelfth of December. xliiii. ix. iiii. In all Diets, Beavors, and exceeding days yearly Mt. viic. lxxvil. viis. xd. ob. For Liveries. l. s. d. Fourscore poor men for Gowns at xls. a piece yearly Clx. Forty Scholars for Gowns finished and made up, at xxxvi s. two d. a piece, which makes yearly lxxii. vi. viij. Summer Suits for forty Scholars at xxix s. vi d. a piece ix. Winter Suits like number, at xvii s. x d. a piece xxxv. xiii. iiii. For every Scholar yearly six pair of Shoes, at xxd. the pair, four pair of Stockings at xx d. the pair, Hat and Band iiii s. Garters, Points, and Gloves at xuj d. in all yearly xliiii. For every Scholar two Shirts, at iii s. apiece, and six Bands at x. d. apiece, in all yearly xxii. For Books, Paper, Ink, Quills, and teaching them to Write and Cipher yearly xiiii. Four Gowns for the Chappel-Clerk, Organist, Manciple and Matron, at xl s. apiece yearly viij. Sixteen Gowns for Sixteen Grooms and other inferior Officers at xx s. a man xuj. In all Liveries and other Necessaries yearly iiiic. xxxil. For Wages. l. s. d. For the Master of the Hospital yearly l. The Council of the Hospital xv. The Steward of Courts for Cambridge and Essex x. The Steward of Elcombe xl. The Preacher xl. The Register and Solicitor xxx. The Receiver xxx. The Auditor without Diet xl. The Schoolmaster xxx. The Chapel Clerk viij. The Usher xv. The Organist xiii. vi. viij. The Manciple viij. The Pantler with xxvi s. viij d. for Beavors viij. The Physician and Physic xl. The Butler for the House, with xxvi s. viij d. for Beavors viij. The Butler for the Scholars vi. xiii. iiii. The Bailiff of Elcombe xl. Other Bailiffs x. Fourscore poor men at C s. for wages, and xxvi s. viij d. a piece for Beavors uc. vi.xiii. iiii. The Sexton attending in the Hall and Chappel, with xxvi s. viij d. for Beavors seven. vi. viij. The Scholar's Groom iiii. Other five Grooms at iiii l. wages, and xxvi s. viij d. for Beavors xxvi. xiii. iiii. The Gardener xx. The two Scullions viij. vi. viij. The Porter for Wages and Beavors viij. The Matron xuj. The Landress xxx. The Cook, besides his accustomed Kitchen Fees xuj. The Plumber for his time xx. The Barber for the Scholars xl. The two Out-porters iiii. The Clock keeper xl. The Surveyor of the Hall lii. The Keeper of the great Chamber xl. The Scholars, Butler, and Groom, to make their Diet equal to others ciiii. The Scavenger vi. The Scrape Trencher xl. Portage of Meat from Market vi. x. In all Fees and Wages yearly Mt. lxviˡ. vi. Other Ordinary Allowances. l. s. d. The Master's Fuel x. The Preachers c. The Register and Solicitor c. The Receiver c. The Schoolmaster iiii. Chappel Clerk xl. The Usher iiii. The Organist xl. The Manciple xl. Law Charges xl. Fuel for the Hospital, and allowance for weak and sick clii. Reparations lx. Renewing of Householdstuff l. Washing and Starching Scholars Linen vi. Candles xlv. Burials x. Communions xl. Quit Rents ix. xuj. Surplus allowed for the Master and Strangers in the Hall viij. Loss in cutting out Beef xi. C. l. s. In all the other ordinary allowances yearly iiii. xxxii. xuj. l. l. l. C. l. s. d. Sum total of the yearly Expense of the Hospital for Diets, Liveries, Wages, and other ordinary allowances M. M. M. seven. vi. ix. x. ob. Besides Extraordinaries for Pary x l. Palmer ciiii s. This Establishment was made Nine and forty years ago, since which time there have been considerable alterations, chief upon the account of the increase of the Revenue: which I shall set down in a fit place hereafter. The next thing to be considered, is the consummation of the Settlement, to put it beyond all question; which cannot be effected without a new Act of Parliament particularly designed to confirm this new Foundation, in distinction from that at Hallingbury: Therefore you find it propounded in the beginning of the Establishment, which was in the first year of King Charles his Reign: and in the third, this following Act of Parliament was obtained, which, I have been told, was never before printed; and therefore proper for this place. The Exemplification under the Great Seal of England, of the Act of Parliament for confirmation of the Hospital of King James, founded in in the County of Middlesex, at the humble Petition and only Costs and Charges of Thomas Sutton Esquire, and of the Possessions thereof. CAROLUS Dei gratia Anglie, Scotie, Francie, & Hibernie Rex, Fidei Defensor', etc. Omnibus ad quos praesentes Litere pervenerint, Salutem: Inspeximus quoddam breve nostrum de Cerciorand ' è Curia cancellary nostre nuper emanand. unacum quoddam return. in dorso ejusdem brevis fact. in Filaciis dicte Cancellarie nostre de recordo residend. in haec verba, carolus Dei gratia Anglie, The Writ of Certiorari. Scotie, Francie, & Hibernie Rex, Fidei Defensor, &c, dilecto nobis Henrico Elsyinge Armiger', Clerico Parliamentorum nostrorum, Salutem, Volentes certis de causis Certiorari super tenore cujusdam Actus Parliamenti nostri apud Civitatem nostram Westm ', Decimo septimo die Martii, ultimo praeterito inchoat', & ibidem usque vicesimum Sextum diem instan. Mensis Junii tent', ac deinde usque ad & in vicesimum diem Octobris, proxime sequen, praerogat. intitulat', An Act for the establishing and confirming of the Foundation of the Hospital of King James, founded in in the County of Middlesex, at the humble Petition and only Costs and Charges of Thomas Sutton Esquire, and of the Possessions thereof. The Return thereof. Tibi precipimus quod tenorem Actus predict. cum omnibus illum tangerd. nobi. in cancellariam' nostram sub Sigillo tuo distinct & aperte, sine dilatione mittas & hoc breve T. meipso apud Westm' xxviiiᵒ. die Junii, Anno Regni nostri quarto Cesar. Ra. Executio istius brevis patet in Scedula hinc annexat' H. Elsyinge Cler ' Parl. Inspe'ximus etiam predict. The time of the beginning and continuance of the Parliament, viz. from the 17. day of March, in the third of King Charles the First, until the 26. of June next following. Scedulam eidem brevi annexat' in Filaciis dict. cancellary nostre de Recordo similiter residen. in in haec verba, In Parliamento inchoat' & tent' apud Westm ' Decimo septimo die Martii, Anno Regni Serenissimi & Excellentissimi Domini nostri Caroli, Dei gratia, Anglie, Scotie, Francie, & Hibernie Regis, Fidei Defensor', etc. tertio & ibidem continuat' usque in Vicesimum sextum diem Mensis Junii, tunc propter sequen. communi omnium Dominorum tam spiritualium quam temporalium, & Communium consensu, & Regie Majestatis assensu (inter alia) fancitum, inactitatum, & stabilitum fuit hoc sequens Statutum, The Title of the Act. An Act for the Establishing and Confirming of the Hospital of King James, founded in in the County of Middlesex, at the humble Petition and only Costs and Charges of Thomas Sutton Esquire, and of the Possessions thereof: Cujus quidem Statuti tenor sequitur in haec verba, viz. The Act. Whereas our late Sovereign Lord King James of blessed memory, at the humble suit of Thomas Sutton late of Balsham in the County of Cambridge Esq deceased, Recital of the Letters Patents. by his Highness' Letters Patents under the Great Seal of England, hearing date the Two and twentieth day of June, in the Ninth year of his Majesty's Reign of England, did give and grant unto the said Thomas Sutton full power, licence, and lawful authority to erect and establish at or in the late dissolved besides Smithfield, in the County of Middlesex, an Hospital and Free School in such sort as in, and by the said Letters Patents is expressed. And did further by the same Letters Patents, nominate, ordain, assign, constitute, limit, and appoint certain persons in the same Letters Patents named to be Governors of the Lands, Possessions, Revenues and Goods of the said Hospital; And did by the same Letters Patents Incorporate the said Governors and their Successors to be a Body Politic and Corporate, to have continuance for ever by the Name of the Governors of the Lands, Possessions, Revenues, and Goods of the Hospital of King James, founded in within the County of Middlesex, at the humble Petition and only Costs and Charges of Thomas Sutton Esquire: And did further by the same Letters Patents give licence to the said Thomas Sutton, to give, grant, and assure to the said Governors the Mansion-house, commonly called , besides Smithfield, in the said County of Middlesex, and divers and sundry other Manors, Messages, Lands, Tenements, and Hereditaments mentioned in the said Letters Patents, as in the said Letters Patents more at large appeareth. And whereas the said Thomas Sutton, Recital of the Founder's Deed of Bargain and Sale. minding the performance of the said Charitable Work by his Indenture of Bargain and Sale, bearing date the First day of November in the Ninth year aforesaid, and enroled in his said late Majesties High Court of Chancery, did, according to the said licence to him in that behalf given for the consideration in the same Indenture mentioned, give, bargain, sell, grant, confirm, and convey to the said Governors of the Lands, Possessions, Revenues, and Goods of the Hospital of King James, founded in within the County of Middlesex, at the humble Petition and only Costs and Charges of Thomas Sutton Esquire, and to their Successors for ever, the said Mansion-house, commonly called besides Smithfield, in the said County of Middlesex, and divers and sundry other Manors, Messages, Lands, Tenements, and Hereditaments in the same Indenture mentioned and expressed upon especial trust and confidence, that all and singular the Rents, Issues, Revenues, Commodities, and Profits of all and singular the said Manors, Houses, Lands, Tenements, and Hereditaments, should be for ever truly, faithfully, and wholly distributed, converted, and employed to and for the maintenance and continuance of the said Hospital and Free School, and other the Charitable uses in the said Deed indented, mentioned, as by the said Deed indented more at large appeareth. Recital of the Heirs Suit in Law against the Foundation. And whereas since the death of the said Thomas Sutton one Simon Baxter, the Heir of the said Thomas Sutton, hath attempted and endeavoured to impeach and overthrow the Incorporation and Foundation of the said Hospital, and the endowments thereof, and so to obtain and get to himself the Manors, Lands, Tenements, and Hereditaments that were the said Thomas Suttons, and by him conveyed to the Governors of the said Hospital for maintenance of the poor there; Howbeit the said Heir drawing the same in question in his said Majesty's Courts of King's Bench and Chancery, and the Case being adjourned by the then justices of the King's Bench into the Exchequer Chamber, after solemn argument and deliberate advice of all the then justices of both Benches, and Barons of the Exchequer, it was clearly resolved, That the said Foundation, Incorporation, and Endowment of the said Hospital, was sufficient good and effectual in the Law. And judgement was thereupon given accordingly in the said Court of King's Bench, and also a Decree agreeing with the said judgement was had in the said Court of Chancery, upon consideration whereof, and for that the said Foundation and Endowment doth daily maintain Fourscore poor men, some maimed in the Wars, some undone by Shipwreck and Misfortune on the Seas, and Forty poor Scholars, with a Master, Preacher, Teachers, and Attendants, and other Officers in very ample manner, with good and sufficient allowance in all things: It is most humbly desired in the behalf of the Governors and poor People of the said Hospital, That it may be enacted by the Kings most Excellent Majesty, the Lords Spiritual and Temporal, and the Commons in this present Parliament assembled, and by the Authority of the same, The body of the Act. And be it enacted by the Authority aforesaid, that the said House, called the late dissolved besides Smithfield, The place of the Hospital. and all the said Houses, Edifices, Buildings, Orchards, Gardens, Lands, Tenements, and Hereditaments within the Scite, Circuit, and Precinct of the same, was, is, and shall be for ever hereafter an Hospital in deed and in name, and is and shall be called by the name of the Hospital of King James, The name of the Hospital. founded in within the County of Middlesex, at the humble Petition and only Costs and Charges of Thomas Sutton Esquire, and that such of the said Governors, named or mentioned in the said Letters Patents as are yet living, The Governors incorporated, & by what Name. together with such others now living as have since been named or elected, or mentioned to be elected into the room or place of such of them as are since dead, or are removed, or have relinquished their places, and are now esteemed Governors, now are, and they and their Successors for ever hereafter shall be and continue, And shall be adjudged, deemed, and taken to be a Body Corporate and Politic, by the name of the Governors of the Lands, Possessions, Revenues, and Goods of the Hospital of King James, founded in Charter house within the County of Middlesex, at the humble Petition and only Costs and Charges of Thomas Sutton Esquire, and by that name shall have, The Governors' capacity. and may have and enjoy all and singular such and the like capacity, power, and ability to all intents, constructions, and purposes, as any other Corporation lawfully Incorporated, may, or aught to have, And be it further Enacted by the Authority aforesaid, That the said Governors, Power given to the Governors to make laws and orders under their Common Seal. and their Successors for the time being, or the most part of them, from time to time, and at all times hereafter, as to their or the most part of them shall seem fit and convenient, shall and may have full power and authority by writing under their Common Seal, to make, ordain, set down and prescribe as occasion shall require, such Rules, Statutes, and Ordinances, as they shall from time to time, and at all times think fit, as well for and concerning the naming and electing of such person and persons as shall succeed into the place and room of any the said Governors, when, and as often as any of them shall die or be removed from such place or places of Governor or Governors, or voluntarily shall relinquish their places; As also for and concerning the Election, Order, Rule and Government of the Master, Preacher, Schoolmaster, Usher, poor Men, poor Children, and all other Members, Officers, or Servants of the said Hospital in their several places, offices and rooms, and for their and every of their Stipends and Allowances, And that the same Rules, Orders, Statutes and Ordinances so from time to time to be made, set down and prescribed as aforesaid, shall be and stand in full force and strength in Law, and be executed in all things according to the true intent and meaning thereof, under the several pains, forfeitures, and penalties as shall be expressed and contained in the same Ordinances, Statutes, and Rules respectively: Provided always, that the said Rules, Ordinances, and Statutes, or any of them, be not repugnant or contrary to the Laws or Statutes of this Realm of England, nor against the purport or true intent of the recited Letters Patents, The Governors henceforth to take the Oaths of Supremacy & Allegiance. And be it enacted and established by the Authority aforesaid, That every person that shall from henceforth be Elected a Governor of the said Hospital, shall before he exercise the place of a Governor, take the several Oaths of Supremacy and Allegiance, which any two others of the said Governors for the time being, The Master to take the same Oaths henceforth. shall have power and authority by this Act to administer unto them: And that the Master from henceforth to be elected shall, before he exercise or take any benefit of the said place, take the said several Oaths of Supremacy and Allegiance; The Masters other oath. And shall also take an Oath that neither he, nor any other for him, with his privity, allowance, or consent, hath given, or shall give, directly or indirectly, any money, or other gratuity or reward, for, or in respect of the having or enjoying of the said place; All which said Oaths to be taken by such Master, any two of the said Governors for the time being, shall have power and authority by this Act to administer; And that the Preacher, Minister, Schoolmaster, Usher, The oaths of the Preacher, Schoolmaster, Usher, Officers, and poor men. Officers, and poor men, and every of them from henceforth to be elected and admitted, shall before he exercise or take benefit of any such place, take the said several Oaths of Supremacy and Allegiance; And shall also take an Oath that neither he nor any other for him, with his privity, allowance or consent, hath given, or shall give directly or indirectly, any money, or other gratuity or reward, for, or in respect of the having or enjoying of the said place, All which said Oaths by the said Preacher, Minister, Schoolmaster, Usher, Officers, and poor Men to be taken, any one of the said Governors, and the said Master for the time being, shall have power and authority by virtue of this Act to administer. The Governors to hold for ever the Hospital against the King and others. And be it further enacted and established by the Authority aforesaid, That the said Governors and their Successors shall and may for ever hereafter, have, hold, and enjoy, according to the purport, true intent and meaning of the said Indenture of Bargain and Sale, the said Hospital, House, and all Buildings, Gardens, Courts, Orchards, and Backsides thereto belonging, and all and singular the Manors, Messages, Lands, Tenements, Liberties, Franchises, and Hereditaments by the aforesaid Letters Patents by the said Indenture of Bargain and Sale, given, granted, conveyed and assured, or meant, mentioned or intended, in or by the said Letters Patents or Indenture, to be given, granted, conveyed or assured to the said Governors against our Sovereign Lord the King's Majesty, his Heirs and Successors, and against all other Person and Persons, of whom the said Hospital, House, Manors, Lands, Tenements and Hereditaments, or any of them, were holden at the time of the said Indenture made, and against their Heirs and Issues, notwithstanding any Title accrueing for or by any Alienation in Mortmain; And also against all and every other person and persons of whom the said Thomas Sutton did purchase the said Hospital, House, Manors, Lands, Tenements and Hereditaments, or any of them respectively, and against their Heirs, Issues and Assigns; And also against all and every other person and persons claiming, or that shall claim any Estate, Right, Title, or Interest of, in, out, or unto the said Hospital, Manors, Lands, Tenements and Hereditaments, or any of them, by, from, or under any person or persons, of whom the said Thomas Sutton did purchase the same, unless such other person and persons do pursue their Title, Claim, or Interest by way of Action or lawful Entry within ten years after the end of this present Session of Parliament, Saving to the King's Majesty, Exceptions and Save. his Heirs and Successors, all such Estate, Right, Title and Interest as his Majesty had, or might have had unto any the said Manors. Lands▪ Tenements, and Hereditaments before the said Indenture made, other than for or by reason of any Alienation in Mortmain; And saving to all and every other person or persons, Bodies Politic and Corporate, and their Heirs and Successors (other than the Heirs of the said Thomas Sutton, and other than such person and persons from whom the said Thomas Sutton purchased the said Hospital, House, Manors, Lands, Tenements or Hereditaments, or any of them, their Heirs, Issues, and Assigns, and Persons claiming by, from, or under them respectively, and other than such Person and Persons as shall claim the title of Alienation in Mortmain of any the said Manors, Lands, Tenements and Hereditaments) all such Estate, Right, Title, Claim, Custom, Interest and Demand whatsoever, as they or any of them have, or shall have, in as large and ample manner and form to all intents and purposes, as if this Act had never been had nor made. The Governors disabled to convey the Hospital, House, or Lands to the King. And be it further enacted and established by the Authority aforesaid, That the said Governors and their Successors, shall be from and after the end of this present Session of Parliament, for ever wholly and utterly disabled in Law to make, do, levy, or suffer any Act or Acts, Thing or Things, whereby, or by means whereof the said Hospital, House, Manors, Lands, Tenements or Hereditaments, or any part of them, or any of them, shall or may be aliened, assured, given, granted, demised, charged, or in any sort conveyed, or come to the possession of our said Sovereign Lord the King, All conveyances to the King of any the Hospital L●●… us to be v●●…d. his Heirs or Successors; And that all Alienations, Assurances, Gifts, Grants, Leases, Charges, and Conveyances whatsoever, from and after the end of this present S●ssion of Parliament, to be done, suffer●●, or made to our said Sovereign Lord the King, his Heirs or Successors, by the said Governors or their Successors, of or out of the said Hospital, House, Manors, Lands, Tenements or Hereditaments, or of, or out of any part or parcel of them, or any of them, shall be from and after the end of this present Session of Parliament, utterly void and of none effect, to all intents, constructions, and purposes, any former Law, Statute, Act, Ordinance, or other matter or thing to the contrary notwithstanding. The Governors disabled to make any Estates but for 21 years, or under, or for one, two, or three lives, or for any years determinable upon one, two, or three lives by Indenture in possession, and not in Reversion, at the usual Rent or more, or the true yearly value thereof And be it further enacted and established by the Authority aforesaid, that the said Governors and their Succesors, and every of them, be also from henceforth for ever wholly and utterly disabled in Law to make, do, levy, or suffer any act or acts, thing or things, whereby, or by means whereof the said Hospital-house, Manors, Lands, Tenements, or Hereditaments, or any of them, or any part of them, or any of them shall or may be aliened, assured, given, granted, demised, charged, or in any sort conveyed to any Person or Persons, Bodies Politic or Corporate, other than Leases and Demises by Indenture of the said Manors, Lands, Tenements and Hereditaments, and every or any of them (other than the said Hospital-house, Orchards, Gardens, Backsides, or any of them, or any part of them, or any of them now used for the habitation or use of, or for, the Master, Preacher, Schoolmaster, Usher, poor Scholars, and poor People of the said Hospital, or any of them) for the term of One and twenty years or under in possession, and not in reversion, or for one, two, or three lives, or for any number of years determinable upon one, two, or three lives in possession, and not in reversion, and whereupon such yearly rent or more shall be reserved to the Governors of the said Hospital and their Successors, during the continuance of every such Lease as is now reserved upon any demise thereof, or otherwise the true yearly value thereof, and other than Grants by Copy of Court Roll, according to the Customs of the several Manors respectively: An Exception by granting by Copy of Court Roll. Provided nevertheless, that it shall and may be lawful to and for the said Governors and their Successors, to grant reasonable and convenient Annuities, Rents, or Fees to such person or persons as shall be Officers, Ministers, or needful Attendants concerning the affairs of the said Hospital, only for life or at will, So as the number of the Officers, Ministers, or needful Attendants be not increased above the Number which now is, as fully and amply as they should or might have done, as if this Act had never been had or made; A Proviso for the Lord North. Provided always, and be it enacted that this Act, or any thing herein before contained, shall no way extend to give any title to the said Hospital, in or unto the Mansion-house now in possession of the Right Honourable Dudley Lord North, or of his Assigns at or near the East end of the said Hospital, nor unto any the Buildings, Edifices, Courts, Gardens, Orchards, or Grounds thereunto belonging, or therewith used or enjoyed, nor unto any other the Messages, Tenements, or Hereditaments of the said Lord North, being within or near the Scite or Precinct of the said Hospital; But that it shall and may be lawful to and for the said Lord North, his Heirs, Tenants, and Assigns for ever hereafter to hold and enjoy against the Governors, Master, and other the Owners or Possessors of the said Hospital in the , now, and for the time being, the said Mansion-house and Premises, and all ways and passages by Cart or otherwise, Easements, Waters, Watercourses, Channels, Pipes, Conduits, Cocks, Liberties, Profits, and Hereditaments to the same, or any of them belonging, or therewith, or with any of them now used or enjoyed, or the which by the true meaning of any Grant, Covenant, Clause, or Agreement contained in one Deed of Feoffment made by Edward Lord North unto Sir William Peter Knight and others, bearing date the Sixth day of November in the Fifth year of the Reign of the late Queen Elizabeth, and in one other Deed made by Roger late Lord North and others to the Right Noble Prince Thomas late Duke of Norfolk, bearing date the last day of May in the Seventh year of the Reign of the said late Queen Elizabeth, were meant and intended to belong unto, or to be enjoyed with the said Mansion-house, or any other the said Messages, Tenements, or Hereditaments of the said now Lord North, according to the true meaning of the said several Deeds; And that it shall and may be lawful at all times hereafter to and for the said Dudley Lord North, his Heirs, Tenants, and Assigns, and all others inhabiting and possessing the said Mansion-house, or any other the said Messages, Tenements, or Hereditaments of the said Lord North, for themselves, their servants, and workmen to have free ingress and regress into and from the Orchards, Gardens, or other places of the said Hospital, where it shall be needful to survey, repair, cleanse, amend, and new make the said Pipes, Conduits, Cocks, Channels, and Watercourses, and all other Pipes, Conduits, Cocks, Channels, and Watercourses that hereafter shall be erected or placed within the precinct of the said Hospital for the conveying of Water unto the said Mansion-house, or other the Messages, Tenements, or Hereditaments of the said now Lord North, or any of them, and to that purpose to subvert and dig up the Soil of the said Orchards, Gardens, or other places of the said Hospital where it shall be needful: Provided also, A Proviso for the Viscountess Maidstone. and be it Enacted by the Authority aforesaid, that this Act or any thing therein contained, shall not in any wise extend unto the Mansion-house of the Right honourable Elizabeth Viscountess of Maidstone, situate and being in Church-yard, near unto the said Hospital, nor to any the Buildings, Outhouses, Gardens, or Grounds therewith used, or thereto pertaining, nor to any Mansion-houses, Buildings, or Grounds therewith used of any other person or persons within or near the precinct of the said Churchyard or Hospital, and not conveyed, or mentioned to be conveyed by the said Thomas Sutton to the said Governors by the said Indenture of Bargain and Sale; But that it shall and may be lawful to and for the said Viscountess of Maidstone, and all and every other person and persons whatsoever, to hold and enjoy the said several Mansion houses and Premises, therewith used, or thereto pertaining, together with all ways and passages with Carts or otherwise, and all Liberties, Profits, Easements, Water and Watercourses, Pipes, Cocks, and Passages for Water, and liberty to dig, cleanse, amend, and new make such Pipes, Cocks, and Watercourses as fully and as amply as if this Act had never been had nor made. Ego Henricus Elsyinge Armiger', Clericus Parliamentorum, virtute brevis dicti Domini nostri Regis de Certiorando mihi direct', & his annexat', certifico superius hoc scriptum verum esse tenorem Actus Parliamenti supradicti in eo brevi mencionat'. In cujus rei testimonium Sigillum nomenque meum apposui atque subscripsi, Dat' secundo Die Julii, Anno regni dict' Domini nostri Regis Caroli quarto, H. Elsyinge Cler' Parl. Nos autem separales tenores brevis & scedulae predict. ad requisition' Gubernatorum terrarum possessionum, revencionum, & bonorum Hospitalis predict. duximus Exemplificand' per presents. In cujus rei testimonium has literas nostras fieri fecimus Patentes, Teste meipso apud Westmonasterium Decimo octavo die Julii Anno Regni nostri quarto. Cesar Car. Examinat' per nos Rob. & Edw. Clarke Clericos. Irrotulat' & Rotul' Patent' Cur' Cancellar' Domini Regis Caroli, infra script' de Anno Regni ejusdem Regis Angliae, etc. Quarto. Now all things are fixed and settled, according to the admirable Ends they were designed for, every one enjoying the benefit and refreshments of our Noble Founder's Charity: Ezra 6.9. Day by day we have our Portions without fail, that we may offer Sacrifices of sweet Savour unto the God of Heaven, and pray for the Life and Prosperity of our most gracious King, and the Happiness of our Noble Governors. The Names of the present Governors. 1. The most Reverend Father in God, Gilbert, Lord Archbishop of Canterbury 2. The Lord Chancellor of England. 3. The Duke of Buckingham. 4. The Duke of Monmouth. 5. The Duke of Ormond. 6. Lord Chamberlain. 7. Lord Treasurer. 8. Earl of Bridgewater. 9 Earl of Craven. 10. Earl of Shaftsbury. 11. Lord Bishop of Winchester. 12. Lord Bishop of Rochester. 13. Lord robart's. 14. Mr. Secretary Coventry. 15. Sir William Wild. 16. Martin Clifford Esquire. Thus the Government of this Foundation is fixed upon the most Honourable Grandees of our State, and the most Reverend Prelates of our Church; they who sit at the Helm of our Kingdom, and are graciously pleased to steer and guide this goodly Ship of Renowned Sutton's Charity. And here we may note the great Wisdom of our Founder, who made choice of men of Honour and Power, who were able to maintain his Foundation by their Interest, and to grace it with their Honour. When any of these Noble Lord, happen to decease, another is chosen within two months by the voices of the Major part. The Patent runs thus. TO all whom these Presents shall come, the Governors of the Lands, Possessions, Revenues and Goods of the Hospital of King James, founded in the , within the County of Middlesex, at the humble Petition and only Costs and Charges of Thomas Sutton Esquire, send greeting in our Lord GOD everlasting. Whereas _____ one of the Governors of the Lands, Possessions, Revenues, and Goods of the Hospital of King James aforesaid, lately died, and departed this life, by means whereof his room and place of a Governor did become, and yet is and continueth void: Know ye therefore, that the said Governors according to the true intent and meaning of the Letters Patent of our late Sovereign Lord King James, for the Foundation of the said Hospital, bearing date the Two and twentieth day of June, in the Ninth year of his Reign, do elect, nominate, and appoint _____ to be henceforth one of the Governors of the Lands, Possessions, Revenues and Goods of the said Hospital of King James, founded in the , within the County of Middlesex, at the humble Petition and only Costs and Charges of Thomas Sutton Esquire, in the room and place of a Governor so being void, as aforesaid, by the death of the said _____ _____ to be, and continue in the room and place, and to have, exercise, and enjoy the said room and place of one of the Governors of the Lands, Possessions, Revenues, and Goods of the Hospital aforesaid, according to the true intent and meaning of the said Letters Patent. In witness whereof the said Governors have hereunto set their Common Seal, and every one of them his particular Seal, etc. The Members that are kept and maintained in the Hospital, chief consist of old Gentlemen and Children. 1. FOurscore ancient Men, who have been formerly in the Wars, and been serviceable to their King and Country: or else decayed Merchants, whose Estates have been swallowed up in the Deep, or aged and poor Householders, who have formerly lived in a fair esteem in the World; who have a long while born the labour of the day, and now are joyful to find such a Noble Sanctuary and place of refreshment. It was primarily intended for old Gentlemen Soldiers, when Age seemed to sound a Retreat, and therefore such qualified Persons, by the Orders of the Governors, may be admitted into the House, ten years sooner, or younger, than other men. I suppose, because the hardships and severe Discipline of War, the Wounds and Distempers contracted in the Camp, might soon shatter their Bodies, and render them more early objects of Charity. These Persons are chosen by particular Governors, every one in their Order: only the King puts in two in his course, the Queen and Duke of York one a piece, than the Governors in their respective turns, as places happen to be vacant: This they do by a Warrant sent to the Master and Register of the House. The Form of a Warrant for a Pensioner. To my loving Friends, the Master and Register of Sutton 's Hospital. I Do hereby nominate and appoint A. B. of N. in the County of M. to be a poor Brother and Pensioner in Sutton's Hospital; and do desire that this my Warrant may be presented to the next Assembly of Governors for the Election of Pensioners, to the intent he may be elected and admitted into the next place which shall fall to my disposal (next after N. N. of S. in the County of P. whom I last nominated). Given under my Hand. A great Number of Religious and Aged Persons have here received Comfort both of Soul and Body: Much about 554 have here peaceably spent the Evening of their days, and then ascended up into Heaven to return thanks to their Great Founder and Deliverer in their former time of Distress. Here I cannot but take notice of the health, and sweetness of life in this place: For if out of 80 aged men, there die but 9 in a year, which from October the third, 1614 to 1676. makes up the Sum of 554, or thereabouts, they seem to outlive the common rate of men, the purchase of whose lives is usually reckoned seven or eight years. But if at any time it please God to visit the City with the Pestilence, or some such grievous Distemper (which God for ever avert from them) the House is dissolved, and every Pensioner has a Certificate in this Form. To all whom these may appertain, Greeting, etc. THe Bearer hereof, A. B. a Brother of this Society of the , hath occasions to go into the Country, and there to make his abode for a time. And forasmuch as in these Contagious times all Officers and others have just cause to be fearful whom they lodge or entertain into their Company; These are therefore to certify faithfully, that neither this Bearer, nor any of our Society, hath been yet visited with the Contagion, or any danger thereof, God be praised, but are in as perfect health and soundness, as in former times. These are therefore to will and desire all men, whom it may concern, to suffer the said A. B. quietly to pass, and freely to stay at the place of his intended abode, or elsewhere, behaving himself civilly and orderly, whereof we give good Testimony, as also of the undoubted truth of the Premises. In witness whereof we have hereunto set our Hands. From Charterhouse, by the Order of the Lords the Governors. 2. There are also 44 Boys at School, chosen by the same Honourable Persons, after the same manner with the Pensioners: They are only capable of Admission between the years of 10 and 15; and are to continue in the House but 8 years at the most. The place, where now the Scholars are taught, was formerly a Tennis-Court, upon which an Historian has this Remark, It was a Change, à Ludo Pilario, Slow by Hows, ad Ludum Literarium. Out of this Nursery of Learning some are by Election transplanted to the Universities, either to Cambridge or Oxford, to any College, according to their own Friends choice and determination; where they likewise are capacitated to receive any favour or benefit from the said College; as several worthy Persons do this day in the Universities, and are no small Reputation to this Noble Foundation. Their allowance is 20 l. per Annum, duly paid Quarterly, without any charge or trouble in the place of their Residence, in either of the Universities: And this is done upon their sending up a Certificate to the Receiver of the , with this or the like signification: These are to certify whom it may concern, That T. B. Student of hath been resident all the last Quarter; and is of a good life and conversation. This is to be signed by the Head of the College and two of the chief Officers. They have liberty from the House to discontinue two months in a year; so that their time of discontinuance is usually excepted in the Certificate. Nine and twenty of these Scholars are maintained at the Universities, and the Allowance of 20 l. per Annum continues for 8 years. Others who are superannuated, being unwilling, or uncapable of Learning, are designed for Apprentices, put out to Write and cipher, and disposed of to a Trade, with the Sum of 40 l. (which was agreed on the last Assembly). Here I cannot but take notice of a mighty Inconvenience which attends the School, and were it once remedied, it would certainly redound much to the Improvement of the Lads, and the Honour of the Foundation: I humbly desire that the Right Honourable the Governors, would take it into their consideration; For how is it possible for ripe and well-grounded Lads to be sent away to the Universities, when Elections usually come sooner than the Scholars are prepared for them: And this truly arises from no other cause but this, when Boys are admitted into the House, little or no regard is had to their Learning and Proficiency; but the thing mainly considered is, Whether they are between the years of Ten and Fifteen; and though they are scarce able to read, than they must be admitted. The way to obtain a place for a young Lad or an old Gentleman, is much the same: viz. to make an address to any single Governor the Person has most Interest in, by way of Friends, Petition, or any other method of Application: for no old Gentleman or Boy is chosen by a common Vote, but each Governor nominates in his turn: Then a Warrant is to be procured, if for a Lad, after this manner. To his loving Friends, the Master and Register of Sutton's Hospital. I Do nominate, choose, and appoint A. B. the Son of C. D. to be a poor Scholar of Sutton's Hospital; and do desire that this my Warrant may be presented to the next Assembly of Governors, for the Election of Scholars: to the intent he may be accordingly Elected, and admitted when any such place shall fall in my Disposal. Given under my Hand, etc. And here it is to be noted, that their Majesties, his Royal Highness, and the Governors, being usually pre-engaged, it is the best way to be early in making application, especially for the place of a young Lad; Three or four years is but a reasonable time before hand; for else ordinarily they will hardly have the benefit of their Warrant, which some impute to the unkindness of the Officers. For the Governors at an Assembly make a List, and nominate their Lad, each of them, who, being approved of, is certain to come in, though the place should fall after his Governors' Death: and till the former Nomination and Warrant be served, no other can have any claim or virtue. The Number now in the House maintained and kept, is above 188 Persons, besides the 29 Scholars at the Universities; and the standing Council to the House (which at present are Sir William Jones his Majesty's Attorney General, and Mr. Dolben of the Temple) have a retaining Fee from the House; and several other persons who are mentioned in the first Establishment. At the Admission of every Member, it is required that they be sober in mind, and healthful in body; which later information is to be given by the Chriurgion, with the Approbation of the Physician, by an Order Decemb. 10. 1613. What a mighty benefit this Donation has proved to many hundreds, in the space of Threescore and six years, is almost incredible; for no Estate of the like Revenue has done near so much good, in all Europe: For some Persons who have been Members of great and considerable Families, have been glad to take Relief in this, when their own wealthy Relations esteemed them as a burden. I have already given you an Account of the Ancient concerns of the House, and now I intent to conclude, with a fresh account of the Alterations of Salaries, and increase of Revenues by the great wisdom and care of the Right Honourable the Governors. As for the particular Orders by which the Ancient Men are to be regulated, they are conveniently placed before their Devotions. I find an Account of the Lands, Manors, and Revenues of the , set down Alphabetically by Master Fuller, but so confusedly, by reason of mistakes of Farms for Manors, that I chose rather to set them exactly down as I found them in the Rental at the , made Anno Dom. 1673. 1. THe Estate about the Charterhouse, viz. in the Lane, and the Yard before the House, and the Backside of the Wilderness, called now Sutton's Street: These are let out to several Tenants, but the Annual Rent of them all amounts to l. s. d. 202 00 00 2. Some Lands at Hackney, in the County of Middlesex, which bring in per Annum 025 00 00 3. At Southminster in Essex, the Lease-hold Rents of the same Manor per Annum 921 03 04 The Free and Customary Rents of the said Manor per Annum 038 08 3 ob. 4. Cold Norton in Essex, Lease-hold Rents 160 00 00 Free and Customary 017 06 09 5. Great Stanbridge in Essex, Lease-hold Rents 113 06 08 Free and Customary 012 04 02 6. Little Hallingbury in Essex, Lease-hold Rents 267 13 04 Free and Customary 010 16 2 ob. 7. Castle-Camps in Cambridge, Lease hold 652 14 08 Free and Customary 032 09 3. q. 8. Balsham Manor in Cambridge, Lease-hold 200 00 00 Free and Customary 041 19 5 ob. q. 9 Buslingthorpe in Lincolnshire, Lease-hold 305 10 00 10. Dunsby in Lincolnshire, Farm Rents 408 18 08 11. Elcomb Manor and Park in Wiltshire, containing all these Farms (which Mr. Fuller sets down for Manors) 1. Chilton, 2. Black-grove, 3. Missunden, 4. Salthorpe, 5. Wescott, 6. Uffcott, etc. The Lease-holds whereof amount to 1063 13 04 Free and Customary 020 15 8 ob. These are all the Manors, Lands, and Revenues which were settled by the Founder himself upon his Hospital. But the Purchases since have been Considerable. 1. Thurston, and the Marsh, in Cold Norton in Essex, which brings in per Annum l. s. d. 018 00 00 2. Elmestead Park in Essex, Lease-hold 060 00 00 3. Fryans and Jackletts in Essex 60 00 00 4. Little Wigborow in Essex, Farm Rents 200 00 00 Free and Customary 005 05 04 5. Higney Grange and Isle in Hungtingtonshire 220 00 00 6. Fulstow-Marsh-Chappel and Tetney in Linc. 50 00 00 7. Hartland in Devonshire 36 00 00 Small Tithes 25 00 00 8. West-black loft, Saddlethorpe, Yokfleet, and Bellasis in Yorkshire 070 00 00 011 03 0 ob. 9 Bockleton in Shropshire 060 00 00 10. Thickwood in Wiltshire 078 06 04 Another Rent 003 69 01 The Ancient Revenue comes to 4493 19 10 ob. The new Purchased Lands to 0897 13 9 ob. Both together amount to 5391 13 08 Although the House lost near 8000 l. in Beaumont's and Heyward's time, in the years 1623. and 1624.: and was rob of 1600 l. in the year 1649. and was set behind hand in Mr. Gerard's time, when he was Master; yet during these Wars, as well as formerly, there have been considerable Additions since the year 1614 First of all, 24 Boys were allowed at the University 20 pounds per Annum a piece, out of Lands purchased by the good Providence of Sir Richard Sutton, one of the Founders faithful Executors. Secondly, Five Scholars added since to the number of the University Youths, who are now 29, by the good care and providence of Mr. Gresset. And Four Scholars more added to the first Foundation of 40, maintained in the House. The Master's Salary has been raised from 50 l. per Annum, to a 100 l. and lately increased to 200 l. The Preachers from 40 l. per Annum to a 100 l. The Schoolmasters from 30 l. to a 100 marks. The Readers from 20 l. to 30 l. per Annum. The Gardiner's place is also considerably increased. And the Apprentices have their 20 l. doubled. For now the Lands amount to as before mentioned in the Rental. l. s. d. 5391 13 08 A very fair Estate for a private man to get, and to bestow to such Excellent Purposes, whose praise ought to be celebrated in all Ages. Thus we may observe how just and regular Affairs stand in this House, that the Revenues are no way embezel'd: 'Tis true, not many years since a lamentable sire happened, which occasioned the taking out the famous 1000 l. so long kept prisoner in the Chest; but yet in time it is to be hoped it may be gathered up, and return to its old habitation: and in truth it lay there to be a reserve for extraordinary Emergencies. So neither is the Estate diverted to any other use than what the Founder designed, viz. decayed Soldiers, and English Gentlemen, and others who formerly have been well educated: These have every one a handsome and convenient Apartment. Likewise it is laid out on the maintenance of decayed gentlemen's Children, who have a Chamber to two of them, wholesome diet, admirable conveniences, and all accommodations imaginable; so that they are no burden at all to their Parents, after their first years admission into the House. I have nothing now to say, but to recommend this Great Example to the Christian World. The Poets feign that at the end of the thread or web of every man's life, there is a little Medal containing the person's name; and that Time waiting upon the Shears, as soon as the thread was cut, caught the Medals, and carried them to the River Lethe: about whose Banks there were many Birds flying up and down, that would get the Medals, and carry them in their Beaks a little while, and then let them fall into the River, only there were a few Swans, which if they got a Name, would carry it to a Temple, where it was Consecrated. May the memory of this great Man long endure, and in this Temple dwell for ever. The last WILL AND TESTAMENT OF Thomas Sutton Esquire. IN the Name of God, Amen. The Second day of November, in the year of our Lord God One thousand six hundred and eleven, I Thomas Sutton of Camp; Castle in the County of Cambridge Esquire, being weak in body, and of good and perfect mind and memory, thanks be given to Almighty God for the same; Do make and declare this my last Will and Testament in manner and form following; that is to say, First, and principally, I commend my Soul into the hands of Almighty God, trusting through his mercy, and by the precious death and passion of my Saviour and Redeemer Jesus Christ, to be saved, and to inherit the Kingdom of Heaven for ever. And my Body I will to be buried where and in what sort it shall seem meet and convenient to mine Executor or Executors, and Supervisor or Supervisors of this my last Will and Testament, with the least pomp and charge that may be. Item, I give to every one of the Children of Richard Cox, late Bishop of Ely, who shall be living at the time of my death, Ten pounds apiece, of lawful money of England. Item, I give to the Children of Eleanor Ask, late wife of Robert Ask, of Aughton in the County of York, Esquire, the Sum of One hundred pounds of good and lawful money of England, to be equally distributed amongst them. Item, I give to the poor Town of Berwick upon Tweed, One hundred Marks of lawful money of England, to be distributed amongst the Poor there by the discretion of the chief Governor and Preacher there for the time being, to be paid within one year after my decease. Also I give to Andrew Westwood's wife, of Newcastle upon Tyne, or to her Children, or to so many of them as shall be living at my death, Ten pounds, to be bestowed equally amongst them. And I give to the poor people of Stoke-Newinton in the County of Middlesex, Ten pounds to be distributed by the Constables, Churchwardens, and Parson of the same Town, for the time being, to the most needy people there. Also I give to Mr. Grace, dwelling in Yorkshire, sometimes servant to Ambrose Earl of Warwick, or to his Children, if any of them be living at my decease, Forty pounds of good and lawful money of England, to be distributed equally amongst them within six months after my decease. Also I give to the Children of my Aunt White, or to so many of them as shall be living at my decease, One hundred Marks to be equally distributed amongst them, within six months' next after my decease. Also I give to William Cocket, Son to William Cocket late Alderman of the City of Lincoln, One hundred pounds of lawful money of England. Also I give to the Children of John Copeland, late of Skillingthorp in the County of Lincoln, or to so many of them as shall be living at the time of my decease, One hundred pounds of lawful money of England, to be equally distributed amongst them, saving unto Elizabeth Copeland, for my meaning is that she shall not have any part of the said Legacy of One hundred pounds. And unto the said Elizabeth Copeland I give the Sum of One hundred pounds of lawful money of England, to be paid unto her at the day of her marriage, or within one year after my decease. Item, I give unto Jane Upton, one of the Daughters of Elizabeth Upton, late wife of Hamond Upton of Wamfleet in the County of Lincoln Esquire, the Sum of fifty pounds of lawful money of England. And to every other of the Children of the said Elizabeth who shall be living at the time of my decease, Twenty pounds apiece of lawful money of England, to be paid within six months' next after my decease. Also I give to the Children of one Skelton, late of Lowth in the County of Lincoln, and sometimes towards the Henneages of Heniton in the said County, Ten pounds to be equally divided amongst them. Item, I give to the Children of Thomas Pynner, late of Micham in the County of Surrey Esquire, or to so many of them as shall be living at my decease, Twenty pounds to be equally distributed amongst them. Item, I give to the Children of Henry Tutty, late Gunner in Barwick, or to so many of them as shall be living at my decease, Ten pounds of lawful money of England, to be equally distributed amongst them. Also I give to my Niece Elizabeth Allen, Two hundred pounds of lawful money of England. And to every of her Children which shall be living at my decease, One hundred Marks apiece. Item, I give to Simon Baxter, if he be living at my decease, Three hundred pounds of lawful money of England, if not, than I give the same Sum to his Child or Children, to be equally divided amongst them. Item, I give unto Francis Baxter, if he be living at my death, Five hundred Marks of lawful money of England, if not, I give the same Sum to his Child or Children, to be equally divided amongst them. Item, I give unto each of my Servingmen to whom I give wages, with my Cook, that shall be alive at my decease, Thirteen pounds six shillings and eight pence over and above their wages then due. Item, I give to so many of my Maidservants as I have in my house, at the time of my decease, five Marks apiece over and above their wages. Item, I give unto the Children of Reynold Tomps, my late Servant, if any of them be alive at my death, Ten pounds to be distributed amongst them. Item, I give to the Fishermen of the Town of Ostend in the Low-Countries, One hundred pounds of lawful English money, to be given and distributed amongst the poorest Fishermen of that Town, or for want of a competent number of them, to call in some other of that Town to have a share of the said one hundred pounds, by the discretion of the Governors of that Town and his Assistants, and the Parson and Minister there for the time being, the same to be paid within one year after my decease. Item, I give towards the mending of the Highways between Islington and Newington in the County of Middlesex, Twenty six pounds thirteen shillings and four pence of lawful money of England, to be employed and bestowed by the good oversight of mine Executor or Executors, the Constable of Newington and the Churchwardens there for the time being, the same Highways to be amended, made, and helped within one year after my decease. Item, I give towards the amending of the Highways between Ashden and Walden in the County of Essex, called Walden-lane, One hundred pounds of lawful money of England: And towards the amending of the Highways between Great Lynton in the County of Cambridge, and the said Town of Walden, Threescore and six pounds thirteen shillings and four pence of lawful money of England: And I also give towards the amending of Horsheath-lane, Threescore pounds of lawful money of England. All these works next before recited, I will shall be overseen and guided by the two head-Constables thereunto next adjoining, the Treasurer of Walden, and the Parsons of Ashden, Hadstock, and Horsheath, and the Constables of the same Parishes for the time being: And the same several Sums to be employed, and the said Highways so to be amended, so far as the same Sums will extend within One year after my decease. Also I give towards the amending of the Bridges and the ordinary Highways between Southminster and Maldon in the said County of Essex, the Sum of One hundred pounds of lawful money of England, and the same Work to be overseen and guided by the two head-Constables thereunto next adjoining, and the Parsons or Vicars of Southminster and Maldon for the time being, and the same money to be so employed, and the Highways so amended, within one year after my decease. Item, I give to Mr. Robert Dudley, Alderman of Newcastle upon Tine, or to his Children, or to so many of his Children as shall be living at the time of my decease, Thirty pounds of lawful money of England which he oweth me. And I will and do earnestly charge mine Executor or Executors, to deliver into the Treasury or Chamber of the City of London One thousand pounds in currant money of England, with such care and foresight to be had, that such Bonds or Assurances be taken of the Lord Maior and Aldermen of the same City that for the time shall be, by learned Counsel in the Law, as the same may be safe, and for ever go and be converted to these uses following▪ That is to say, That the said thousand pounds be yearly lent and put forth to Ten young Merchant men, not having any great Stocks of their own, being young men, and of honest life and conversation, and towardly in their Trades; that is, to every one of them One hundred pounds for a year, without paying any thing for the same: And these Ten young Merchants to be chosen and appointed by the Lord Maior and Aldermen of the said City that for the time shall be, and the Dean of the Cathedral Church of St. Paul in London for the time being. Provided as before, that none have or continue the said hundred pounds so appointed above one year. Item, I will and give to the Children of Justinian Crome Draper, sometimes dwelling in the City of Lincoln, or to his children's children, if any of them shall be living at my decease, Twenty pounds of lawful money of England, to be equally divided amongst them. I give also to the Wife and Children or Child of Martin Wathersine Dutchman, sometime dwelling at the Sign of the White-Bear in Buttolph-lane, London, if any of them be living at the time of my death, Ten pounds to be equally divided amongst them. Item, I give to the next Kinsman or Kinswoman of Henry Vavering Dutchman, Smith, sometimes dwelling in Barwick, three pounds six shillings eight pence. Item, I give and bequeath unto Sir Francis Popham Knight, as well in respect and good will which I bear unto his Wife, being the Daughter of my late deceased dear Wife, the Sum of Two thousand Marks of lawful money of England, upon condition nevertheless, and so that, the said Sir Francis Popham, and the said Lady Anne his Wife, give a sufficient discharge and a general release to mine Executor or Executors, as well for that sum, as also for the receipt of all the rest of her part of portion of the plate, money and household stuff already paid, and delivered to them or to their use, as appeareth by several bills or notes subscribed with my own hand, which I do think to be the very true half, and better half of the said plate, money, and householdstuff, part whereof was delivered by one John Fishborne, my late Servant, to Sir John Popham Knight, late Lord Chief Justice of England, at his late House in Chancery-lane: The rest of the Householdstuff, as Chairs, Stools, Bedsteeds, Kitchen stuff, Tables, and such like, was delivered by the said Fishborne to the said Sir John Popham's Servants at Newington, One thousand pounds in money paid in this sort, (viz.) To Sir John Popham by his Servant Straker upon the said Sir John's Bill before marriage Three hundred pounds, which Bill after the marriage I returned to the said Sir John Popham; seven hundred pounds were paid to the said Sir John Popham upon the marriage by one Mr. Anthony Law, late dwelling in Pater-noster-row, London, the better moiety of the plate due to Sir Francis Popham, was by the appointment of the said Sir John Popham, received by one Mr. Clark, sometimes towards the said Sir John, and now a Counsellor at the Law of the Middle-Temple as I guess. Item, I give to my wellbeloved friend Amy Popham, Two hundred pounds to be paid to her at the day of her marriage, or when she shall accomplish the age of Eighteen years. Item, I give to Francis Popham, Mary Popham, Elizabeth Popham, Jane Popham, and Anne Popham, all Daughters of the said Lady Anne Popham, One hundred pounds apiece, which several Sums I will shall be paid them at the days of their marriage, or when they shall accomplish the age of eighteen years: And my will and meaning is that unless the said Sir Francis Popham, and the said Lady Anne his wife, do or shall give to mine Executor or Executors a general Acquittance or Release to the effect , that then, as well the said Legacy of Two thousand Marks so willed to be given to the said Sir Francis Popham, and the Lady Anne his wife, as also the other several Legacies given and bequeathed to every of the said Children of the said Sir Francis Popham, and the Lady his wife, shall remain and be to the use of mine Executor or Executors, to be wholly disposed and given by them within one year after my decease, partly to the amending of Highways, and partly to poor Maidens marriages, and partly to the releasing of poor men that lie in Prison for Debt, and partly to the poor people of mine intended Hospital, when it shall please God that it shall be established and erected. And where perhaps it is or may be supposed that the said Sir John Popham hath paid Three hundred pounds to Sir Rowland Hayward of the City of London, Alderman, as a Debt due unto him upon the Bonds of John Dudley and Thomas Dudley, I protest before God that I paid the whole three hundred pounds to the said Sir John Popham, in this sort to be paid over to the said Sir Rowland Heyward, viz. Two hundred pounds by my Servant John Fishborne, and One hundred pounds by one Henry Best Scrivener, near Temple bar. There was a demand made by Alderman Ducats Executors, for Four hundred pounds owing to the said Alderman upon the Bonds of John Dudley and Thomas Dudley for Copper, for the use of the Earl of Leicester, which the said Earl transported into Spain, which Debt was paid to the said Alderman. For I myself was a Messenger from the said Earl to the said Alderman, to let him understand that Mr. Bainham, my Lords special Officer and Receiver, should discharge them presently, & after it was discharged, the said Alderman demanded interest for the forbearing of the 400 l. which, as I remember, Thomas Dudley discharged: Mr. Justice Owen, as I remember, who had the doing in the Testament of Ald. Ducket, promised to deliver in the said Bond to Sir John Popham, then being Attorney, which I do believe he did: And whereas Mr. John Gardiner, brother to my late wife, by his last Will and Testament, did give unto Anne Dudley, now wife to Sir Francis Popham, one hundred pounds to be paid to her at the day of her marriage, the same hundred pounds was and is paid by me, at or before the day of her marriage, viz. In a Chain of Gold, being fourscore and seventeen pounds ten shillings in Gold, and for the fashion paid to Master Padmore Goldsmith in London, fifty shillings, which completes the hundred pounds, for the which, amongst other things which I delivered in trust I have no acquittance. Item, I give to Mr. Jeffery Nightingale Esquire, the Sum of Forty pounds of lawful money of England. Also I give to my Cousin William Stapleton, Son of Sir Richard Stapleton Knight, One hundred Marks. Item, I give unto the Children of Sir Francis Willoughby Knight, One hundred pounds of lawful money of England, to be equally distributed amongst them. Item, I give unto John Law, one of the Procurators of the Arches, London, Two hundred pounds. And to Mr. Tbomas Brown, Ten pounds to make him a Ring. Item, I give to the Wife and Children of John Gardiner, my late Wife's Nephew, if they be living after my decease, being the Mother and two Sons, Two hundred Marks to be equally divided amongst them. Item, I give to the poor people of Hadstock, to be distributed amongst them by the Churchwardens and Constables there for the time being, Twenty pounds Item, I give to the poor people of Littlebury, and to the poor people of Balsham to be distributed as afore, to either Town, Twenty pounds. Item, I give to the Parson and Churchwardens of Balsham aforesaid, for the time being, to buy a Bell withal, to be hanged up in the Steeple, to amend the Ring there, Twenty pounds. Item, To the poor of Southminster Twenty pounds. Item, To the poor of Little Hallingbury Twenty pounds. Item, To the poor of Dunsby, in the County of Lincoln, Twenty pounds. Item, I give to Robert Wright Poulterer of Little Hallingbury, Five pounds. Item, I give to Widow Ask, late Wife of Robert Ask of London, Goldsmith, Twenty pounds which she oweth me. Item, My will and meaning is, that there shall no Interest or Increase for money be taken after my decease, so as he or they by whom any Sums of money are or shall be owing, do pay the principal Debt within one half year next after my decease. Item, I give and bequeath to the poor Prisoners within the Prisons of Ludgate, Newgate, the two Compters in London, the King's Bench and the Marshalsea, the Sum of two hundred pounds, to be paid and divided among the same Prisoners by even and equal portions. Item, I give to Susan Price, at the day of her marriage, Forty pounds. Item, I give to one Collins of the Town of Cursal in Essex, Five pounds. Item, I give to my good friends, Mrs. Heyward and Mrs. Low, either of them Ten pounds. Item, I give to Margaret Woodhal my God-daughter, the Sum of Twenty pounds. Item, I give to all other my God-childrens Five pounds a piece. Item, I give and bequeath to the Master and Fellows, as the Corporation of Jesus College in Cambridge, the Sum of Five hundred Marks of lawful money of England, to be employed, used, and bestowed for or in some perpetuity, for and to the use, benefit, and behalf of the said College, Master, Fellows, and Scholars in such sort, manner, and form as by the discretion of the Bishop of Ely for the time being, the Vicechancellor of Cambridge for the time being, the Master and Fellows of the said College for the time being, and my Executors hereafter named, or the Survivor or Survivors of them, if they be living when the bestowing of the said Sum shall come in question, shall be thought best and most convenient. Item, I give and bequeath the Master and Fellows, as th●●●…oration of Magdalen College in Cambridge, the Sum of Five hundred pounds to be employed, used, or bestowed for or in some perpetuity, for and to the use, benefit, and behalf of the said College, Master and Fellows, and Scholars there, in such sort, manner, and form as by the discretion, privity, and consent of the Vicechancellor in Cambridge for the time being, the Master of Trinity College in Cambridge for the time being, and the Master and Fellows of the said Magdalen College for the time being, shall be thought best and most convenient. And I will that my great Chain of Gold, and all my Jewels of what kind soever they be, shall be sold by mine Executors and Supervisors hereafter named, towards the better and speedier payment of my Legacies and performance of this my last Will and Testament. And my will and meaning is, that all the Legacies by me, in this my Testament and last Will, given and bequeathed, and for the payment of much whereof there is no certain time set down, shall be paid within Two years' next after my decease at the furthest. Also I give for and towards the building of mine intended Hospital, Chappel, and School-house, the Sum of Five thousand pounds, if I do not live to see it performed in my life time. And I desire in the Name of God my Feoffees, and my Executor or Executors, within two years after my decease, or sooner if they may conveniently (if it please not God I live to see and cause the same my determination to be performed and accomplished) to see and cause the same to be performed and accomplished. Also I give the residue of the years which I shall have at the time of my decease in one Close called the Withies, lying within the Town and Fields of Cottingham, in the County of York, to the Mayor and Aldermen of Beverly, or to the Governor of the same Town and his Assistants for the time being, to this end and purpose, That they shall distribute, or cause to be distributed, the yearly profit arising of the same over and above the yearly Rent payable to the Kings most Excellent Majesty, amongst the poorest people dwelling within the said Town of Beverly. Also I give to the Mayor and Aldermen of the City of Lincoln for the time being, all such Profits and Revenues as shall arise and grow of the Parsonage of Glentham within the County of Lincoln, and all the residue of the years that shall remain after my decease, to this intent, that they shall distribute and bestow, or cause to be distributed and bestowed the same, amongst twenty of the poorest people that shall then be dwelling in the said City with the consent and privity of the Dean of the Cathedral Church of Lincoln, or the Recorder of the same for the time being (they the said Mayor, Aldermen, Dean, and Recorder, foreseeing that the Parsonage be let for their most benefit). Item, I give into the Treasury or Storehouse of mine intended Hospital, to begin their Stock with, and to defend the Rights of the House, One thousand pounds of lawful English money. And I give to every one of my Feoffees whom I have put in trust about my intended Hospital (to whom I have not given any thing in this my last Will) the Sum of Twenty six pounds thirty shillings and four pence of lawful money of England. Item, I give to Amy Popham, if it please God she live to keep House, three Featherbeds, and so many pair of Holland Sheets, with the Bolsters to them, and so many Hang of Tapestry, as furnish her a Bedchamber. The rest of my Householdstuff I will shall be sold by mine Executors for the speedier payment of my Legacies, and performance of this my last Will. Item, I give to the Widow Tassel of Balsham, the Sum of Five pounds of lawful money of England, and to Thomas Laurence the elder, of the same Town, Five pounds of lawful money of England. Item, I give and bequeath unto the Brother of Percival Graung, my late Servant, deceased, the Sum of Twenty pounds of like lawful money of England. And of this my last Will and Testament I make and ordain Richard Sutton of London Esquire, and John Law one of the Procurators of the Arches, London, my Executors, charging them, as they will answer at the last Day of Judgement, that they, or one of them in the absence of the other, endeavour themselves, with all earnestness and diligence, to see this my Will performed according to my true meaning and charitable intent. And I make Overseers of this my last Will and Testament, the Reverend Father in God George Abbot, Arch bishop of Canterbury, unto whom I give and bequeath the Sum of Forty Marks of lawful money of England, or a piece of Plate of that value, at his election and choice. And also Lancelot Andrews Almonizer to the King's Majesty, my other Supervisor and Overseer of this my last Will and Testament, unto whom I give and bequeath the Sum of Twenty pounds of lawful money of England, or a piece of Plate of that value, at his election and choice. Item, My will and full intent and meaning is, That if any person or persons whosoever, to whom I have in and by this my last Will and Testament given and bequeathed any Legacy, or Sum or Sums of money, shall any ways gainsay, impugn, contradict, or impeach this my last Will and Testament, that then all and every one so impugning, contradicting, impeaching; or gainsaying this my last Will and Testament, and every of their Children and Kinsfolks to whom I have in and by this my last Will and Testament given and bequeathed any Legacy or Sum or Sums of money, shall have no part nor portion of any such Gift, Legacy, or Bequest, but shall utterly lose the same, and be utterly barred thereof, as if no such Legacy, Gift, or Bequest, had been given unto him, her, or them, by this my last Will and Testament (any thing before in these presents mentioned or contained to the contrary in any wise notwithstanding). Item, I give and bequeath to Richard Sutton, one of my Executors before named, the Sum of One hundred pounds; and to Mrs. Law over and besides the Legacy before to her given, I give the Sum of Forty pounds to make her a Gown withal. Item, I give to Master Hutton, the Vicar of Littlebury, Twenty pounds. To the Town of Camp's Castle where I dwell, to be distributed amongst the poor of the same Parish, Ten pounds. Also to the poor of the Town of Elcomb, to be equally distributed amongst them, the Sum of Ten pounds. Item, I give and bequeath those my Manors of Littlebury and Hadstock in the County of Essex, to the Right Honourable the Lord Thomas Howard Earl of Suffolk, and to his Heirs for ever, upon Condition that he do well and truly pay, or cause to be paid to my Executors before named, or to the Survivor of them, the Sum of Ten thousand pounds of lawful money of England, within One year next after my decease. And if he shall refuse to pay the said Sum of Ten thousand pounds for the said Manors, than I give and bequeath the said Manors of Littlebury and Hadstock to my said Executors, and to their Heirs for ever. And then I will and devise that the said Manors of Littlebury and Hadstock shall be sold by my said Executors, or the Survivor of them, to the uttermost price and value that they may be sold for, and the money coming of the sale thereof, together with as much more as shall make up the same Sum the full Sum of Twenty thousand pounds, I will shall be employed and bestowed by my said Executors, or the Survivor of them, with the advice of my Supervisors aforenamed, in some good works and charitable uses for mine intended Hospital, and for poor people, or otherwise as they in their wisdoms and discretions shall think fit. Item, I give to Mr. Flood, Parson of Newington, the Sum of Thirteen pounds six shillings eight pence. And to the wife of Benjamin King of Southminster, Six pounds thirteen shillings four pence. Item, I give to Thomas Averell, if it shall be found that he hath dealt faithfully and plainly with me in my business, the Sum of Ten pounds which he oweth me. Item, I give unto the wife of Mr. Ingry of Littlebury, Three pounds six shillings eight pence. Item, I give to Sir Henry Hubberd Knight, the King's Majesty's Attorney General, a piece of Plate of the value of Ten pounds: And to Mr Locksmith his Clerk, the Sum of Ten pounds. Item, I give to the poor of the Parish of Hackney, Ten pounds. Item, I give to Bridget Law the Sum of Ten pounds: And to the Lady Altham, daughter to Mr. Auditor Sutton, the Sum of Twenty pounds. Item, I give to Sir Edward Philip's, Master of the Rolls, a piece of Plate of the value of Twenty pounds: And to Sir James Altham, one of the Barons of the Exchequer, One piece of Plate of the value of Twenty pounds. Item, I give to my late wife's kinsman, Guy Godolphin, the sum of Ten pounds. Item, I give to the Right Honourable, my very good Lord, the Earl of Suffolk, the sum of Four hundred pounds. All the rest of my Goods, Chattels, and Debts, not before given and disposed, I give and bequeath to my intended Hospital, to be employed and bestowed on and about the same, according to the discretion of the Feoffees of my said Hospital, or the greater part of them. In witness hereof I have hereunto set my Hand and Seal, the Twenty eighth day of the Month of November above written. Thomas Sutton. Memorandum, That the same Testator did acknowledge this his Will, written and contained in these Three and twenty leaves, to be his last Will and Testament, and that his Hand and Seal set thereunto is his own Hand and Seal, and that he had heard it read, and was acquainted with the Contents of it the said Twenty Eighth of November above written, In presence of us, John Law, Leonard Houghton, Alexander Longworth, Thomas Hall, The Mark of Richard Pearce, The Mark of Thomas Johnson, Primo Decembris 1611. idem recognitum per Testatorem coram Jo. Crook Quarto Decembris 1611. recognit. to be the Testators last Will. Before me Henry Thoresby. A Codicil to be annexed to the last Will and Testament of Thomas Sutton Esquire, made and declared the Day whereon he died, being the Twelfth of December, One thousand six hundred and eleven. ITem, he gave and bequeathed to Mr. Judge Crook, one of the Judges of the King's Bench at Westminster, the Sum of Ten pounds. And to Mr. Henry Thoresby, one of the Masters of the Court of Chancery, the like Sum of Ten pounds: And to Mrs. Sutton of London, Widow, the Sum of Three pounds six shillings eight pence to make her a Ring. Also he gave to Mr. Hutton, Clerk and Vicar of Littlebury, the Advowson or next Presentation to the Parsonage of Dunsby in the County of Lincoln. Also he did then publish and declare before Mr. Flood, Parson of Stoke-Newington in the County of Middlesex, Robert Petit, Alexander Longworth, John Parsons, and Thomas Johnson his Cook, that he had made his Will, and thereof had made and ordained Richard Sutton of London, Esquire, and John Law, his Executors. I thought good to make a Conclusion of all, with some proper Devotions, relating to those particular Occasions which concern the Fourscore pious and aged Gentlemen, etc. Not that I intent, by any means, to detract from the excellency and usefulness of the Prayers of the Church: for these are only designed for private Offices at home, and possibly, by God's assistance, may be instrumental to the Improvement of their Thankfulness to God, and their Preparation for their latter end. Here likewise I thought it might be convenient to place several Orders (which hang up in the lesser Hall of the Pensioners) by which they are to square and regulate their Manners; so that they might have in a narrow compass contained, the several Instances of their public and private Duty. Lord, now lettest thou thy Servant departed in peace, according to thy word. For mine eyes have seen thy Salvation, which thou hast prepared before the face of all People. To be a Light to lighten the Gentiles, and to be the glory of thy people Israel. Eccles. 12. The years draw nigh when thou shalt say, I have no pleasure in them: while the Sun, or the Light, or the Moon, or the Stars be not darkened, nor the Clouds return after the rain. In the day when the a The ribs. keepers of the house shall tremble, and the b The Legs. strong men shall bow themselves; and the c Teeth. grinders cease because they are few, and those that look out of the d Eyes. windows be darkened. Or ever the e Circulation of the Blood. silver cord be loosed, or the f Liver. golden bowl be broken, or the pitcher be broken at the fountain, or the wheel at the cistern: then shall the dust return to the earth as it was, and the Spirit shall return to God who gave it. Job 5.26. Thou shalt come to thy grave in a full age, like as a shock of corn cometh in his season. ORDERS made by the Governors of the Hospital of King JAMES, founded in by Thomas Sutton Esquire, at several times since the beginning of the said Hospital, and yet continuing in force, and to be observed or known by the poor Men, Pensioners, and Brothers of the said Hospital for the time being; as follow. NO poor Man shall be admitted into the Hospital, unless he shall appear to be clean, and sound of body from any foul and infectious Disease. (Per Ordinem fact. 10 Decemb. 1613). And to prevent that none be admitted that is infected with any infectious Disease, It is Ordered that the Chirurgeon of the Hospital for the time being, shall view and search the Body of such a person, if there be any cause of suspicion, before he be admitted. Per Ordinem 24 Februarii, 1622. No poor Man that shall be a Member of the Hospital, shall wear any long Hair, or any Weapons within the said House, or have any Weapons within their several Lodgings. Per Ordinem 10 Decemb. 1613. Every poor Man of this Hospital, that shall happen to fall so sick, that he cannot come into the Hall to take his repast, than he shall have his part in Diet in his Chamber, or his weekly allowance in money for it, as the Master and the Steward in their discretions shall hold meet. Per Ordinem 22 Decemb. 1615. The Master of the Hospital for the time being, and every Officer, poor Man, and every Member of the same, shall take their Diet in the Dining Halls appointed for that purpose, and not in their Chambers, unless it be in time of Sickness, or upon some urgent occasion, such as the Master shall allow of. Provided that they do not then exceed the proportion of Diet that is set down and established. Per Ordinem 21 Januarii, 1618. No Officer, Pensioner, or Member of this Hospital shall send, or carry away any Bread, Beer, or Meat from their Tables, when they shall be at Dinner and Supper in the said Dining-Halls; but if any Bread, Beer, or Meat shall happen to be left, it shall be bestowed on such poor men and women that shall from time to time be appointed and allowed to do service in the said Hospital, or otherwise as the Master in his discretion shall hold fitting, but not any of it to be sold for money. Per Ordinem 21 Januarii, 1618. One of the poor Men of the Hospital, in their several turns, and the Master Cook of the said Hospital shall go weekly to the Market with the Steward or his Man, to buy the Provision of Fish and Flesh for the Diet of the Hospital, that choice may be made by them of that which shall be good and sweet, and to see ready money paid for the same; And if any poor Man shall refuse to serve in his turn, he shall be kept without his Diet in the Hospital until he perform it. Per Ordinem fact. 25 Junii, 1621. The Master of the Hospital, and all and every Officer, and the poor Brethren and Members thereof, shall take their Diet of Dinner and Supper in the Common Hall in the Hospital, and not in any of their Chambers; And they shall carry no part thereof from thence into private Chambers. And not any of the poor Brethren shall presume to sit down at the Table before Grace be said, and the Master and chief Officers sit; nor any of them to arise from the Table before Grace be said, without licence of the Master, or in his absence of Senior at the Master's Table. Provided notwithstanding, that if any of them happen to be sick, upon signification of his sickness to the Master, it shall be lawful for him, with the Master's allowance, for to take and have his Commons out of the Kitchen, in his private lodging, during the time of his sickness. Per Ordinem 24 Februarii, 1622. All the poor Brethren, and other the Inferior Officers and Members of the said Hospital now being, and their Successors that shall hereafter at any time be chosen into their rooms, shall give dutiful Reverence to the Master of the Hospital for the time being, wheresoever they shall happen to be in his presence, or when either he shall speak to any of them, or any of them shall repair or speak to him, they shall stand before him with their Heads uncovered, not presuming, whilst they are in his presence, to put on their Hats (except it be at the Table whilst they are at Dinner and Supper.) And that none of them give or use any evil, reviling or railing speeches of him before his face or behind his back, upon pain of the loss of one months' Commons at least for every such Offence done. And also it is commanded that they be obedient unto him in all his lawful Commands and Injunctions to them for the observing the Orders and Constitutions now made, or hereafter to be made by the Governors of this Hospital and their Successors. Per Ordinem 24 Februarii 1622. They, and every of them, and all others that shall succeed them in their places, shall be diligent in frequenting the Chapel in the Hospital twice every day at times of Divine Service, and there behave themselves Reverently, as becomes them to do in so Sacred a Place, and at so holy a Work. And though they may ask and obtain leave of the Master on some Work-day of the Week to be absent, upon some good and urgent occasion, yet that in no case none of them be absent from Service and Sermon on the Sunday, if he be in health, and able to come forth of his Lodging. And that every one of them do receive the holy Communion of the Lords Supper thrice every year, to wit, at Christmas, Easter, and Whitsuntide, if he be at that time in health, able to go forth of his Lodging. Per Ordinem 24 Februarii, 1622. And unless the Master and Preacher be satisfied by some lawful excuse and just cause of their failing, otherwise the party so wilfully neglecting, shall be liable to the Master's Chastisement, and to the Governors further displeasure. Per Ordinem 22 Junii, 1627. If any of the poor Brethren and Inferior Officers and Members of the said Hospital, after his admittance, shall draw any Weapons in the said Hospital, to the intent to hurt any Member of the said Hospital, or shall strike in anger any of the said House, within the precinct thereof, or be convict of any notorious crime punishable by the Laws of this Realm. That then his place in the Hospital shall be void, and be quite removed from the same. Per Ordinem fact. 24 Februarii, 1622. None of the poor Brethren shall intermeddle with any business touching the affairs of the Hospital, but attend only the Service of God, and take thankfully what is provided for them, without muttering, murmuring, or grudging. Per Ordinem 26 February, 1622. None of the said poor Brethren, or other the said Inferior Officers and Members of the said Hospital, shall wear any weapons, long hair, coloured boots, spurs, or any coloured shoes, feathers in their hats, or any Russian-like or unseemly Apparel, but such as becomes Hospital-men to wear. Per Ordinem fact. ut supra. None of them shall lodge abroad out of his ordinary Lodging by night, or permit, or suffer any Stranger to lodge in any of their Lodgings within the Hospital. Neither shall any of them haunt Houses suspected of Incontinency, Gaming-houses, common Bowling-Allys, Taverns, or Alehouses by Day or Night, neither use swearing and taking of God's holy Name in vain, nor railing on any of his Fellow Brethren, nor given to any Drunkenness, or other notorious Vice, upon pain of such punishment as shall be thought meet of such an Offender, by the Master, in the presence of two of the chief Officers of the said House, whom he shall please to call unto him. And if the party so punished by him shall prove incorrigible, after he hath been twice punished, than the Master shall put such an Offender out of Commons until the next General Assembly, and then he shall make the same Offender, together with his Offence, known to the Governors, that they may inflict such further punishment upon him, either by expulsion or otherwise, as they in their wisdom shall hold sitting. Per Ordinem fact. ut supra. No poor Brother of the Hospital shall hereafter presume to go into any Taverns or Alehouses with his Livery Gown on his back, upon pain of such punishment as the Master in his discretion shall hold sitting to be inflicted upon him. Per Ordinem fact. 22 Februarii, 1624. No poor Brother shall have leave to pass the Seas upon what pretence soever, but by Petition to the Governors, and signed with six of their Hands. In which case and time of absence, he shall only be allowed his wages, and have his place reserved for him. Other allowance for Commons he shall not have. Per Ordinem 21 Junii, 1627. They shall not go into the Country to visit Friends, or upon any other business, without the Master's leave, and that but for two months at the furthest; In which case and time of absence no part of his wages shall be abated. But if they go abroad, either with leave or without leave, and fall under Arrest or any other danger whereby their return is stayed, in such case they shall have no moneys or allowance from the Hospital, only their places shall be reserved for them till the Governors' pleasure be further known. And moreover, no Brother shall presume to pass the Out-gates of the Hospital in their Livery Gowns, upon pain of paying a months' Commons out of his Quarter's wages. 21 Junii 1627. They shall not undertake the following of others men's Causes and Suits, nor procure the molestation of trouble or expense of other the King's Subjects, by their suggestions or informations, upon pain of paying what Mulct the Master, by the Ordinances can impose upon them, and abiding the Governors further Censure. 21 Junii 1627. All other Duties to be performed after their Admission, as daily frequenting the Chapel, Reverend behaviour at Prayers, Civil fashion of Feeding, Cleanly and decent Clothing, Neat and wholesome Lodging, Friendly and Brotherly Conversing and Living together, shall be referred to the Master's discretion to direct, and to the power given him to correct. 21 Junii 1627. At an Assembly of the Governors, 27 February 1656. It is Ordered, That whensoever any Pensioner or poor Man of this Hospital, shall, with leave or without leave, go into the Country, and be absent from the Hospital, or shall live in or about the City of London, Westminster, or elsewhere, and shall not be Abiding, Lodging, and Resident at and in the Hospital, he shall have no allowance at all in money, or otherwise, for his Commons or Diet, during any such time as he shall be absent from the Hospital. And those that are now absent are at their perils to take notice of this Order, and to return home to the Hospital by the Feast of the Annunciation of the Virgin Mary now next ensuing. Neither shall any Pensioner or poor Man that lodgeth in the Hospital, and goeth abroad into the Town, be suffered to be out of Commons, nor be paid any money, for, or in lieu of his Commons, but shall take and eat his Commons in kind in the common Dining-Hall of the Hospital, according to the Orders of the House, and shall carry none of it away uneaten; and what he cannot eat there, shall be there left, and given to the poor women that are appointed to do service in the Hospital. And We the Governors do charge the Receiver not to pay any of them any money, or allowance contrary to the intent of this our Order, upon pain not to be allowed the same upon his Account, besides incurring our further Censure. Provided always, that if any of the said Pensioners shall be sent, or go away out of the Hospital upon the Dismission of the House in the Sickness time, in respect of the danger of the Plague, then, in such case, during such time of Dismission and Absence, he shall have his full Allowance in money for Commons and Diet, as hath been formerly given in such case. There are divers other Orders made by the Governors concerning the poor Men and Brothers of this Hospital, which are not so proper to be comprehended in this Table; but are (with these herein mentioned) transcribed into a Book remaining in the Vestry, whereunto any Pensioner or poor Man of this Hospital may, at convenient times, repair, to see and read, for his better knowledge and observation. My House shall be called THE HOUSE OF PRAYER. Mark. 11. ● Spare the People 〈…〉 Let the Priests, the Ministers of the Lord, Weep between the 〈◊〉 and the Altar, and let them say. Spare thy People O LORD joel. 1.17. London Printed for Henry Brom●●. 1677. PRAYERS UPON Several Occasions, Fitted for the PRIVATE DEVOTIONS OF THE Ancient Gentlemen IN THE CHARTERHOUSE, &c: Upon their Admission into the House. O Thou Lord of Hosts, and God of battles! The great Preserver of Men! I adore, reverence, and magnify thy holy Name, that after the skirmishes of a tedious and uneasy life, I have the blessed Opportunity of retiring and making my peace with thee, O God; my Life has been a real warfare, I have been exposed to the dangers of Night, and the discoveries of Day, to the fury of unkind Wether, and the rage of Enemies; but yet thou wast my defence and shield, the support of my Soul, and my great Deliverer: Therefore, blessed be the God of Heaven, I will take the Cup of Salvation, and praise thy glorious Name: I will never cease to cry out, Holy, holy, holy, Lord God of Hosts; Blessed be thy Name for ever and ever. O Father, who hast looked upon me in the times of hazard and sear, moved and frame my mind into acknowledgement and thankfulness: Thou, who art absolute in thy Providence, hast wonderfully raised means to secure and relieve thy Servant in danger; may thy grace and goodness never forsake me, but continue to be my loving God, Helper, and Saviour unto the world's end: How many are in ●onds and Distress, when I am Free and provided for? How many are in wars and necessity, when I am in peace, and encompased with plenty? Though I have justly deserved many years ago to have been cut off from the Land of the Living, and by reason of my sins to have been sent early to the House of Mourning, yet thou hast drawn out my life to a great length, thy mercy has saved and protected me all the time of my Pilgrimage, and now I remain as a signal Monument of thy loving kindness. O grant, that the remainder of my time may be spent in Thanksgiving and Repentance, that all the days of my appointed time I may patiently wait until my change come. Let my Admission into this Religious house be an Emblem of my Entrance into Heaven above; that my Life may be a continual walking with Thee, that the main tendency of my thoughts may be heaven-wards, and my conversation there also. Grant, O Lord, that my entering into this Society of Grey-hairs below, may be an Earnest of my joining with the Elders that are before thy Throne above: That when I first put on these Garments of Charity, I may resolve to endeavour that my Soul may be clothed with humility and gratitude, and the robes of Righteousness. I am sensible, O Lord, of the weakness of my Body, and the decays of Nature; but our Souls are of another frame and complexion: Therefore be pleased to quicken and revive my thoughts, to awaken the powers & faculties of my Soul, that the feebleness of my Body may be recompensed with the strength of my mind, that the declination of my outward man may be in order to the Ascension of my Soul into the Heaven of Heavens. Not long since the sorrows of my heart were enlarged, but now thou hast graciously brought me out of all my trouble: I have nothing now to do in this place of Retirement but to live well, and love thee, from whom I receive my daily bread, who art the Fountain of all I drink: Therefore, O my Soul, praise that God who is so great a lover of the sons of men: Thou hast not dealt so with every man, neither have the wicked a desire to praise thee. Thou hast plentifully prepared all things for me thy aged and infirm Servant, so that I must confess I want nothing but thankfulness to Thee. What Reward shall I give unto thee, or what Sacrifice shall I pay for all thy benefits? Now I am settled in this Religious place, O Lord, grant that by my life I may answer the ends of my admission, and the purposes of our Noble Founder's Charity: Sanctify my memory to treasure up good things; purify my conscience to have peace in thee; and reform my will to do thy pleasure. Teach me to be humble and meek, to be patiented, full of content and thankfulness for the riches of thy mercy: For how poor must that man be, who is not content with a God so rich as thou art? Let the remainder of my time be spent in the thoughts of eternity, and the ravishing joys of another life; that while I carry about with me this decayed and withered body, which will soon moulder into dust and ashes; while I have time and opportunity, I may endeavour to live in thy fear, that I may die in thy favour, O thou Strength, and Redeemer of Israel. Amen. On the Founder's Day. BLessed be thy Name, O God, and this happy Morn, wherein the Foundation of my present Comfort of this Life was laid, wherein this Noble Benefaction was given by Thomas Sutton, a great Lover of Souls and Bodies, who has so plentifully provided for the repair and support of my aged Body, and the heavenly entertainment of my Soul: O my Soul, give thanks unto the Lord, for he is good, and his mercy endureth for ever! This Day let us worship him, in the beauty of holiness, let us come before his Presence with Thanksgiving, and make a joyful noise unto him with Psalms; Blow the Trumpet at the time appointed, at our Solemn Feast-day. Be pleased, O Lord, to send the Influence of thy Grace upon me, that I may answer the intent and purposes of our Noble Founder in my Life and Conversation; that my years and department may be exemplary for Piety and Devotion, that I may sanctify this Earth with a blameless and angelic Life; and that at my last hour I may be reconciled unto Thee, or else all these Benefits will rather become a Curse than a Blessing unto me. Teach me, O dearest Saviour, to live a life worthy of the name I bear, as a Member of thy Church, worthy of the Blessings I have received, of the Food I eat, and the Ease I take; of the Love my gracious God hath showed to me, and the Glory he has reserved for me; I live in the abundance of thy Favours, and within the influence of thy Goodness. I thank thee, O Lord, for the fixedness and condition of my Life, for many corporal and earthly comforts which I now enjoy; nay, thy blessings exceed far the number of my sins, which are more than the hairs upon my head. In this House is God known, and his Name is great in our Israel; for his mercy reacheth unto the Heavens, and his truth unto the Clouds. O Lord, thou hast brought up my Soul from the grave, thou hast kept me alive, that I should not go down unto the Pit: Thou art my Shepherd, and I shall never want; yea, though I walk through the Valley of the shadow of Death, I will fear no evil, for thou art with me, thy Rod and thy Staff, they comfort me: This day thou preparedst a full Table for me, surely goodness and mercy will follow me all the days of my life; and afterwards I hope to dwell in the House of the Lord for ever. When I looked round about, and saw no hand to help me, thy Providence relieved my fears, and all my wants; and led me to this Habitation of Comfort: When I was weak and stooped for Age, thou wast my strength, and the lifter up of my head: when my eyes waxed dim, and I was almost banished from the sense of the pleasures of this life, thou didst recompense that loss, with the joyful prospect of those Blessings which are in the Kingdom above: Though my hands, and the Pillars of my House tremble, yet I rejoice, because my hope is founded upon the Rock of Ages, which cannot be removed, but abideth steadfast for ever: My Passions decay, and all things prove insipid unto me, I have but a small relish of mortal Joys, because the sense of them is swallowed up in the unexpressible thoughts of Heaven and Happiness: what I am capable of partaking of in this life, I hearty thank the Great Preserver of Men, that he has plenteously afforded it me, I had perished long ago, if I had not been sustained by his protecting Hand: Therefore will I pour forth his deserved Praises with a joyful and thankful heart; hoping, in God's due time, to sing Eternal Hallelujahs with the Blessed Saints above. O thou first born of the Dead, put me always in mind of the Resurrection: now I am full of years, let me be full of Grace, and full of Faith. I am hearty sensible of all the Miscarriages of a long and sinful Life, yet thy mercy is over all thy Works; though my Sins are as Scarlet, yet thou canst make me all over as white as Snow: As I have tasted of thy benefits here, so let me partake of thy Salvation hereafter. I consult not with Flesh and Blood, but rely upon thy Providence; desiring thee to bestow upon me Wisdom, and Patience, and Thanksgiving, to know thy Will, to suffer what I deserved, and to extol and praise my Guide to everlasting Glory. This is the glorious Day of Relief and Consolation; therefore from the rising up of the Sun, to the going down of the same, the Lord's Name be praised: The Dead praise not the Lord, nor any that go down into the Pit, but we that are alive, and in health, who live in the Enjoyment of his peculiar Blessings, will bless the Lord from this time forth for evermore. Glory be to God on high, on Earth peace, and good will towards men. Amen. Upon the Decease of a Pensioner. O Thou who art the Spring and Original of all Comfort, the Hope of them that live, and the Resurrection of the Dead; Sanctify this mournful occasion to me thy Servant, that I may seasonably prepare for my latter end, and wisely provide for the journey to my long Home: Spare me a little, before I go hence and be no more seen. I am daily sensible of the near approaches of death, every moment I receive some warnings of mortality, and I know, within a few days I must departed, and render an account of all my life: Therefore teach me rightly to state the Accounts of my Soul, and to improve the precious minutes of my stay in this life, for on the least of them depends Eternity. My Soul longeth and waiteth for the living God: I desire, in thy due time, to appear before thy glorious Presence, that I may see the good things thou hast laid up in Heaven for them that are thine: Confirm my hope, and make it perfect, until I enjoy the lively Fruits of thy assured Salvation: Bear me upon thy saving wings, through the miseries of this life, and let not the mire and clay, wherein I stick fast, detain me for ever: For thy Names sake, O Lord, have mercy upon me, for my sin is great. If every moment we offend thee, and can do nothing as we ought, than how long must my Accusation be, who have so many years repeated so many transgressions? How dreadful must the thoughts of the Process of the Day of Judgement be unto me who have been so long an experienced sinner? I faint at my own unworthiness, and yet otherwise I cannot appear before thee: O Lord, I have no other qualification for thy mercy, but my extreme misery, I am now brought very low, to a vale of misery and tears, surrounded with all the Chambers and Instruments of Death. This dear Brother, just deceased, only shows the way that I must soon follow, e'er long I must repair to the House of mourning; I must bid my last farewell to the world: but woe and eternal sorrow will be my Portion if I die in my sins, and departed in thy displeasure: Therefore, out of the abundance of thy love, pardon, cleanse, and reform my poor and sinful Soul, send me thy sanctifying, thy guiding, and supporting Spirit, that I may pass safely through the valley of Death, in the lively sense of thy mercies, and the refreshments of thy love, in the hopes of pardon, and the expectation of glory. O thou ancient of days, at whose voice the pillars of Heaven shake, and the whole Creation trembles, thou art my strength and defence, in whom is my sole trust; deliver my Soul from death, mine eyes from tears, and my feet from falling; cleanse me from all my iniquities, and purge me from my secret sins, for Heaven is so holy a place, that no impure thing can inhabit there: teach me so to number the rest of my days, that I may apply my heart unto Wisdom: Here length of days is in her right hand, and her ways lead to those rivers of joy which are at God's right hand for evermore. O Lord, who art touched with a sense of my Infirmities, let me not be afraid of the thoughts of Death, that King of Terrors, but soften its severity, by a mild Commission, sweeten its bitterness with the most pleasant relishes of joy and immortality: My life I had of thee, and all the blessings I have enjoyed ever since I came into the World; O Lord, make me willing to render them back again into thy hands. Whom have I in Heaven but thee? and I desire no other Saviour but thee. Teach me often to meditate on Heaven, that I may wish for it: of Hell, that I may abhor it: of Death, that I may expect it; and of the Day of Judgement, that I may be prepared for it. To thy mercy I appeal, I fly unto thee for secure; my sole dependence is on thy love: I fear, love, reverence, and adore thy goodness, which is thy glory: Blessed is the man whom thou choosest, for though he seemeth to decay and perish, to be a companion of death, though the body wax feeble and impotent, yet he lives the life of Faith; he lives in the secure Courts of thy protection, and the Guardian Angels pitch their Tents round about him. Let not this be a short heat and sudden fit of Devotion, raised by this late instance of mortality, and the amazing thoughts of Death; but may these exercises of piety continue, and endure to my lives end: For I know that my Redeemer liveth, and that he shall stand at the latter day upon the Earth; and though after my skin, worms destroy this body, yet in my flesh shall I see God. Amen. In the Morning before he stirs abroad. O Lord God Almighty, who makest the out-going of the Morning and Evening to praise Thee; I cannot but reverence and adore thy Divine Majesty for the Blessings of the last Night, for my Preservation from all evils, both of Body and Soul. I laid me down, and slept, and risen up again, for the Lord hath sustained me: For I am a weak and aged Creature, surrounded with Infirmities of Nature, and seldom free from the assault of Temptations night and day: Though my Limbs wax stiff and cold, yet let my Soul be vigorous and fervent, that like Jacob, I may seem to wrestle with thee; for thou delightest in the earnest and importunate Solicitations of thy people. Now I am risen from my place of slumber, teach me to look upwards; to found my hopes on Thee, to fix my eye upon that holy place, from whence the day does break. Bless me in all my endeavours and duties of this day, that in every action I may have a regard to thy glory, and the salvation of my own Soul. Unto thee, O Lord, have I cried, and early in the morning shall my Prayer come before thee: As long as I live will I magnify thee on this manner, and lift up my hands in thy Name: O let me hear of thy loving kindness in the morning betimes, for in thee is my trust: Show me the way I should walk in, for I lift up my Soul unto thee. I desire to dedicate the powers of my Soul, the Affections of my heart, and the Faculties of my Body, to be thy Faithful, Loyal, and Obedient Servants. Extend, O merciful Father, thy loving kindness over all the World, especially this sinful Land of my Nativity. Herein bless his most Excellent Majesty, his Royal Consort, and the Illustrious Prince; let the Sons of Violence do them no harm: Let Mercy and Truth preserve him, and his Throne be established for ever before thee, O thou who art the wonderful Counsellor, and Prince of Peace. Be gracious to thine Inheritance, for the glory of thy Name, let not thine Enemies devour the Church, and lay waste her dwelling places: Defend it with the Custody of Angels, and the Patronage of Kings and Princes, that She may flourish under the Beams of thy Favour and Providence, take root and spread, and fill all Lands, that the whole Nation may be blessed with thy health and salvation. Bless our Noble Governors, under whose care and protection we live and are sustained: Let thy Truth and Mercy be ever with them, and when they have happily finished their Course in this Life, crown their Wisdom and Fidelity with Immortality and Glory. Hear me for all those whom I am obliged to, by the bonds of Duty, Charity, or Affection. Pity all those who sit in darkness and the shadow of death, preserve them in the midst of an untoward and sinful Generation; Avert thy Judgements from us, and soften the hearts of all our Enemies. O Lord, whom my Soul does desire, and my Spirit seeks early in the morning: How excellent is thy Name in all the World? Grant me a pure intention of mind, and a steadfast regard of thy glory in all my Actions: Create in me sorrow for my sins, thankfulness for thy benefits, fear of thy Judgements, and love of thy mercies, that I may have a continual reverence for thy Name, and be mindful of thy presence for evermore. Every morning I draw nearer the last Stage of my Life, therefore, Lord, assist me with thy Grace, that I may be the more prepared every minute for my dissolution, that when I hear news of thy Messenger, Death, I may not be amazed, and wax faint, but hope in thy Salvation. Let this Day be a day of Reformation and Repentance; that though I am weak and aged, yet I may become a new Creature, and serve thee in true holiness and righteousness all the days of my life. Rule and govern my heart, that it may every day be intent and studious upon good things, that I may not live as an useless Creature, and so become a burden to the Earth. Support me in this my long Pilgrimage, in the Journey of this day, and the performances thereof, hold me by thy right hand, that my feet slip not aside, that I may fall into no danger. I brought nothing into this World, and it is certain I can carry nothing out, therefore, O Lord, be thou my portion and my hope, in whom I will ever trust. My abode here is of no long continuance, which often puts me in mind of Eternity: My present weakness and poverty reminds me of thy strength, and the riches of thy glory. Remember thy Promises, O merciful Father, and suffer me never to forget thy Praises: O fail me not this day following, and all the days of my life, my God, and my Redeemer, through Jesus Christ his sake. Amen. An Evening Prayer. OMnipotent and Everlasting God, thou who neither slumberest nor sleepest, the great Shepherd of Israel, I dare not commit my body to rest, before I have commended my soul to thee: I dare not suffer my eyes to sleep, nor mine eyelids to slumber, nor the temples of my head to take any rest, before I have poured out my soul before Thee in Praises and Thanksgiving, for the blessings of this day past, and the succours of thy Favours, for the length of my life, and the continuance of thy Providence, for the comforts of my soul, and the refreshment of my body, which I have largely received: The Day is thine, and the Night is thine, therefore let me experience thy goodness in both: Let my Prayers be set forth in thy sight as Incense, and the lifting up of my hands, be as the Evening Sacrifice. I humbly thank thee for all the late Instances of thy love and goodness, for the improvement of my time, and the blessed opportunities of Divine worship; for the occasions of doing good, and the benefit of holy conference, for the gracious issues of thy love, and the manifestation of thy glory: make me to remember, that the more Blessings I receive, the greater will my account be at the last day: Take away all the mutinous thoughts of repining nature, that when I consider the happiness of my birth, and the quality of my education, I may not quarrel with my present condition, but study to repay as much thankfulness, as I receive charity: Praised be thy Name, that I am thus provided for, that I have a place whereon to lay my head, and that I am not tempted to put forth my hand to wickedness, for some strange course of supply. Whenever I consider of the mean circumstances of my condition, let me then remember the smallness of my deserts, who might well be satisfied with the bread and water of Affliction, or with the crumbs that fall from other men's Tables: Possess me with this seasonable persuasion, that this my present state is fittest for me, and make me sensible that thy Providence does visit the lowest condition of men, and that the beams of thy Favour do reach unto the most withdrawn and solitary places of the world: O thou, who art pleased to call thyself the Hearer of Prayers, give me a tender sense of Conscience, that out of the abundance of my sorrow I may pour out a most plentiful and hearty confession of my sins before thee: Make me to consider seriously, that all pain and grief is but the fruit of sin, and that as all sickness naturally makes way for death, so death (in itself) is the forerunner of Condemnation: Why should I cover and hid my sins from thee, when the discovery of them is the way to receive thy pardon and release? For thou hast bound thyself by a promise, to hear and assist all those that seek thee with an unfeigned heart: I have a thousand ways done evil in thy sight: My Prayers have been interrupted, my Meditations perplexed and rob of their wont sweetness, and my careless hearing and reading of thy Word hath proved unprofitable: My faith has been encountered with grievous doubtings, because I cannot feel that strength and power of thy Spirit which I desire. I am compassed about with many weaknesses, as I have found by the experience of this day: Satan is full of his old subtlety, to work upon all advantages; therefore give me thy holy wisdom, to discover his snares, and thy grace to withstand his siercest assaults: O Lord, forgive my Ignorance, and forget my Presumption, pardon my iniquities committed both in youth and age; give me prudence and sobriety to carry myself among men out of the reach of just exception, and arm me with resolution, that I may sacrifice my credit and estimation, nay, life itself, if need be, for the testimony of thy Faith. Let me not be haunted with troops of unquiet thoughts, because I feed on Charity when my Relations live plenteously upon their own; for all the World is thine, and thou art an equal Lord and Disposer of that and this too: every my Soul with Spiritual Blessings in heavenly things, raise and ennoble my Soul, that it may not dwell too long upon the Earth, but often be entertained with the thoughts of that City above, which hath Foundations, whose Builder and Maker is God. Make me to see the depth of my sins, that I do not flatter and deceive my Soul: pardon the vanities of my youth, and the offences of my riper years: When I look upon my days that are past, and consider how much time has been consumed in sin and folly, and how little in the exercises of Piety and offices of Religion, when I behold all my sins marshaled in rank and order before my eyes, I am even ashamed and confounded within myself, and have no other sanctuary to repair unto but thy mercy and goodness. Let not thy Graces in me whither with my age, nor my zeal for thy glory cool with the decay of bodily heat: Suffer me not to put the evil day far from me, to delude my Soul with the idle hopes of living a little and a little longer, but teach me with St. Paul to die daily. Now therefore do I bow my Soul to thee, O God, and humbly lay myself low before thy Throne, pity these feeble and trembling knees; have mercy upon thy poor Suppliant, though now sleep be ready to seize upon the eyes of my body, yet let not vain security oppress my Soul: I am now thinking of thy everlasting Rest, which I hope at length to obtain, when time shall be swallowed up in Eternity, when Faith shall be turned into Vision, & bare hopes into actual Enjoyment: O Lord hear, and graciously accept of these my Prayers, through Jesus Christ his sake. Amen. A Preparatory Prayer before the Sacrament. O Thou Searcher of hearts, who knowest the secrets and most silent passages of the mind, assist me in the survey and examination of my Soul, that I may draw up a true Inventory of all the furniture of sin which is lodged in my breast: I dare not approach thy Table, before I have entered into myself, and laid open all my sins and iniquities before thee, which I have been contracting so long, that I am become an aged sinner; I have no other Sanctuary to repair to but thy mercy; therefore, O Lord, pardon the sins of my whole life, and pity the Infirmities of age; and though I am of small esteem, and no reputation among men, though this trembling and withered Body of mine, is become unwelcome to the eye of the World; yet grant that thy holy Spirit would vouchsafe to dwell in this Ancient Temple, that I may daily magnify thy holy Name. I dare not presume to draw near thy Table, without making my addresses to the Throne of Grace; for he that confesses his sins shall obtain a covering for them. O Lord, cleanse my hands, and purify my heart, and make me conformable to thy Will and thy Image, that I may not pollute thy heavenly food, nor profane the most blessed body and blood of my dearest Saviour: To this end sanctify my body and soul, that no unclean thing may come out of my mouth; that I may detest and abhor covetousness, lying, and injurious dealing; all cursing, blasphemy, and unreasonable anger; that I may be chaste, virtuous, meek, and religious; that I never offer to put that heavenly Food into a mouth used to gluttony and drunkenness, to falsifying the truth, and speaking evil of my Brethren, for this will be to make no difference, yea, to profane the Lord's Body. Teach me to put off the Old man, and repair the breaches of my decayed Nature; prosper and direct my present purposes of communicating at thy Table; that I may prove a true Disciple, and know my Lord in breaking of bread: This is the commemoration of my Saviour's death, may it prove instrumental to my eternal life; strike an awe and reverence in my heart, because of thy Presence, and in consideration that it is thy holy Ordinance: My soul mourns, when I consider at what a great distance my sins have set me from thee; but yet now I begin to revive and wax glad, because of thy faithful promise of reunion. O how I hunger and thirst for thy saving health! to be united to that sacred Body, whose Head is Christ. Give me Faith to believe in him, who by Faith and new Obedience is made mine: Make me a welcome Guest at thy holy Table, that all the days of my life I may bear a good Conscience both towards God and towards Man, which will be a continual Feast: O Lord, this is a Feast of Love, therefore expel out of my mind all disorderly and uncharitable thoughts, that I may lovingly embrace all my aged Brethren, who are fed within the walls of this Religious House, that I may extend it to all men, even my enemies, and forgive the whole world; for thou didst the same thing to us, who were at variance with thy holiness and purity: For he that comes to thy Table with the barbarous thoughts of Revenge, does certainly crucify his Saviour afresh. If my Lord and Saviour descended from his glorious Palace in Heaven, was so humble as to take our Nature upon him, endured the contradiction of sinners, and at last laid down his life for my sake; truly I am ashamed to think that I should scruple acts of kindness and civility, Instances of love and charity to those who are bone of my bone, and flesh of my flesh; for so thy Prophet tells me, by advising me not to turn away my face from my own flesh. Seeing my God was made a Sacrifice for me, what can I do less than make my solemn vows in the House of the Lord, to serve him faithfully all the days of my life, than to thank him for the pledges of his love, and the seals of his Favour: that while I carry about with me this frail and shattered body, I may fit myself for the glorious Mansions above, where there will be an Eternal Communion of Saints. Who can tell how oft he offendeth? therefore, O Lord, cleanse me from my secret faults: Cast me not away in the time of my old age, and forsake me not when my strength faileth me; enable me to get the mastery of sin, that I may perform holy duties with more ease and satisfaction, and that I may have sweeter fellowship with thy Spirit. I am eternally bound to thank thee for thy gracious instances of Providence in my own behalf, that when I was a slave to sin and punishment, thou gavest thy Son for a Ransom, didst send thy holy Spirit for a pledge and comforter, thy Word for a Guide, and hast prepared a Kingdom for my inheritance: I am now going about to renew thy Covenant, to beg pardon for my failure in any of the conditions, that I may not forfeit my right to Eternal Happiness. Accept of my Prayers and Vows, my imperfect offers of Duty and Obedience, for the sake of the Son of thy Love, the Holy Jesus, my Mediator and Redeemer, the Saviour of Mankind: Grant that I may be a worthy Receiver, that this holy action prescribed us by the great Atonement, may prove efficacious, and add to the life and refreshment of my Soul, through Jesus Christ his sake. Amen. A Prayer after the Receiving the holy Communion. O Dearest Jesus, the Head of the Church, the Beginning and Firstborn from the Dead; thou who gavest thyself a Sacrifice and Propitiation for my sins, accept of my hearty Prayers, and receive my Thanksgiving; thou who upholdest all things by the word of thy Power, sustain my weak and aged body; thou who art the brightness of thy Father's glory, purify and refine my Soul, that it be not sullied with the filthiness of sin. I humbly thank thee for the greatness of thy love, in humbling thyself to the death of the Cross, for thy institution of this Blessed Sacrament, for thy gracious invitation to this holy Table; and lastly, for the unspeakable comfort and refreshment of my Soul. Possess my Soul with a mighty sense of thy great goodness, that I may declare to the sons of men the wonderful works that the Lord hath done unto me: Let me clearly perceive the manifestation of thy wisdom and love, who to inform and instruct my weakness, are pleased by these Elements of Bread and Wine, to figure out unto me the Body and Blood of my dearest Saviour; may the Shadow lead me to the Substance, and this Seal of thy gracious Covenant be an instrument of my eternal Happiness, that from this temporal Commemoration I may rise to the blessed Vision of my sweet Redeemer. I am now almost in the Suburbs of Death, grant that it may be in order to my entrance into the heavenly Jerusalem; 'tis not long before I shall try the Grand Experiment, for now my Pulse beats (about) threescore, and much further the strength of man cannot go: Therefore I desire to settle the affairs of my Soul, before I go hence and be no more seen; I cannot tell whither I shall have another opportunity to partake of thy holy Table: Therefore let this present participation of the holy Sacrament be a Seal and Testimony for the Remission of my Sins. Though I have not long to live, yet I will enter into covenant with my Soul to serve and obey thee, to love the Lord my God, with all my heart, and with all my strength; for the Righteousness of thy Testimonies is everlasting, give me understanding, and I shall live: O thou who art the appointed Heir of all things, the express Image of thy Father's Person, let thy Grace comfort and refresh me who hunger and thirst after eternal life, let my Soul never faint in the Courts of the Lord, as long as my heart and my flesh cryeth out for the living God: Let Satan never find an opportunity to tempt and ensnare my Soul; may I ever be diligent, to prevent a surprise, and abstain from transgressions, lest my portion be among sad and accursed Souls. As for me, I will call upon God, and the Lord shall save me: Evening and Morning, and at noon day, will I pray and cry aloud, and he shall hear my voice; he hath delivered my Soul in peace from the Battle that was against me, therefore I will put my trust in him for ever. I confess I have omitted much good, and am guilty of many Offences of Ignorance, Infirmity, and Knowledge; therefore thy pardon I still beg, and assistance of thy Grace, that I may bring forth fruits worthy of Repentance. Make thy Church happy in a Moses and Aaron; in Nursing Fathers to go in and out before thy people, and holy Ministers to stand before thee our God: Preserve them from the malice of their Enemies, and the strive of the people; let their lips preserve knowledge, that we may seek the Law at their mouth: Spare thy people; bless them in their Souls, Bodies, and Estates, that this Nation may be at length as great an instance of thy mercy, as it has been of thy wrath and fury: Every one of us more or less has contributed to the vast heap of crying sins, yet seeing thou hast graciously afforded us a space for repentance, and suspended the dreadful execution, let our sorrow procure the continuance of thy Favours, that Peace and Plenty may be within our Borders, and no Invasion in the Land. I thank thee, O merciful Father, for the freedom of thy Gospel, the food of the Word, the sweet refresh of thy Sacraments, public Communions in thy Church, and for all the benefits which are enjoyed by the society of Saints and good men. Pity all those who sit in darkness, and in the shadow of Death, who are not acquainted with thy Name, or knowing it are nevertheless carried away by strong delusions into the ways of error and mischief. Bless all the sons and daughters of affliction, strengthen them in the hour of trial, that neither the love of this world, nor the loss of light, neither the fear of death, nor the terrors of Hell, may make them unwilling to departed this life. And now at length I humbly desire thee to give me wisdom to order my life aright from henceforth, that I may be wary and circumspect in all my actions, a careful and an understanding Hearer of thy Word, a constant frequenter of thy Courts, sober and temperate, exercising myself unto all godliness, that my whole Spirit, Soul, and Body, may be kept blameless unto the end: Plant in my Soul a deep detestation of all evil, that when I see my sins, I may also behold my Redeemer. Bless this Religious Society, the pious and aged Brethren; that Peace and Love may endear and unite us all together; that we may faithfully communicate heavenly things one to another: temper our minds with submission and reverence, that we may honour our Governors, and pay our just duty to all our Superiors, and no way carry ourselves insolently to our Inferiors. O Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, the Blessed Three in One, the All in All, accept of these, and all my hearty Prayers, through Jesus Christ my God and Saviour. Amen. In the time of Sickness. O Thou determiner of my days, in whose hands are the Issues of Life and Death, behold and pity thy aged and sinful Servant, diseased in body, and distressed in mind; turn thy face unto me, send down thine aid to comfort me, for I am in pain, desolate and poor: Speak peace unto my Soul, and say thou art my Salvation. O dearest Jesus, the brightness of thy Father's Glory, dispel these Clouds of Darkness and Despair; thou, who art the Souls Physician, arise with healing under thy wings, and show thy skill in my weakness. If it be thy Will and Decree by this thy Chastisement to finish my days, draw near to my humble and afflicted Soul, support it by thy strength in this day of Trial, as I have always endeavoured to live, so let me now die the death of the Righteous; diminish the fears of death by the hopes of a blessed life; hid not thy face from me in the time of my trouble; hold not thy peace at my tears, now my Soul cleaveth unto the dust, but let the last Minute be the best of all my life. Many days have I enjoyed the Comforts of Life, in this quiet and Religious Sanctuary, and all I ascribe to thy particular mercy and gracious instances of Providence: But now my spirits faint, my eyes wax dim, my hands shake, and the pillars of my house tremble; now I find the time of my dissolution approaches by the regular Course of Nature: therefore what is my Hope, O Lord? truly my hope and affiance is even in Thee: O Lord, my heart is smitten down, and withered like Grass, so that I forget to eat bread; there is no health in my flesh, because of thy displeasure, and no rest in my bones by reason of my sin: Therefore, dear Saviour, pardon me, forgive me all my sins, comfort me in this day of sorrow, ease my pains, and satisfy my doubts, strengthen my hopes, and relieve my Soul: Thou, who are the Firstborn from the dead, the appointed Heir of all things, uphold my faint and trembling Soul in the conflict and agony of death, that I may utter nothing displeasing to thee, O God, and give me assurance that my portion shall never be among hopeless and accursed Souls in the Regions of Torment and Despair. Welcome blessed Hour, the period of my Pilgrimage, the term of my Bondage, the end of my Care, and the Haven of my Hopes; now I am to take my flight to the place from whence I shall never more return; now I am to enter into the loving Embraces of my Lord and Saviour. O thou Father of Comforts! how do I love to hear of thy mercy, and the joys of Heaven? O how dear unto me are the promises of the Living God? Suffer me not to be impatient in this day of Visitation, but meekly to resign my spirit up into thy Hands, and peaceably to pass by the Gates of Death, to the Kingdom of Glory. Separate my Transgressions, O Lord, from my Soul, or else they will separate me from Heaven: Now the Enemy is busy, and Satan watches for an advantage, secure my apprehension, add strength to my faith, and pity my Infirmities; make all my Friends, who stand around my Deathbed, sensible of Human frailty, by beholding me an object of Mortality, just setting out for Eternity: O Lord, let thy pardon refresh my Soul, let thy Spirit guide me safely in the way to the blessed Mansions above: (If they are at the point of death.) I have fought a long fight, in much weakness, I have near finished my Course, though in great faintness, and the Crown of my Life is, that through the strength of thy Grace I have kept the true faith, and now die in it: I thank God for all his blessings, the company of my Friends, the means of Physic, holy Prayers, and living and dying in the best established Church in the Christian World. I willingly resign my Earthly body to the Dust from whence it came, and I earnestly desire to be with God: I profess to all the World, I know no other Name by which any man can be saved, but by the Name of Jesus: I renounce all presumption and confidence in my own merits: I thankfully acknowledge Gods repeated Blessings, and hearty bewail my own sins: I repose all my trust in the mercy and promises of God, and I forgive all my Enemies, as now I beg of God to forgive me. Into thy hands, O Lord, I commend my Soul. Amen. A Prayer to be said at any time by a young Scholar of the House. O Merciful Father, the Redeemer and Sanctifier of all thy Children, I praise and magnify thy holy Name, because I have received many special and peculiar Blessings at thy hands: I thank thee, O God, that I was born of Christian Parents, that I was baptised into the true Faith, that my Lot is fallen in this excellent place of Piety and Education, and that I have the knowledge and opportunity of making my early approaches to the Throne of Grace: Teach me, O Lord, to remember my Creator in the days of my Youth, to dedicate the Spring and Innocency of my Age to the God of Purity and Perfection; I am now soft and tender, apt to receive the first Impressions that are laid upon me, suffer me therefore not to be led aside by the whispers of sin, or the pernicious Examples of a wanton and profane Age: Season the beginnings of my years with thy Grace and Goodness, let wisdom teach me the fear of the Lord, that I may cheerfully run the way of thy Commandments: I am now entering upon the Stage of the World, and humbly desire to be led by good Example; therefore, O blessed Father, lead me not into Temptation, but deliver me from Evil: Curb and restrain the unruliness of my passion, rebuke and subdue the rashness and heat of youth, train me up in that way wherein thou desirest I should walk: Frame in me an humble and submissive mind, that I may be willing to be taught and obey, to entertain all godly and profitable Instructions: Give me understanding to discern my duty, grace and wisdom 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all corrupt Example and Conve●●●… and to fix my heart upon Obe●●●… Thanksgiving. Here thy won●… 〈◊〉 mercy has placed me, to be brought up in thy Fear, and praise thy Name; therefore I hearty desire to fulfil thy Will, that these my fresh and greener years, may be consecrated to thy Service, before they receive any taint of Corruption from a lewd and infectious Age; I bow my Soul before thee, earnestly desiring that I may betimes become a Servant of the Living God. Teach me to shun the occasions and appearances of sin, that I may never be defiled with its Embraces: Teach me to avoid the first steps and entrances of Impiety, that I may never be so bold as to violate thy Commands. Let the apprehensions of a small sin so terrify and affright my tender Soul, that I may always abhor the malignity of gross and filthy sins, that I may keep these Evils at a distance, and not be entangled in their Snares. As I grow up in years, let me increase in Goodness and Learning, that I may fully Answer the ends of my Noble Benefactor, and be instrumental to the publishing of thy Honour and Glory: Now may I justly sing Hosanna, seeing thou hast made so many shiftless Babes and Sucklings to rejoice. Plant in me a just and forward Obedience to all my Governors that are set in Authority over me: In an especial manner bless my Sovereign Lord King Charles, let him be as the Firstborn, and glorious among the Kings of the Earth, let thine Hand hold him fast, and thine Arm strengthen him. Bless him likewise in all his Royal Relations. Be gracious to thine Inheritance, bless them who watch diligently for our Souls, that at the last day they may give a joyful account of them to the Shepherd and Bishop of our Souls. Arise O God, maintain thine own Cause, remember how the foolish man blasphemeth thee daily: continue unto us the Light of thy Gospel, that the Name of the Man of thy Right Hand, Christ Jesus, may be glorified, thy Church enlarged and defended, and we all brought up in the true Faith of thy only Son. Bless our Noble and Wise Governors, our Instructors both in Sacred and Human Learning; and sanctify my heart with humility, that I may show all due Reverence, to the several Members of this Religious House, whether in Age or Authority placed above me. Purge and cleanse my Soul from all the seeds and beginnings of evil; root out of my mind all folly and vanity, idleness and self-conceit; expel all lose and wanton desires, all stubborn and contumacious Humours, which are apt to breed in younger years; that every day I may wax wiser and more holy, sensible of thy gracious assistance, and the comforts of a chaste and virtuous life. O thou Father of Lights, it is by thy Providence I am placed here in the School of Instruction, and from thy Goodness I crave a blessing upon my endeavours, otherwise all my labour and study will be vain and fruitless: To thee therefore do I lift up my Soul, who art the Fountain of all Knowledge, the Original of all Tongues and Languages, I humbly desire thee to endue my mind with knowledge and discretion, quickness of perception, and a tenacious memory, that I may be sit for that station which thou art pleased to design me for. As I now make my Addresses betimes to thy holy Majesty, so grant that the sincerity and fervour of my Soul may continue and increase, that I may be accustomed to Prayer, and lifting up holy hands unto thee. Pardon all the sins of my youth, the errors and miscarriages of my few and imprudent years: Bless me with health of body, and soundness of mind; increase of friends, and profitable acquaintance; sanctify the ministry of thy Word unto me, that my Soul may rejoice in thy Salvation. Make me able and ready every day to extol thy loving kindness, and frequently to meditate upon thy mercy, O thou Pittier of all that stand in need of help, my Guide and Castle of Defence, the great Preserver of Youth as well as Men, through Jesus Christ his sake. Amen. FINIS. Errata sic corrigat Lector Benevolus. Page 10. line 14. read now. p. 21. l. 11. r. dolentèr. p. 21. l. 18. r. propagentur. p. 38. l. penult. r. 500 marks to Jesus College. p. 55. l. 6. r. colic. p. 87. l. 14. r. Horse-heath. p. 114. l. 16. r. fitting. p. 127. l. 12. r. all. p. 135. l. 20. r. of age. p. 187. l. 10. in the marg. r. by Hows. p. 191. l. penult. r. latter. p. 195. l. 9 r. Fryans. p. 234. l. 18. r. the Senior. p. 237. l. 16. r. shoes. p. 238. l. 4. r. for such.