VERA EEFIGIES EDVARDI WATERHOUSI ARMIGERI ANNO DOMINI 1663.: ANNOQVE AETATIS SVAE 44 portrait D: Loggan ad viwm sculp: FIRMA NOBIS FIDES blazon or coat of arms Fortescutus Illustratus, OR A COMMENTARY On that Nervous TREATISE De Laudibus Legum Angliae, Written by Sir JOHN FORTESCUE Knight, First Lord Chief Justice, after Lord Chancellor to King HENRY the six. Which TREATISE, dedicated to Prince EDWARD that King's Son and Heir (Whom he attended in his retirement into France, and to Whom he loyally and affectionately imparted Himself in the Virtue and Variety of His Excellent Discourse) He purposely wrote to consolidate his Princely mind in the love and approbation of the good Laws of ENGLAND, and of the landable Customs of this his Native Country. The Heroic Design of whose Excellent Judgement and loyal Addiction to his Prince, is humbly endeavoured to be Revived, Admired, and Advanced By EDWARD WATERHOUS Esquire. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Oportet leges quidem acriter statui, mitius autem quam ipsae jubent poenas sumere. Isaeus apud Stobaeum, Serm. 147. LONDON, Printed by Tho. Roycroft for Thomas Dicas at the Sign of the Hen and Chickens in St. Paul's Churchyard, 1663. TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE and truly Noble EDWARD EARL of CLARENDON, Lord HIGH-CHANCELLOR OF ENGLAND. May it please Your LORDSHIP, THOUGH the proof of Your obliging and generous Virtues hath fixed in Wisemen a confidence of Your favourable acceptance of whatever Wisdom and Worth (under the Patronage of Your endeared Name and Greatness) presents to the Public; and that it cannot but be thought rather a certainty then presumption, that You will treat those with ingenuous kindness, who are ambitious to perpetuate Virtue, and to adorn the dead Monuments of it with all those Trophies of revival and amplitude, which their greatest parts and most elaborate endeavours to that honestly-ambitious end can possibly arrive at: Yet may it (My Lord) be doubted how this enterprise of mine, by which I humbly (under the favour of Almighty God and Your Lordship) design to revive the Memory, and illustrate the Learning of that Venerable and Profoundly-Scientifique Antecessor in the Office of the Chancellourship, Sir JOHN FORTESCUE, may be from my hand accepted, who am none of the first Three in adaptation to such a Service. But since it pleased God as to impregnate me with resolutions to attempt, so to vouchsafe me health to finish what I proposed in these Commentaries, I trust Your Honour will accept the Protection of them, though they be but the Umbra and Echo of the various and transcendent Learning that the Text of the Chancellor FORTESCUE abounds with. For truly (My Lord) had I not wellweighed my Reverend Original, and found in him that Pondus and Affluence of general and well-digested Science, which would exercise the pains and curiosity of a Gentleman and generous Artist, I should never have ambitioned the exploration of what God would enable me to, in so incessant a progress of study as this has occoasioned. Yet forasmuch as by the assistance of God I have in such proportion as his merciful indulgence has favoured my humble industry with, perfected these Commentaries, and obtained the favour and encouragement of an Honourable, Learned, and Grave Permission of them to the Press for public View; I humbly beseech Your Lordship to pardon me while in pursuance of those primitive resolves of my first undertaking them (which was above five years since) I devote them to Your Perspicacious and Oracular Self, Whom of all His most Excellent MAJESTY'S Favourites and Ministers of Estate, I foresaw, by the augury of a very affectionate and well-instructed experience, the probablest to succeed to the opportunity, and exceed in the ability to propagate FORTESCUE in all the latitudes and advantages of his Sage, Legal, Civil, and Politic Counsel and Conduct of Greatness, to that which is the most Royal termination of it, justice; and by that Impartial Arbiter of justice, which wise and well-advised Englishmen call, The Law of England. And therefore (My Lord there being so true a Parallel between my Noble Text-Master and Your Noble Self, Both Gentlemen by birth, Both Lawyers by breeding, Both Knights by degree, Both Wisemen by experience, Both loyal Attendants on your Sovereign's recesses abroad, and Both honoured by your Sovereigns with the trust and state of Chancellors: these Instances of likeness relating to, and uniting in you both, make me bold to conclude, that to no Worthy alive are these Commentaries so properly to be addressed as to Your Highly valued Person, Whom I believe to be not only what the Learned Parisian Chancellor Budaeus once wrote of the French Chancellor Deganai, In Epistol. Dedicator ante Annot. in Pandect. (One Qui per omnes aetatis progressus totidem honorum Civilium gradus suopte nixu, nullo manum porrigente scandens, non antequam ad culmen honorum evasit, scandendi finem fecit, ut non fortunae beneficio, sed suo merito pervenisse eo credi possit, cujus ea vis suisse ingenii atque animi cernitur, ut quocunque loco natus esset, in quodcunque tempus incidisset, fortunam ipse sibi facturus videretur) but also what may as truly without degenerous flattery be added, That very Happy He, Who has concentred in Him so much of the Eloquence of Tully, the Gravity of Cato, the justice of Aristides, and the favour of Maecenas, as renders You meet to obtain the utmost Honour, a Sovereign Master can reward a faithful and approved Subject and Servant with: Which that Your Lordship may long deserve, and live to enjoy and to bless this Nation and every worthy Interest and Concern in it, with the rays and diffusions of that Prudence, Piety, and Loyalty which are concluded eminent and exorient in You, is and shall be the earnest and sincere Prayer of From my Study in Zion- College. June 11, 1663. (Renowned Sir) Your HONOURS Most Humble Servant EDWARD WATERHOUS. THese Commentaries upon the Chancellor FORTESCUE'S Learned Treatise De Laudibus Legum Angliae, We conceive useful and fit to be published; And therefore approve the Printing thereof. May. 14. 1663. Robert Foster. Orlando Bridgeman. Matthew Hale. Thomas Malet. Robert Hyde. Edward Atkyns. Thomas Twisden. Thomas tyrril. Christopher Turnor. Samuel Brown. Wadham Wyndham. AN INTRODUCTION TO THE COMMENTARY UPON FORTESCUE. BEfore I treat on the Text, I think it convenient to write somewhat concerning the Parties introduced, and the manner of introducing them. Dialogus est oratio, in qua disputantes introducuntur quotquot Authori libiserit. Cic. add Attic. lib. 13▪ The manner of their Exhibition is by way of Dialogue, a form very ancient and significant, whereby Authors, as Trismegistus, Plato, Plutarch, Tully, Athenaeus, Aristophanes, Lucian, and hundreds of others, brought in such persons, and fictions, as conduced to the various expression of their design, and the useful instruction of after-Ages: and therefore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which is the inward reasoning of the mind, whereby a man proposes things Pro and Con, as if really acted, is by Ruffinian ranked inter schemata 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and he that skills this Art aright, called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so that Dialogues are proper Modes of Speech and writing, whereby one and the same person both frames Questions and Answers, under names and notions of Persons distinct and several. Thus does our Chancellor act both his own and the Prince's part, laying down those Rules, which Experience had taught him, the best Conduct and Regulation of life, and in producing the Prince as assenting to or dissenting from them, and so occasioning either his first adhesion to what he positively asserted, or his further addition of such Proofs as should resolve the doubt, and make the Dose prescribed Palatable. So that in this Text, by the help of Dialogue, there is not only a calm and pleasant delight for Youth and Novice-wits, but grave and pithy Direction for the most accomplished minds, who from it cannot but be enriched; Lilius Gyraldus, Syntag. 15. De Diis. p. 425. since, in Lampridius his words of Severus his Lararium, it contains Christum & Abrahamum, Orpheum & Apollonium, matter of all Variety and useful Institution both in Morals, Prudentials, and what's the most excellent in the knowledge of Things Heavenly. This for the Dialogue. Now of the Persons in this Dialogue, which are Two, and those under a pair of Illustrious Names, the Prince and the Chancellor, or as here they ought rather to be marshaled, the Chancellor and the Prince. The one apt and willing to teach, the other prone and ready to learn; which harmony cannot but produce a profitable and desired effect: for that heart is sure to be wise whose ear accepteth Counsels, and who turneth not his eye from the Precepts of Wisdom. Now though by the Laws of Civility and Nations, precedency be due to the Person most dignified, and Princes of the Blood have the Pre-eminence of Temporary Officers, where their Offices have not immediate representation of Sovereigns, their Masters; yet I shall crave leave to treat first of the Chancellor, and then of the Prince: because in this Dialogue, and as to this occasion, the Chancellor is the first both Ordine temporis, as the Commencer of the Discourse, and Dignitate sermonis, as intending to distil into the Youth of the represented Prince what his grave Experience observed necessary to make his Life exemplary, and his Government, when ever it should begin, successful. The Chancellor I find described three ways, 1. By his Name, Fortescue. 2. By his Office, Chancellor. 3. By his personal Dignity, Miles Grandaevus: which represents him a man doubly honoured, from his Title Miles, from his Experience Grandaevus; For multitude of years teach Wisdom. Forte Scutum Salus Ducum. Fortescue's Motte. For his name Fortescue 'tis ancient and Knightly, possibly derived à forti scuto, which some Founder of the Family was especially noted to have; either his Integrity which covered him from top to toe from the malice of his foes, who like cruel Archers shot at him, though his Shield, like Joseph ' s Bow, abode sure through the mighty God of his Salvation, Gen. 49.24. or else from some more than ordinary Valour, which the many blows received on his Shield did amply express. I shall not here engage in the Story of Names, nor take upon me to dive into the Well of Science to fetch thence that, which we would call the truth of their Original. If we understand a Name, as Logicians do, Tholoss. Syntag. Juris. lib. 36. ●. 4. ss. 1 De mutations Nominis. River. Exercit. 22. in Genes. 2. for Vox Significativa secundum placitum; then there is no certainty of Names but uncertainty, what pleases the Imposer, and others to give after his Example: yet for the Antiquity of Names, we are to know that they are coaeval with time and things, for when God created things he named them according to the specifique nature of them, or according to some use or other purpose which they most tended to. After whose Example the Hebrews, and (a) Hine colligunt Hebraei Adamum insignem Philosoplium fuisse, qui naturas ornnium animalium probe tenuerit, ut inde juxta naturam ac proprietatem suam cuique suum nomen indiderit. Fagius in Gen. 2.19. Adam especially gave Names to all Creatures, which Names did evidence not only their Nature, but their subjection to man, as (b) Geograph. Sacrae, p. 26. & p. 57.58. Tholoss. Syntagm. Juris. lib. 32. c. 8. Bochartus, Grotius, Rivet, Tostatus, and all the Learned on Genes. 2. agree. After the Jews, the Greeks followed, and the Romans were so multiplicative of Names, that they run them out into an infinity almost; for beside their twenty eight Appellative in (c) Isidor. Origin. lib. 1. c. 2. Isidore, I find (d) De Nominibus Romanis, c. 1. p. 341. Ed Sylburg. Sigonius (out of the ancient Grammarians, Sosipater, Donatus, and Diomedes) numbering four sorts of Names, one derived from Dignity, as Praenomen, being therefore prefixed because Gentile, as Publius; the second of propriety declaring their Nation and Boud, Nomen, as Cornelius; the third Cognomen, being an additional adjoined to their Genile Name for the greater State and Equipage of it, as Scipio; the last Agnomen, from some casual regard or remarkable action, as Africanus: on all these he enlarges, and therefore to him I refer the Reader. Lilius Gyraldus. Syntagus. De Musis. The Poets also took the liberty to term the Muses, Camaenae, Heliconiades, Parnassides, and such other names to the number of thirty, Hist. Deorum. Syntagm. 10. and as many names had Hercules also from the several fictions they had of him. So generally are Names given ad placitum, that it is hard to limit Names to Natures or Actions, when even fictive occasions have been Parental of them, and that ubique locorum, no Nation not taking the liberty so to do. And at home to be ignorant of this would be our shame, when every day's experience lessons it, and no man that is Clerkly, but knows, that Names are occasional, and varied as occasion serves, as Master Cambden, our learned Antiquary, every where in his Britannia acquaints us. Amongst us therefore in England, we have only two Names usual, the Christian given at the Font, or Baptistery, by the Bishop or Presbyter ordinarily, as John, James, Robert, Edward: and the Surname for distinction of the Family from whence Children descend. Both these are usually expressed in Deeds, No●en dici putant quod rem notam faciat, sitque velut rerum imago. Manertus apud Tholoss. Syntagm. Juris. lib. 32. c. 8. Grants, Wills, and all other Writings whatsoever, and when ever omitted, are either the fruits of negligence or worse; for it leaves men in the dark, and subjects their Actions to uncertainty, which alloyes the credit and grandeur of them. And for this cause (if no other could be added) men are obliged in Justice to their Fames, Persons, Posterities, and Families, to own their individual persons by those Names Christian and Familique, which they ordinarily go by; since as many Authors, not living to publish their pains, become unprofitable to the World, to enrich which they in their Lives and Studies were probably ambitious, as I think amongst many others, Julius Caesar Scaliger was in that Noble Compilement of an hundred and ten Books De Originibus, which are lost: or else others come after the Author's death, and thrust themselves into that praise which they never merited, and call themselves Fathers of those Speculations, which, if they could vindicate themselves by a Reply, Epist. Dedicatory before Fortescue. Pitsaeus p. 597. would disown their impudent, and but Suposititious Authors. I the rather observe this, because in the mention of my Text-Master, not only Mr. Mulcaster a learned man, and a Student in the Law, terms him Master Fortescue Knight: but also Pitsaeus out of Robert Record writes him only Fortiscutus, De Fortiscuto meo hoc dicam, quod & de Thoma Cranleio Lelandu, refert, ut qui non modo ingenio, verum etiam ●alamo, utpote bonis instructus Artibus, plurimum valuit: so that were not Records and later Authors more punctual, the Worthy Author might have been less certain. Selden' s Notes on Fortescue. To the Reader. Rot. Parent. 20. H. 6. Membr. But our late learned Selden, who has led me the way to admire this Author, has particularly displayed this brave Sage to be third Son to Henry Fortescue Son of Sir John Fortescue Knight, Captain of Meaux and Governor of Bry in France under Henry the Fifth, which Sir John was second Son of William Fortescue of Wimeston in the County of Devon, Esquire; Fortescue ' s Descent by Father and Mother. so that our Chancellor being immediate Heir in the eighth descent of Sir Richard Fortescue Knight, who came out of Normandy in the conquerors time, was generously descended by his Father, and no less by his Mother, who was a Daughter and Heir of Beauchamp, his eldest Brother was Lord Chief Justice of Ireland and died issueless, his second Brother's Posterity in the third Descent divided themselves into two Branches, one of which seated themselves at Fawborn in Essex, the other was seated by Sir john Fortescue, Chancellor of the Exchequer, and Master of the Court of Wards, at Salden in Buckinghamshire, where now the Heir of his Family Sir john Fortescue resides, who very civilly and like a Gentleman of Honour, A most worthy Kinsman. sensible of the service I aimed to do to the Memory of our Chancellor his Noble Kinsman, presented me with this information from his Pedigree, and with the Picture of our Chancellor which he caused to be cut to be hereunto prefixed; which I purposely mention as my return of kindness and thanks to his care to right my Noble Chancellor, whose Portraiture but for him had been unknown and unpublique. So that he was of a Knightly Race, and of so renowned a Gravity, that he was Chief Justice to Henry the Sixth for the latter half of his Reign; and, as appears by Records, that he might Statum suum decentius manutenere, the then King gave him an Annuity of an hundred and eighty Marks out of the Hamper, together with 116. s. 11. d. ½ percipiendum singulis annis ad Festum Natalis Domini pro una Roba, & Furrura pro eadem erga idem Festum; & 66. s. 6. d. singulis annis ad Festum Pentecostes pro una Roba, & Linura pro eadem erga idem Festum: so greatly did this Worthy Knight deserve of his Prince, that he was thought the meet subject of all Favours. For he well demeaned himself in all Trusts, and as he lived no shame to his Family, so died he not ashamed of Fidelity to his Sovereign; for him he accompanied in his misfortunes, and to him did he express the ardour of a just and ingenuous gratitude, in applying to his Son and Heir, whom he hoped should inherit his Throne and Dominions, such wholesome Documents, as best fitted him to submit to God while a Sufferer, and to rule in the place of God when he should restore him to his Government, and subject his people and the guidance of them to him. Thus much for our Text-Master's Name, Fortescue, Now for his Office, Chancellor, a great Office of Trust and Dignity, the Prince's Conscience in a Subjects breast, the Great justice of the Realm, in whom the oppressed aught to find Relief, and from whom the Oppressor how great, how popular soever he be, aught to find no Favour. The Trust of this Officer in England, appears notably out of old Ingulphus, where Edward the Elder, King of this Land, expresses his mind to Turktil, Abbot of Crowland, his Chancellor in these words, Ut quaecunqus negotia temporalia vel spiritualia, Regis judicium expectabant, illius consilio & decreto, tam sanctae fidei, & tam profundi ingenii tenebatur, Lege Forcatulum lib. 7. De Gallerum Imperio & Philosophia. Salmuth. in Páncirol. Part. 1. p. 316. Locus is in quo celebrantur ludi forenses, fossis, Cancellis, aut aliis id genus septis erde circumscriptus. Erasin. Adag. 93. Chil. 1. Cent. 1. Cui alludit Cicero lib. 1. De Oratore. Et quasicertarum artium sorenseb●s Cancellis circumscriptam Scientiam. Idem in actionibus, Ab his Cancellis quibas me circumscripst, declinav●ro. omnia tractarentur, & tractata irrefragabilem sententiam fortirentur. So Ingulphus. The Name Cancellarius is variously understood, Grammarians make it no more than a Scribe or Notary, as the Domestici apparitores to great Magistrates, or as Praefectas Praetorio. The Verb Cancello, whence Cancellarius, signifying to deface, or amend, or cross out a thing written, having relation to a Superior commanding it, some have thought to import the Office and Officer to be subservient, and under some limitation: which possibly the Lattices, which are called Cancelli, whether in Churches or in Courts do further illustrate, For as in Churches, Chancels are immured in and severed from the Navis Ecclesiae, and the most noted Members of the Church sit there; so in Courts, the Judges and Officers of the Courts fit within the Barrs, when the Counselors, Advocates, and Pleaders, which Budaeus calls Cancellarios, and we call Barristers, stand and plead at the Barr. In the Sacred Empire the Office of Chancellor is as frequent as our Steward in Manors, every Province almost having its Chancellor; who is but a cipher to the Great Chancellor, Budaeus in Pandect. p. 78. Edit. Vascos. whom Budaeus defines, Principis praesentis Vicarius, & eo peregre prosecto, Inter-rex quodammodo censendus; and in another place, Norma omnium jura reddentium, cujus ore facundi Reges moribus nostris esse solent, cujus oculis velut emissitiis, circumspicere omnia ac perlustrare creduntur: And therefore Cassiodore writing to one of these Chancellors, Variarum. lib. 11. c. 6. cajoles him thus, Respice quo nomine nuncuperis, tenes quip lucidas fores, claustra patentia, senestratas januas. This great Officer, France, Spain, Denmark, Sweden, Scotland, prefer above all Officers, and so does England too, and that anciently; for Fleta writing of the Great Officers of England, Lib. 2. c 13. p. 75; Edit. Seld. fayes thus of the Lord Chancellor, Est inter caetera quoddam officium, quod dicitur Cancellaria, quod viro provido & discreto, ut Episcopo vel Clerico magnae Dignitatis debet committi, simul cum cura Majoris Sigilli Regni, cujus substituti sunt Cancellarii omnes in Anglia, Hybernia, Wallia, & Scotia, omnesque Sigilli Regis custodientes ubique, Glos. p. 110; so Fleta: Sir Henry Spelman fayes much in few words, Censorem non agnoscitpraeter Regem, nec lites ei transmittant Judices, sed invitis ipsis saepe adimit, so Herald And in all Acts of Parliament and Instruments of State, the first Person of Trust is the Lord Chancellor, who is counted Magistratuum omnium Antistes; by reason of which the Chancellourship is called, Budaeus loc● pracit. Summum bodie honorum fastigium, ultra quod nibil sper are licet homini quidem privato & togato, quasique quod dam summa quedam ambientis animi solstitium. By which, and what to this purpose might abundantly be added, it appears, that this Officer is the weightyest, and of greatest import of any in the Nation, Caput sanctioris interiorisque consilin, without which well-performed with trust and temper, Oppression would call for Divine Vengeance, and Injury not be more the Siu then Suffering of the Nation: thus much for the Office of the Chancellor. Though I judge in this high and supreme sense our Author bore the Name, Selden Epistle before his Book. Spelman in Gloss p. 416. had not the actual Power and Office of Lord Chancellor in England; true it is I find him called (a) In Introduct. Materia ante Fortescutum ex Impress. Edw. Whitchurch. Cum Privilegio. Temps. H. 8. Chancellor, yea Summus Angliae Cancellarius by Pitsaeus: yet I doubt the Grant he had from Henry the Sixth was abroad, Non nisi a victo, & exulante apud Scotos Rege. The Ius ad rem he had to testify his Prince's favour to him; but the Ius in re not effectually commencing, till his Prince's suppressed Right should invigorate, and evict his Rival's power; our Chancellor cannot be accounted so plenary a Chancellor as otherwise in his Master's possession of the Crown he would have been. Though then he was not, as to the State and Possession of that Honourable and Great Trust here in England, so complete and perfect a Chancellor: Dominus Cancellarius Angliae constitutas fucrit. Coke Preface to 10. Rep. 2 Instir. in 1 Ed. 2. Stat. De Militibus. See my Defence of Arms and Armoury. yet Chancellor to H. 6. of England he indisputably was, as also to his Son Prince Edward, and in it behaved himself worthy the Title of Miles Grandaevus. Miles] the highest rank of the lower Nobility, an Honour given to Men of Merit (for Miles quasi Millesimus, A man, as we say, of a thousand) who being an Esquire before (for Sir Edward Cook says, if his Authority be as good in Heraldry as in Law, no man was wont to be made a Knight, but he that was first an Esquire) was rewarded by his Prince, or some having Sovereign Commission for some notable performance done, Photius in Excerptis ex Olympiod. p. 853. Edit. Sylburg. Though I know there is more probability in that Opinion, which our Books are of, that rise of it from the Baculus, which the Tyrones novitii, who had suffered their Lances to be broken, which was a deviction in their Hastiludia, and Torneaments, did bear, and thence were called Baccalaurei: which the strenuest Soldiers after were called by. So M. Paris p. 768. l. 55. p. 769. l. 4. p. 747. l. 51. Petrus Blesensis. Serm. 1. p. 130. or to be done. Now this Honour of Knighthood was an encouragement to venture, the price of life, that which carries men sometimes beyond reason to hazard, and beyond Conscience to detain what they get. Olympiodorus tells us, that Honorius the Emperor rewarded valiant men with the name of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which I am apt to think was our Knight's Bachilors: and the Author says, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Not only Citizens of Rome were so rewarded, but Strangers that deserved well in their Wars; yea not only did they give them the Nobilitation of Honour, making the Alchemy of base blood to become generous: but giving them badges of their Honour answerable to those now in use. Tacitus (Annal. lib. 18.) tells us, that Equestri dignitate donare, & Annulis honorare, were promiscuous: and Lampiridius, while he mentions Severus his care to exclude infamous persons from the Equestrian Order, Ne Ordo Equestris commacularetur, tells us also, and together with him Suetonius, That Rings, Spurs of Gold, and Crowns, with Chariots of Triumph, were the reward of brave Spirits. As after-Ages have had like occasion for men of Courage, so to them have they been no less grateful; nor have extemporary Services gone without extemporary Favour. Honour being often given upon the ground where it has been won; which makes the Knight Bachilor in his Institution, a brave Military-esteemed Order. There is no man but must yield to Time's Sovereignty, and to that Fate, that common Opinion, and perhaps general Error introduces, That, That makes and mars what, and who it pleases; and though by its obstetrication many notable Orders of Knighthood are produced, as our Order of Saint George, and those other, Toizon d' Or, Saint Michael, Saint Iago, Calatrava, Saint Esprit, the Annunciation, Templars, Knights of Malta, Alcantara, and Montesio, or that of the Teutonick Order, Though I say these, and the most of them, have been honoured by the pleasure of Sovereigns with especial Rays of Majesty, carrying their Testimonial in their Badge on the outward Vest, which challenges all approachers to a more than ordinary respect: yet bare Knighthood is not without somewhat of a dignified lustre, both as in Antiquity and universality of allowance, it is most ubiquitive and embraced; and our Land and Law account it a noble degree, and of 1000 years' age here amongst us. Since than I find our Authors make Milites and Principes a kind of Synonyma's, Edit. London. p. 1026. as Brompton, no rude Historian, does in his mention of David King of Scots, his coming into England in King Stephen's time, who was met by the Northern English, in his words, (Milites & Principes Angliae Boreales animosi, cum insigni Comite Albemarle, &c, viriliter restiterunt;) and since Knight's Bachilors, made by any Sovereign, are owned in all places as Persons of Honour, and their Title less burden to them in cases of worldly vicissitude than others by Patent are, I account them both as to their Rise, Antiquity, and Universal respect, Rot. Patent. 20 H. ●. part. 1. in 10 Claus. 38 H. 6. in 30. Rot. in Turr. Dorso 〈◊〉. Parliamenti. not less nobilitated than becomes worthy men and merits. And such an one was our Knight, who was Chief justice from the 20 H. 6. to the 32 H. 6. yea, for aught I know, to the 38 H. 6. and after Chancellor to his Prince; to which Offices men seldom attain till they be aged and experienced, and till they be notable for Counsel: therefore is it added here to our Chancellour's remark, that he was Grandaevus, a man not so much for Action as Counsel; a Knight, that like the old Leontine Gorgias, Caelius Rhodigin, lib. 19 c. 20. was famous in the very determination of his life, being able to say with him, Quod voluptatis causa nibil mibi unquam facere permiserim; and having gratified his passion with no abuse of his virtue. This, This is he that is called Miles Grandaevus: and well may he so be, for he was a Grandsire and Oracle of Counsel and Conduct; Grandaevus, qui est provectioris aetatis, quasi grandis aevi senex, faith Cerda: so Virgil, In lib. 1. Aeneid. Et qu●e victus Abas, & qu●e Grand●evus Alethes. So Pliny, Alios esse Grandoevos, semper Canos. Yea Grandoevus and Longoevus the Latins promiscuously used for Old-age; in that then any thing of more than ordinary remark was expressed by Granditas, famous Phrases, Granditas Verborum: so Pliny writing of one rare for his time, says, Non illi vis, non granditas, non subtilitas, non amaritudo, non dulcedo, non lepos defuit. By this Attribution to our Chancellour's we are told, that he was a man wise enough to make a Prince happy; Non panitendum Imperatorem egisset, si diutius illi per Cononem & Leonem, Orientis praefectos, imperaro licuis●et. Egnatius in Theodosio Adramiteno. A Grandoevus who carried Time's Badge on his Head, and Time's Glass in his Hand; that had outlived the Passions and Easinesses of heady, fierce, credulous youth; and was grown as full of Counsel as an Age was of Moment's; an Helluo temporis, who had so measured Time that it could hardly deceive him: This is he, who addresses himself in this Dialogue to the Prince, whom he much conversed with, and thereby may be presumed fully to understand. And indeed the great Experience of this Gentleman, whose former conversation with the Youth of Honour and Note, (to whom in times past he had read the Civil and Common Laws) gave him a more exact Method of dealing with the Young Prince, than the bare Principles of ● Mother-wit, or the rude notions of a life of Study would have suggested to him, since had he been morose and humorous, as most aged men and Artists are, he would sooner have deterred from, then exhorted the Prince to, the Study of what he commended; for Great Spirits are not easily cajoled into any thing by Praetorian Dictates, which smell more of a Cynique Severity then a generous Candour: but when he, in his grave and sober address, compliments the Prince into a good opinion of him, how well received are all his Documents? Prejudices against men's Persons end in prejudices against their Words and Actions: and men of scandalous looks are seldom less than Beams in the Eyes of Princes, who never look with pleasure upon figures which have torvous, rude, and discomposed Visages. This the wise Chancellor foreseeing, frames himself to such a Courtly Demeanour, as might not immerge his grave Design in the danger of miscarriage; but still preserve him regarded in his Princely eyes, to which he ever desired to approve himself worthy: Thus much for the Chancellor, the first party in the Dialogue. Now of the Prince, the second and more noble party. This Prince was brave Edward, Rex longe pientior, quam Imperio forinnatior. Leland. de H. 6. in Cygnea Cantione. Son and Heir to King Henry the Sixth of this Land, by Dame Margaret Daughter to Reynard Duke of Anjou and Berry, and King of jerusalem, to whom, in his Father's Misfortunes, this Royal Stripling, forced to fly into France, addressed, and from whom he doubted not to receive the courtesy of welcome, being under those inevitable pressures which attend things humane, and against the infelicities of which Crowns cannot prescribe; for could any Father have merited his own establishment and his Posterities blessing, surely the Saintly Father of this Prince would have been the very He: For He was a Prince of remarkable Virtue, Holingshed. p. 691. a Pattern of most perfect Piety, upright, far from fraud, wholly given to Prayer, reading of Scriptures, and Alms-deeds; of such integrity of life, that his Confessor avowed, that for all the ten years he had confessed him, he had never committed any mortal Sin; so continent, that suspicion of unchaste life never touched him; so full of Charity, that he thought he did never enough for the Church and the Poor: Who on days of Devotion would wear Sackcloth, and learned from his Saviour to use no other Communication then Forsooth, Forsooth; Yea, Yea; Nay, Nay; yea so full of Mercy, that he pardoned (when for a time he was restored to his Crown) one, that thrust him into the side with a Sword when he was Prisoner in the Tower. Yet this Prophetic King, who foretold from the face of Henry the Seventh, when but a Child, That He would be the Person, to whom both We and our adversary, Hollingshed, p. 678. leaving the Possession of all things, shall hereafter give room and place, could not by his Kingly Divination foresee, or by Prudence obviate, and forestall his misfortune: but after almost one and thirty years quiet Possession of his Government, in the fifty second year of his age, lost his Crown by Battle gained against him, his Adversaries being fewer in number then his Partisans; Holingshed. p. 691. and soon after his life was taken away by Murder, and his Corpse buried at Chertsey, being carried thither obscurely without Priest or Clerk, Torch or Taper, Singing or Saying, or any kind of Decent or Christian Solemnity. So departed this good King. And unfortunate was Gallant Prince Edward his Son, who as he was a young Gentleman of fair Complexion and comely Person, so was he of a brave, bold, and daring courage, as appears by his valiant demeanour in Tewksbury field, wherein he very Princelyly manned a great and puissant Army, expressing no remissness in any point of true and generous Knighthood; yet for all that endeavour lost the day, and became a Prisoner to Sir Richard Crofts who took him, and for a while kept him safe and secret: but whether the fear of Edward the Fourth, now Victor, or the love of the reward promised to the Discovery and Delivery of him, wrought the resignation of him into Edward the Fourth's Hands, Pag. 688. sure it is, rendered he was, and as sure that upon the rendition of him he was contrary to Edward the Fourth's Proclamation, slain. For when he came into Edward the Fourth's Presence, and was by him demanded How He durst so presumptuously enter into his Realm with Banner displayed, He, the Prince Edward (Son to Henry the Sixth) boldly answered, To recover my Father's Kingdom and Heritage, from his Father and Grandfather to him, and from him after to me lineally descended; at which words King Edward the Fourth said nothing, But with his band thrust him from him, or (as some say) struck him with his Gauntlet, Whom incontinently George Duke of Clarence, God an Avenger of innocent blood. Idem loco pr●cit. Richard Duke of Gloucester, Thomas Grace Marquis of Dorset, and William Lord Hasting, that stood by, suddenly murdered; For which cruel Act (saith my Author) the most part of the Doers in their latter days, drank of the like Cup by the righteous justice and due punishment of God. For the Duke of Clarence who murdered both Henry the Sixth and his Son, Pag. 690. this towardly Prince, (that our Fortescue so loved and applied himself to) about the 18 E. 4. was accused of Treason, cast into the Tower, and after drowned in a Butt of Malmsey: The Duke of Gloucester, Pag. 703. after Richard the Third, was slain at Besworthfield, His body being naked and despoiled to the skin, and nothing left about him, not so much as a clout to cover his privy Members, being trussed behind a Pursuivant of Arms like an Hogg or Calf, Pag. 760. his head and arms hanging on the one side of the Horse and his legs on the other side: the Lord Hastings was accused of Treason by the Duke of Gloucester, Pag. 724. when Protector to Edward the Fifth, and beheaded: so that only the Marquis of Dorset remained, which, what became of him I find not; but I believe he that shed the blood of a Prince had his own blood shed, as the satisfaction of Justice. For viler men never the World saw of Nobles than were these Peerlessly wicked P●ers who slew in cold blood the Son of a King, whom the King in being, promised to preserve: Thus much for the Story of the Prince, the second Person in the Dialogue, Who being the Care and Charge of our Chancellor, and proving notably rational and manly, may be thought to appear such from the improvement of those Principals and Maxims which our Fortescue, His Father's and His Chancellor, had communicated to him in this Discourse, De Laudibus Legum Angliae, which among many other Treatises that he wrote, is accounted the most worthy, as being not only the fruit of his solid Law-judgement, which further appears in the Year-Books of H. 6. from the twentieth of his Reign upward; but of his various Abilities in philology and Historique Learning, as in what after followeth more at large appeareth. So endeth the Introduction, which the Author publishes, as he does the subsequent Commentaries, Sub Protestatione de addendo, retrahendo, Spelman, ante Glossàrium. corrigendo, poliendo, prout opus fuerit & consultius videbitur, DEO Clementissimè annuente. E.W. Sr: john Fortescu Kt: Lord Chief justice & Lord Chancellor of England under King Henry the six. portrait FORTE SCUTUM SALUS DUCUM blazon or coat of arms A COMMENTARY Upon FORTESCUE De laudibus Legum Angliae. CHAP. I. GAudeo verò, Serenissime Princeps, super Nobilissima Indole tua. 'Twas the Oratour's Rule, long ago, to commend what he had to utter by apt Prefaces; Oratoris est bene incipere: and the reason being to engage the Auditors to Attention, and thence to captivate them, the Practice proved not only appropriate to Orators, but to Historians, and generally all Writers. This Method, prevailing with our Chancellor in these words, makes me ready to write that of him, which Seneca does of his Fabian, That he seems to him, Mihi non effundere videtur Oration●m, sed fundere. not so impetuously to multiply words, as weightily, and profitably to express his mind by them. So count, so seasonable, so peculiar to his purpose is this Courtly Frontispiece, that therein our Fortescue, like Seneca's Fabian, may well be written of, as non negligens in oratione, sed securus, and his Book, to which this is the Inlet, Seneca Ep. 100 be termed Electa verba, non captata, etc. Choice words, not wrested, as the manner of men is, from their proper meaning, but significant to the purpose for which they are alleged, and expressive of an high Genius, and a Magnanimous Soul, that uttered them. For here the Chancellor displays both the Prince's Endowments, and his own Affection to the Glory and Extent of them; that as, by the one, he appears to have tutoured a Noble mind, so, in the other, does he insinuate such Tuition to take the first fire from his Example, who loved the virtue in others, which was first ingenerated in himself. This Clause then, Gaudeo, Serenissime Princeps, super Nobilissima Indole tua, relates both to the Prince, and to the Chancellor, in the Expansion of it. To the Prince, as, Serenissimus, and Nobilissimae indolis; to the Chancellor, as affected with, and rejoicing for the futurity of good to the Nation, over which his Accomplishment was to be influential. This is the purport of this Introductional Artifice, which I the rather touch upon, because it is a Course both Christian, and artly, not to prejudicated our Success by rude Prefaces; but to make our ends on men in honest ways, through the Mediation of Favour, honestly begged, and readily, with Consent of those we ask it of, obtained. And, because the Cause precedes the Effect in Nature's Order, and it will become us to treat of the Root, before of the Fruit, the Prince's Perfections shall preceded the Chancellour's Affection to Him for them, even in our Comment. The Prince is represented first, as Serenissimus. Then, as Nobilissima indolis. Serénissimus. Anciently Emperors and Princes were pleased to be called by Names of singular Beneficence; Pii, Clementes, Mansueti, Tranquilli, Sereni, Felice's: but, of late, they have assumed Superlatives to their Condecoration, so that not only jupiter had the Name of Optimus Maximus, but all Supremes are now represented by superlative Expressions, because they challenge sole Power within their Dominions. Hence comes it to pass, that though Princes do communicate many Attributes of theirs to men of Virtue, and Eminency (as to Patricians, Senators, and Ministers of Learning, and State) such as are the Titles of Illustres, Spectabiles, Nobiles, Clarissimi, Perfectissimi, (of which Pancirol gives us a particular Account) yet the Title of Serenissimus, In Notitia dignitatis utriusque Imperii, à p. 3. ad p. 20. & c. 4 17. Alciatus & Brechaeus ad Legem 100 in lib. De Verborum significatione p. 234. as incommunicable, Princes have reserved to themselves, and to such have wise men chiefly, if not only, given it. Thus of old did Saint Leo term the Emperor Leo, to whom he wrote, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, To Our most glorious, and most serene Son, Leo the Emperor: and that, because Serenity in a Prince is that temperament, which keeps him aequilibrious, and properly qualified to rule, and all the Concomitants to it. And therefore though Herodian, to flatter a vile Commodus, may call him Nobilissimum Imperatorem, and Licinius Valerianus may, because none others will, give himself that Title; yet none deserves the Title of Serenissimus, but he, that, in Lactantius his words, in opere misericordiae largiter fecerit, etc. He that is merciful, generous, and has expressed in his life, De Opi●ic. c. 15. and Actions, Perfect Virtue. Indeed Serenity being a Supralunary may well be accounted more than ordinarily of: nor is it so much a Courtesy, as a due debt, and homage to Serenity, to admire it. The Catholic Rational Nature conspires to pay a Devoir to this Deity for the Diffusion of its quality to every thing. Serenity is that temper, that gives opportunity to all Virtue; and then is the Season to do worthily, when there is no Cloud, no Storm of Obliquity in the Mind, but all the Region of it is clear: therefore all serene things were accounted excellent, aestas serena, coelum serenum, colour serenus, lux serena, animus serenus, doctrina serena, frons tranquilla, & serena, yea, vitam serenare, and domum largo igne serenare, are frequent in all good Authors to express the greatest pleasure, content, and comeliness by. And therefore the Positive being so significant, its Superlative must have a supereminency of sense, reflecting most intense Lustres on a Prince, and prolating him, not as only disposed to, but accomplished with the liberallest Proportions of humane Capacity, whereby lofty Nature is reduced to such an harmonious Mansuetude, as makes Majesty comply with Meaness, and forbear those superb and monstrous Titles, which both intimidate men, and entrench on God's Patience provoked by the Arrogancy of them. For though Attila may glory in the Title of Ira Dei ego sum, & Orbis vastitas, I am the Anger of God, and the World's Devastation, and Abbas the Persian King vapour, that he is King of Kings, and Sultanies, Lord of the Imperious Mountain of Ararat, Commander of all Creatures from the River Corazon to the Gulf of Persia, Governor of all Sultan's, Emperor of Musselmen, Bud of Honour, Mirror of Virtue, Rose of Delight; while Sapores vaunts himself to be King of Kings, Equal to the Stars, and Brother to the Sun and Moon; and Cozroes will be Lord of Lords, Prince of Peace, Salvation of men, the great Conqueror rising with the Sun, giving Lustre to the Night: notwithstanding the great Cham give out, he is the Son of the highest God, and Quintessence of the purest Spirits; and Prester john challenges to himself, Animosa vox videtur, & regia. cum sit stultissima Senec. lib. 2. Benef. c. 16. to be Head of the Church, the Favourite of God, the Pillar of Faith: yet all these, and such other Rhodomontadoes, are but the Lunacies of deluding and deluded Opination, the Metretricious Suggestions of light, and loathsome Eccentricity, Privations of that Serenity, which keeps the Mind in a Royal Mansuetude, and inclines it to a fertile, and frequent Humanity, which Nerva probably foreseeing in Trajan's temper, rewarded with Adoption of him to the Empire: for, though Trajan were a Spaniard, and neither an Italian, nor Italized, yea, though Nerva himself had many Kindred, and none of strange Origen were ever Emperor before Trajan, yet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Dion Cass. lib. ●8. p. 771. He did not prefer the advancement of his Kindred above the good of his Government, Trajan, he chooses. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Making Virtue a Qualification to Government, rather than Country. And accordingly he approved himself: for no sooner was he in the Throne, but he gave the Senate assurance, That he should disturb, or put to Death no good Man, which exemption of Good Men from fear, and danger, persisted in by his other supernumerary largesses, of which that was one Openly he honoured, and preferred all Good, and Just Men, made all Men account him an Incarnate God, and possessed them with such Eulogick gratitude, as would have tempted any Mind, but that of serenity, to abate of its condescension, and to affect distance. But the gentleness of his Mind kept him in the merit of that praise, which Herodian gives to Marcus the Emperor, Father of Commodus, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 etc. that he did not only profess in Word, Lib. 1. p. 464. but practised in Deed the Gravity and continence of perfect Virtue. In short, what this serenissimus in a Prince is, the Lives, and Carriages of five of our late English Monarches, ●. 6. Q. Eliz. K. J. Charl. 1. four of which are, I believe, rewarded with the Glories of Heaven for it, and the last yet is, and I incessantly pray long may be, the living Instance of it, will beyond all the Oratory of Words, and Sculpture of the most Immortal and transcendent Pen, discover, and confirm. Our Chancellor then meant much by Serenissime Princeps, yet not all that he had to bless God for in his matchless Pupil. To be of a towardly and pliant Nature, to be a subactum solum to virtuous Implantations, was a blessing, which the rough and sanguineous truculencies of some Natures abhor: but to have nobilissimam indolem, a fertility, and profuseness of addiction to Good; to have, as it were, Good connatural to, and radicated in the very freehold, so that it is, as it were, inseparable from it, This is a noble Second to the former, nay it is the Parent of it, at least the sine qua non: for such most an end Princes prove, as they are in the Oar of their natural Temper. Hence the Chancellor expresses the accomplishment of the Prince by Indoles nobilissima, as the significatio futurae probitatis; so Tully uses the Word, Caesaris verò pueri mirifica indoles virtutis. Cic. ad Brutum 3 lib. 1. Ep. 7. c. 12. De Consol. So 2 De finibus 18. and he commends Lentulus as one eximiâ spe, summae virtutis adolescentem. And Seneca mentions Tantae indolis juvenem, qui citò Pater Maritus, citò Sacerdos, etc. Yea not only in Children is Indoles nobilissima a notable comfort, but in Grown Men in veris signum est praesentis virtutis, so Tully: Faec exim fuisse in isto C. Laelii M. Catonis materiam & indolem; and Pliny says, primum nonnullis indolis dedi specimen; 5. Vers. lib. 2▪ Ep. 7. and Aulus Gellius mentions Laetae indolis adolescens, lib. 19 cap. 9 'Twere endless to multiply instances out of Authors to this purpose: that only, which the Phrase imports, is a natural edge both to Good, or Evil; for indoles barely is applicable to either: for though Livy writing of Lavinia, understands her Indoles to be generositas quaedam virtutis atque animi (1 Ab Vrbe 9) yet, when he uses the word of Hannibal, he makes it to Evil as well as to Good, cum hac indole virtutum ae vitiorum sub Asdrubale meruit. And therefore the Nobilissima here is not only a Compliment, but a Characteristical discrimination of the Prince's propension to Good, as his Choice, and that which God had so tinctured his Temper with that he could as soon cease to be, as not to be Nobly Virtuous. Indolem valent, quantum terrae proprietas, & coeli, sub quo aluntur. And hence is it, that as curious and thrifty Planters, that delight in choice Fruit, do not only preserve choice Seed, and choice Grafts, but also sow and plant them in proper Soils; that so their Natural Indoles may have no Alloys, and Debasements, but Additions from the Position of their Fixation: so do prudent and diligent Parents, and Supervisours express their Affection and Judgement in the Nurture of Youth to Virtue, that, their Natural Towardness not being nipped and blunted, they may in time come to a virtuous Tapering, and to that proportion of Plenitude, which their Natures and Opportunities capacitate them to. Which Connaturality of the fruits of Education with the Impressions of their Birth make Virtue so habitual to them, that they may well be called theirs as (by Divine Concession) they are the temporary Possessors of them; since by their Coalition with them, and their Appropriation of them, as their peculiar Treasure, they are only and properly termed serenissimi and nobilissimae indolis. For though Titles, and Terror may cause ascriptions of Perfection to Men, who otherwise as they deserve them not, so would not obtain them, Shows of Virtue, or claims to the credit of Her from the real Alliances of Her, to their Ancestors, is not current Coin to purchase the Prince's Character here. For those remote and dubious Titles, though they derive faint and refracted lines from the Centre of Merit, yet are but the by-blows of its excellent Heroickness. They are as Monogenes, Pompey's Cook somewhat like him, but not very Pompey the Great: they are as Serapio Scipio's Slaughterman, not indeed Famous Scipio, Africk's Master. They are Spintheris the despicable Player, not Publius Lentulus the Grave Senator. They are virtutis umbrae, little conducing to Prince's praise, but rather the Vizard of such Deformities as seek, and take Sanctuary and relief from creditable appearances. That which only is worthy Princes, is propriis gemmis coruscare, to see that the Virtue they pretend to, be vera, non fucata; propria, non aliena. For that the Chancellor here admires the Prince, as One ●hat was worthy his Descent, and Degree, and thereupon He assures him the Serenity of his Mind consorted with that Noble Towardliness, which he undoubtedly discovered to be his Own, unstudied, unaffected, naturally His, had so affected him with Joy, that he could not but declare his thoughts with Gratitude to God the giver, and with admiration of Him the Subject of so much and so rare Endowment, Gaudeo, Serenissime Princeps. This the Chancellor adds, to show the Sense Wise men have of Prince's Worthinesses: for since they are the great Examples of their People, and have, as it were, the power of making them Good, or Bad; the preponderation of them to Virtue, which will be the ●urn of the Common-Scale, and make it incline to the right, cannot but highly rejoice those, In Augusto. that rightly conceive it. Augustus was a brave Prince, yet Suetonius writes, he never commended his Sons to the People's love nisi cum hac exceptione, si merebuntur, etc. but with this proviso, that they deserved, professing, that Honour ought to be the reward of Virtue, and not the Companion only of great Birth, and high Blood. For well he knew, that if the Wisdom and Calmness of their Minds did not balance, and overbear their Passions, and make them tenable against Temptation and the fierce and too often prevalent sieges of it, they would do by their People, as that General in Cedrenus wrote he would do, in case their Good and his Will were competitors, aut mundus pro Imperatore etc. Either the World shall acknowledge Me an Emperor, or I will make myself ●o, whether they will or no. Or, as Paul the Fourth, who was so great a Self-admirer, that he blushed not to say, that either he would have his Will, or he would set the World on fire, and go up in the flame thereof. Pag. 122. But rather as D' Avila represents Mounsieur le Hospital the French-Chancellour, not like the Duke of Guise all for War, but endeavouring to compose, and sedate Differences, and to reconcile parties, though he held the reproach of a soft Gown-Man for so doing; and Henry the third of France, who was wont to say, that by Civil, intestine Wars Religion itself, which received its Nourishment from Peace, was much impaired, and so that, instead of gaining those Souls that were gone astray, by violent means, they did endanger the loss of those, that were most Zealous in the Truth: and therefore that of the Moralists concerning Caesar is most true, Plutarch. in adver●. Stoicos p. 1059. edit. Parisiens. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, no Man, but Caesar, that is in his right Wits, and is overpowred by Ambition, will come to the Commonwealth to disturb it for his own Radication, and Establishment. For ingenuity, that persuades a Man not to better himself as Chrysippus did by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, by topsyturvying all Men, and all things, but keeps him in the Golden mean of Contentation, especially such a Jewel in the Mind of Princes must needs exhilarate all Men, chiefly those, that have had the Honour of their Nurture, and Tuition, and have been near them in attendance, and affection; and such the Chancellor having, I conjecture, been, alleges his gaudeo upon the view of such imbibings, and so pleasing probable Fruits arising from it. Gaudeo, serenissime, etc. As the Prince's Virtue gave, so the Chancellour's love took, the occasion of Joy at the Prince's proficiency. For though Joy be the proper Act of the Soul's exultation within itself, Cic. 3. Tuscul. Ep: 98 Ad. Lucil. Epist. 23. Gaudere significat Taentam apud se voluptatem sentire, neque vulgò proferre gaudii notas, in regard whereof Triumphare, & gaudere is joined by Tully in lib. 189. ad Atticum, and Seneca censure him as Imprudent, qui adventitio laetus est; adding the reason, Exibit gaudium, quod intravit, etc. The joy that is occasional only, and rises from imperfect Virtues, goes, as it comes, but that, which flows from a Divine Soul, conform to God, is constant, and solid, and increaseth towards Eternity. Mihi crede, res severa est verum gandium, etc. Believe me, true joy is a serious thing: and so Ep. 27. Aliquid potius bonum mansurum circumspice, &c, look upon durable good, only lasting joy is to be attained by Virtue, so Ep. 59 Est elatio animi suis bonis, viribúsque fidentis, and Gaudium hoc non nascitur nisi ex virtutum conscientia; so Philo, whiles he calls Joy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Lib quod deterius potiori insidiari soloat p. 177. determines, joy may be in no mind, but where grounds from Virtue are, taking to himself, immortal delights. According to which, that expression of the blessed Virgin, Lib. De septenar. & Festis p. 1172. is Emphatic, My Soul doth magnify the Lord, and my Spirit rejoiceth in God, my Saviour. I say, though to rejoice be properly the Product of our own good, and intern serenity, yet has it an extent also to that good, which we opinionate to be in any one, and for that are as much delighted, Cic. 4. Tusc. as if it were our own. Quum ratione animus movetur, etc. When the Mind is moved by Reason, pleasingly, and unalterably, then is it partaker of joy. Hereupon the Chancellor reckoning upon the Prince, as Heir of the Crown, and probable to be the Monarch of this Land, in whose excellent Endowments, every particular in the Nation, would proportionably to its capacity and concern, be blest, not only excites others, but protests himself much pleased with, and refreshed by the hopes and assurances he had of futurities blessing, in his excellent and Royal Inclination; and this is the cause of his Gaudeo. Videns quantâ aviditate tu militares amplecteris actus. It should seem the visible Application of this Prince to Manly and Martial Experiments had been earnestly looked into by the Chancellor; who, not like a Parasite of the Court, or a mendicant at the Trencher, deluded the Prince into a belief, that Vice was Virtue and haughtiness of mind, Princely towardlyness: but like a man of weight, Worth, and Integrity, whose Conscience led him to enter common with his Prince in hazard, and whose heart hoped God would give hisdead and (as it were) buried right a glorious Resurrection in his future Prosperity (which this his Addiction to Chivalry, did in a kind fore-speak) annexes this videns quantâ, etc. as the Rise of his Gaudeo serenissime. Princeps de nobilissima indole tua. Videns, Men of Honour love the Warranties of Honour, Reason, and Piety for their applauses, not daring to gratify Power and Greatness to the disservice of Truth and Fidelity. He that has so debauched a Soul to put his probatum est to an uncertainty, may, ere long, be accounted fit for no Honour above a Knightship of the Post. But he that says no more than he sees, knows, and believes, deserves the credit of a faithful Witness. Quantâ aviditate militares tu amplecteris actus. This is the materia prima, of which the Prince's Virtue, as it is here by the Chancellor rejoiced in, consisteth; and it directs us to two observables. First, Principis electio, that which the Prince chose to be the Companion of his Time, and the Dial, upon which, by the shadow and reflex of his present inclination, they should judge the height of their after-hopes from him. And those were no nugatory Trifles, no effeminate Lubricities, no childish refuse Trumperies, but the great and peculiar Glories and Ornaments of Princes, Militares actus. Secondly, affectus Principis erga res electas, he prosecuted them so chosen with no indifferent, remiss, and tepid love, but with a generous insatiety, with the keen appetition of impatience, and prodigal intentness. Quantâ aviditate militares tu amplecteris actus. His choice was optimorum; for even Nature lessons to this in all the Emanations of her Implants; no Creature, but by its sensual propension is vehiculated to what it apprehends best for its Conservation, and least contrary to its Being Yea, Lib. 2. de Ben●. sic. 118. take away those impediments to choice (vis major & metus, which Seneca says, do ex necessitate tollere arbitrium) and propose to their sense things, they shall decline what they apprehend injurious to them, and accept what is pleasing. And for men, they are usually estimated by their Company, Pleasures, and professed Engagements. And such is the rate of their Exchange, in the Reputation of men, as their Judgement is either dignified, or depreciated in its choice: Moses lost himself almost in the People's eyes, for choosing a Zipporah to breed upon; so course a ground they thought unmeet to draw a fair-figured Posterity upon; especially Princes, as they are altioris molis, and are the great Sea-marks, by which Subjects are directed, are to avoid indiligence therein: Neglects in them are ominous, and of tragic interpretation, because their Duty being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, to adorn their Charges by Actions Kingly; Adag. 1. Chil. 2. Cent. 5. p. 652. their Torpor is the hazard of their Government. Therefore Homer bringing in Agamemnon, when he says, All his Companions in War were full of sleep, and took their rest, singles out Him, as more concerned to wake, because he had the care and conservation of all upon him. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Iliad. x. v. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Care kept King Agamemnon broad awake, No sleep, his charge in danger, could he take. Hence is it, that all Princes have Characters according to these first Draughts of their Choices, by which the● are understood to be legible in all their after Portraitures. Nero, that delighted in Butchery, and in converse with Mummers and Jugglers, was presaged to be a rude Monster: as was Trajan, that was pleased only with worthy men, and graceful manners, a virtuous Prince. The choice then of our Prince being actus militares, to inure himself to hardship, and to accustom his body to toil, to fix his mind against fear, and thence to chase all touches of effeminacy; to propound to himself certain hazard, and uncertain Victory; by hope to provoke Attempts, and by Courage (with God's blessing to force Success: this choice of his is the merit of true Nobility, which Marius in Sallust expressed thus. I account (said he) Nature equally the Mother of all men, In Jugurth. and that the bravest Spirits are in her Heraldry the noblest, and most to be honoured: that Nobility began in Virtue; and therefore, though I can show no Statues of my Triumphing Ancestry; yet if my Military Habiliments creditably managed by me, and the Wounds received on my Body for my Country, might be instead of valour, and Ancestry, than I have wherewithal to render me n●ble; thus Marius, and that most wisely: for Martial Addictions, where mansueted and tempered by ingenuous and civil Virtues, steal into the Mind informidable Resolutions, and instruct, by observing the Experiments of past and present, men at Arms to learn the method of fight, and the temper of bearing both loss and gain, since the Issues of War, as all other things, are in the Hands of the Almighty, who disposes them as he pleases; and often it is seen, that as the Race is not to the swift, so not the Battle to the strong; nor are always men fortunate, as they well design, and dexterously manage their Designs. Marshal Memorancy was a brave man, and commanded in chief the Forces of France many years; yet in all his Enterprises he came not off, but either a loser, grievously wounded, or a prisoner: Notwithstanding which secret pleasure of God, the best Prescript to a Prince's probable security is Arms. And therefore, though true it be, that Seneca long since writ to Nero, Errat, siquis existimat tutum esse regem ubi nihil à rege tutum est, securitas securitate mutua paciscendâ est, non opus est instruere in altum editas arces, D'Avila p. 239. Lib. 1. do Clem: p. 626, 627. nee in adscensum ardnos colles emunire, nec latera montium abscindere, multiplicibus se muribus turibúsque sepire, salvum regem in aperto clementia praestabit, unum est inexpugnabile munimentum amor civium. Though instances there are of the Oratories of Princes, who by the cogencies of their Wit, well and aptly uttered, have wrought Subjects to despise Death, to bring their dying Rights to life again; making them so keen and eager on fight, that they have gone pleasantly, and with triumph, to try their Title by Combats, and fought Fields: yet never did I read of any, that by brave words won Field, without the second of brave Action. For the personal Valour of Commanders makes Soldiers of raw, and bold of cowardly men; when timorous and flying Leaders spirit their Foes, and discomfit their Parties. And Princes, whose design it is, to appear like Caesar, with their Veni, vidi, vici, and either to lose life, or obtain victory over their oppositions, in a just Cause, and notable Quarrel, resolve with our King Hen. 7th. Rather to be left dead Carrions on the cold Earth, then to be free prisoners in Lady's Chambers. Holingshed p. 758. Omitting no accomplishment, that Time and Affairs opportune them to. For that Prince, who is not valiant, will never be accounted wise, since Wisdom consists in obtaining what we affect, and in preserving such beloved attainments of ours, which Valour well managed, and spritefully expressed, chiefly conduceth to. And therefore that Precept of Pythagoras, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, not to taste of those things that have a black Tail, Plutarch rightly understands to be a Command to avoid men of dissolute souls, Lib. de Educ. Liberis. p. 12. and infamous lives, was very good, because they taint those they breath upon, from the corrupted Lungs of their putrid Principles, and Practices. And thence is it a choice piece of Wisdom, as to choose the best and most every way endowed men, to train up Princes in youth: of which Plato in 2. de Repub. & lib. 6. & 7. de legibus Arist. lib. 6. Politic. lib. 1. Agellius lib. 9 c. 3. and, according to which, Charles the Great educated his Children, Aemilius Probus lib. 2. c. 16. Sons and Daughters, as Probus informs us; and as Theodosius did Arcadius, and Honorius, under Arsenius; and Constantine, did his Sons, Nicephor lib. 22. c. 33. & lib. 14. 6.2 Euseb. lib. 4. the vit● Constantini c. 51, 52. And, as Trajan was by his Master Plutarch, who writ to him that Golden Book, De Liberorum institutione. And Alexander was by Aristotle, and all the most excellent Precedents to the World of virtuous Majesty have been. Schrivelius in Epist dedic. ante Iliad. Homer. Edit. 1656. I say, as it has been their Wisdom, to choose the choice of men for their Tutors, so have those Tutors been conducted to their Education, from the observance of their Natural Tempers; and, by both, animating them to good, and deterring them from evil, as they saw they were more or less addicted to them; especially when their Charges are of such as Portius Cato was, I am acri ingenio ut ipsi sibi fortunam fecisse videatur, etc. Who was of so sharp a wit, that he seemed to carry his good fortune in his promptness; Sabellicus lib. 5, Ennead. 5. no Art either public or private wanting in him, so great was his eloquence in Speech, and bravery in Action, that it purveyed for him all his after Glory. In short, so rare was he in all parts of Virtue, that he seemed to do every thing as if he had been born only to that end, & yet was all he wished to be to a matchless perfection Where such Princes are, they must be tended specially that their Vestal fire extinguish not, that they turn not to Serpents hissing, which mars the delight of their Virtue's harmony. Their Minds must be kept ever stirring, that through inoccupancy of Virtue they constagnat not Vice, which being habituated to men is not easily rooted out of them. Hereupon the Wisdom of these Architects is to raise aRoof of Action upon the Foundation of sober Virtue; to keep the Mind within bounds, and to spend its volatility on Corporal Exercises, which are of virile invention and performance. For the Tutors and Directors of Prince's Educations, after they have seasoned their Charges with Letters, and secured their Breed and younger years from the Censures of Illiterateness, prompt them to Corporal Exercises, and athletary Activities, such as are skill in handling the weapon, for defence of their persons (a very great ornament and security to any man of power and honour to excel in) not that he shall need either to provoke, or be provoked the more by it: for his Passion has no stimulation thereby, nor will his Skill betray him to Pride over others, because true Science abhors Boast, but rather keeps itself latent against a time of need, and proves a Reserve to his security against secret Attempts, and false Treacheries, which seldom are acted upon Princes of spirit, and Corporal Manlyness. Next to this, Tutors present to Princes riding of the great Horse, and the right managing of them in all the parts and punctilios of Cavalry; then they allow Justs, Barriers, Tournaments, Tilt, or such other Manly Recreations, as are fashionable to greatness in the age of their life and breeding. And they at last allow them to try the proof of all these preparatory Inductions by Field-service; that is, such venture, as may display boldness, and bravery; but be as little in the Eye and Road of Danger as may be: their Design being not to end, but to enamel his life with all those emboss, which illustrate the Fame, and aggrandith the Military Virtue of arising Majesty. For wontedness, and assuscency to any thing connaturalizes it, which Pythagoras gave us long ago the rule of, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. To choose the best way of life and custom, Plutarch lib. de exilio. p. 602. will make it delightful to us. The experience of which, even in Military Affairs, rules the practice of great Commanders (not ordinarily to draw raw Soldiers, and fresh men into present service, but to put them into Garrisons to be trained, and their best men to draw out, that their Novices, by the sport that now and then they have, may be gradually perfected in the Habit of courageous Boldness. Those actus Militaris then that our Prince here does embrace, may be thought those only; that are the Recreations and expressions of their spirits in times of Peace. And to these he is said to be not ably addicted, and affectionately acted. As well he chose, so to his choice, does he resolutely adhere; and this displays both Judgement and Constancy. A good Choice, and a grave Mind, not to waver in, or be cold to it: Levity is one of the Alloys and exuberances of Youth, and that which has so great a party in those early Flowers; that though they smell sweet, and come timely, yet they are soon gone. And therefore, the Prince young and wise, in age probable to choose and choose again; yet fixed to his first worthy Choice, deserves well the praise of his Tutor while he lives; as did such another Babe of Grace and Greatness, james the Son to the King of Scots; of whom Erasmus gives us almost an incredible account, Adag. Chil. 2, Cent. 5 p. 564, 565. concluding, Saetis demum dolori nostro, satis discipuli memoriae, deserve of him. For the Prince here is commended not only amplecti, which argues endearedness, but magnâ aviditate; for so the Quant à imports: 'tis a Note of Magnitude and Hyperbolicism. Aviditas argues such a love, as obcaecates, à non videndo propter nimiam cupiditatem, saith Festus, a kind of Fury, that carries a man in a Whirlwind, Lib. 3. de Finibus. Sicut amens qui mentem suam non habet: Such an insatiety, as is in Nature's Hunger, and women's longing: such as Tully reports of Cato, Erat enim, ùt scis, in c● inexhaust a aviditas legendi nec saetiari poterat: and, in Pliny, nothing thing is more frequent than avidit as diripiendi lib. 12. c. 14. Avidit as ad aliquem faciendum, lib. 17. c. 18. Aviditas ad cibos, lib. 20. c. 16. Aviditas faeminarum, lib. 20. c. 21. Yea, Ad Quint. fratr. lib. 1. Veri boni avi peras ●●ta est, ●ence. Ep. 23. tully's infinita aviditas gloriae, and his aviditate inflammatus, which he mentions, lib. 2. offic. c. 54. All these, and such like expressions in Authors, makes the Chancellour's Character of the Prince by this Quantae aviditas, to be importunate and implacable, like that of Cato, who confessed, Graecas literas senex didici, etc. I learned Greek in my old age, and was so eager after it, as if I should never be satisfied with any attainment beneath the perfection of it. There was much then of freeness and irritation in the desire of the Prince towards Arms; so that his Mind all on fire with love to, and valuation of it, testified itself, by hasting to, and embracing the Theory, as inlet to the practice of it. For so amplecti signifies here. 1. De Oratore 120. And not only cognoscere & intelligere, but vehementer amare; so Tully, Nec quod jus civili (Crasse) tam vehementer es amplexus: so in Sallust. Imperator omnes ferè res asperas per Iugurtham agere in amicis habere magis magisque e●m in dies amplecti. So Tully, Pro Sylla. Tanto amore suas possessiones amplexi tenehant, ut ab his membra divelli citius ac distrahi posse diceres. So that all the result from this of the Chancellor in portraying the Prince to be Martial, will amount to this, that use and custom made it not only affected by, but connatural to him: so that as Aristides could sooner not be, than not be just, Citiùs Solem è coelo, etc. Sooner the Sun could be displaced the Firmament, than Aristides be removed from his integrity. So our Prince could as soon deny his Stomach food, or his Eye pleasure, as his delight Martial Exercise. And hence was it, that as to show his forwardness, avidit as & amplecteris is asserted: so to evidence him more led by sense and passion, than reason and speculation, this delight of his is rendered by Militares actus. For Youth is more pleased with Corporal Traverses, then Mental Agitations; those are introduced, when the Senses exterior are glutted, and the wild Oats are sowed, as we say; but Bodily Feats, as they are in Youth most seasonable and fragrant, so are they most delighted to express them, because Sense pleases itself in its perfectest model, and vivid'st Representation, which is that of the Body in Youth, when the Sails of the Skin are filled, and the Veins reaking hot with lively blood, and the Joints unctiously motive with metaled Youth, and the Spirits energically diffusive, when the Circulation is uninterrupted, and the Violets scent in the Breath, the Roses colour in the Cheek, and on the Lip, the Lilies whiteness on the skin, when the Plushy Mantle on the Head, and the succulent Moisture of the Bones, rouse up to agility, and perform creditably their undertake. Then, then, are men chiefly delighted in, and carried to actus militares. Yea, then is the impression of Custom more durable when it's fixed on Nature's marble and adamant, which was the reason that Solomon advises, to teach a Child in the Trade of his Youth, that he may not depart from it in Age; it being not often seen that virtuous Youths degenerate into vicious Old-ages. Hence considering the Chancellor presents the Prince as so earlily generous, and so towardly inclined in his first Dawning as it were. I cannot but greatly admire him, and believe the Chancellor by these Representations of him was much a Votary to him. For, since there is nothing amiable in Man, but Virtue, because that has abundant remains of the image God, and the primeve Sculpture of omnipotence, so without that is there nothing less estimable than he in his degradation. And this was the sense of David. Man in honour abode not, but became as the Beast that perished; yea, the Heathen Agamemnon when by the Sycionian he was presented with the famous Mare Aetha, Plutarch in Gryll p. 98●. Edit. Paris. on purpose that he might be excused from War, accepted her 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Thinking a brave spirited Beast more valuable than a base spirited Man. And hereupon, when Princes in their ascents to Manhood, choose honest delights, and honourable loves, they are highly to be blazoned for remarkable, and almost Non-suchess, the tendencies of youthly greatness, being mostly to lubricity and effeminateness; the triflings of time, the debaucheries of Minds, the enervations of Strength, the neglects of Affairs, both of Peace and War, these are too often the Infelicities, and Shipwrecks of Princes as well as meaner men. Thus was Edward the fifth of this Land made unhappy by fond delight. Holingshed, p. 715. Petulantium libidinem, inxu. riam, avarniam, cr●delitatem sensim quidem prim● & occ●●ltè, veiut juvenili errore exercuit. Sueton. in Nerone cap. 6. D'Avila. p 746. Spotswood's History, Scotland, p. 259. And if Youth abstain here, there is another snare that is apt to be caught by; desire of gain, though by indirect means, and satisfaction of anger, though by oppression and blood. The Duke of Guise, to maintain his Party with pay, seized on Church▪ Chalices, and coined them. * Henry the Third of France, when he had caused the Duke of Guise to be murdered, came in all haste to the Queen-Mother to tell her, He had made himself King of France, now he had slain the King of Paris: but she replied, You have made the Duke of Guise to be slain, God grant you be not now made King of nothing. Yea, so long as Adam Gordon, Huntley's Deputy in the North of Scotland, stands on Record for abusing the Queen's Authority, in revenging his Family on the Forbes' Family, their Antagonists, one hundred and twenty seven of whom he slew, and twenty seven burned alive in Favoy-house; there will never want an horrid instance of the danger of power in a vicious mind. Give me a Prince like Malcolm the Third, King of Scotland, who can defy a Conspirator, and bravely challenge him; yea, upon his sound repentance heartily forgive him. Such Princes England has mostly had, now has to a miracle beyond compare, and I hope ever will have such, who have been, are, and will be nobly courageous, but not bloody; God and the King may, and do show mercy from their own innate essential Clemency, but they are afflictive to men not without the aid of others, whom they consult with; when they send their Thunderbolts, and are by their Counsellors often so allayed, Seneca Natural. Quast. lib. 2. p. 856. that their anger proves favour, faith Seneca. Quia jovem, id est, Regem prodesse etiam solum oportet, etc. Such Magnanimity, such virtuous loftiness of mind, will keep all Maggots of corrosion and putrefaction off, admit no suggestions of Vice to Familiarity and Audience, but abhor the Promoters and solicitations to them, as valiant Grillon did, who being Captain of H. 3 '. Guard, and commanded by him to kill the Duke of Guise, D'Avila. p. 742. honestly and religiously replied, Sir, I am really your majesty's most humble and devoted Servant, but I make profession to be a Soldier, and a Cavalier. If you please to command me to challenge the Duke of Guise, and fight with him hand to hand, I am ready at this instant to lay down my life for your service: but that I should serve for an Executioner, before your majesty's justice commands him to die, is a thing suits not with one of my condition; nor will I ever do it whilst I live: thus he. So dangerous a thing it is to give way to any evil, that, a battery and breach being once made upon Integrity, all the residue and remain of Virtue is in peril. Well may the Prince then here be a person of wonder, and of the Chancellour's love, who gives up himself to such innocent and graceful Recreations, as are purely Princely, and become him as peculiarly such: for so it follows, Convenit namque tibite taliter delectari. Convenit namque tibi te taliter delectari. This is added, to carry the Prince's praise to its true merit; 'twas not only a good, but a graceful choice, that he made, proportionable to his quality, and station; his delights were not like the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Cent. 1. Chil. 1. Adag. 30. those Gardens of the Poet's fiction, altogether vain and profitless, in quibus semina etc. in which seeds of virtue will no better thrive, than seeds of plants strewed up and down in an earthen pot; as Erasmus his words, are no such delights did the Prince fix upon: for than that might be said of him, which was said of Calvisius Sabinus in Seneca Nunquam vidi hominem beatum indecentius, Ep. 27. N●ver did I see a man less become his happy condition than Sabinus did. The Prince, like him would have been great and rich; but in his demeanour not admirable, no nor imitable, as neither was he; yea, had the Prince so declined and inconsidered himself, that might have been said to him in the aftertime of his life, which Seneca writes to his Friend, E●dem loco. Ep. 27. Numera annos tuos, & pudebit eadem velle, quae volueras puer eademparare: Consider thy years, and you will be ashamed when a man, what ye loved and gloried in, when a child. But when he culls out to his esteem such Recreations as are Princely and virile, well may he be applauded with a Convenit. Indeed delights are common to all Creatures, and the chief external good both of their desire and endeavour; and when the object of them is adequate and regular, when it has no inconformity to the Agent, Vnicuique nostrûm padagogum dari Deum non quidem ordinarium, sed hunc inferioris note, ex corum numero, quos Ovid ait De Plebe Dcos. Senec. Ep. 110. that acts to, and is acted by them, all is well, and like to be fortunate with us. For since there is a kind of Deity in the addiction, and genius, and the naturality of men's propensions do mostly presage their excellency, and preoccupy their conquest of the difficulties they encounter with, according to that of Heraclitus, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and according to that, which Ammian Marcellinus makes good in all famous persons, who have been excited to do what they worthily did, by it, lib. 21. p. 394. It conduces much to a good issue, that we mismatch not our genius, by any base consort, or plebeian Mate of converse and inteurness. Alcmon in Plutarch tells us, Libro De Fortuna Romanorum. Fortune is the Sister 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, of good education, great persuasion, and exact providence, and circumspection. Hence do the current of Authors erect the genius and ducts of men, as Mints and Forges of their Fortunes, good or bad. Plau. in Trinummo. The Comedian has it, Sapiens ipse sibi faciet fortunam; and Portius Cato is by Livy Sabellicus, and Budaeus made one, Qui quocanque loco natus, etc. Who would make every Country his, and every condition he was fit for come to him, and force their courtesy upon him. Indeed it is not always the reward of Virtue to succeed; the lines of worthy men do not always fall to them in fair places, nor have they always goodly heritage's: In Panegyr. yet Pacatius stands to it, Sua cuique prudentia Deus; and Erasmus has collected sundry instances to confirm it: and mostly we see, that men are happy or miserable, as their minds are narrow or great, active or supine, industrious or negligent, Hic Princeps suo beneficio tutus nihil praesidi●s eget: arma ornamenti cansa babet. Senec. lib. 1. Clem. p. 625. Patrem quidem patriae appellavimus, ut sciret datam sibi esse in potestarem patriam quae est temperatissima. liberis consulens. suáque post illos pone●s. Idem sodem loco. prudent or temerarious: yea, in Princes and great men, there is no choice so noble, as that of courageous virtue, that draws forth the mind to bounty, benignity, and a through closure with every overture of well-doing; nor is it possible narrow thoughts should cohabite where true valour is. Men of honour, who look upon themselves as born and bred for public good, are acted by principles of suavity and munificence, consulting no accumulation to themselves but fame, no practice on men but that of Justice and Obligement; their delights are to be Patrons of Virtue, and Storehouses of munificence. This the Duke of Guise made good to his enemy, the Prince of Coude; for having taken him at Blainville, he so gloriously treated him, that they both supped at Table together that night, and after lay together in the same bed. So did Charles the Fifth Emperor do by Francis the first of France, Herbert's Hist. H. 8. Yea, it is against the hair, nay against their nature, for them to be forced otherwise, though by reason of State, or necessity of affairs. Henry Wardlow, Lord Bishop of St. Andrews, Hist. Scotland. p. 57 had so noble a nature, that he thought no cost too great for a brave work; one day the Major Domûs complained of the great number of comers, who expected, and had entertainment at his house, desiring him for the ease of all his servants, to make a bill of household, that they might know who were to be served. He condescended, and when his Secretary was called to set down the names of the household, being asked whom he would first name, answered, Angus and Fife, two large Counties. The Secretary from this understood his pleasure, and desisted. All this I instance in, to show that what men choose as their delights, are so commensurate to the addictions of their souls, that the one is discernible by the other. Our Prince then by choosing militares actus, as the subject of his embraces, may very fitly be saluted with a Convenit tibi, Princeps, taliter delectari. For he, in thus doing, answered all, that could be expected from him, ratione famae, familiae, fortunae, potentia, all which were either hopeless, or hopeful, as he proceeded to the improvement of this choice. For if the Prince fit still, and cry Leo in via, fearing to hazard his person to gain his right, he both contemns his Government, and animates Rebellion, upon hope of no disturbance for recovering it: and the infamy of such pusillanimity, being a Hell on earth, makes a brave mind kindle, and engage to recuperate, which if God pleases not to permit, yet he dies with the same of an honest valour, and a just resentment of his injured estate, and fells the Fine and Recovery against him at the dearest rate, resolution enraged, and desire doubly edged, can part with it at. D' Avila p. 237. Famous Momerancy in Anno 1576, fight against the Hugonots Army, was boldly charged by Robert Steward, Momera●sy asked Steward, whether he knew him, or not? Yes, quoth Steward, I do; and because I do, I present thee with this, and shot him in the shoulder, so that he fell, but as he was falling, he threw his Sword, the blade whereof he still held in his hand, though broken, with such a violence at Steward's face, and then he was near eighty years old, that he beat out three of Steward's Teeth, broke his Jawbone, and laid him by him on the ground for dead; which shows, that men do fell their ruins, as dear as love and rage can make them to their Ruiners. Nedum quia Miles es, sed quia Rex futurus. This is added, to show, that Titles employ cares of corresponding to them in actions of congruity. Magnos magna decent. This Alexander understanding from his Master Aristotle, or his Mother- Genius, replied to one that asked him, if he would run at the Olympic Games: Do any Kings run there? implying, that men must do only those Actions, that are semblable to themselves, the Actors. Of this Nehemiah had a sense, when he resolved against flight in those words; Shall such a man as I fly? And this that Emperor remembered, when he roused himself up against sorrow for his distress, with these words, Non decet Imperatorem mori flentem. And to this the Chancellor here is the Prince's Remembrancer, that as he well chose, so he should fix upon grounds of Congruity and Reason, as he was both a Knight in present, and a King in possibility. Miles es,] This is not expressive of his profession and addiction, but in a more press sense relates to his particular dignity and degree. For usual it was with Princes afore, & in H. 6. time, to create, by dubbing their Son's Knights at the Baptistery, or in their Cradle, or when they were able to go. Perhaps our Prince might not be so early a Knight, but one created either when he grew fifteen years, or before. Whensoever he was Knighted, is not much material; that such he was, is without doubt; and that such he deserved to be, according to the addictions of his manly mind, is plain from our Chancellour's words, which I take to be not pompous in courtiery, but real, according to the latitude, and very truth of its History, and accomplishment in him, Rex futurus. This is the other Argument on the behalf of Martial Acts, as our Prince's choice. He was born the Heir of a Crown, and had Title to Regality, when God should disseise his Father of Regality by death; till when, the Prince was but a Subject: for the Law abhors deprivation, or resignation, Nullâviverborum nullâ ingenii sacultate exprimi potest, quantum opus sit, quám laudabile, qu ámque nanquam à memoria hominum exiturum posse hoc dicere, Parentibus meis parui, cessi imperio corum, five aquuns, five iniquum fuit, obsequentem sub● missúmque me praebui, ad hos unum contumax fui, nè beneficiis vincerer Senec. lib. 3. De Beneficiis p. 50. upon any pretence whatsoever, Allegiance being indispensable, and determining no how but by death. Now the Prince being by Inheritance, if he should survive his Father, a King, this Rex futurus is proper, as to that probability and the regality of a Title; but it had another sense also from our Chancellor: it is as it were a Prophecy of Loyalty, concerning the ruin of Usurpation, and the Introduction of H. 6. the rightful Lord, or at least of him the Prince (now his Father is dead) King. Rex futurus is indeed the voice of Loyalty, but it has an associated per adventure; because what we are is before, what we shall be behind the Curtain of Providence mysterious to us. 'Twas bravely said of our Text-Master, but he (good man) reckoned without his Host, and was not a Prophet in the upshot: yet this he did, to keep up the Prince's spirit, to harden him against despondency, to rivet on him magnanimity, which erects a Kingdom of content in the very quarters of Crosses. This, I believe, he did, to lesson him, that power lost by Battle, is by Battle to be regained; that Princes fight strenuously are probable bravely to succeed; that diligence makes those fortunate, whom dissoluteness reduces to want, and, what's worse, contempt; that if there were no other Argument to Courage, this were enough, that Princes are impatient to be the Vassals and Tennis-Balls of Fortune, and that their probablest Rescue and Restitution is from Resolution. Regis nempe officium est pugnare bella populi sui, & eos rectissimè judicare. In this Clause the office of Rule, both as to War and Peace, is fet down; and this the Chancellor appropriates to Kings, as the meetest persons to carry on both good Offices. This was primitively familisrique, all power being vested by God in the Heads of Families, over those that were theirs by Generation, Emption, Compact, or Conquest. And as the power of life and death, which was Civil Judicial power, was in them; so also was the Military and Bellatory power in them also; for, if they were to rule their Family, they were also to protect their Rule from inroads upon, and injuries to it. Thus did Abraham, very soon after the World's peopling, arm his menial servants, to propel danger from them, and redeem his captive Nephew, Gen. XIV. 14. After when power was more public, and increase of people dwelling together called for a Magistrate; the Sword, both to repel evil, and compel to good, was lodged in him as well by the determination of God as the consent of the people. This did Moses, joshuah, and the Judges execute, and after them the Kings, God having written this Sapience on man's nature; according to which, generally, all Nations, and unions of men in all places, and at all times, assented to the position of power in one or few, for the good of their respective Combinations. And, if the Holy Writ had been silent in this, there had been good authority for its practice, Quis ergò magis naturam rerum ignorat, quam qui optimo ejus operi & commendatisismo hoc ferum & perniciosum vitiu● assignat. Seneca De iral. 1. p. 542 merely upon the rules of civil convenience, and social necessity, which is an original Law, and paramountly takes place, as having its warrant in its weight, importance, and utility; nor could it be doubted, but the general compliance of the rational nature with it would have silenced all pretensions to doubt about it. But St. Paul, from the Spirit of God, has partly asserted Magistracy thus accommodated, as our Chancellor describes it. The Magistrate bears not the Sword in vain, that excludes power from being made a cipher. If thou dost well, thou shalt have praise; if evil, fear the power: that is, the authority of God, in the trust of man, is for promotion of Justice, both in animation of good, and repulse of evil. Under which head, War, as occasionally necessary, is not only lawful, but useful; and that without which, Justice cannot be propagated; since Wars are undertaken not wisely, Dum in pace esse possumus, non arma induamus. Egnatius in vita ejusp. 575. edit. Sylburg. Aelius Spartianus, p. 128. edit. Sylb. Nullum Orna mentum Principis fastidio dignius pulchriús que est, quam ella Corona, Observatos Cives. Seneca lib. 1. De Clem. ad sinem. not properly as choices, but as such exigents, without which peace and justice cannot be accomplished, or enjoyed: so true is that of Valerius Martianus, who, though a Creature of bustle, and one made by battle, yet when become great and grave, declared it his Maxim, Let us not live War, while we can leave in Peace. And therefore, if a Governor will prove himself an Adrian, It à se Rempublicam gesturum, ●t sciret populi rem esse, non propriam; if he will show himself untreacherous, by being jealous of his necessary power, he must apply himself pugnare bella populi sui, if ever he intent eos rectissimè judicare. For as the Empire of God is not submitted to, but ratione potentiae & for midatae vindictae in rebels; so will not humane Governments be subjected to in their moderate, legal, and uninjurious Commands, without punishment by the edge of the sword upon Recusants. Hence was it, that as the jews, in times of peace, punished Enormities with death, restitution, retaliation, according to the divers nature of them, so did they impede the great neighbouring evil of encroachment on them; which Nations bordering on them were ready ever to attempt, by diversion, and making their Country the seat of War. Upon which they were led by their Kings, and Leaders, who were jepthahs for valour, Souls for stature, david's for activity, chosen men, whom their people followed readily, stood to manfully, brought off victoriously, there being a natural love and loyalty in all people to men of honesty and valour, as appears in many instances, but chiefly in that of the people to jonathan, and after to David; Quem in socordis Principis invidiam Cives facilè admisère. Egnatius in vita ejus p. 585. Lib De Iside & Osicide p. 354. edit. Parif. Lib. De Agesilao, p. 763. yea, and of later times to Nicephorus Boloniates, who thrust Michael Ducas from the Empire; and, Ignatius says, had reception by the people, as a reproach to Ducas his Cowardice. Hence came it to pass, that the Nations looked upon no virtue so peculiarly and directly in the Kings, as Chivalry. Plutarch tells us, the Egyptians chose their King's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, either from their Priests, or from their Warriors; and he adds the reason, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as thinking those only worthy to rule, who were famous either for Valour, or Learning. And Xenophon writes, that the Greeks were like minded, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. So well advised was Agesilaus, that he judged strenuity proper for Kings. Lib 3. Memo●ab. p. 763. So Agamemnon is commended by that Author from a Poem of him here quoted, and approved, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, He was both great to fight, And wise to rule aright. Yea, he brings in Cyrus, justifying himself to be a good Governor, from that valour he expressed against the Nations enemies, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as if it had become him scurvily to fear, and not rather to fight them as he gallantly did. And Clyt●bulus is brought in by him, declaring, that the Persian Kings did, and they ought ever to divide their time, De Administrat. Domest p. 827. Lib. 3. Hist. G●aecae p. 493. Aquinas de regimine Principum, c. 21. Romani s●n●per justa movere arma, caeterae nationes odio, & malevo 〈…〉 quód Imper●●m t●nt● Vrbu justitiâ ageretur, sela in populam Romanum apiebant. Lilius Giraldus Syntag. Deorum pag. 466. Lib. 1. p. 640. edit. Sylb. between War and Husbandry; and where ever this distribution of Kingly Office is not, he terms it, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, an imperfect Government. The Romans also eyed much Valour and Military Prowess in their Kings, Consuls, Emperors, and Captains; therefore, they chose two yearly Consuls, and purposely disposed one to the care of Martial; the other, to the civil justicing between man and man, yea, though they were a Nation fledged by War, and were made up of flagrant and combustible Elements, yet were they most just in their pacts, and inviolably zealous for indemnification of Allies; nor did they ever take a provocation so lightly, as to proceed to revenge it on their Provokers, and right themselves against their provocation: but, upon sullain and surly persistencies in contumacy, and resolves of injury, memores icti foe deris cum panis non statim ad arma prccurrunt, dum prius more legitimo quaeri malunt, faith jornandes. After, when they chose Emperors, and Chiefs, they looked upon the warlik'st of men, and him they subjected to, and followed; yea, the Laws of all Governments, as of the Empire, France, Spain, Denmark, and this Empire of Great Britain, do therefore call Wars the (a) 7 E. 1.1 E 3. ●. 7.18 E. 3. c. 74 H. 4. c. 13.2 E. 6.2.4 & 5. P.M.c. 3 King's Wars, Coin (b) 25 E. 3. c. 2.12.3 H. 7. c. 6. 5 E. 6. c. 19.20 H. 6. c. 19 the King's Coin, the Navy (c) 31 Eli●. c. 4. the King's Shipping, the Forts (d) 2 & 3 E. 6. c. 16.13 R 2. c. 15. the King's strong Holds and Castles, the Laws (e) 21 I ac. 2 the King's Laws; the Subjects, the King's Subjects; the Courts, the King's Courts; because by these the Kings are enabled to defend themselves, and their Governments, and that by Wars, to suppress Rebellion, or divert Invasion. And the trusts of God and Men, vested in the King to these public Beneficencies, have, do, and will ever produce to their trusties, glory, riches, and serenity. These exhalations are returned in golden, silver, Seneca in Comsol. ad Polyb. p. 754. and milky showers; the Via lactea of Majesty. Caesari quoque ipsi, cui omnia licent, propter hoc ipsum multa non licent: omnium domos illius vigilia defendit, omnium otium illius labour; omnium delicias illius industria, omnium vacationem illius occupatio. Now if the Office of Kings be to war for peace, and security; where, without it, they are not purchasable, or possible to be kept; then the means of effecting these are, de debito, the King's. Every end supposes a means. If the King be to do, he is to have wherewith to do: he is else but togatum mancipium. Therefore our Laws do own and recognize the Seignory of the King, Habet Rex in manu sua omnia jura, quae ad Coranam, & Laicalem pertinen● potestatem, & materialem gladium, qui pertinet ad Regni gubernaculum. Flera, c. 17. lib. 1. p. 16. edit. Seld. to defend force of Arms, and all other force, against the peace, whensoever it shall please him. So declare the Peers and Commons, in full and free Parliament, 7 Edw. the First. Not thereby to out themselves of all subject-like Counsel to their Kings, in cases of War, to be entered upon: for, in those Cases, our Kings have chosen to take their advices, before their own personal ones: but the Law was so, and so then declared, to enable the Crown to do its proper office, in case of emergencies, either of Rebellion, or Invasion; and were they bound to wait the Convention of Counsels, tedious often before, and in their Meetings, Remedies would be impossible, and Villainies unhinderably successful. — serò medicina paratur cum mala per long as convaluêre moras. This is the rather to be touched upon, because it was once an old sore, and through the putrefaction of this hath made a many years' confusion, and given being to a Levelling Monster, and a Hydra-headed Antique, which deserves to be cautioned against in the legal Assertions of the Truth in this Cause For the King being caput regni & legum, all direction, protection, judgement of discretion, and severity is in him; and as the Law says, Nihil potest Rex, quam quod de jure potest; so is it a just Rule (saving incommunicable absoluteness) Quidquid jovi, id Regi licet, that is, as unaccountable to the coercive power of Subjects are Kings, as God himself; the Deputy: as his Principal, though that of Seneca be also true, Lib. 7. De Benefic. Ad Reges potest as omnium pertinet, ad singulos proprietas. Yea, were not Kings exempt from these Shackles of Iron, and base Metal, what glorious Nothings, and glistering Ciphers would they be? What pitisul Mercenaries would insolence, and Plebeian encroachment reduce them to: like that Tartarian Prince, they would truckle under the Usurpations of their Vassals, and be guilty of that easiness which is irregal. Quod ad Religionem attinct, de qua inter vos disputari audio, Inlioff. Discurs. Politic. p. 91. vester Pontifex meus Pontifex erat; vester Lutherus, meus Lutherus. So abhorred a degradation of Majesty, that no generous spirit would take such an unkingly Kingship. The Law then in the Chancellour's words, Pugnare bella populi sui, has this Interpretation, That the King is by Office to fight the Battles of his People; that is, by his people to battle, for the adjunct of propriety, has here but a sense of ministry, not causality; that is, 'tis not to fight the Wars of his people, as they are Warranters of, and Regent's in it; but of his people, as they are those Instruments he fights by, and fights for, since the end of War is Peace, as it follows, Et eos rectissimè judicare. This the Chancellor adds, to show the amiable, as before he had the terrible Check of Majesty. So wisely has God provided for Order, and the tuition of the Magistrate's power, that between Force and Law it should be intermerate. Force supports Law, and Law moderates Force; were it not for punishments, we should be Ravilliacks to one another, Homo homini lupus; and were it not for Laws, Property would be determined by Might, and lame and helpless Mephibosheths be popped off with nothing, though they are the rightful Heirs, and aught to be the real Possessors of their Rights. So that Laws are the Rules and Monitors of Kings, concerning their duties to God, in their demeanours to men. 'Tis true indeed, Parem habere non debet Rex, nec multò fortiùs superiorem in justitia exhibenda, ut dicatur de eo, Magnus Dominus noster, & magna virtus ejus. That Fleta asserts, as the King's undoubted right: but then he subjoins, Licètomnes potentiâ praecellet, cor tamen ipsius in manu Dei esse debet, & nè potentia sua maneat irrefraenata, fraenum apponat temperantiae, & lora moderantiae, nè trabatur ad injuriam qui nihil aliud potest in terra, quam quod de jure potect. So Fleta, lib. 1. c. 17. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Crispinus apud Stobaeum, Ser. 45. p. 324. I know that great is the indulgence of God to Kings, and vast Prerogatives has he vested them with. And to Kings, as the flower of men, hath he given rational principles of sapiency, to immure and protect his Donaries to them, and Kings would be accessary to their own, and their Subjects woes, if they should not employ to their preservations (in all worthy and wise latitudes) such Entrusts, and Commissions, by God and Laws delegated to them. But yet Fleta's counsel is from the unerring mouth and mind of Truth, Temperent igitur Reges potentiam suam per legem, quae fraenum est potentiae, Nullius juris ratio, aut aequitatis bonignitatis patitur, ut quae sal●briter pro utilitate homi num introducuntur, ea nos duriore interpretatione contrà ipsorum commodum producamus ad soveritatem. Modestinus, lib. 8. Responsorum. quòd secundùm leges vivant; quia hoc sanxit lex humana, quòd leges suum ligent latorem: & alibi digna vax ex Majestate regnantis est, Legibus alligatum se principom profiteri. So he, loco praec. It is sedition in Subjects, to dispute what a King may do in the height of his power, King James' Speech at White-Hall, 1609. p. 531. of his Works in Fol. but just Kings will ever be willing to declare what they will do if they will not incur the curse of God. I will not be content, that my power be disputed upon: but I shall ever be willing to make the reason appear of all my doings, and rule my actions according to my Laws. Prince's then must not be remiss and negligent, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 etc. Diotogenes Pythagor. apud Stobaum Serm. 46. p. 329. Lex scripta, quamuès dura, est servanda. Gloss ad Pauli verba lib. 5. ad Edit. Digest. lib. 3. tit 2. p. 344. King James' Speech at White Hall, 1609. p 537. of his Works in sol. but vigilant and distributive of their power to their Subjects; that's judicare, the act of Majesty, by example of, and authority from God. The Lord sitteth in the Congregation of the mighty, he judgeth amongst the gods. And this impartment of their power, they must make secundùm jus & aequum, as the Laws of their Government directs and advises, and that's rectissimè eos judicare. For though Laws may be hard and unpleasing, yet, while they remain Laws, the people are to be ruled by, and the Prince is neither cruel, nor unjust, in exacting obedience to, nor in correcting contumacy against them. Though his goodness and conscience, in discharge of his place and power also it be, to cause their emendation and correction (if such they be) with all possible speed, and to proceed with all imaginable zeal to the deliverance of the people from the burden and influence of their rigour on them: so wisely spoke King james of happy memory. If any Law or Statute be not convenient, let it be amended by Parliament; but in the meantime, term it not a Grievance: for to be grieved with the Law, is to be grieved with the King, who is sworn to be the Patron and maintaixer thereof. And thus all gracious and beloved Kings have ever done, ruling not by Lust, but Law; not by absolute power, but by legal administrations: and this will properly call him, that so does a King. ' O 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Tyrant's seek their own good, Kings the good and benefit of their Subjects, saith the Philosopher; and lib. 4. De Repub. after he has spoken much of Kings, as Keepers of those Rights, which Nature has annexed to men, Lib. 8 De Moribus c. 12. c. 10. p. 403. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Xenophon. lib. 2. De Exped. Cyri. Libro unico, De Instit. Prine. in Argum. p. 527. Politic. Fleta in Proëmio libri edit. Selden and made them Defenders of, he concludes, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. that is, The Tyrant's end is benefit to himself, to suck the sweet, and eat the fat of Subjects: but the King's care is to profit and better his Subjects, by example and precepts of virtue, seeing they do things honest, and of good report. And that this is the second pillar of Government, and that which Kings are to look after, having by the Sword procured peace; if otherwise it was not attainable, is plain from the joint consent of all good Authors, and Authorities of Scripture, Reason, and Practice; as learned Hopperus, and Ficinus on Plato's Politics, has notably observed. I know there are some Parasitique Wits, that forge Arguments, to the subversion of legal Boundaries, as never made by God for Princes, nor reasonably to be commended to their practice; yea, that harmless, and, as I believe, it was intended, and is by Wisemen expounded, Rule of the Civilians, Quod Principi placuit Legis habet vigorem, they apply to the liberty of the King's Will, to do what he will with the lives, fortunes, and liberties of the people under them; a Device to blow up the very Root of Kingship, God's blessing on it, love of Subjects under it, and the content of that continual Feast, which a good Conscience makes to its Possessor in all the vicissitudes, and varieties of life. For King's being but men, and so under the Law of mutability and misery, do need, how great soever they be, the prayers, fidelities, and assistances, both by purse, and person, of their Subjects, as often as their legal and necessary needs shall call for them; and if they that are to pay and serve, love not their Lord, they will part with their money but slowly, perhaps after the season be past, and serve him but coldly, him in show, and his Antagonist in truth: 'tis love, alas! mixed with fear, both subtly, and yet innocently blinded in the gubernative activity of power, that makes Kings secure and beloved. Take away these kind intercourses in this politic Marriage between King and People, and all the Disdiapason ceases, and the harmony becomes disconcented. Indeed, the pleasure of Kings is, in a sober sense, the Law; because Kings please to do nothing but Justice, the just Counsels of God being with them, quà Kings, and they knowing, that they are accountable to God, for the riot of the man, against the King, in them, ought so to demean themselves to their Subjects, as God does to the World, Rex est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Fornerius ad Legem, 244. lib. De Verb. signif. pag. 526. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Diocogenes Pythagor. apud Stobaeum, Serm. 339. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Philippus Rex apud Herodotum, lib. 3. Pythagor. because God has made their Subjects to them, as the World is to him; that is, since God has made them Lords, not to be disputed with, but by prayers and tears, by patience and resignation, they should carry as even and just an hand towards them, in providence for their good, in compassion to their wants and weaknesses, in tenderness of their freedoms and securities, in desires to deserve their submissions and loyalties; as God does, whose mercy is, in this sense, over all his works, and who accounts severity his strange work. And as God can do no injustice, because he is essentially just, and all Justice is originally in him, and what is in us, is but by derivation from him; so Kings are to do nothing unjust, because not only so far as they do it, they are inconform to God, but for that they are responsible for what they do to God, whose rectitude they ought to imitate. Caveant igitur sibi Reges & judices, nè conquerentes repellant, vel perverse judicent, ob quod in judicium justi Dei corruant, Lib. 1. c. 17. Art. 10. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Idem loco prec. ubi judex terribiliter discretus, & intolerabiliter severus, immoderatè offensus, & vehementer iratus, cujus sententia immutabilis, carcer irremeabilis, tormenta sine fine, saith Fleta notably. And while Kings remember this, and bring their dignities in credit by their virtues, not resting more on their Power to coerce, then on their justice to invite their people to their admiration and imitation. Hortensian Laws, that translate power from people to them, restraining all from using it besides themselves, are no injury, but advantages to the people; the wisdom of Kingly Counsel best knowing how to manage dexterously, Tiraquel. in Alex. ab Alex. lib. 6. c. 24. and to purposes of Sovereignty, such entrusts: No, nor truly are such devolvings greater advantages to Kings, then to render them more capable to make their people happy, by their more affectionate and watchful eye over them for their good, nor is all the honour and support that love and loyalty in Subjects to their Prince can express, more than the bare return of their Regal merit, who watch, and cark, and care, that they may be quiet and orderly under him, in order to God, the Sovereign of him and them: which makes me conclude Allegiance and Fidelity a most religious and reasonable service of God, through the Person and Government of the King; Calvin's Case, 7 Rep. who, whatever he be, we ought to obey for Conscience sake, with gratitude to God's mercy, when a David, and a Solomon; and with patience under God's pleasure, if otherwise: considering, that as well evil men, as good in Kingship, are to be obeyed; because obedience is due to the Office, and to the Person in it, by reason of both the Person in the Office, and the Office in the Person, and that inseparably, and without distinction. Yea, if Kings should be misled by ill Counsels, and do the thing, that is not right in the sight of God, and in the sense of the Law, because God is the only Judge of their actions, and the Law's Head is the King: Christian Subjects have no refuge to fly to, but Obedience, and Prayer to God, to turn his heart. They must not curse the Prince in their thoughts, nor calumniate him in their words. For as the former is Blasphemy and Sacrilege, so the latter is desperate Treason; the Road to damnable and detestable Rebellion. For since God never made any other Judge of Kings but himself, pretention to reduce their Eccentricity, by being insolent against them, is in Gods, and the Laws account, but plausible enmity and intention to subvertthem: the good King, our late Lord Charles the First, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Seneca, Ep. 64. Quam venerationem praeceptoribus meis deboo, candemillis praeceptoribus generis humani, à quibus tanti boni initia fluxerunt, si Consulem video, aut Praetorem quibus omnia bonor haberi solet faciam, equo desiliam, caput ad aperiam, semitâ cedam. Quid ergo? Marcum Caronem u●rumque, & Laelium sapientem, & Socratem cum Zlatone, & Lenone, Cleanthem que in animum meum five dignatione summa recipiam? ego verò illos veneror, & tantisi nom nibus semper assurgo. 7 Rep. Calvin's Case. found it so. Never were more Protestations of love and loyalty worded, than some of his Englishmen made to him; who yet brought him to the cursed custody and power of those, who impiously, and to the eternal dishonour of God, and the Laws of Nature and Nations, murdered him, whom all good men venerate for a Martyr. Power then being the Ordinance of God, and residing divinely in the Person and Office of the King; Allegiance and Duty, in all the latitude of them, are by all manner of rights due to the King. And as nothing can make it cease to be due to the King, it being founded in the Law of Nature, and due by it to the King; who, though he may die in person, yet lives in succession and office, Rex ●unguam moritur Reg. Juris. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Adag. 89. Chil. 2. Cent. 7. there being no Interregnary Chasm in England; so can no just expression of it be denied, without sin against God, and injustice to his Vicegerent, who has power of his Body, as Head thereof, and aught to have homage from it, as the vital influence of the whole, and every particular in it; which I thought good to write of here, to testify my abhorrence of those Levelling Monster Anarchique Principles; which, infatuating this Nation of late, produced so unnatural, and tragical effects of War, Disloyalty, and Irreligion amongst us: in which while, some loyal-resolved, and knowing subjects, asserted their duty, and to their eternal honour, suffered more, or less for it: more credulous beguiled, and misconducted ones, Habeatur personarum a● dignita●um proportio, & cism sit ubique virtutis modus, aequò yeccaet quod excedit, quam quod deficit. Seneca, De Benef. c. 16. either wholly forgot it; or, in regard of the pressures upon them, did not so vigorously express it as they ought; which since God, I hope, and the King, I dare say, has in the majority, and well-meaningness of the seduced people forgiven, I only remember here as a Caution against Relapse; humbly beseeching God, that both King and People may live in unity and godly love, That as all good Kings in their Government must imitate God, and his Christ, in being just and righteous, David and Solomon in being godly and wise (they are wise King james his words) as they prefer their People's good beyond their own quiet and pleasure, as Philo says. Kings, Speech, 1616. pag. 551. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Philo, lib. De Agricultura, paeg. 193. shepherds of their people, do; so all good people must, and are only good, when they do observe the Rule of Religion, Give honour to whom honour, fear to whom fear, tribute to whom tribute is due; that is, to the King, and to all in Authority under him, and to evidence to the World, that while others live besides, they live according to the rule of Christian, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Justinus Mart. Epist. ad Zenum, & Siren. p. 590. edit. Sylburg. and English subjection. And this, on bothsides observed, will cashier all jealousy; for while both respectively, rule and obey according to the Laws of this Realm, the people will live orderly, and in peace, and the King will be able pugnare bella populi sui, & eos rectissimè judicare. Vt primo Regum cepite octavo Clarissimé tu duceris. Here the Chancellor produces to the Prince a Scripture-instance, in the great example of the wisest of men and Kings, Solomon; who being instructed by God how, as well as authorized where to rule, is the best pattern for a Prince's practice in his regal demeanour. And that Solomon here mentioned (for the eighth of the second of Kings wholly treats of him) is not a person less matchless, then is generally and truly presumed of him. 'Twill not be amiss to consider, what in him may be most eminent, most convictive of our Belief, See the most learned Bishop of Worcester's Character of him, in his Sermon, at our Gracious Sovereign's Coronation, pag. 3, & 4. of his supremacy above other men, either of his, or aftertimes. And though comparisons are odious, and vulgarly, we say, there is no one man so accomplished, but there is another as excellent as he; yet since the Spirit of God, and all Authors Christian after him, has made him the Phoenix, humanae naturae ornamentum, 'twill be not lost labour to consider him. Solomon then was a Prince born, the Son of King David, by Bath-Sheba his beloved Wife, a Prince Solomon was, called by this name mysteriously, in order to his causation of peace, and introduction of the concurrent blessings with it, Plenty and Riches. For he made silver, to be in jerusalem as Stones, and Cedars made he as the Sycamore Trees that are in the Vale in abundance, 1 King. viij. 27. and in order to his being a Type of Christ Jesus, the Prince of Peace, who broke down the wall of separation between God and Man, and brought life and immortality to light through the Gospel. A Prince Solomon was, wise as an Angel of God; so the Holy Text phrases him, so the Holy God endowed him: God that gave him leave to desire what he would of him, gave him love to Wisdom and Grace, to beg it as his choice, and to obtain it as his jewel: so wise, 1 Kings iii and so understanding a heart did God give Solomon, that all Expositors do agree him ex omni parte beatus, both as to speculation, and action. Tiraquel numbering the virtues of all Ancients, Lib. 5. De Nobilirate. and Moderns, makes Solomon, in wisdom, paramount to them all. Pineda has made a large and laborious. Treatise De gest is Solomonis, wherein he makes every arome, and minute-particle of him, a Mountain of Wonder. And Turrian is not behind him in the admiration of him. Lib. 6. De Philosoph. Princip. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Aristor. Precemio Metaphys. In Piman●o Mercurii. Lib. 3. come. 6. Dialog. 250 13. c. 3. De Vetitate, p. 214. And no wonder: for if wisdom make a man's face to shine as it is, Prov. and as the Heathens acknowledged to the praise of her, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, There is nothing more honourable than wisdom; because it is the Image of God, and that which gives the possessor of it praelation above others; as it enables him to know those things, that otherwise are hidden, and hard to men. So the Philosopher says. If Socrates, whom the Greeks thought 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the wisest of Mortals, made it his study amongst men, and his petition to the gods, to be wise; O amice Pan, & caetera Numina, date obsecro, ut intus pulcher efficari; O thou Pan, and the rest of the gods, grant me, I beseech you, to be beauteous in soul, inwardly worthy; which Roselius enlarges, Veritatis divinae cognitionem petebat; He desired knowledge of divine truth, which God only was able to grant him, which only a calm and well-tempered Soul was capable of. If Wisdom, which all Authors and Ages thought God in Man: if this, I say, were in our Solomon eminently, beyond the proportion of other Kings, and answerable, if not transcendent, to the endowments of other men, not Moses himself excepted, though Vatablus be of another opinion; In 1 Reg. three 12. and if this mass of Wisdom be evidenced not only judicially on the Throne, but discursively in the Chair, to the admiration of all hearers, who being at his discourses from the Cedar in Lebanon, to the Hyssop upon the Wall, and other his civil Precepts in the Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, and Song of Solomon, (though Grotius herein also much abates him, while he makes the Proverbs to be only liber 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a compilement, like those the Emperors of Constantinople after him had, of all the select Sentences of those Heroiques that in time preceded him, and were Proverbial amongst the jews.) I say, Solomon's works and words considered, will render him such an Non-such, as the Holy Spirit characterizes him to be. So true is that of a learned man concerning his Proverbs, Bayns in c. 1. Prov. inter Crit. Sact. Neque ullum vel ex universo Proverbiorum numero reperias, etc. That there is no passage in the Proverbs so inconsiderable, and ordinary in the words of it, but if it be rightly and throughly understood, couches in it some admirable piece of truth and wisdom, worthy the most wise Solomon its Penman. So great, so wise, so much of mortal comprehension had Solomon, that, amongst men, the sons of natural propagation, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Gregory Naz. Orat. 53. in Eccles. p. 74●. no Socrates, no Xenophon, no Caesar, no Marcus Antoninus was greater, was like to him. He was of the quorum, quaruns, quorum, to all that preceded him, or shall succeed him in the ordinary way of Manhood; and therefore is most to be heeded, as he is virorum scientissimus, & exemplorum augustissimus. This for the Dignity of his Person. Now as to the Divinity of his Prescript, in that which our Chancellor here instances, in the eighth Chapter of the first of Kings; which Chapter, having many remarkable passages in it, was purposely quoted by our Chancellor. First, In it there is Solomon's regard to, and valuation of the Ark of God (the visible sign of God's presence) expressed in the Assembly of State, that he summoned to attend its remove, The Elders of Israel, all the Heads of the Tribes, and the chief of the Fathers of the Children of Israel, unto the King, vers. 1. 'Tis not fit any thing of Gods should be passed over without due honour, nor his Ark change his station, without the attendance of a decent Equipage: Princes that serve not Religion with all their might, are not worthy the blessings that attend it. Therefore, gracious King Charles, our late martyred Lord, eicon Basilie. pag. 212. art. 24. made a rare choice, Nor could I follow better Precedents (said he) if I were able, than those two eminent Kings, David, and Solomon, not more famous for their Sceptres and Crowns, than one was, for devont Psalms and Prayers; the other, for his divine Parables and Preaching, whence the one merited, and assumed the name of a Prophet, the other of a Preacher. Titles, indeed, of greater honour, where rightly placed, than any of those the Roman Emperors affected from the Nations they subdued, it being infinitely more glorious, to convert souls to God, by the Word, then to conquer men to a subjection by the Sword. Thus he. Ver. 5. All the Estates, that attended the Ark's remove, did it not more to observe the King's pleasure, then to testify their own duty; for they that went before the Ark sacrificed Sheep, and Oxen, that could not be told, nor numbered for number.] Zealous minds think that the best service of God, which is most costly, as desiring to show the truth of their heart in the bounty of their hand. Ver. 14. Solomon blessed the whole Congregation, and the people stood.] 'Tis a good sign of accord, when Passions, and Prejudices, do not obstruct between Prince and People: when the one thinks himself not too high, to regard his meanest Subject; the other, shows himself not too heady, and humorous, to observe and reverence his Liege Lord. Ver. 23, 24. Solomon the King solemnly pours out his Soul to God in prayer before the people, as not ashamed of the humility of a sinner, in the height of the state of a Sovereign.] Nothing debases Majesty but sin, nor disparages a King in his People's eyes, but flagitiousness: he can never miss acceptation with men, that first gains by prayer and humility acceptation with God: nor does he ever miss to find God propitious, who seeks him with all his heart, and serves him with all his might. Ver. 29. Solomon builds a magnificent Temple, which he devotes to God, and which he prays, that God would accept as his own.] 'Twas not the King's prayer, nor the bounty he had expressed in the costly furniture of it, that at all advanced those ends Solomon had in its designation: he intended it as a refuge to the people's distress, and an oracular repertory, in which the secret of God's power and goodness should be (as it were) deposited, which it could not prove, unless God ratified it for such: therefore prays he to God to grant his Petition, and to accept those services, that he and his people should in that place perform to him. Good Princes would willingly bring God and their Subjects to an accord, and leave his blessing as the guard of their government when they are gone▪ There is no policy like that of Religion, which ever keeps God on its party. Ver. 55. The King blessed the Congregation again after, as well as he had done before his prayer.] To teach Princes, that their love to their people, should be ever in their memory, and that Religion is the cement of their reciprocation; nor do the Laws of Holy Church lesson ought to Prince, or People, beside love, and duty. Ver. 65, 66. Solomon keeps a Feast, to satiate the People's stomaches with his dainties, as well as he had spoken to the filling of their ears with pious Orisons, and devout interpellations to God for them.] To pattern Princes, to use all Baits to catch Multitudes, the soberer of them with the reason of good counsel, and serious kindness; the ruder sort by bounty, and pabulary plenty, which will make them love, and bless their Benefactor, and return to their quarters contented, as Israel did, v. 66. These are the main Poles, upon which this Chapter moves towards a fitness of directive influence on the Prince, for in that he has his life and breath from God, and even for his Crown, and Power, is but a Feudatary to the Almighty, who deals by Monarches, as by Pismires, and exalts, or suppresses, as he pleases, in the Kingdoms of the World. And inasmuch as Kings have no readier way to preserve God their Tutelar, then by securing his rights inviolate, and by promoting the glory of his Divinity above all secular Projects, and extern conveniencies, as Solomon here did, and as Nature herself dictates to her very own Sons not enlightened by Divine Revelation, or Scripture-Regulation, according to that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, The first care of Kings is that of Religion, and the Worship of God. In that, this wife and worthy Monopoly of devoting to God the totality of our prime and principal affection and reverence is in this Chapter pithily and particularly set down; and that it conduces, being punctually observed, to so much felicity and greatness in the outward state, paradoes, and pomp of a Prince, it well deserves the perfection and distinct observance of him: and the Chancellor has done wisely and faithfully to direct him to it. Quare ùt armorum, utinam & Legum studiis simili Zelo te de ditum contemplarer. Here the good old Chancellor wisely does not non movenda movere, Adag. 61. Chil. 1. Cent 6. pag. 254. E●a▪ in. as they did, who laid siege to supplant that which was sacred, as past their reach, and so ought to have been exempt from their attempt; but he presses the Prince to so equal a dividend of himself between Arms and Arts, that neither may have cause to boast of their engrossing him, or of his dese●tion of them; but both being ancillary to his Regal Endowment, might indifferently be Candidates to his favour, and to both have his love and leisure proportioned. To love Arts, so as not to hate Arms; and to practise Arms, so as not to decline Arts: to handle the Sword, yet not so as to suppress the Law: so to remember himself a Prince, as not to forget himself a man; homo ab humanitate, a Christian man, ferendo non feriendo, a knowing man, whose right commenceth from God, and is conveyed and declared by the Laws of civil compact, recognising hereditary descents, and is secondarily supported by Armies, and courage to manage them. Chrysippus libro 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 citatus in Digest. Tom. 1. Tit. 3. De legibus Senaiúsque Consultis, p. 73. ' O 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. The Law is the Queen of all divine and humane things, and aught to preside over all men, good and bad, to be the Leader and Precedent, and the rule both of just and unjust. And thus a Prince, viewing himself, cannot more incline to Mars, than Mercury; nor affect to be only a Soldier, and not an Artist, but practise both Feats of Cratory, and Prowess, as occasion serves, and as their warrantable and just advantages conducts them: which to observe, and be punctual in argues the highest fruits of noble Institution, inclination, and God's Amen upon them. Orat. 53 in Ecc●es. p. 763. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. For Wisdom (saith Nazianzen) can instruct the City to do more than arms, and strength without it can: yea, whereas the indiscreet man, by his force, is rather presumptuous to take the first opportunity, though it be the worst, because he rests on his forces, and that arm of flesh, he is seconded by; Wisdom conducts him, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, to choose worthy methods to worthy ends, and to stay God's leisure, and not to precipitate a good cause by an ill managery. So that Father: and therefore so concluded Edward the Fourth of this Land his life, with the charge he gave the Lords and others, trusties for the education of his Children, Holingshed. pag. 709. in these words: If you bring them up in virtus, you shall have virtuous Princes; if you set them to Learning, that Governors shall be men of knowledge; if you teach them Activity, you shall have valiant Captains; if they practise Policy, you shall have politic and prudent Rulers; if they be unlearned, they may, by flattery, soon be blinded, and by adulation often deceived; if they lack activity, every Creature, be he never so base of birth, shall foil and overthrow them like dumb Beasts, and beastly Dastards. Therefore I desire you, and in God's name, adjure you rather to study to make them rich in godly knowledge, and virtuous qualities, then to make parties to gratify them with abundance of worldly treasure, and mundane superfluity. Thus nobly that King. cum ùt armis, ità legibus judicia peragantur. Quod Justinianus Augustus equissimâ librue ment in initio Prioemii libri suo Institutionum ait," Imperatoriam Majestatem" non solùm armis decoratam, sed & legibus oportet esse armatam; ut utrumque tempus" bellorum & pacis rectè possit gubernare. This the Chancellor marshals in this order, to make good what he had formerly gained: for, as in the former clause, he had made the Prescript; so in this he subjoins the reason, Kings, as mixed persons of Mercy and Justice, are Keepers both of Laws and Swords, the purports of both Tables; and, being such, are to practise the activities of both hands, to apply Law to their ordinary, and force to their extraordinary administration; since as Food and Physic preserve the Body-natural, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Synes●us lib. De Regno pag. 926. so do Laws and Arms the Body-politique. Hence is it, that Synesius makes a well-instituted Warlike Prince most inclinable to Peace; because his generous Nature having circumvallated his power renders him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Not only, not willing to do wrong; but by his power to prevent wrong from being done; yea, it inclines him not so much to list up his head above men in self-magnification, as his hands and heart in solemn gratulation to God; both the God of him and his Government. For Kingship was looked upon in the World to be the Prognate of God, and a derivative from his Wisdom: and therefore, not only the Scripture brings in God, asserting the Patronage of Kings, By me King's reign, and Princes decree justice, Lib. De Providentia, pag. 100, 101. but also Heathen Writers make their Gods the Proto-Kings; which Synesius avers to be the Position of the Egyptians, who are reckoned mortalium antiquissimi: and this they did not only to awe men into fear of their Thunder and Lightning, but also to bespeak them to a belief, and recumbency on them, as Fountains of Justice, Sanctuaries of Refuge, Treasuries of Benefaction, not torvous, and of truculent aspect, but gentle and calm-looked. Thence came those Positions of justinian, Regiam Majestatem, Glanvil in Prologue. etc. and thence transplanted into our Law; because, though Kings be, in a sort, Gods and unquestionable by any but God; which was Marcus Antoninus his assertion seconded by all subsequent Authors, De Jur. belli & pacis. l lib. 1. c. 8. as Grotius has well observed and as Tacitus long before wrote in those words, Principi summum rerum arbitrium Dii dederurit subditis obsequii gloria est relicta. The gods have given Princes supreme power. and allotted to Subjects only the glory and praise of obeying them. And though those, whom he mentions to be Kings in Ga●l and Germany of old, who had only power precario jure regnandi & auctoritate suadendi, non jubendi potestate, Tacitus De More ●ib. Germ. were but improperly called Kings, Kingship being a thing absolute, by, from, and under God; though; I say, these are, and ever will be loud truths, not to be descried by the Oyms and Zyms of Anarchy and popular insult; yet are they far from inflating Princes, beyond moderate, and well-featured Bounds. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Non bene imperat, nisi qui bene paeruerit imperio. Aristor. lib. 3. Politic. God has indeed subjected Subjects to Kings; but has he not also subjected Kings to himself? Surely yes, and they must give account of their people to him; and they will never have comfort in their rule, except they have learned to rule over their passions, and to be subject to the Prime Regent, God; who has deputed Kings to be Pastors and Curates to his, Flock the less glorious Creatures, on whom the Image of God is stamped, as well as on the greatest Monarches. And therefore, as Arms are to support Governments, so Governments are to express themselves by Laws, as the genius of direction to those Arms. For God never intending power to be bruta fulmina, which carry more terror than use: the Magistrate is not to use it, Ideò Imperialem fortunam relus humanis Deus praeposuit, ut possit omnia, quae noviter contingunt, & emendare, & consponere, & modis & regulus competentibus trudere, & boc hon prinium à nobis dictum est, sed ab antiqua descendit prosapia. Justinianus in Diplom. De Confirm. Digestorum, pag. 16. Tom. I. but for the punishment of wickedness, and vice, and the maintenance of God's true Religion, and Virtue; which when they do, they are true Executours of Christ's Will, and Bequests; lovers of him, because keepers of his Commandment; and his Commandment is to do justice, love mercy, and walk humbly with God. This, this is the noble end, and noble expression of power, ut intelligeret eo se loco jam esse Regem suppositum, Hopperus lib. De Vera Jurisprud. pag. 335. ubi suae propriae personae oblivisci & in unum Reipub. bonum incumbere deberet: Giving the King to understand, that in being a King, he becames a forgetter of what is his personal advantage, to make good his public Office, saith learned Hopperus. And he that goes by this Canon shall be sure of Peace, and God's blessing in his soul, and on his proceedings. Yea, the fruits of it he shall reap in the love of his Subjects, Synesius, lib. De Regno. pag. 21. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. the only and chief protection and security of Princes. For though particular Accidents, and fatal Periodiques tended to in the old age of Governments, crosses this in the experience of its safety; yet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and saving those occult causes, which are not to be defeated, the Canon is sure, that moderate Government is most durable; which is the reason, as I humbly conceive, the Laws of England, the best tempered Laws, for an Island, in the World, point to the Kings of England, the middle way of Government between absolute Will, and popular dependence; because thereby it puts both King and People into a felicitous state, which they cannot deviate from, without mischievous inconveniencies. A Political Monarch governs his Subjects, as a Father doth his Children, by equal and just Laws, made by their own consent to them. In his Sermon at the Coronation of our now blessed and beloved King, pag. 36. Despotical Government is that of the Turks, and Muscovite; but Political is, and aught to be the Government of all Christian Kings; I am sure it is of ours: and therefore such a kind of Monarchy as ours is not only the most just and reasonable, but the most plausible, and popular Government of all others: they are the words of that most Reverend and Learned Prelate the Lord Bishop of Worcester. The King is absolute; what then, may he do what he will? is his pleasure a Law? As King, yes: for so he can do no wrong, because, quà such, Deum agnoscit superiorem & Legem; but as mistaken, or seduced by passion, his Will is not the Law, but the Law his Will; and though men are no Supervisours compulsive of him, yet is there one greater than he, Satis est exspectet Deum ultorem: that's his awe and Monitor, ad bene regendum, the Subject is free: how? not to do what he list; no, not with his own: for he must so use what is his, as not to prejudice the Public: so is the Law of Reason and Policy, Respublica praeferendae est privatis, and so affirm the Statutes, 27 E. 3. c. 3. 12. 16. 28 E. 3. c. 5. 23 H. 8. c. 16. 25 H. 8. c. 13. 32 H. 8. c. 18, 19 33 H. 8. c. 7. 35 H. 8. 4. I Edw. 6. c. 3. & 5. 2 & 3 E. 6. c. 37. 1 & 2 P. & M. c. 5. I Eliz. c. 17. 18 Eliz. 9 I Eliz. c. 15, 17. 8 Eliz. c. 3. 23 Eliz. c. 5. 27 Eliz. c. 19 and hundreds of others, which were made to restrain private emoluments, where publicly detrimental: Yet he is free from all restraints, 21 Jac. c. 3. other than such as the Common Law, or the consent of the Nation in Parliament, puts upon Him, his Body, Life, Lands, Posterity, and can appeal to the King's Court for relief, Ploughed. Com. 236. 2 Instit. c. 21. M. Charta, p. 36. against all preter-legal courses against, or oppressions upon them. And hence is it, that the Government of England being so transacted by the Law, produces Justice, Riches, peace, and Piety, to a wonder. For the Monarch rules in it optantibus cunctis; and if in any thing he be incommodated, non spem hominum excitat sed metum; yea, so filial a love have Englishmen, for the most part, to their P●●ces, that what Seneca writes of the Prince, is true of the people, Nihil esse cui quam tam praetiosum, etc. Nothing they have is so precious to them, as the safety of their Governor; for whom, as they will desperately hazard, so in his safety much rejoice: so much they hold themselves related to his weal or woe. And therefore, though true it be, that England is by some looked upon like Athens in Solon's time, Grocius, De Jur. Belli, & Pacis, p. 64. lib. 1. as a mixed Government, which has much of regulation to power in it; yet is it as true, that England's Imperial Crown being absolute, in regard of dependence on any but God, Stat. 21 Jac. c. 3. & 4. leaves the Monarch as well empowered with the Sword to propagate, and protect Justice, as directed by the Law, to administer Justice to those that need, and seek it. The use then both of Arms and Laws, must be connected in a Prince, that he may be indefectuous: For as Arms are like the Muscles, that move and plump out the joints and proportions of the Body, that they are symmetrious to the beauty of the whole; so are Laws like the Veins and Arteries vehiculary of the blood, and succulency into all the parts, by a right orderly circulation, and distribution. And the counsel Laws give, is not to suppress the use, but advise to the right use of the Sword: not to condonate through easiness great offences, nor to punish passionately, and with severity, small disgusts and errors of infirmity; but to give to every offence its proper chastisement, to arbitrate the Law's Prescript, and become its Patron. This, while a Prince promotes, he declares himself an Agesilans, a rare Prince. For of him Xenophon writes, In Oratione De Agesilao, p. 66● ' 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 etc. That though he could do what he would, yet he d●d what only he ought, professing himself to be under the direction of the Law, though not the subjection of it. Our Chancellor then had good reason for his advice, since he caressed, and smoothed the young Prince into the love of the Law; foreseeing, with Timon of Athens, that if he were only a Martialist, he might be as Alcibiades was by him fore-seen to prove, Patriae exitio futurus; so the Prince might, patriis legibus exitio futurus: since what Youth sucks in, it retains, and propagates in its Manhood, and Age: which considered, good Princes aim to do; as justinian says, armis decorari, to use force as a jewel for show, ad faciendum populum, to purchase dread and estimation; but, armari legibus, to speak favour and terror to subjects, in Law terms, per delegatos judices, non per ut legatos milites, morè curiali, non militari, By Pen and Paper, not Guns and Pikes, the Paradoes of Conquests, not the practice of Civil Governments, except on extraordinary occasions, and then, as necessary as Physic, in bodily distempers. Tamen ut ad legum studia fervide tu anheles maximus legislator ille Moses elim Synagogae dux multo fortiùs Caesare te invitat. Here our Text-Master backs his former Argument by an example; he saw the Prince was earnest, as one through-warm with the love of Arms, and well he perceived, that his eager pursuit, which left no vein in him unstretched, but kindled, to a height of reaking; (for so aubelare signifies, anhelare est eum ex cursu, & quovis labour vehements crebris quasi singultibus spiratur & respiratur. So Columel, lib. 2. c. 3. Ante ad praesepiaboves relegari non expedit quam sudare atque anhelare desierint. Hence anhelare scelus, for doing mischief with might and main. Tandem aliquando Quiretes Catalinam furentem audacia scelus anhelantem pestem patria nefatiè molientem. And again, Anhelaus ex infimo pectore crudelitatem, Cie. in Catal. 24. Author ad Hetennium, lib. 4. is tully's expression for our authority.) And therefore he endeavours to fix his mettle, and intent his earnestness on its right object, by propounding not only a most excellent thing, Opus est alique ad quem mores nostra seipsi exigant: wise ad regulam prava non corriges. Aliquem habeat animus quod vereatur cujus auctoritate, etiam secretum suum sanctius faciat. Seneca Ep. 11. but a choice example of one authoritative in the case, Moses; one of whom, no Story mentions, but either the Holy Text, or Histories from it. The grave Knight will not to Moab, and Ekron, not cull examples out of profane Authors, while there are pregnant ones in the Book of God; his instance therefore is not in Alexander, Caesar, Pompey, Marcus Aurelius, Trajan, Constantine, or his Henry the Sixth, though all great instances of Bravery; but his man of Mirror is Moses: For, though they all in their respective times, were praiseworthy; yet none of them came up to the pattern in the Mount, on which Moses his face glittered to a transfiguration, and admirableness, hardly consistent with Manhood. For God who had provided him such a Nurse-Mother, as a King's Daughter; such a Cradle, as an Ark of Flags, and exposed him to the ruffles, and hazards, of merciless Waters, when but a Babe, only able to cry under the burden of a helpless Infancy, shadowed out what he was, in time, to be, who broke out upon the World, through such a Mist, and Cloud of Dangers; which, when dispelled by mercy, evidenced h●● to be what God appointed him, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Lib. 2. De Vita Mosis. p. 654. etc. as Philo's words are of him both a Lawgiver an ArmyLeader and a devont Sacrificer for the people's relief and supply. Now Moses being such a person is the example presented to the Prince and asserted from the Holy Ghost to be learned in all the Learning of the Egyptians and mighty in word and in deed; which the Holy Text says of him not as thinking those miraculous things that he could do worthy him or commending them in him as they were feats that the Egyptians doted on and were superstitious about: for as Iustin Martyr's words are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, In Resp. ad Quest. 25. ad Oithod. p. 317. edit Sylburg. etc. they were but small things and not proper to commend a Prophet. But therefore the Holy Ghost adds Moses was mighty in word and indeed; because 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 etc. because for those two excellencies Moses was famous with the Egyptians. As then the Chancellour's love to the Prince's proficiency; so his prudence in the choice of his example to that end is well-worthy him. He (wife soul) knew magnos magna decent that trifles became not those Eagle and coelestized souls that steer Princes, which Philip of Macedon hinted to his son Alexander whom he found playing skilfully upon the Lute; Art thou not ashamed (quoth he) my Son to be so skilful a Musician. And thence singles he out to the Prince's imitation this Seraphic instance of both praecellencies A man of Wisdom for he was Legislator to the jews; a man of eminency above others: for though they had other Legislators after him yet he was Maximus Legislatorum all their Legislation was after his model and his precursing them: yea and a man he was not of yesterday who rose malis artibus and in the declension of the World to be a Lawgiver; but olim when the Golden Ages were; when virtues had the upper hand of vices than had Moses the dignity to be Maximus Legislator Synagogae Dux; and fitly so too for he had what Philo says, Lib. 2. De Vita Mosis p. 655. all Lawgivers and Chieftains should have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the gift to excel in all noble endowments, suitable to his place and occasions. Moses is then here mentioned in both capacities, both of a Civil Magistrate, and a Martial Conductor. A Civil Prince, in the exercise of Legislation; a Martial Leader, in his conduct of the people against their enemies. Synagogae Dux, of the former, not only himself, in his books, testifies; but even our Lord Jesus, the truth itself, who puts him in the parallel with himself: The Law was given by Moses, but Grace and Peace came by Jesus Christ; and in another place Moses gave them a Law. Yea, the jews, in Religion, Lib. De Vita Mosis, p. 602. initio. in all Ages of the World, have testified of Moses, as their Lawgiver. Philo judedus writing of Moses his life, calls him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 etc. as the Lawgiver of the Jews, or the Interpreter of the Holy Law to the Jews. And to be a bare Legislator, is to be presumed great in place, grave in years, wise in counsel; for the Ancients did ever account their Lawgivers secundi Dii, and never took Laws from any Mouths, but those which were extraordinarily gifted: 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Philo libro De Sacrificiis. Abesis & Caini, p. 153. yea, if it were reckoned a part of the policy of pristine Ages, to acclamate Laws, as the invention and bequest of the Gods to men, then sure those that were instrumental in their Productions, were none of the lowest of the people, but the best and bravest of them. And of that number was Moses, Maximus Legislator: not only because he was primus & primas Legislator, and primum in unoquoque genere nobilissimum: For before Moses gathered the people into a policy, they lived in diffusions, scattered; and as sheep without a shepherd. But Maximus, as having many preparatory endowments to, and successes in this Legislation. God that called him to, fitting him for so great a Sphere, and making him adorn the Sparta he had appointed him to. Ficinus makes three endowments, or felicities, in a Lawgiver. Deum, fortunam, artem; God above, success about, art in his manageries, and constitutions. Philo the jew, reports Moses his first step to greatness (yea, Com. in lib. 4. De Legib. Platon. p. 821. and Moses had them all. and to this degree of it in Civil and Martial Government) to be his apprehensive Infancy; God made him all touch taking every sparkle of illumination that was struck into him from his puisne institution. The Hebrews story that one day being at play with the Crown of Pharaoh he threw it on the ground and afterwards trod upon it: the King, Gaulmyn in opere Rabinico. De Vita & mot Mosis p. 10 etc. Joseph. A ●tiq. Judatc. lib. 2. c. 5. and Spectators took it to have an ominous presage and the jealousy of Pharaoh meditated revenge of the fact; but the King was advised to try by some expedient conducing to the discovery of the rise of it whether Malice or Chance and to forbear rigour in the interim. An Apple they say was on one side presented him and on the other a Coal of fire to see whether he would choose; and they say God gave him so subtle an Infancy that he chose purposely the Coal of fire and would have put it into his mouth; which they say he was led to do to shadow the former Instinct and under the notion of a Child to serve himself for his future Exploits; and the Sages told the King that there was no reason to put to death his Daughter's adopted Babe for an act of pure simplicity. For being in Egypt and the Egyptians having Greek Philosophers amongst them whom they had leured to them by reward; Moses says he by an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an aptness of nature stole all their Arts from them upon the first insight and impartment of them: so that what other Lads were years in learning and then but imperfectly, Lib. De Vita Mosis. p. 605. at last obtained Moses learned in a trice and that tightly, ultra quam non making good that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. so excellent Wits learn Arts, that they add to them by learning of them. So Philo. Another step to Moses his fitness, was his marriage to Iethroes Daughter: Gaulmyn p. 24. De Vita & morte Mosis. If we'll believe Philo For God says he bringing Moses into his Fathers-in-law house; Who as a Prince and Priest had plenty of all things and especially of Cattle Moses having committed to him the Government of the Castle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was made more apt thence to rule men as acquainting their inspectors which those observations vigilancies and discreet demeanours which will be useful in greater charges. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Philo lib. 2. De Vita Mosis p. 656. But these and such like are but the less eminent lustres of Moses his Additions; that which makes him maximus legislator was his ministration to the Moral Laws Promulgation his Sanctification to his employment Magistratique by being in the Mount with God 40 days and his knowledge of the mind of God in all the latitude of his Commission and his fidelity in doing every thing according to the preciseness of his Entrust which God rewarded with such a reverence from the people that as he was just to God and Men so was God a zealons assertor of his worth and an exiter of the people to an eternal Honour of him and of his Memory in all Generations and his Laws paramounted all other Law in that they abode the test and terror of Conquest and remain to the Jews in Nation and Religion the same that they were even to his day. Yea as when he lived he was the people's Oracle from God and Orator to God a favourite who by the spell of his faith could charm as it were with reverence I write it Omnipotence and bind the Almighty to peace with his people as God himself intimates in these words Let me alone that I may stay this people: so when he was dead God concealed the place of his burial to hinder their Idolatry for surely they would have been supertitious to his memory and erected an Altar near his grave that was so real a numen to them when he lived and this God knowing prevented them by concealing it yet I say this Moses so adored by the people and so victorious in the Conduct of them did render himself Maximus legislator by his self-denial he made no family he gathered no wealth he commenced no regality from this advantage but served God and his charge leaving the compensation to the issue of God's appointment. He looked more at God's glory then his own greatness; at the people's peace then his Progenies preferment; Vt Deus in rebus inferio refus procreandis non sua, sed nostra causa agit, ita & vicarius ejis Princeps Dominum suum imitatus, apud quen omnium actionum suorum rationem red. dear debet, non de se perticulatè, sed▪ dè tota Reipub. universè solicitus esse debet. Hopperus, lib. De Institut. Principis. and when God revealed to him he must die, introduced no Son or Creature of his, whom favour, not virtue, fitted to succeed him; but generously, and justly, deputes joshuah, one parted, and graced suitably to the Office he admits him to, and him, full of the Spirit of Wisdom. He charges, in the sight of all Israel, to be strong, and of good courage; yea, and as a Prophet, assures him God will be with him; as it is, Deut. xxxi. 6, 7. So that Moses, all things considered, was rightly termed by our Text-Master, Maximus Legislator, no Lawgiver before him; no Law like his in duration; no Justice so unspotted as his, no Justicer so venerated as he. The Friend; nay, in a sort, a fellow-Commoner with God (as I may reverently write it) at the Mess on the Mount; or rather the Master of Requests, admitted near, when all were to keep off the Mount. In sum, Moses was prefigured Christ; not only as all Types were, but as he mostly, if not solely, was in the Office of Ecclesiastical despotiqueness, and indisputable Legislation. Hitherto we have seen him in the Temple as the Cornerstone, and Earthly Masterbuilder of the Sanhedrim, or Church-Fabrique: Now let's consider him in Tentorio, as a Magistrate Civil. Synagogae Dux, that's a Leader of the People; for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies any Convention of People; yea, the very actus Congregandi is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉: so Thucydides, Homil. 4. in Hexameron. lib. 2. uses 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and St. Basil calls Cumulus acervus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, so Alexander Aphrodiseus calls plenty of milk 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Beza, indeed, upon the Tenth of Matth. 17. where mention is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, makes a distinction; the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, he says, are gentium; the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉: Judaeorum, but still he agrees, that the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies a collection; and so Turrecremata confirms it: Lib. 1. c. 1. Sum. De Ecclesia, Lib. 1. De Vita Mosis, p. 640. so that Synagogae Dux, is, but in Philo's words, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Leader of the Hebrews. And that this he notoriously was, the Holy ●ext attests frequently: For, besides God's miraculous endowment of Moses, to convince Pharaoh of his meslage, for the People's enlargement out of Egypt; upon which account he is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. the Friend of God initiated in the Holy Mysteries. God made him the People's General too in the Wilderness, and at the Red-Sea; yea, after all to Canaan: Lib. De Cherubin. p. 116. for he it was, that brought them to that promised Land, though he himself entered not with them into it. Happy Israel, that had such a Prince as Moses, Faithful in all God's house, loving to all God's people, etc. as Philo's words are, Lib. 1. p. 626. a circumspect man, equally virtuous in small and great affairs, not greedy of gain, not thirsty of applause, but intent only upon great advantages to God, and the people, Lege Gaulmyn, lib. De Vita & Motte Mosis. octavo. and leaving the lesser practics to lower minds. This, shortly was Moses. Thus happy was Israel; yea, and thus happy also was Moses in Israel, God accepted his integrity, and rewarded it with a renowned life, and a lamented death. 'Tis from the wisdom of the World, that men study rather to be great, then good; fortunate, then honest. That heart which is liquored with grace, and has the tincture of God on it, will stand upright in the Circumvallations of Temptations: Successes and power cannot palliate lawless liberty, where Gods fear denies it. To deal deceitfully, and take men in the snares of their credulity, was no practice of Moses the Chieftain of Israel, God's Friend. For though Moses was sole in power, yet is he no oppressor of the people: No Lord over them against their wills, and to their out cry; but bears with their Murmurs, sympathies in their grievances, watches to prevent their annoyance, buries his own lustre, in the reputation of well-deserving, and has no other Monument, than their Memories, in their Generations, and God's entry of his merits on the Record of his Scripture. And hereupon Moses being so unparallelled a Magistrate, may well be the example of the Prince, to learn both how to govern artlily, and martially; yea, and have a cogency on the Prince, multo fortiùs Caesare. For since Moses was so soft and trimmed Gown-man, Antiq. Judaic. lib. 3. ●. 11. only as some are, who yet do more by counsel in their Studies, than Armies do in the field by action, undisciplined, and unadvised, but a valiant Warrior, as not only his own Books declare, but as josephus, by tradition, reports; insomuch, that when the Ethiopians invaded Egypt, and the Oracle directed them to have their Armies led by an Hebrew Captain, to stop their progress. Which being observed, and Moses chosen for the man, and he so miraculously, and mantully doing it, as josephus at large relates▪ Our Chancellor had high reason, to urge this example, rather on the Prince then Iulius Caesar's, because more energical and potent; more bold and superative in the nature and proper operation of it. For, alas! julius Caesar, which I suppose he may obliquely refer to, in regard he was a Temporary Master of the Western World, having subdued Germany, Gaul, and Britain, and dreamt, he was uniting the Empires of Heaven and Earth together, was but a little time Lord of those Conquests, obtained them by blood and oppression, and of them had far less than Alexander had achieved, before he arrived at Caesar's age: yea; what Caesar had, he held with Troubles and Conspiracies, and at last paid his life for the revenge of his affection, wherein the Senators were Assassins, and the Capitol the Slaughter-house: nor did Caesar obtain ever after such a Marble of himself by the largess of Posterity, as Constantine the Great had, Quod instinctu divinitatis, mentis magnitudine cum exercitusuo, tam de Tyranno quam de omni ejus factione, uno tempore, just is Rempubls, ultus est armis. No such Trophy to his memory, but a tacit reproach of his practice, in the Inscription under Brutus his Statue in aftertimes, utinam none viveres; Caesar, I say, was potent, but cruel; prevalent, but injurious; and this made him execrable, and envied. But Moses was an Heroic that might have had what he would, God in wrath would have extirpated Israel, and multiplied Moses into a great Nation: but Moses interposes with God; and mediates for Israel; yea, was contented to be only what God cut him out for, and general good would quietly permit him to be. And herein he was himself fortior Caesare, and his example ought to invite more irrefragably than Caesar's did, because Caesar could not deny himself, taking what was takable by him. No sooner had the Common wealth's divisions weakened opposition against him, every potent Patrician standing single, and the union of them refracted and subdivided into inconsiderable nothings, but Caesar puts in for the whole: No Reconciler he; for than he had been felo propositi, but a subtle tent rather to keep the Wound open, till at last he and his party marched in at the breach, Victors; and when he was in possession, than he wins those by love, that would be made loyal by it, and destroys those that were implacable; and in this he did in his Generation wisely: But Moses had leave to choose, and refused; might have been the Prince, but continued still the Captain of Israel; yea, when Fame surrounding his actions, and consolidating the People to him, rendered him more than probable, sure not to be defeated of their Acclamations, and complyings with his establishment, in all this crowd of trial, which bulges and swallows down ordinary men's continencies, and ingenuities. Moses stands firm to his veracity, and therefore in all things excels Caesar, as a Prince, and a Soldier: yea, if justinian, from whom our Chancellor citys the prealleadged Position, be the proper, Caesar, he means; yet Moses will still be more swasive with a good Prince than he. justinian did but employ his Trebonian, Lege Justinianum in confirmatione digestorum ante Tom. 1. p. 27. Et seq. to collect the Laws of other men famous in their Ages, that is, to bring them into a body, and to render them useful to all occasions, of justice, and accommodation; and in this work was, though famous, yet fallible. But Moses was taught of God to know, and approved of God, to practise the right duty of a King, ex utroque Caesar. And that this is so, the testimony of the seventeenth Chapter of Deuteronomy, the eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth Verses following will demonstrate, And it shall be, when he sitteth upon the Throne of his Kingdom, that he shall write him a Copy of the Law in a Book, out of that which is before the Priests, the Levites; and it shall be with him, and he shall read therein all the days of his life, that he may learn to fear the Lord his God, to keep all the words of this Law, and these Statutes to do them; That his heart be not lifted up above his Brethren, and that he turn not aside from the Commandment, to the right hand, or to the left; to the end, that he may prolong his days in his Kingdom, he and his Children, in the midst of Israel. Which words contain two parts, Actio and Finis; the King's Action, He shall write him the Copy of his Law in a Book, which is before the Priests, the Levites; and it shall be with him; and he shall read it all the days of his life. And then the King's end in this, as prescribed by God, That he may learn to fear the Lord his God; to keep all the words of this Law, and these Statutes to do them. This is the Analyse of them, but not to be passed over: Tradunt Judzi circa hunc locum, quâ ratione, modo, & ordine & in qua item membrane quo demque atrament liber legis sit describendus. Fagius in Loc. Lorinus also reproaches the jews for this out of Munster. for though I wave the Rabbinique conceits, that this Law contained six hundred and thirteen Precepts, three hundred sixty five affirmative, the number of the days of a year, and two hundred forty eight negative, according to that computation they had of the joints in man's body, which they perhaps conceived the King was to be remembered of, that he might know his life consisted of days, and his body of joints, which might soon be severed from their contribution to life, and government acted in it. To omit these, and such conceits which learned men have, the Holy Ghost's drift is, to teach us: First, the order of God's dispensation to Majesty. He first gives them a Throne, and settles them in it; so 'tis their right. And then he shall write him the copy of this Law. Prince's duties in their Oaths, Examples, and Rules of Restraint, are subsequent to their Titles, not to puss up Princes in a contempt and disesteem of their Subjects, whom because they depend not upon, they may use as they list; but to lesson Subjects to look on Majesty, as God's Vicarage, no Creature of theirs; First, he is seated in his Throne, then minded of his Duty. Secondly, the obligation of Princes, as they are Deo subditi, and vice Deiregnantes. First, to endeavour their own accomplishment, in this literal Prescript, to be able to write, that they may write this, that God commands them to rivet on themselves by such means. I confess, possible it may be, that a Prince may be letterless, hate, and be wholly ignorant of letters. Some have been such, and such not unworthy Princes in their actions: For that their Memories being vast, and their Passions keen, as by the latter they might be impatient to write, as well as impotent; so by the former, possible to reap the fruit of writing without writing; and the Spirit of God not so much looking at writing, as the means; as at remembering to do the end: I confess, 'tis possible much of the mind of God may be here observed by Princes void of letters: but yet in that, Writing is the probablest way of durable fixing, and the Holy Ghost specially enjoins it, it were good, nay best, the letter of this Scripture should be observed, that thereby Princes may know the Laws of God, and of their Government. Statim inito regno sua manu Legem describat prater illam quam privatus descripserat ut intelligat se ad observantiam legis obstrictiorem privatis esse. Fagius in Locum. Secondly, in writing themselves, not by Secretaries, and other hands, than their own; but in their own Characters, the Book of the Law; that is, a Copy of the Autographon, that lies with the Priests of God; and that so written under their own hand, to deliver to the Priest to be kept, inter sacra Dei, as God's evidence, signed and sealed by him against himself; if a violator of it, and the counterpart thereof to have from the Priest, signed by him, as the Charter of his practice. This I conceive is the meaning of the Text, and Lorinus is of the same opinion, though I know others think the contrary; because 'tis said, it shall be with him, which his Copy delivered to the Priest, they say, cannot be. Cajetan reads this clause, Scribet sibi emendationem legis hujas a●cipiens exemplar à Sacerdotibus Leviticae Tribus, de exemplo optimae, etiam punctis & lineamentis emendato ad differentiam vulgarium librorum in quibus lex non exactè Scribitur, & ut ad amussim scriberetur exemplar à sacerdotibus habendum fuisse. And Fonseca follows him, adding, that probably this exemplar with the Priests was that, which Moses wrote; out of which, the Book found by the Prophet Helchia, in the Reign of josiah, was written. But I rather conceive the former (yet with humble submission, yea, and without exclusion of the latter) because I suppose thereby the greater and stronger testimony lies against the King, in case of violation by oblivion, since as the Gospel says, Out of thy own mouth will I judge thee, thou wicked Servant, and perverse. So from thine own hand may God say to Princes, shall your sins be proved and reproved; Oftendam digitum, & debitum, God marshal's then our faults effectually, when Reason condemns the violation of Religion. Describi Carabit, v. 18. Habebat. autem teste R. S duos libros legis unum qui repositus adservabatur in archivis, & alium quem secum portabat. Drusius in Loc. Thirdly, in reading what they have written, and that not once, but often; but always where duty renews, memory of it must be renewed; therefore we write that we may read; therefore read, that we may remember. To write, and not to read; to write on the Sand, or in Air, or Water, is to write in show, but not in deed; for all's lost that's so trifled: those fusile, and unstable Elements, are not adopted to tenacity, and therefore are not the grounds on which we write. Men write on Tables, Trees, Pillars, Parchments, Papers, Metal, and on these they are legible thousands of years, even from Moses his time till now, above six thousand years; whereas then the Prince is to write, In c. 17. v. 19 'tis to write librum è libro, the Copy, as the Original. Cajetan makes four fruits of his reading. First, Vt Deus timeatur. Secondly, Serventur legis praecepta omnia. Thirdly, Non elevetur cur ejus supra alios. Fourthly, Prorogetur imperium Regis & filiorum. God commanded the Law to be written that it might be read, and Princes are commanded by God to write the Law, that they may read it often, and affectionately, with resolution to do it at all times, in youth and age, in prosperity and adversity, in Israel, and in Captivity, and in all latitudes of impartiality, according to the direct and pat requiry of it. And then lastly, he must read it with a resignation of himself to the power, and a resolution in himself to the practice of it. For so much only we know aright, as we practise accordingly, That he may learn to do all that is commanded therein; that is, that knowing God the Commander, and all things accumulately, and copulatively, his command; and himself, though a Prince, not exempt by Prerogative from his duty, may with a ready Will, and unalterable Resolution, perform the Duty enacted by it. This is in short, the sum of this Clause, of which yet our Chancellor has a quotation more succinct in the subsequent words, Quod exponens Helinandus, dicit, Princeps ergo non debet esse juris ignarus. This Helinandus was a French Monk of the Order of the Claniacenses, Possevinus in Apparatu Sacro. p. 72●. he lived about the Year, 1200. and Possevinus says he wrote many things, as forty eight Books of the History from the Creation; In Speculo Historiali, lib. 30. c. 108. of the reparation of lapsed man one Book; Sermons, Epistles, etc. Vincentius Beluacensis also writes of him, where in his works this passage is, I know not; nor indeed have I ever seen the Author; but that it is in them, is more than probable. And his Exposition of Moses his Directory, I take to be very genuine and nervous, suitable both to the Holy Ghost's intent, and his amanuensis' Language. For a Prince being caput Regni & legum, aught to have in him those vital and animal accomplishments, that may in the nobility of their distribution, Quo genere obligatus es, hoc fidens exsoluè. Senec, lib. 5. Benef. vos ad speciem veri componite animum. & dum h●nestum dicitis quicquid est id quod nomine honesti ●actatur. id colite, Idem codem loco. supply all the dependants on him. For, as where there are corporal defects, and monstrosity of parts in them, they are thence lessened in the World's eyes, and do all things with much disadvantage; so much incommodated are they from their mind's plebeity. It was a saucy, and insolent Satire of the Ancients, Rex illiteratus est asinus Coronatus: but yet it has the truth of that Moral, That Kings unlearned are unlike themselves. Not Gods descended in the likeness of men, but Kings descended from the best and most conspicuous of men to be their vassals censure, and the diminutions of the very bruits of people. And therefore Philip had good reason to bless the Gods, that his Son Alexander was born to be bred under Aristotle, because there was great probability, under so noble Institution, he would become worthy his Father, and Tutor. For Parents generate their Sons, men in nature, and to be such in Title as they themselves are; but Tutor's form them, to be worthy and virtuous men, by good Precepts, and lovely examples of virtue presented them. Ex iis autem qui saint, eligamus non ces qui verba magna celeritate pracipitant, & communes locos volvunt, & in privato circulantur, sed ces qui vita decent, qui cum dixerint quid faciendum sit, probant faciendo. Seneca. Ep. 52. And hence it is, that next divine grace, solid and rational Intellectuals frequently actuated in Affairs, according to the limitations of Religion, the nature of times, the coincidence of circumstances, and the Laws of Respective Governments, declare Kings Kinglyly qualified. Omnejus aut consensus fecit aut necessitas constituit aut firmavis consuetudo. Modestinus, lib. 1. Regul. For knowledge of duty consists not wholly in the Theory of their Nature, but in the maturation of their Conceptions, to a subserviency to their end. And therefore, though Kings may have less proportions of speculative abilities, not so clearly defining and canvasing of Justice and Courage, as professed Doctors in Artly Faculties may; yet, they do ever in their aims, and when they do like themselves, excel them in the noblest import of Justice, that is, in distribution of it as a blessing, Totum autem jus consistit aut in acquirende, aut in conservando, aut in minuendo, Ulpianus lib. 2. Institut. resulting from their Crown, as, the Flos Solis which is enlivened and made conspicuous by it. For the chief end of Government is Justice, and that being Constans & perpetua voluntas jus unicuique tribuendi, justus non e● nist qui constanter, & firm animi proposito quod justum est, agit. Reg. Jur. which refers to action, according to that of the Civilians, He is not just, who is not actively such in the disposition and resolution of his mind and purpose. Princes are said to be knowing in the Law of their Government when they observe Laws, and propagate Justice, Cum léx in prateritum quid indulget, in futurum vetat, Ulpianus, lib. 35. ad Edictum. In notis in Philonis, lib. De Officio Judicis. Minimé sunt mutanda qua interpretasionem certam semper habuarunt. Paulus, lib. 4. ad Plautium. according to humane possibilities, and regal prudencies; Rex, cum sit judex, sententiam dicturus assumat sibitum prudentiam, etc. Since the King is judge, and as the living Law determins right and wrong, it becomes him to be prudent, that he err not in judgement; and just, that be proportion punishments and rewards, according to the natures of the actions they refer to, in which no favour or affection must be showed, that justice be not maimed, faith Petreius. Now because the Laws of God and Governments are the best Magisteries of Princes in this noble Craft, and heroic exercise of Conscience, the Chancellor here puts the non debet upon the Prince, telling him, that whatever he pretermits, this he must not do, knowledge of the Law; because without it, a Ruler cannot be just, a People not be happy, a Government not be durable, a Governor not be renowned. The Cabalists do hold, that Injustice is one of the underminers of Thrones, and that Canker that eats out the vitality of their permanence, and disposes them to, and puts them into Revolution and period: yea, he must needs be unnatural to his good name and perennity, who does not labour to know his duty, and perform it, as rightly he ought, so many being concerned besides himself (as in case of Kings there are,) Lib. 1. c. 15. Historiae Sclavorum. and in the rectitude, or obliquity of his actions. Helmodas tells, that Harald was so famous a King, Vt Leges & jur a statuerit, etc. That the Laws and Statutes he made were for the reverence of their Maker so venerable, that both the Danes and Saxons religiously observed them. And since him, those who have followed most the steps of serious knowledge; in strict Justice, have been most renowned. For as to be a man, is to be endowed with Reason and Understanding; so to be a King, is to be knowing in the Law of Nature, of Nations, of his Polity, haec tria sunt omnia; and in these, non debet princeps esse Ignarus. The Law of Nature is that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that which is implanted in all Creatures. This, Corvinus says, is collecta ex praeceptis naturalibus, etc. collected from Nature's Precepts, A mundi origine & primordio nobiscum nata est, nunquam interitura. Quam si sequerentur nostri jurisperiti ne rabulas dicam & legulejos potius non profecto intersecturas, & m●andros quotidiè & identidem de ●ondcremur. Lilius Gyrald. adu literas. taught by Naturae to all Creatures: Such as are Conjunctions of Creatures, male and female, for preservation of their kinds, self-preservation, and all things incident thereto, etc. These Laws of Natural Policy God has chased upon the universal nature of the Creation, animal and sensitive, and the Characters of them are indelible: the World must cease when they cease, Corvinus, lib. 1. Instit. Tit. ●. Gloss, in Pandect lib. 1. Tit. 1. E. Quod natura, p. 55 Lib. 13. De Juti. Sprud. c. 2. p. ●5. which under their prime cause, are the means of its continuance, in its noblest end, and parts external, living Creatures. This Law of Nature some of the Learned do make four fold, Lex Mosaica, instinctus nature, jus gentium, jus pretorium. Possevinus makes it of a fivefold nature, Natural, Supernatural, Mosaique, Divine, Private. Yea, they make the Law of Nature to consist in those Precepts which are purely good, both as to doing of good, and avoiding of evil; according to that rule of justin Martyr, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; and in another place, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Lib. De Aristot. Dogmat. eversione 54. C. p. 116. p. 119. Now this Law of Nature being explicated in the Law of Moses, and added to by that nomothetique, and despotique Authority that Moses has, as the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, (as Diodorus Siculus testifies) he had learned from the Egyptian Priests, In Cohortat. ad Graecos, p. 8. as the truth of their Tradition (as Justin Martyr observes.) The Laws of Nations, of what kind soever, are but the prudent Extracts, and divine Comments upon this Text; and the improvement of that natural Sagacity, and political discretion, which men of parts, place, and experience express according to the entrusts of God with them. And this being in all places, and in all ages, one and the same in the main, and chief tendency of it, which is preservation of justice, and propagation of humanity in all the emergent and occasional branches of them, which diversify and spread out into infinities, as men and things dilate and increase, the Learned call the Law of Nations, as the common Principles which correspond man with man, jus gentium; and this is defined to be in praeceptis & communibus notionibus homini peculiariter insitis, Budzus in Pandect, priores, p. 51. Impress. Basilez, 1534. vivindi reclam rationem continentibus. This consists in distinctions of men's Rights, building of houses, erecting of Cities, societies of Life, judgements of Controversies, War, Peace, Fornerius in Legem 42. p. 122. De signific. Verborum. Captivity, Contracts, Obligations, Successions, and the like; as that judicious Gentleman Sir Thomas Ridley has to my hand observed. Now because this Law is the same to all, in all places, at all times being the instinct of humane nature, and a donary of Gods, View of the Civil and Eccles. Law, p●. the natura naturans to the natura naturata in man, therefore 'tis called the Law of Nations, since it links together humane Natures and Societies so firmly, that there is no unluting, Digest. lib. 1. Tit. 1. De justitia &c jure, p. 56, 57.58. or discementing them, but by a riot and fray against the peace of God's primary position of them: nor can Wars and Animosities justify themselves of any better Origen then by blows, and monstrous heats, against the serene and just cognation, Florentinus lib. 1. Inslit. lege An● not. loc. ut supr●. and alliance of man with man, and the common principles leading them to union and amity. But this being not the ordinary notion of jus gentium, I proceed to honour it as the custom and observances of learned and reduced Polities, which of rude are become civil; ¶ See K. James' Speech, An. 1616 Star Chamber, P. 554. of his Works. Alciatus Brech. & Forner ad legem 10. p. 28, 29. Gajus. lib. 1. Instit. c. 9 Digest. lib. 1. Tit. 1. p. 60. of Ethnique, Christian; of discordant, harmonious. And so by the jus gentium, the * Imperial Laws, ordinarily called the Civil Laws, are to be understood these being the Laws of particular Constitutions, yet are so composed by, and conformed to the Laws of Nations, that they are deep Channels of Justice, Wisdom, and Variety, Ulpian, lib 1. Instit. c. 6. Digest. lib. 1. Tit. 1. De Justitia & Jure, p. 58 and are saved in the opinion of the plurality of civilised men, Ius civil est quod neque in totum a naturali vel gentium recedit, nec per omnia ei seruit. Itaque cum aliquid addimus, vel detratrimus juri communi, jus proprium, id est, civil efficimus, saith Ulpian. Now that the aforementioned Laws do differ in the objects they respect, the Law of Nature suits, Fornerius De Veriorum significad legam 4●. p. 122, 123. omnibus quidem hominibus, sed non solis, because it takes in bruits as well as men. The Law Civil agrees with men only, but not with all men (for that we in England, and in other parts, more or less, it is excepted against in the Exemptions and Salvoes that are allowed against it) but the Law of Nations suits omnibus hominibus & solis; and the Civil or Roman Laws being the amplest and oldest System of humane Laws, are highly to be valued, and so are in the Empire, Nonopportere jus civil Calumniari, saith Paulus; and the gloss gives the reason, Lib. 4. Epitome. Alfini. 19 Digest. lib. 10. tit. 4. ad exhibendum. Quia non est pecuniarium interest, quum sit inestimabilis scientia, p. 1 190. in marg. p. Doctior. By the Civil Law, I mean the Law of Nations methodizd and collected into four Tomes. The first whereof is the Digest à digerendo, or Pandects, from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Budaeus in Pandect, p. 56. edit Basil, 1534. Possevinus Bibliothec. Select. lib. 13. c. 11, etc. seq. Nostrum autem consummationem quaea no. bis De● admuente componetur, Digestorum, vel Pandectarum ●omen habere sanctmus, nullis jurisperitis in posterum audentibus commentarios illi applicare, et verbo●itate sua supradicti codicis compendium confundere. Imp. Caesar justinianus in Concil● ante lib. Pandectatum. p. 13. containing the Works of twenty seven original Lawyers, some of which were before Christ's time, and the rest in the Emperor's days to Maximinus▪ and to this Tome Iustinian's Institutes is added. The second Tome, or Member of the Law, is the Code in Twelve Books, the Responsa of the fifty six Emperors, and their Council, from the Emperor Adrian to Iustinian's time. The third is the authentics, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, proceeding from the immediate mouths of the Emperors, and so being of absolute and unquestionable Authority, this part is called also Novella, Possevinus Biblothec select, lib. 13. c. 16. Ulp. lib. 1. Instit Digest. lib. 1. Tit. 1. p. 58.59. for that the Laws in them are upon emergencies as new matters occasioned new Remedies. The fourth is liber feudorum, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which contains Tenors of a Military Origen. I suppose, some make this as ancient as Christ's time others later, but all very ancient. These are the grand Records of the Civil Laws, which are artlyly and amply expatiated upon by the Learned Doctors in that Science, who truly have in all Ages proved themselves as great Masters of Learning, as any the World has had, and have carried as great a sway in the transactions of State Affairs, as any other Race of Learned men; Lege Imper. Justin. diplom. De Confirm. Digest. p. 11, 12, 13, etc. ante Tom. 1. Pandect. De Origine Juris p. 70. such as of old were Tib. Corun●anus Publ. Papyrius App. Claudius Claud. Centumna●us Sempronis, called by the Romans as none before or after him was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Scipio Nasica Mutius and hundreds of others; which together with their equals of later date such as Vlp. Bartolus Zasius Alciat Hotteman Hopper who all of them in the words of Ulpian declare the Civil Law to be that quod neque in totum naturali vel gentium recedit nec per omnia seruit. Itaque cum aliquid addimus vel detrahimus juri communi, jus proprium id est, civil efficimus. And again, Ius autem civile est quod ex legibus, plebiscitis, senatissconsultis, decretis principum, auct●ritate prudentium. These are some of those jura, that the Prince here is not to be ignorant in. But the great Chancellor, as a common Lawyer by profession and preferment, has another kind of Law to acquaint the Prince with, as he was supposed by our Chancellor to be rightful Heir of the Crown of England, in which there was a peculiar Manicipe Law. Filia temporis, mater peace, fructus sapientiae, fulcrum regiminis, decus regnantis; Doctor & Stud. lib. 1. c. 4. p. 8. grounded upon six principal grounds: First, the La w of Reason: Secondly, the Law of God: Thirdly, on divers great Customs of the Realm: Fourthly, on divers principles called Maxims: Fifthly, on divers particular Customs: Sixthly, on Statutes made in Parliament by the King, and by the Common-Council of the Realm. Such a Law as that Plato describes to be a well-constituted one, Lib. 1. De Legib. p. 773. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. making the Subjects happy and blessed under, and shining as the fruits of it. This is the Law of England ancient, not only ultra memoriam hominum, but recordorum, the fruits of experience, in the succession of time, the womb of peace, riches and renown in all ages and degrees; the centre and stability of all Governors, and Governments, when they reduced all their Circumferences to its punct of Justice, which is indivisible. In a word, the amplitude and glory of its Monarches, while they have been ruled by it, dreaded alive, and lamented when dead, because great and good, powerful and just, men in nature, but Gods in munificence. In these Laws, and in the emanations from them, and the Statute-additions to them, the Prince is told, he ought not to be ignorant, because the Law is the rule of his duty, and ignorantia juris non excusat, neither before God in point of Conscience, or men in point of fame; which is the reason, that wise Princes have laboured to know and govern according to the Laws of their Government, and only unhappy ones neglected themselves in the omission of it; and the effects of swerving from the Law is legible in the troubles of King john, Math. Paris, pag. 231, 245, 384. Wals. in E. 2. Scire Leges, hoc non est verba corum tenere, sed vim ac potestatem. Coelius, lib. 16. Digestor. Pag. 238. to the Prince of Wales. Hen. the Third, E. the Second, R., the Second; who not guided by the Laws, had Reigns of War and Tumult. The Prince then was by our Text-Master well advised not to be ignorant of the Laws, lest he prefer Passion above Reason, and being carried away by the Euroclydon of his Will, forget that pious, prudent, generous Rule of practice, which our late Martyred Monarch, blessed King Charles commended in those words, I cannot yet learn (said that martyred Oracle) that Lesson; nor I hope ever will you, that it is safe for a King, to gratify any Faction, with the perturbation of the Laws, in which is wrapped up the public Interest, and the good of the Community. So renowned King Charles the First. But I proceed to what follows in the Text. Nec praetextu Militia legem permittitur ignorare. This is added, to take away all Arguments of excuse, which Martial Natures are apt to make in Apology for their artlessness; they say, it effeminates the mind: Did it so in Moses, David, Alexander, Caesar, julian, Constantine, Antoninus? nothing less: nor did they allow all time to their accomplishments as Soldiers, Scholars they knew they ought to be, and only could be by Study, and learned institution, and the Laws of God, 1 Jacob. c. s. and Men, as the Treasuries of that they read and considered, and this made them calm Governors, tender Parents, prudent Warriors, politic Statesmen, victorious Princes, and yet continues them in the reputation of Heroiques. Divide a Prince from knowledge and action, curtail him of either of those Diadems, and his Crown is abated; by how much either prevails against other, by so much is he propended to the extreme, which is the overreach of virtues mediocrity. And therefore, as I hold a Prince ought not wholly to neglect Military Affairs, but verse himself in, and accustom himself to them, that he may intonate fear into Neighbours, not to provoke him to War, or to contemn him in his appearing; as vainly did the Emperor by the Swedish King, who was the bravest Hector of his Age; no, nor ought he wholly to rely on them, contemning Arts and Policies of Justice and Law; because they direct best how parta & propria conservare, and are the nerves and sinews of success and honour: but join them together, In Epift. De Justiniano, Codice confirm. In Panicrol. Tit. 56. De Armamentariis, p. 292. etsi milites sive arma propter leges in tuto collecantur, ipsas tamen leges armorum praesidio conservatas Justinianus putavit. So Salmuth. And how little Arms, without managery of Wisdom has profited their undertakers, is evident in the fatal consequences of those brutish engagements, which have been ruinous to Princes, and their Fortunes; as Salmuth has given us many instances to prove the truth of it. And this renowned Queen Elizabeth resolving in herself, who turned the Affairs of Christendom upon the Poles, of her Wisdom and Courage, being truly furnished with both Ornaments, to a degree symmetrious to her Majesty, made her Reign renowned, her Subjects rich and grateful, her Commands absolute and observed, her life prayed for, her death deprecated before it came, and lamented when it came. In a word, left none unsad, but those to whom she justly and honourably was a terror. And she did this to the amazement of all Christendom, and the immortal honour of the Sex, by being directed by her learned judgement, to temper her Justice with spirit, Sapientiae noceri non potest, nulla delebit atas praesens, nulla diminuet sequens ac deinde semper ulterior aliquid ad veneratione● conferet, quoniam quidem in vicino versatur invidia. Seneca, lib. De Brevit Vitae. p. 735. and her Mercy with competent severity, and by employing such Spectacle State-Ministers, and active Martialists, as showed her a practical Monarch, who as she knew how to rule supreme, so skilled the method of her supporting that her soleness by the proper aids and shores of it, Laws and Forces; and this was non praetextu Militiae legem ignorare. For the fundamental and ancient Laws, Privileges, and good Customs of this Kingdom, do not only preserve the King's Regal Authority, (but are the People's security of Lands, Livings, and Privileges, both in general, and particular) are preserved and maintained; and by the abolishing, or alteration of the which, it is impossible, but that present confusion will fall upon the whole state and frame of this Kingdom. 1 jac. c. 2. in the Preamble. They are the words of the Statute, Which considered, there is great reason Princes and Monarches, especially ours in England, should not be ignorant of the Laws, because they are so essential to their own stability, and their people's security, as nothing can be more; nay, without them, Modestinus, lib. 1. Regularum. known and exercised in that Quaternion of Magistratique method, Imperare, vetare, permittere, punire, which contain the virtue of Laws, there can be no honour to the Prince, no felicity to the People: yea, that Prince that is so unhappy, while he intends so nobly, not to be well resented, may use Cato's words, though in a little other sense, Nihil egisti, fortuna, omnibus conatibus meis obstando, non pro mea adhuc sed pro patriae libertate pugnavi nec agebam tantâ pertinaciâ at liber, Seneca, Ep. 24. sed ut inter liberos viverem, nunc quoniam deplor at ae sunt res generis humani, Cato deducatur in tutum. Better for a good King to go to a glorious reward in Heaven, then live to oblige a graceless, and ingrate people. But God being the only Lord of life and death, is to be attended upon for the issue of things; which if they be not to Princes, as well as other men, such as they would have them; yet are, in whatever they are, such as God permits, and knows best for them to have them. In the mean time, we must endeavour to do our duties, the Prince not excepted, whose part it is, juris non esse ignarus praetextu Militiae. A sacerdotibus Leviticae Tribus assumere jubetur exemplar legis, id est, à viris Catholicis & literatis. This is added, to restrain the King for the Matters of God, to God's own appointment and institution; the Priesthood was settled on Levi by God, Numb. 1.2, 3. and no portion had Levi with his Brethren, for the God of his Priesthood was his portion. Now, God to put a dignity on the Priesthood, does not only enjoin the people to consult the Priest, who had the custody and knowledge of the Law; but even the Prince, he was to write the Law from the Original, with the Priests, called here the Levitical Tribe; In loc. not as Aben-Ezra thinks, to distinguish them from other Priests, which were not of the seed of Levi: for Drusius refuses that, upon the ground that the Priests were of the Kindred of Aaron, who was of the Race of Levi; but to keep us close to God's Ordination, who made the Priesthood the Repertory of Law-Learning, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Philo's words are: And hence learned Grotius writes; Hìs vero ratio habetur meliorum temporum, Grotius in Deut. xvii. 9 etc. Here, saith he, is an account of the flourishing times of Levi; for then all controversies, judgements, difficulties, were brought before, and resolved by them; but afterwards they declining, and the incomes of the Priesthood being great, and inclining the Priests to sloth and luxury, it fell out in time, that the Learning of the Priesthood was translated into other Tribes, amongst which there were those that excelled the Priests in knowledge of the Law: so that the people did not only wave the Levites, but even sometimes the Highpriest, and applied themselves for introduction in the Law of God, to those that were learned, though not Levites, but Laymen; saith he, out of Maimonides, lib. 2. De Synedrio. Though therefore the Priest's misbehaviour, might eclipse their credit with the people; yet God's dignification of Levi is plain from Scripture throughout the whole Book of Numbers; and the Author to the Hebrews mentions it in the fifth of the Hebrews, as an augmentation of it. Lib. quod Det. potiert insidi soleat. p. 166. No man, saith he, takes this honour upon him, but he that is called of God, as was Aaron. Yea, and plain is it from Philo, whose words are, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Do you not see, quoth he, that God the great Lawgiver, did not commit the preservation and charge of holy things to every man, but to the pure and holy Levites. So in another place, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. The Levite has all the privileges that pertain to a perfect Priesthood, Lib. De Sacrif. Abelis & Caini, p. 152. by which men attain the knowledge of the great God, and are in their sacrifices and services rendered acceptable to him. And in another place he gives the reason, why God took such care of Levi, and made their Habitations, Cities of Refuge, as well as their Offices, the keepers of the holy things of God; because they deserted all that was most dear and near to them, to attend his portion who is immortal. The Priests than were the trusties, to whom the Custody of God's Law was referred. And therefore Princes enjoined to transcribe the Law from their Original, were to apply themselves to them; so under the Law: nor is it otherwise under the Gospel. For as God under the Old Law by Moses; so under the New Testament by who was faithful in God's Church as a Son, has ordinated an Evangelical Priesthood, not less conspicuous, than the Aaronick one; for, as that was ordained of God for men in things pertaining to God, as it is Heb. v. 1. as that was an honour to those that were of it, who were counted God's portion, as that had the dispensation of offering both gifts and sacrifices, De differentia Mosaici sacerdotis & Evangel●i lege in Orat. Carlerii in Concil. Basil. Concil. To. ●. p. 8. & Orat. Polemarii, p. 522. and making known the Law of God to men, as none were to be of that but Levites, persons separated to that function, as that was exclusive of all other Worship, till the time of refreshing from its burden of multiplied Ceremonies came: so the Priesthood or Ministry of the Gospel is ordained by Christ, and the Ministers in it Patrimonium Crucifixi, and the Tithes in it the Ministers right, and all parts of Ministry only is dispensable by them, and none ought to be accounted in the Ministry, but those separated to God by Canonique Ordination. Thus they answer each other; and in one thing the Gospel Priesthood excels the legal. As it is a more spiritual one, so a more durable one, so a more general one, that brought men to see their God through the Glass of Types and Figures; this face to face, that lasted but till the substance came. Catholicus est ille qui credit implicité, vel explicatè actu, vel habitu omnia qu'ae pertinent ad fidem orthodoxam formatam vel informem. Brulifer. Dist. 59.3. lib. 4. This shall endure, till time shall be no more; that was limited to the jews: This is indulged to all Nations; the Gospel brings salvation unto all men: now, there is neither jew nor Gentile, bond or free, but all one in Christ jesus. So that the Chancellor has done well to expound the Evangelique Rites by viri Catholici & literati. Catholici] This word in all Authors is expressed to denote Universality; the Physicians call * that which is profitable to allay and sweeten all humours, a Catholic Medicament; and Quintilian terms universal and perpetual Rules Catholic, Catholici then here is to exclude factious assumption of the Office of Ministry, without admission, and confirmation in it Apostolical, ¶ Lib. 2. c. 13.9 Instit. Orator. that is, Catholic: for no Ministry is Catholique●, but that which is by Church-Tradition, Catholic Reception, Apostolic Practice, Scripture-Warrant; which for aught I know, have read, or I think is possible to be found in Scripture-History or Tradition, was Episcopal, in the sense that our Holy Mother the Church of England practices it from the purest times, and piousest precedents. And then Literati, to denote qualifications of the mind to, both understand in themselves their duty, and make others understand theirs also. For the Catholic Church, N● putes Ecclesiam, quae in petra est, in una parte esse terrarum, & non diffundi usque ad sins terr●, etc. S. Augustin. lib. 11. contriter. Petiliani, c 108. Sic Tract. 32. Super Joannem, 1 Homil. super Apocalypse. de correct. Donatist. c. 3. which is not restrained to any part or particular of the whole Church, either Roman, Reform, or Greek; but the whole Complex of Christians, having Christ their Foundation, and being the pillar and ground of Truth on him the Rock, though it may differ in circumstantials; yet being one in unity of Faith, and essentials of Worship, Sanctus August, de correct. Donatist, c. 30. Extra hoc corpus neminem vivificat Spiritus Sanctus. and practise of Charity, accounts its particular Ministry, in a true sense, Catholic. And therefore, though the Chancellor by Catholicis mean the Romish Priest, excluding all others, Romanae Ecclesiae abundè satis est gloria partem esse parvam universalis Ecclesiae. Lib. De Officio pii viri, p. 388, 390. yet it is applicable to the Priesthood, or Ministry of the Universal Church: of which in Cassander's words, It is abundantly enough honour done the Church of Rome, that it is a small part of the Universal Church. And no National Church is more or less Catholic one than other, Vbi à capite non receditur per falsam, & Scriptures sacris dissentaneam Doctrinam à capite Christo, a corpore vero non per quamvis rituum & opinionum diversitatem sed per solam charitatis defectionem. So he. So that the Officer that the Catholic Church has admitted to, and empowered with the things of God, the dispensation of his Word and Sacraments, and other holy parts of Priesthood, is Successor to the Prerogatives of the Evangelique Priesthood, of which the Levitical was forerunner, and no Intruder must be harkened unto, or admitted to participation in it, who is contrary publicae, antiquae, perpetuae, Quisquis ergo ab hac Catholica Ecclesia fuerit seperatus quantumlibet landabiliter se vivere existi●net, hoc solo scelere quod à Christi unitate disjunctus est, non habebit vitam sed ira Dei manet super ipsum. Sanctus Aug. Ep. 100 post collat contr. Donatist. Nomen Caholicum fuit inventum, ut ea discriminutione nominis ab haretico cum conventiculis cognosceretur esse distincta. Baronius, To 1. ad Am. 42. & universali Ecclesiae consuetudini. For Saint Paul reprobates such interposition as dangerous; we have no such Custom, nor the Churches of God. This be enough for Catholicis viris. And those the Churches of God have always trained up to be, and admitted only such as be Literati; as Learned, without Catholic, will be but a factious; so Catholic, without Learned, a barbarous Priesthood. The Apostle's rule is to Timothy, Study to show thyself a Workman, 2 Tim. two. 5. that needs not to be ashamed, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Operarium inconfusibilem, one that can hew out fit proportions from the mass of Scripture, and orderly set together what he has apportioned for his Ministry, to make it orderly and advantageous, Lib. 1. Contra Cresconium, c. ● not erubescentem, as St. Augustine expresses it, as they are that boast of more than they can perform, seeming to be what they are not, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, rectè secantem, that is, carrying himself so, as to hold the Truth free from all extremes, as they do that keep the Channel, and avoid the Rocks on both Shores, Collatio er go inter Dei servos esse debet, non altercatio, saith Saint Ambrose, in loc. Grotius will have it to be similitudo ductà victimis quae certo ritu secari debebant; and, says he, a man is said rightly to divide the Gospel, cum cuique accomodat camonita quae cuique Maximè conveniunt, In Locum. quomodo de victimis aliae partes dabantur sacerdotibus aliae privatis; which being an act of Wisdom, requires learned breeding to direct the Workman unto, and in his work; and upon this ground, as the Priests of old were learned in the Law, so the Ministers of the Gospel, whose mouths are to preserve knowledge, are to be by Canon learned, and such the Chancellor means by Literati, not such as the Scientique Budaeus laments for being in primorum ordinum sacerdotibus in France, Budaeus in Pandect. priores, pag. 186. edit. Basil. where virtutis doctrinéque praemia in homines latinè infantissimos non singula sedbinae, terna congeri veriùs quam conferri vidimus, qui certè non tam bis honoribus ornati, quâm obruti esse iniquis oneribus videntur. No such Drones, and overgrown Novices does our Text intend; the holy things of God are under the Gospel committed viris Literatis. Cl●. pro Balbo. So Tully expresses viri literati as studiis doctrinisque dediti literatus & desertus. So De Clar. Orat. 4. Such, who have much in them, and much written upon them of knowledge of books and men, and of holiness to the Lord: of the sword in these men's mouths, In penul. should not that of Plautus be true, In eo ensiculo literarum quid est? But every part of their Exhortation and Reproof, their Information and Direction should be rich and full of Argument. This is the Chancellors scope, to inform the Nation, that the Christian Ministry, though it had the Levitical for its precedent, yet not only succeeds, but exceeds it. And that the Rites of consecrating, or crowning Kings, and taking Oath of them to perform the Laws of their Government, and to maintain the Rites of Holy Church, as they will answer it to God, and the evidences of their Consciences, and the Gospels they swear by, to which the Ministers of God, Bishops, and others, are Witnesses in the behalf of Truth, is no lame and lazy Ceremony, made up only of extern pomp, but of necessary and renowned consequence; which those that vituperate are Children, and those that would overthrow are Devils; because therein accusers of ancient Piety and Prudence, and enemies to Mankind, who generally have the Priesthood in highest honour. This I the rather touch upon, because we have lately been in, and are not yet wholly purged from the Lees of those unhappy times, wherein, with many, all Antiquity was execrable, nothing pleasing but novelty, decrescebat innocentia in foro, justitia in judicio, in amicitiis concordia, Lib. De Abus. saculi in artibus peritia, in moribus disciplina, as S. Cyprian once complained of his time. No Law, but Lust; no Justice, but Arms; no Church, but a Meeting-place; no Priest, but a High-shoe, or uncatholique illiterate; no Canon, but Enthusiasm; no Mercy; but Ruin. So that truly in our England, there was a kind of Reverter (at least in the menace of the Rabble, and their Arch-dukes) of Draydlike Ethnicism, De Natur. Deorum Syntagm, 17. p. 529. Tun● maximè Deos propitiari, cum per cruciatum hominem excarnificâssent, saith Giraldus of the Druids, and 'twas too true of them. But blessed be God, we are in a better state now, the exemplar legis has been tendered the King, à viris Catholicis & literatis, and now the Echo of our Learned Chancellor may humbly present the pre-instanced Scripture, Chap. xvii. of Deuteronomy, as that which is the noblest Monitor of the Prince's duty, that any where, in any Author, in any time is to be found. Liber quip Deuteronomii est liber legum quibus Reges Israel subditum sibi populum, Regere tenebantur. This is added, to show the Text-Master's love to the Prince, in his preference of Deuteronomy, Plinius in Ep. Caninio Rufo, Ep. 6. and the xvii. Chapter of it, for his direction, to be according to much Wisdom; for that it is Methodus regiminis quo Reges Israelis teneri deberent, God's precise determination of the King to that, as his Oracle and path to walk by, and in. Indeed, I am of Pliny's mind, Sum ex iis qui miror antiqu●s, etc. I am of their minds, who admire the Ancients, but yet not so to despise the acquirements of later men and times; for that were to accuse Nature, as spent, and defective to a generous production of Rarities, now as well as heretofore. I know there are Tracts of Policy, and Treatises of Institutions for a Prince, which of late have been proposed to the World with notable art, and subtle insinuations: nor are the later Wits less keen, nor their Writings less polite, than those of their Antecessors: But these are but men that wrote, and what they wrote subject-like them to errors and mistakes. Moses, the Penman of this, was one of God's infallible Secretaries, and he propounds to the King (that was Prophetically regulated and admonished, for Israel was yet under Moses his Regiment) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Philo. lib. 1. De Creati Principis, p. 725. etc. The noble Mean between the Iron and Leaden Extremes how he shall be, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. An admirer of right, a judger of wrong, a propagator of truth, as the best Pillars of a durable Regality. This, says Philo, Moses propounds herein, as a Reward to the Prince that is led by it; and therefore no wonder, though Moses direct to Deuteronomy, as his second, and most complete System of the Law. For though there were many parts of Holy Writ that persuaded the Prince to love the Law, and to embrace it as the Rule; as that where no Law is, the People perish: or that of Saint Paul, The Law is just, and holy, and good; and if it had not been for the Law, Rome seven. 12. Rom. seven. 7. I had not known sin. Or that of our Saviour, who being interrogated by the jews, questions of import, answers them, by referring them to the Law; How is it written in that Law? Though I say the Chancellor might have illustrated the beauty and use of the Law from other Scriptures, yet in that he waves them all here, and refers to this Book, and this Chapter of this Book, 'tis a strong Argument, he thought it the most opposite to the Prince's instruction, Partem Scripturae politicam & legislativam; as Aure●lus his words are. In Pentateuch. Well he knew, good Chancellor, that every word of God was good; but that these were like those of Solomon's Apples of Gold in Pictures of Silver, the only words he could artlyly use to his purpose, Deuteronomium est quasi incensa, & perpetua concio, e●que de causa Mosis, c. 17. v. 18. jussit ut novi Reges, elegendique describunt sibi Deuteronomium, In argumento an●e Deuteronom. ut discant timere Deum, etc. saith A. Lapide. It's true indeed, every Book of Moses has his peculiar excellency, as it answers some useful end of God in the Production of his Designs there described: in Genesis there is description of God as the enjoyner of the Law; in Exodus, of Moses the Minister of the Law; Lorinus in pr●fat ante Deuteron. ● Beda In loc. in Leviticus, of the Heads and Content of the Law; in Numbers, of the Nature of the People, to whom this Law was given; but in Deuteronomy, there is a short Recapitulation and Conclusion of the Law given; the last words of Moses, most pithy, most memorable, most culled: and A. Lapide says his Book was made upon three Causes. First, for supply of Mortality, because all the old men that came out of Egypt, and heard the Law delivered on Mount Sinai were dead. Secondly, because Moses was now to die, and being to leave the people of his care and love, he leaves them instructed in the Law by this Copy, and perfect Account of it. Thirdly, for that the words of Rulers and Princes have most sway with the people they govern, he leaves them this Book, as the lasting Memorandum, and journal of their duty, and enjoins Governors to transcribe it, that by remembering it themselves, and ruling their people according to it, they may be happy and beloved as Moses was. For so it follows, Hunc librum legere jubet Moses, ut discant timere deum & castodire mandata ejus quae in lege scripta sunt. Well did Moses know the temptations of greatness, that Kings are but men in nature, though Gods in sacredness; that Power is apt to arrogate a Prerogative above Mortal Restraints, and that the nature of man frail in them, is apt to pervert God's intention in the latitude of their Commission. Therefore Moses claps the Clog of God on the King's Conscience, and enjoins him to read and write over the Law of him and his Government, as he will answer the violation of it through ignorance or perverseness to the God of that Law, in whose hand his life and breath is, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. saith Philo, Lib. De Nominum Mutatione. p. 1048. That his corrupt Nature being awed by God's Sovereignty, may by fear and awe of it be restrained from exorbitant rigours, and vain excursions. Indeed, as the Law of God is the best Book; so fear of God is from the best Lesson man can learn. No grace has more of the exaltation of God, and depression of man, than fear has; and no man has more need to have God's fear in him, than a King that is free from the fear of man onhim. Saint Bernard makes fear prima gratiarum quaetotius Religionis ex●rdium est; No fear, no Religion. Therefore the Wiseman says, Fear God, and keep his Commandments, that is the whole duty of man. in the last of Eccles. It à est primus in ordine gratiarum sicut paupertas in ordine Beatitudinum, De donis Spir. Sancti. c. 1. Lib. De Abrehamo, p 351. saith that Father. Indeed fear, as it may be objected and accented, as it may be tinctured and biased, may in Philo's words be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, an ill adviser. It may be jonas in our ship cause a storm, and endanger all the serenity of our inward peace: this his fear, the fear of man; a fear of incredulity, a fear of inverting God's position, making God less, and man more than he is. In an evil fear, forbidden by God, perfect love casteth forth this fear; 'tis a fear of servility, not ingenuity; the fear of Bastards, and not Sons: 'tis the nail in our heads, after the butter and milk in a Lordly dish, which this World's flatteries, and the Iael's of infirmity treat us deceitfully, and to our ruin. But holy fear, to fear the Lord and his goodness, is the felicity, as well as duty, of not only Subjects but Princes: nay, 'tis paramountly pertinent to Princes, because the only object of their fear, as a Superior to them, employs it, and as a God to them, deserves it. And this the Hebrew phrase here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, translated to fear imports: for 'tis none of those ordinary words the holy Language has; for ordinary fear not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the fear of one, a stranger in a Land that is not his own; as Psal. cxx. 5. nor 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a fear of tristicity: so Psal. xxxviii. 18. nor 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a fear of modesty, like that of youths, who blush for fear, when they come before men of age and worship, job xxxii. 6. which we call a running our heads in a hole; nor 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a fear causing an uproar in the mind, Isa. xxxii. 11. like that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, charged on Martha, Tumultuaris circa plurima, c. v. nor 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a fear that wholly unmans us, Deut. xxviii. 16. nor 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a fear taking away all hope of acceptance, Esay xli. 10. Nor this, or any of these fears, which melt down the spirit, and make a manless fusility in the ponderous and masculine nature of man: none of these is the fear here. Beatus es, si cortuum triplici isto timore repleveris. ut timeas quidem pro accepta gratiae amplius pro amissa longè plus pro recuperata. Sanctus Bernardus Serm. 54. supper Cantie. Cantie. That which Moses lessons the King to learn from the Lord's Law, is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which is a fear provoking to worship, and draw near to God; such a fear as argues love and duty, to fear him ●so as to fear him only, him always, so as to cast down their Crowns and Sceptres at his feet, and to serve his glory with their complete absoluteness. This is the King's timere deum, but it has an adjunct and copulation, which makes it both appear to be what it is in truth, and to make the principle from which it is sound in a suitable effect, keep his Commandments all the days of his life. This is that which ingratiates the fear of God with God, when 'tis seen in obedience to him, according to his declared Will, his Law, and that in every particular, not one, but all his Commandments; and that not sometimes, and not at o●her times, but all the days of his life. This is to be upright with God, as was King David, Then shall I not be ashamed, when I have respect to all thy Commandments. This is non currere per mandata sad ambulare in mandatis; to make God's glory the end of Prince's Lives and Reigns. And this is to produce what in our Text follows. Ecce timere deum effectus est legis, quem non consequi valet homo nisiprius sciat voluntatem Dei, quae in lege scripta est. This is well inferred from the presumption of its cause; to write the Law, is the way to remember it; to love it, the way to practise it; and to practise it, is to be what the Law here is told us to aim at, Fear God, and keep his Commandments, fully and constantly. This our Chancellor calls an effect of the Law, because the Law is in God's intention, and the ordinary way of his dispensation, thus to dispose Kings, as it offers them the Rational and Religious answering of the end of their Power, and his Prescript: for Philo makes the Law as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. God's declaratory of his Will, Lib. De Migrat. Abraham ●. p. 408. both as to what man may, and may not do. And therefore, inasmuch as fear is a postnate of knowledge, and knowledge the means of ingenerating divine fear; and this knowledge is conveyed to us by the Law, according to that of the Apostle, I had not known sin but by the Law. Not that the Law has any efficacy, to illuminate man to an efficiency of Holy and Reverential Fear. For that is true of the Law, which Saint Augustine wrote of freewill, In solutionibus Questionum ●i la●i. q. 1. Valet liberum arbitrium ad opera bona, si divinitùs adjuvetur, quod ●●t humiliter petendo & faciendo, desertum verò divino adjutorio quamlibet scientia legis excellat, nullo modo habebit justitiae soliditatem, sed inflationem impiae superbiae & exitiosum tumorem. ●9 Epist. ad Hilar. And so in another place, Nam & lex ipsa in hoc adjutorium data est illis, qui eâ legitimè utuntur, ut per illam sciant, vel quid justitiae jam acceperint, unde gratias agant, vel quid adhuc eis desit quod instanter petant. Whereas therefore the knowledge of what is our duty to do, and not to do, is said to be ●he effect of the Law, which teaches us what, and how to do our duty, or not do; it is to be understood, not a necessary effect, such as follows the cause, but an effect in order, that is, where ever fear of God is, there the Law of God, known and observed, has been the ordinary means of producing it, and not only the ●escue to point us to our Lesson, but the instigatour of us to learn and practise it. And indeed, to this end has the Will of God concerning man its patefaction in the Law, that man might not be under any impossibility of knowing what he is, and is not to do; nor plead ignorance, when his omissions and errors shall come to Arraignment: and therefore as here is much mercy in God's promulgation, so is there a call to us in it of eternal gratitude. For the Law written on the heart, and riveted in the created nature, would have compurgated God from cruelty to his Creature, in punishing the breach of his Law, which they had such previous and plenary warning of. But in that he has been pleased to write his ●aw, and our duty, in such legible, and indelible Characters, as are learnable; not to know his Will by the Law, is to despise God from Heaven, and to sin against our Maker, and his Mercy. To fear then the Lord, as it is an act of service to God, so of mercy to our own souls, because it puts us out of fear of his fury; who is a consuming fire, who has power of soul and body; and it puts us into the protection of his promise, that No good thing shall be wanting to those that fear him, Psal. 34.9. And for as much as this fear is as in God causally, so in the Law institutionally; and Moses, by the spirit of God, directs Kings to the Law as their Academy and Oraculary; because they being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. as Philo calls them, Lib. ●. De Vita Mosis, p. 654. are not only to take care that secular matters be carried on well and wisely, but also the matters of God and his service. Kings and all in Authority shall do well to study the Law, that they may know to do the Will of their Lord; for that is to know God aright, to practicate his fear from a principle of Conscience, and holy affection to God▪ When not to oblige him to be ours, if any act of ours properly could so do, but to glorify him as our chief good, is the source of our service, when we study to know, that we may be ready and regular, in doing what we know we ought, to show forth the virtue of him that has called us out of darkness into his marvellous light. This, this is to know the Will of God, which is written in his Law; because this is perfect Charity, which is the fulfilling of the Law; and without this all the Notional and Grammatique Knowledge of the Law abstracted from practice of the duties postulated, is but nothing. So true is that of Saint Augustine, Pro bonis operibus sperastiterrenam quandam felicitatem; In prima quinquagena ex Prologue, Psal. 31. impius es, non est ist a merces fidei, cara res est fides, vili illam addixisti, impius ergo es & nu●●a sunt operatua, move as licet in bonis operibus lacertes, & videaris navem optimè gubernare, in saxa festinas. So that Father; and so our Lord Jesus, If ye know these things, blessed are ye, if ye do them. Principium omnis famulatus, est scire voluntatem domini cui servitur. Here the Chancellor proceeds to confirm what went before, from the consideration of domestic Order, which is suitable to the greater Polity of Kings and People; nay, of God and Man: for in Families there is a Lord and Servants; the one commands, because he is Master of all, and his Will is their Law: the other obeys, because he is bound, as he eats, drinks, is clothed, and lives by, and under his Master. Now in this service, which the Chancellor calls famulitium, as after Festus he does, servus famulatus, the first and chiefest thing is to know the Master's pleasure, Ep. 47. and to study, and actually answer it, Si● cum inferiore vivas, quemadmodum tecum superiorem velles vivere. And because the Will of the Lord and his humour was best seen by frequent being in his company. Seneca tells us anciently, the Masters did admit their Servants to eat with them; yea, and that the Masters might see what tempers their Servants were of, and what commands could best bear, Instituerunt diem festum quo non solum cum servis domini vescerentur, sed quo utique honores illi in domo gerere, jus diceré permiserunt, & domum pusillam Rempubls. esse judicaverunt, Ep. 47. Servants thus encouraged, the Master expected a return in observance; no dispute, no delay, to be sure no opposition: The Servant was, whatever he understood his Master's pleasure to have him be, according to that of Philo, Lib. quis rerum divinarum. Haret. p. 482. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. The only praise of a Servant, to think no command of his Masters slight, but to do all to his utmost pleasure, that he thinks he wills. And therefore God alluding to the Sovereignty of Earthly Masters, says, objuregatively to Israel. If I be a Master, where is my fear? Vbi est obedientia servi sub imperio domini? and the Apostle, to strengthen the authority of Masters over Servants, says, Servants be obedient to your Masters in all things, for this is wellpleasing, and acceptable to God. How holy Paul obey in all things? yea, in all things: Suppose he commands Idolatry, or Murder, or any other sin, is he to be obeyed in this? Yes, he is to be obeyed, but not in the kind of the command he exercises, in the Servants disposition, but not in the act of termination to such his command, Cum dominus carnis à domino spiritus diversum imperat, non est obediendum, saith Saint jerom, and Tertullian, who owns this Canon, yet modifies it, sed intra limites Disciplinae, obey him so far as he obeys God. Ideò Romanas leges contemnimus, ut divinae jussa servemus, said the Martyr Sylvanus, Justinus Martyr in Apol. 2. pr● Christian. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. We worship indeed but one God, but we are loyal servants to Kings and Emperors, praying constantly for them, that they may wisely and worthily discharge their trusts towards their people, as we profess their people ought to express loyal duty to them. And Seneca is positive, that virtuous minds, contra Remp. imperata non facient, nulli sceleri manus commodabunt. Let Stratocles flatter Demetrius never so highly, and desire the Athenians to pass a Law, Vt quicquid Demetrio Regi placuisset, id in Deos pium, & inter homines justum esset: yet Integrity will not swallow any unjust command, though it dare not disobey by contumacy a just ●ower, while it acts unjustly: but in things that are indifferent, in things civil and prudential, Philo, lib. De Confusione Linguarum, p. 333. there the Master is so absolute, that the servant is bound to obey throughly and constantly, and has no remedy, but to pray 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. that God their only Saviour would hear and relieve them. This was the state of Servants bound to obey; yet had they also a privilege, when they were veterans and faithful: For then, as they were secundi liberi, where Children were, so where they were not, they did in jus liberorum transire. To which probably our Apostle alluded, when he made the privilege of Adoption to consist in translation from Servants to Sonship. This is notably set forth by Abraham, in the case of Eleazar of Damascus his Steward, Gen. xv. 3. Behold! to me thou hast given no seed, and one born in mine house (to wit, Eleazar, v. 5) is mine Heir. This Eleazar of Damascus so called, because he had possibly either purchased a house at Damascus, or had some Rule there (not born there) is in Chap. xxiv. 2. said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Procurator filius, or gubernator d●mus, in cujus manu relinquam omnia quae mihi sunt, saith Rabbi joseph, filius discursationis, who checks all under my Roof. This is he of whom Abraham says, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 haereditat mihi, that is, He at present possesses mine for me, and hereafter shall possess mine for himself. Now this being the compensation of ancient and faithful servants, that they may in time come to this, the principal familique prudence is, to study the Master, and to let no word of his fall to the ground, no command of his be neglected; and this is scire voluntatem domini. For since the servant is in his body, his Lords, and has all accommodation from his Lord; what is more reasonable, then that his Lord should be, in this World, and in things lawful, all in all to him: so that the servant having no sphere so proper for his actuation, as his Master's will, and that will being best observed, by setting one's self to the exact knowledge of it, the Chancellor has fitly made it the first knack in the van of service, and that which makes the Master pleased with his servant, and with his service as such. Legis tamen laetor Moses, primo in hoc edicto effectum legis, videlicet timorem Dei commemorat, deinde ad custodiam causae ejus, viz. mandatorum Dei ipse invitat, nam effectus prior est quam causa in animo exhortantis. That which our Chancellor calls Legislator, Philo terms 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Lib. De Monatchia, p. 819. because Laws being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; and to sacred purposes, for order and distinction, security and beauty, the deliverers of them to the people they ruled, may fitly be termed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; which, though all Lawmakers deserve not to be; because, as they may rule solely, yet not be Kings, and People, yet by no Law: so they having not so much of Divine Rectitude in their Titles and Transactions, may abate in the deserts and right to such nominal Titles. But Moses was none of these; he obtains power justly, uses it moderately, and resigns it willingly, when God his Principal, determining his life, calls joshuah to succeed him. This, this indeed, was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, nay, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, somewhat above the rate of men; for, as ●●de habent quaerit nemo, sed opportet habere. So when 'tis had; oh! to keep to their stipulations is death to them. If violation be more advantageous, no suasion of Religion, no fear of losing fame, no disgust of their People, keeps such lawless and boundless Natures in awe, they will do what Providence prompts them to, and Prudence suggests, as a necessary Expedient, Con●zen. Politic. lib. 5. c. 20. p. 339. though they do perjure themselves, and confound all, that Laws and Policy has distinguished; and all this they do, because the light in them is darkness, and the salt unsavoury. They consult with the false Oracles of flattery and self-magnification, and decline God's fear lessoned in his Law. Were that, their Counsellor, they would do nothing under pretence of God, but according to God, not rule, but as he does, suaviter & fortiter; first with justice, and then with courage, and that by & according to God's Law, which directed by God, discovers the soul's vanity, and instruct to fear God's Power, and love his goodness, as its complete restraint from enormity. I know God by Miracle can instruct Kings, as he reigned Mannah, and raised the Apostles from letterless Fishermen, to learned Metropolitans, and profound Doctors. He can do by his absolute omnipotence what he will, and therefore is not obliged to qualify Princes with fear and observance of him according to the method of Nature or Art, his Will being the Law: 'tis but say, and do: so the Chaos testified a passivity to his information; nor did in the pre-existent Matter ought reside, that had any refractoryness in it. It did not, it could not appeal from his Will; for that had no superior, no equal. But in that, God now discovers himself to us in familiar and natural methods, and leaves causes to their natural operation, ordinarily interposing no Power to suspend or impede the production of effects from causes; and inasmuch as the effect is first in nature of project, though last in order of time, the cause Physically preceding it: Therefore the Chancellor advises to get holy and humble fear from the Law, which is God's undoubted will to us; and that which we knowing, and doing, in such knowledge and deed shall be blest. This is the sum of this Clause. Sed quis est timor iste quem promittunt leges observationibus suis, verè non est timor ille de quo scribitur, quod perfecta charitas for às mittit timorem. Timor tamen ille licèt servilis soepe ad legendum leges, Reges concitat, sed non est ipse proles legis. Our Chancellor having wrote great things of holy fear, and made it, that Lucifer which shines in the Souls firmament, as an effect of God's Law read and practised, now comes to limit us to a right notion of it, that we may not mistake its counterfeit for the currant and noble grace of fear; Timor filialis oritur à duplici radice; 1. a cognition divinae magnitudinis, & a dilectione Dei Aragonius in S. Secundae, Divi Thomae. 919. Art. 2. De Timore, p. 264. and this he does, by distinguishing of fear, as a nude and rude passion, from what it is as a complex of graces, and a renovated principle, which makes us commensurate, in such degrees as humane frailty allow, to God's requiry of us in order to his glory, our Neighbours good, and our own personal and soulary felicity. For as it is not every Medicine that cures, every Suitor that succeeds, every Valour that is victorious, every Speaking that is oratory; so is it not every fear that is this fruit of the Law this favourite of God. There is fear that quivers through a guilty pusillanimity; there is fear that precipitates to a desperate ferocity; there is fear that sinks men beneath their station, into the stupidity of dull infects of senseless inanimation; fear that petrifies, and obdurates to an immobility; fear that lethargizes the spirits, and makes a man dead, while living. These fears may sometimes be useful, and God by their Revulsions work great effects preparatory to the fear of Worship and Reverence, Timor Dei est metus reverentiae, & cultus, A Lapide in Ecclus. xxiv. 24. p. 28. so often brings the terror into the Conscience, and thereby pricks the sinner at the heart, letting out all the purulency, and impostumation of sin by its Lancet; and that removed, makes a kindly Avenue to his fuller work of Repentance and Conversion. In which sense, Saint Paul calls the Law, our Schoolmaster to bring us to Christ: because as the Schoolmaster cultivates youth, and weeds out by his Discipline all the trash, and corrects him for all the wilful breaches of his Rules, and so brings him at last into a pliant and regular temper, in which all after proficiencies thrive from their implantation to a great and graceful increase: so does God by toeling the sinner to read, and in reading to be taken with the terrors of the Law against the sin he is guilty of; so dismount and caress him, that for ever after he is a changed man; that as God did call off Paul from his eager Pharisaism, and Saint Augustine from his profane Manichism, by the voice of his power and mercy effectually touching them; so does he often do by others, through the ministration of the Law; the threatenings of it being as so many voices, and Counsels of desistance and abhorrence. This Saint Bernard counsels the sinner to observe, Serm. 13. Inter paervos Sermons▪ Timor servilis quantùm ad●servitutem est malus, tamen quantùm ad substantiam est bonus. Aragonius in secundam. Secundae Tho. 919. Art. 4. De Timore, p. 268. that he may be happy; Fili accedens ad sernitutem Dei, sta in timore, si ex timore te feceris illius servum, faeciet te ex charitate amicum suum, & sic aqua timoris commutabitur in vinum dilectionis. But this fear, though it be like poison, useful by the modification of Omnipotence; yet it is not the fear of those, whom God values Jewels, and, as such, will protect, Mal. iii 'Tis not the fear of God's Elect, spuriorum timor, non filiorum; 'tis timor praedae, non probitatis, a fear that preys upon the vitals of ingenuity, and like imbibed spirits at present refreshes, but after grate on, and overwhelm them, without God sanctify it to illuminating purposes. Therefore this fear quà such being not of staunch materials, and loyal composure, is not able to fortify against evil, and to provoke to good; not make the soul as complete towards God, as the Queen of Navar's accomplishments rendered her to the World, when she not only bore up the degree and estimation of a Queen, D'Avila, p 363. though she had no Kingdom, but kept up herself, and built up the greatness of her Son, in spite of adverse fortune; but it flags, and renders the man that is acted by it mercenary, illiberal, and constrainedly only good, being so far from enfranchising the soul, that it servilize it, and reduces it to an angustation of perplexity. Whereas the fear of God, Greg. Naz. Orat. 53. on Eccles. p. 756. expresses it. which Moses magnifies as the Laws work in the sacred heart of Kings, is quasi auriga animae, quasi nauclerus animae, quasi specula animae; 'Tis 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a salutiferous, but a rare endowment; and a good Prince applies that of Synesius to the fear of God, makes God's fear the Philosophy he sets down to, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, in Ep. 45. ad Herculianum. That which carries him not Phaeton-like, furiously up to the Clouds of Pride, but Christianly, by the safe path of Humility, steers him to secure his immortal soul from those exitials that are occasioned by two much either of presumption or despair, gives him a Prospect of God in his Soul and in Heaven, in the Throne of his affections, and in the bliss of his divine supereminency; and by this incoats glory even in this state of mortality; A Lapide in loc. which A Lapide, on those words of the Son of Syrach, Chap. 34.15. Blessed is the soul of him that feareth the Lord, to whom he doth look, and who is his strength. Thus descants on, parata ●st anima (saith he) sapientis tum in spe, quia per timorem, & amorem Dei sperat certóque assequetur speratam à se Beatitudinem, tum in re, quia beatitudo hujus vitae consist it in timore filiali, hoc est, in amore Dei, quia per eum fit amicus, filius, & haeres Dei, & cohaeres Christi, quare ut filius, à Deo protegitur, dirigitur, omnique bono cumulatur. Thus he. And therefore as it follows in our Chancellor. Timor verò de quo hic loquitur Mosis quem & pariunt leges, est ille de quo dicit Propheta, Timor Domini Sanctus permanet in saeculum saeculi, hic filialis est, & non novit poenam, ut ille qui per charitatem expellitur, nam iste à legibus proficiscitur quae docent facere voluntatem Dei quô ipse paenam non meretur, sed gloria domini est super metuentes eum, quos & ipse glorificat, timor autem iste, timor est de quo Job postquam multifariè sapientiam investigat, sic ait; ecce timor Domini ipsa est sapientia, & recedere à malo, intelligentia Job xxviii. Recedere à malo, quod intelligentia timoris Dei est, leges docent, quô & timorem hunc ipsae parturiunt. In this conclusion of his first Chapter, our Chancellor has reduced into a compendium, all that he writes concerning the subject of Fear, as the Lesson of the Law to the Prince. And, as in the former Clause, he showed what fear the Law wrought not as its proper and most noble work, that is, in the effectuation it expresseth to the mind, that is taught by God: so in this does he set forth specially what it is in the useful and proper proceed of it towards a gracious and well-inclined person; and this he does out of that of the Psalmist, Psal. The fear of the Lord endures for ever: not by a duration of time; for the absorption of Faith by Vision, and Hope by Fruition, determines all fear, as it is in order to beatitude; for that being enjoyed, fear, the means to it, is lodged in its end; but the fear of the Lord endures for ever, that is, it makes the fearers of God so walk before God, while they are in the way to him; as that he shall take them into glory with him, and give them a coeternity of beatitude with him, which shall as little cease to be what it is, as his own Essence shall: so that he being for ever and ever his united to him by grace, shall in glory also have a being and endurance for ever and ever, or else for ever and ever, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, is an accumulate expression, denoting a constant method of God in all distributions of his to men by holy fear, to usher in all their subsequent services. And this is but as the way to that he wages; whether one or both senses amounts, but to the acclamation of filial fear, which is the Oil of Charity, the odour of a sweet-smelling Sacrifice to God: so far from being inconsistent with the Charity, that is, the bond of Perfection, that it is the very Charity, that is, the Bond of Perfection. Since thus to fear God, and keep his Commandments, is the whole duty of man. And this to do, though it does not paenam non merere, Caten. Graec. Patrum, p. 439. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Isidor in Job xxviii as the Chancellour's words are, which attributes too much to the opus operatum, in the desert of it; since all our righteousness is but as a filthy rag before God; and when we have done all, we are commanded by our Lord to say, we are but unprofitable servants, and so no meritters, but demeritters. Yet does the acceptance of God's mercy crown this fear so far in us, that it makes us more than Conquerors over our corruptions, which are deservedly our fear, and entails us to the sure mercies of David, which are emanations of fidelity, and munificence inseparable from the fearers of God, because founded upon the veracity of his immutable Godhead. And hence it is, that job his determination of God's fear to be wisdom, and to depart from evil to be understanding, chap. 28. is literally and infallibly to be understood, as indefatigble; and the same is expressed to be, because it is the fear of the fontal and durably wise being, and so is objectively Wisdom, and it worketh a practice in man suitable to the purpose of God in his Creation and Endowment, Gregorius Theolog. apud Caten. Graecorum Patrum in Job xx. p. 436. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. A holy life is the first and most excellent Wisdom, and that which is most clean and acceptable with God; which is, to abhor and recede from evil, as God's opposite and Antagonist in his soul, and so argues understanding, and makes him subjectively wise, because wise, 2 Jer. 13. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Greg. Naz. Orat. 53. both the witness of wise actions, since sin is absolute folly, as God charges it in his people. My people have committed two evils; forsaken me the fountain of living waters, and digged to themselves broken Cisterns that will hold no water. So that the Law of God, in all senses, teaching man his duty, and quickening his endeavour by grace, imparted him to a capacitation of it, and a resignation of him to the conduct and empire of it, may well be magnified by our Chancellor in this first Chapter; and the Scripture he refers the Prince to from the Book of Deuteronomy, of all other, be the most peculiar to the ends of his Instruction in the fear of God, and to the observation of his Precepts all the days of his life; saying of our Chancellor, as Synesius does of his Herculean, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. If there be question, Whether there be Siren's, so long as your Instructions remain, Ep. 145. they will put them out of question, since in every line of them they have such melodious notes, as wholly Fortescue, the Prince, and render him unable for admiration to contain himself. And so I end the first Chapter, referring the Reader for the fuller satisfaction of the latitude of holy and servile fear, to the many Authors, whose Works have much of it; as they may be read in Fabian justinian his Index Universalis. Printed at Rome, Anno 1612. p. 529. and in the Schoolmen, who generally have written as largely on the Head of Fear, as on any other common place whatever. And so I proceed to what follows in CHAP. II. HAEC ut audivit Princeps, erecto in senem vultu sic locutus est] because I look upon these Dialogues, as to the Persons, as well as to the Matter real, and not fictive: therefore I term this Chapter the Prince's Replication to the Chancellor. And three notable things it is considered for: First, the Prince's civility, in a speedy repay of his love; haec ut audivit Princeps. Secondly, the Prince's preparatory pertness, to oppose his youth to this grave and wise Chancellour's age, erecto in senem vultu, sic locutus est. Thirdly, the Prince's pregnant and pathetic Reply in the following matter. First, the civility of the Prince's return to the Chancellour's counsel, is notable: no sooner had he a sense that he was obliged, but instantly he meditates the compensation, haec ut audivit Princeps. 'Tis true, men may have courtesies done them they know not of, and then their detinue of thanks, till they have notice that they have received kindness, is their excuse: but when a kindness is done, and so palpably, as we our own selves, are privy to, and convinced of the reality of it; if then we either do it not at all, or not seasonably, and while 'tis warm and fresh, we do amiss. For, as ingratum est beneficium quod diu inter manus dantis haesit; so is the thanks suspectable not to be real, when it is cold, and comes by grand paws, and tedious crawling to those we owe it to. This our Prince abhorring, as knowing the suspicion of ingratitude, too great a blot for Majesty to be branded with, suffers nothing to impede his thanks to the Chancellor, but sends by the same Post that brought the Narrative Packet, his recoil of acceptance, haec ut audivit: no Arrow as it were, is impelled toward the Mark; no thought ejaculated to its object, no volubility of the eye more quick, than this courtesy of his Princely heart, haec ut audivit, that is, non citiùs audivit quam retribuit; well knowing that of the Moralist was true, qui citò dat, his dat; and that he who makes no haste, has little good will. It is I know, a way, of narrow minds, to defer rependments, in hope that time may wear out the expectation in those that deserve it, as it does the gratitude of those that are deserved of: such spirits are frequent to vulgar births and brats of self-admiration, who are content, every body, should admire them, and as divine, offer to them; while they in no sort divine, are immunificent; no rain of their bounty, no sunshine of their favour falls on their adorers, though their loves to them, make them their costly Votaries: all they sow upon this Rock, and commit to this Cormorant, is sure to be thin come up, though thick sown. And well it were, if such degeneracy were the botch and deformity of men of low degree: Ingrata patria non habebis essa mea. Dictum Scipionis. but greatness sometimes has been capable of these ingratitudes; yet the Prince takes no precedent from them that are great, but not good, and have prelation above others in body and blood, but not in mind and virtue. Therefore his practice is to haste out of debt, to accept of what is in love presented him, and to represent himself the owner of it: this is the first thing, the Prince's acceleration, reddere quod recepit, cui recepit; Haec ut audivit Princeps, Secondly, the Prince's preparatory pertness is notable; pertness, in that he takes fire immediately upon the stroke, and kindles by his own innate candour, and the vestal touch of his gentle mind; and preparatory, I term it, because it was ordinated to usher in the subsequent matter, more conveniently. It was the Preface to the Discourse, and the Porch to this Pupillike entertainment of the grave Chancellor. Erecto in senem vultu; he does not roughly frown, or rudely grin, but gravely youth out his mind to his Instructor, erecto in senem vultu. Of all the parts in man, the face we call the Marketplace, and in the face the eye is the jewel of it. Of all the senses of man, sight is the noblest; not only because it is the Organ even of our Clarification in Heaven, and that which we see the face of God by, but because here in this World it is the instrument of our Earthly Heaven, Wisdom, and Philosophy; which, in Philo's words, have their initiation from no other thing in us, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. then from it as the Prince of the Senses; Lib. De Abrahamo, p. 373. therefore, though he calls it small in bulk, yet he adds, 'tis that organ which views the great things of Heaven and Earth. Thus, as Phidius, to use his words, Did out of every material, make Statues, Gold, Wood, Stone, Iron, his Art appearing in every Figure, let the Materials be never so trite, that any one that had artly eyes might see him the Workman: so God the great Architect of man, though he has made him to consist of parts more and less noble; yet in the minutest and least glorious part has he instanced his matchless power and goodness. Alas! the face, it is but a ball of flesh, and the eye but a bubble, which Omnipotence keeps clear and plump; yet how inexpressible is the prevalence of these to captivate love, to search into art, nay to do actions, second in a sort, to those of miracle and astonishment. But I say no more of the face, for that's ipsa oris species; our Prince is here said, erigere vultum, Lib. De Orator. ●●. 3 De Oratore 12. and that's to present his Will, quae pro motu animi, infacie ostenditur. So Tully, Vultus qui sensus animi plerúmque indicant; and Imago animi vultus est, indices oculi; and as dejection of Countenance shows a guilt, which Cain confirms after that fraticidial facinus, when God told him his Countenance was fallen from his brightness to be sad: Ep. 94. so erection of Countenance is a token of God's primaeve largess, and Nature's innocency resting in us. Ille vultus nostros erexit in coelum, & quicquid mirificum magnúmque fecerato à suscipientibus voluit, etc. saith Seneca. Indeed, the Ancients, and men of wisdom in all Ages, have made the Countenance the Horizontal Line, upon which the Idaea's of the Mind, and the possessions of the Regency there, turn themselves open to a perfect view; when there is a sad disaster, and a lugubrious uncouthness within, there will be a flag of defiance to joy, and gentleness in the Visage; there will be ambiguus, ac consceleratus vultus, as Horace says; Quintilians, distortus vultus, Lib. 6. c. 3. Herc. Fu●. Ovid' s Durus, Ferinus, Terribilis, Trepidus, Tristis vultus; Seneca ' s Igneus, Tumidi & truces vultus. There will be Ovid's Countenance that covets abdere vultus suos tenebris, Projectus & degener vultus. Tac. lib. 19 2 De R●med. Amor. 39 Men, in these cases, will toto vultu in terram procumbere, 14 Metam. 57 They will show, what troubles the spirit of man hating prevarication has. And when again there is contentment, and a virtuous habit; when all is placid, and averse to mischief: then there is on the Virgin Visual Table, the Inscription of Decorus, Dilectus, Hilaris, ingenuus. Then there is Ovid's Laetus & loquens nitidus vultus, and Virgil's Virgineus, and Placidus; and Claudian's Comptus & Coruscus vultus. In short, the face and hew of it, is an undeniable gnomon of the interns that reflect their beams of intention, or remission, of brightness, or obsuscation, according to the nature of them in their original: So that whereas our Chancellor expresses the Prince as erecting his Countenance on them; he concludes him pleased within, and evidencing of it in a conformity of looks on the visual superficies of so composed a soul and sense; and by erecto vultu, here he means what other Authors do by the most benign Epithets; and what Ovid, Placido vultu respice mea munera. 2 Faster. 4. and as one that did not addere vultum verbis only, but praeire verba vultu amicali. He makes way for the main address of his gratitude in the following words, sic locutus est. Scio, cancellary, quòd liber Deuteronomii, quem tu commemor as sacrae Scripturae volumen est, leges quoque & Caeremoniae in eo conscriptae, etiam sacrae sunt, à Domi●● editae, & per Mosen promulgatae. Quare eas legere Sanctae contemplationis dulcedo est. These words argue the Prince both gentle of nature, and satisfied in reason and judgement; that as by the one he accepted the counsel of age, so in the other he owns the gratification of youth, in the firm persuasion of the Chancellour's Arguments to be valid, and his quotations Scripture. And to make his ingenuity more transparent, I shall first observe his Assent to the Canonization of the Book, out of which the Scripture-counsel is taken; Deuteronomy, that, he owns to be Sacrae Scripturae Volumen. Secondly, his Recognization of the Laws and Ceremonies in it as sacred, because part of the Canonique Scripture, Leges & Ceremoniae in eo conscriptae, etiam sacrae sunt. Thirdly, his mention of the Author of them, GOD, à Domino editae. Fourthly, his notice of the Instrument of their Promulgation, Moses, Et per Mosen promulgatae. Fifthly, the Conclusion he subjoins, deduced from the preconcessions, Quare ea● legere Sanctae contemplationis dulcedo est. These, as the oratorious and pious Preliminaries to his weighty subsequent Reply, are worthy notice. But yet I proceed. Sed lex, ad cujus scientiam me invitas, humana est, ab hominibus edita & tractans terrena: quò licèt Moses ad Deuteronomii lecturam Reges Israel astrinxerit, cum per hoc Reges alios ad consimiliter faciendum in suis legibus concitasse, omnem effugit rationem, cum utriusque lecturae non sit eadem causa. This Clause has the Nerves, Sinews, and Ligament of the Prince's reason in it, and had need of athletary and masculine Arguments to resolve and repel it. No doubt, the Law of God which Moses proposes, is that which has an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in itself, and aught to have a more than moral suasion on men, nay, a divine Empire over them, to believe, embrace, and follow the Prescript of it; the reason is, because flesh and blood is non-plussed, and has no Rampire to raise against the Battery of its Divinity; God does assist it with such an inseparability, that no wit of man shall hold out siege against it; but if he be not sealed up to the day of destruction, shall yield up his reason and prepossessions to it. No doubt therefore, but Israel's King would hold himself concerned in a punctual consistency to it. God, whose the spirits of Kings are, was in it, and he dinted the edge of it, to cut through the oppositions of all argumentation against it. And therefore it was capable to teach the fear of God in God's method, and to the proportion of his requiry, because he fitted it to that end. 'Twas mighty, through God, to dismantle the strong Holds of Satan, and to rescind every obstruction that adversateth that end of God. It had a mighty Author, GOD; and a mighty Minister, Moses, and a mighty appearance with Thunder and Lightning; and thence aught to have a mighty power with Kings, to teach them how to rule men under God, that they and their subjects may live with God for ever. But, Sir Chancellor, quoth he, Saul's Armour will not fit David, nor will the Prerogatives appropriated to this one only Law, be appliable to all, no more than the Scribes and Pharisees come up to Moses, because they sit in Moses Chair: Moses was a man mighty in word and in deed, his Law was written by the Finger of God; the Statutes and Appointments of it were contrived in the Divine Mind; and no wonder, if they directed to God their Centre whence they originated: no wonder, though they taught the Kings that were to be, what they might, and might not do, and possessed them with a fear to do the contrary, and with a care to do their positive injunction, in reverence to God the enjoyner, and to the injunction, as a part of his Worship. All the scruple is, How humane Laws that are made by men, subject to like infirmities with others: perhaps, Tyrannos, truculent, profane, per jurious. How these so weak and wicked should arrogate the authority of God, and command indisputable obedience to their Laws. And how Kings that are holy, pious, and beloved, should be reasonably thought to read them, or be obliged to conform to them; since qualis causa, talis effectus, shrewdly presumes the Laws of violence and injurious contexture and impression like themselves. This the Prince objects, as holding himself not so strictly obliged to peruse the Laws of England, since they are but humane in their subject matter, and earthly in the objects that they respect. And this concludes the second Chapter. CHAP. III. At Cancellarius, scio, inquit, per haec quae jam dicis (Princeps clarissime) quant● advertentiâ exhortationis meae tu ponder as qualitatem quo me non infime concitas super inceptis nedùm clariùs sed & profundiùs quodam modo tecum disceptare. THese words bring in the Chancellor, acknowledging both the candour in the Prince, and the favour of the Prince to him; which he the rather here mentions, because good counsel, and noble Precepts, have not ever such returns from Pupils on their Tutors. 'Twas rare counsel that Seneca gave Nero, in his Book De Clementia, which he says he begun and continued, Vt quodammodo speculi vice fungerer, & te tibi ostenderem perventurum ad voluptatem maximam omnium. And yet, though it had the sublimest strains of rhetoric love, and pathetic zeal to his aggrandization, that it might polish the roughness, and attenuate the superbity of his nature tending him to practices, as victorious over passion, and as obliging to subject's gratitude; as Augustus his was, whom he brings in as justly glorying, Praestitisti, Caesar, civitatem incruentam, & hoc quod magno animo gloriatus es, nullam te toto orbe stillam cruoris humani misisse; yet had he no other answer but death from that patricidial Monster. But blessed be God, our Chancellor having to deal with a sweeter Nature, and receiving from him better proofs of radicated virtue, gives him this due Encomium in the Exordium of this Chapter. And that he does by several Gradations. First, he salutes him as a Prince most excellent; not as great, but good; not glittering in the Vest of Royalty, so much as in the Virtue of Meekness and ductility; In maxima potestate haec verissima animi temperantia & humani generis incomprehensibilis amor, Lib. 1. De Clementia, p. 624. ●. 11. non cupiditate aliqua, non temerit●te incendi, non priorum principum exemplis corruptum, quantùm in cives suos liceat experiendo, tentare, sed hebetare aciem imperii sui; as Seneca wrote to Nero. And then secondly, not setting light by the grave and pithy suggestions of his experienced State-Minister, who had with loyalty and love asserted his Rights, partaken in his misfortunes; and now for his good, affectionately imparted himself as he was able to him. This had been but like heady and grateless Youth, which is apt to neglect and forget great deserts, Pettitus in leges, Atic. lib. 6, Tit. ●. p. 538. and grave deservers, which the Attic Laws censured; as Val. Max. lib. 5. c. 3. witnesseth, and which all ingenuous Nature's abhorred. But in that he does accept the counsels, and consider them, magnâ advertentiâ, intently and with a fixation of mind, to be conducted by them, and to admit them to a regency in him, argues him a high favourer of virtue, and one that bespeaks the Chancellor to continue his service to him, and that not in the ordinary way of daily astancy, and appearing at this Court; but of diligent study to consider, and of faithful Resolution to impart, what he conceives fit for him to know and do; yea, and to convey this to him by a method of effectuality and perspicacity; that by delighting him with the method and pleasure of the Congress, he may be enamoured with, and surprised by the potency of the Reason; and thence be form into such a composure of honour and honesty, as may for the present make him the darling Prince; and in future, promise and perform him, if God see fit, the renowned King of his Father's Subjects; which, that he may by this means come to, he proceeds to direct him as follows. Scire igitur te volo, quod non solum Deuteronomii leges, sed & omnes leges humanae sacrae sunt. Quo Lex sub his verbis definitur, Lex est Sanctio Sancta jubens honesta, & prohibens contraria; sanctum enim esse oportet, quod esse sanctum definitum est. Here the Chancellor shows, that though the Laws of God mentioned in his Word, and Deuteronomy as part of it, be primarily, and per se sacred, because they immediately come à fonte saecro, and are the issues of explicated Divinity, there being a kind of patefaction of God in the Wisdom and Order, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Trismegist. in Pimand. 9 the reason and necessity of them, to preserve Natural Religion, Civil Justice, and Social Harmony; yea, and to dispose men by their oeconomy, to glorify God, in adoring him as Supreme, and securing his from the sacrilege of our Insolence; and though God has implanted such Majesty in his Laws, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, in Min●e, p. 564. as is not in any humane Law in the World, abstracted from it; ye● are all Laws which derive their force, à lege naturae (and those that do not, are no Laws, according to that of the Schools, * Sanctus Thom. Summ. prima, secunda, q. 95, Prima secunda, q. 91. art. 2. Nulla Lex humana habet vim legis nisi in quantum à lege naturae derivatur) and are honest, Detrahunt leges aliquando à jure naturali, & addunt juri naturals; nec obstat, quod ipsum jus naturale est immutabile & verum, qui● illud verum in suo genere, in certis autom capitulis mutatur, & mutetur, quoad observantiam ipsam, tamen semper bonum, & equum est, Gloss. in Digest. lib. 1. Tit. 1. De Jure & Justitia, p. 58. just, possible, according to the Custom of Places and Times, advantageous to common profit, and plain. These as regulated by the eternal Law of which they partake, inasmuch as from it they are inclined in proprios actus & fines. These though Humane, in regard of their Makers, and in regard of their Tether, they respecting humane Conversation and Order, yet are sacred, and do refer to God, as their Author and Justifier; yea, they having a respect to that which is God's definition, Dr. & Stud. c. 19 Lib. quod Deus fit immutabilis, pag. 303. Lib. De Abrahamo, p. 350. Order and Charity, according to Philo's notion of them, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. yea, and being nothing else but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, The Narrative of the regular and devout Lives of the Patriarches, before the Law on Mount Sinai was published, there is good reason to call and account the Laws of every Government sacred, and severely to punish the violent and obstinate Contemners of them. Si quis adversus ●as fecisset, s●cer alicui deorum cum familia pecuniáque esset, Livius, lib. 2. was the Romans judgement; and Saint Paul's further, He that resists shall receive to himself damnation, that is, shall have a sentence in his Conscience, in praejudicium futuri judicii. That the Laws have ever been accounted in all Nations sacred, is not only evidencible from the nature of Laws, which point out to man his duty, both to others and himself: from whence Philo terms the Law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as he does the King, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, adding, that as it is the duty of a King to command what is to be done, Lib. secundo De Vita Mosis, p. 654. Lib. 1. De Legib. and forbid what is not: so is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. the manner and mode of doing and not doing it, the propriety of the Law: and hence the Law (deriving its descent, non populorum jussis, etc. not from the People's power, or from the judge's judgements, but the rule of Reason and Nature. And again, Hanc sapientissimorum fu●sse, etc. I see (saith he) the Law to be the judgement of the wisest men, not flowing barely from the conceptions of humane nature, nor issuing from any Sect or number of men, but some thing eternal, the Wisdom that governs all the World by commands and restraints.) Not only from this aught the Law to have great esteem, Cic lib. 2. De Legibus. M. Antoninus, lib. 10. c. 25. Lib. De Mundo, c. 6. Plutarch, De Homero. Plato in Minoe, p. 665. Politic. p. 556. Ficin. Com. in 1. De Legib. p. 767. Lib. 12. De Legib. p. 997. Aenead. 4. Lib. 3. Com. in Lib. 1. Aenead. 3. p. 226. Reip. Gerendae. Praecepta p. 817. Lib. ad. Princ. Indoctum, p. 781. Porphyrius in vita Pythagorae. edit. Holstenii. but ever had amongst all Nations in all times. They called the Law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Lord of men; adding, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a sinner against the Law is a fugitive; and when Croesus asked Pittacus, What was the greatest thing? 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, meaning the Laws which were written on the Barks of Trees. Plato calls the Law, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the invention of truth. Ficinus in primo leg. Platon. derives the Laws by Minos, Lycurgus & Selon, from three Gods, jupiter, Apollo, Minerva, Power, Clemency, Wisdom; this argues the dignity of Laws; and Plato terms them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Plotinus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. a power or faculty containing all harmony, the soul of the Body politic; and Ficinus on him, says, Legum major est quam syderum authoritas; and Plutarch said much of the Laws, when he wrote the Laws, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. The Laws always gives the first place in the Common wealth to him that does just things, and understands things profitable to Mankind. And in another place, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, yea, they were so exact in observing their Laws, that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, was Gospel with the Ancients, be their Learning and power what it would be. Pausanias' replied therefore to one that asked him, how the Laws came to be so fixed, that no man durst endeavour their change, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Because the Laws are Lords of men, not men of the Laws. Hence the Laws, as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, all men have subjected to. Lib. De Bon. hom. libert. Diodor. Sicul. lib. 1. c. 6. Plutarch in Solone. The Egyptian Kings, Nil agebant propriis affectibus, sed omnia juxta legum decreta. Alcamen refused the gifts offered him by the Messenians, Quoniam si recepissem, inquit, cum legibus pacem habere non poteram. Pysistratus, though a Tyrant, being accused by the Areopagitas, for violating the Laws of Solon, submitted to the judgement of that Senate according to them. Augustus Caesar, when he had violated the Law of Adultery, by him made, in beating the Adulterer with his Daughter, whereas he should have delivered him over to the Law, was displeased with himself; and when he cried out to him to forbear, because he violated his own Law, Augustus forbore, ashamed, aequum tamen ducebat non minùs se quam alios legibus parere, Lib. 4. c. 1. as Fulgosus words it, I might be endless in quotations of this nature; but I refer the Readers to other places of his Commentary, where I more largely prosecute this: Ep. 90. concluding with that of the Moralist, Hujus opus unum, est de divinis humanisque verum invenire, ab hac nunquam recedit justitia, pietas, religio & omnis alius comitatus virtutum consertarism, & inter se cehaerentium, haec docuit colere divina, humana diligere & penes Deos imperium esse, & inter homines consortium, quod aliquandiu inviolatum mansit, antequam societatem avaritia distraxit, etc. Whereas then the Chancellor says, Laws are sacred, and adds, Lex est sanctio sancta jubens honesta, & prohibens contraria; What doth he but speak, what God and Nature inspires him concerning it; for Laws being the inventa deorum, and the universal suffrages of Nature, propagating good, and impeding evil, are so deservedly accounted sacred, Illustres conditores legum, inventionem legum in Deum, sed per diversa nomina atque media retulerunt, lege annumerationem Legislatorum apud Ficmum in Argum. ante Minoe, Platon. p, 564. as nothing can be more, because they are from the sacred being, example, authority, and tend to a sacred issue, God's glory, and men's good. Which considered, though the Moral Law once delivered by God be absolute, and no dispensation by man can be allowed for the breach of it; yet is there a kind of second power, Lege S Pettit. De Legibus Atticis, edit. Paris. 1635. next to the positive Law of suspension, latent in the nature of man, and that by God's permission, as it were authoritative, which may be exercised besides, though not directly against that unalterable Law, Lib. 2. Excusationum. c 4. Digest. lib. 1. Tit. p. 86. De Consti●. Primus. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Later Constitutions, that better see the defects of former, are to be preferred before those that preceded them, saith Modestinus. For else emergent virtues would be without reward, and vices without punishment, because they, as omissi casus, being not in the ordinary Canon; and must on that ground be passed over, Lib. De Joseph, p. 531. as if Magistrates were unconcerned in them. And this evil prudence, and self-preservation, the supreme Law, next that other, obviates, and that warrantably. Philo says Government is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. a various and prudent adaptation of man to times. As a Sea-Master does not always steer one course, nor put out alike Sails, but varies and altars, as the Seas and Winds, and his Marchandizes, and men occasion; and as a Physician does not always give one dose, but varies his prescript as the Patient changes, by intentions, remissions, repletions, all to health: so should a Governor order his affairs, as he sees best according to emergencies, regarding public good, and men's profits. And this Seneca makes a most notable care of a Governor to prospect, so that he must needs no other eyes but his own to direct him. And hence is it, that as he proposes Laws, ad docendum, as well as imperandum, yet he improbates Plato's long Laws, preferring short Laws soon learned, and easily remembered far beyond them, and cries out, nihil videtur mihi frigidius, nihil ineptius quam lex cum Prologo; yet does he suffragate to the use of additional Laws to those that are constitutional and primaeve, according to the requiry of extraordinary Occurrences, Budaeus in Pand. priores, p. 194. jura constitui oportte in iis quae 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 accidunt, non in iis quae 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, id est, iis quae plerúmque accidunt, non in iis quae nec opinatò, vel praeter hominum opinionem. which surely but for this, would be such an hiatus, as would swallow up all Gods and men's Constitutions. For though it may be disputable, whether the World does senescere vigore; and many, on both sides, have variety and reason for their adhaesions for and against it; yet is it out of doubt, that the World, in the acceptation of it for men, the noblest part of it, do every day decrease in virtue, and with their new fashions, new habits and diet, introduce new vices; which, if not cautioned against by Laws, (slips cut out of the whole piece of pristine Wisdom) all that is sacred and civil, will quickly be absorped And therefore as Fabius Cunctator was by the Romans called Imperii scutum, because he taught them the way to master and ruin Hannibal by not fight him, Lib. 1. p. 642. edit. Sylb. and for that was called by jornandes, prima redeuntis & reviviscentis Imperii spes: so true subsequent Laws, woven out of the materials of Legislative Wisdom, which the Ancients had, and we from them received the principles in. These I say improved, are rightly termed reviviscentis sapientiae naturalis indicia, the amputations of vice and eradicators of pestilent annoyances, and Magistrates that carry them on to these ends indisputably to be adored. Porphyrius, De Abstin. lib. 1. p. 6. And therefore that King amongst the Bramins, that made the Law against the venery of Women, by enjoining that every Wife should be burned with her Husband, was an eternal Benefactor to the Nation whom he governed, and to the Successions of them: For whereas their Lust satisfiable by others, Linschotten, in his Voyages to the India's, c. 36. better as they thought then their Husbands could, made them poison their Husbands, to enjoy their Lechers, and so filled Families with degenerous Brood's: his Law drew them, for love of their own lives, to do nothing against, but all things for the lives of their Husbands, that they themselves might also live with them. And this was the break-neck of that Lechery; and so a good instance, that even by the light of nature, there is a latent power in Governors wisely to enact such Laws, as times, places, persons, and occurrences shall require; and such enactions being sacred, ought as such to be obeyed, and that upon the ground that they are sanctae, because they do sancta jubere & honesta, & prohibere contraria, and have no name above their nature, but answerable to their appellation, according to our Chancellour's words, Sanctum enim esse oportet, quod esse sanctum definitum est. This I conceive is added, to discriminate just from unjust Government: in just Government, a just Law is the Rule, that teaches unicuique quod suum, est tribuere, and impedes and punishes whatever is contrary to it; that makes God and his right, men's awes, and expects their zeals to appear asserters of them; whereas other Governments set up wickedness by a Law. Nay, are set up to be what they are by wickedness; such a Government is that of the Turks, and was that of the Mammalucks. Now as the Government is, so must the Laws of its support be; for holy and righteous Laws will no better suit with unrighteous power, and unjust manages, then old Cloth will with new in a Garment; or new Wine with old Bottles, to use our Lord's comparison. That then, which the Chancellor intends, is, that things ought in nature to answer their definitions; and if Laws be defined holy from the holy Sanctions, they are presumed to command, and the contrary to them, to forbid: Then the Laws ought to be preserved in their account of holy, from forbearing enactions that are diametral to honesty, and of evil report. And on this ground the Laws of England, since Christianity, have not only eliminated foolish Laws, Plut. lib. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, p. 245. De his quiserè à numine puniuntur, p. 550. like those of the Argives, that Women when they coupled with their Husbands, should put on Beards; or that of the Romans against their manumitted servants; or that of the Lacedæmonians, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that is, men should not suffer their Mustachio's to grow. Not only have the Laws of England avoided fond enactions, but also eliminated all Ethnique Laws, and Dr●ydize Customs; yea, and the Reformation has since refined things, which in, and under Popery, had at least negative legality, as dispensations for Lechery; and all this upon the Chancellour's Rule, Sanctum enim esse oportet, quod esse sanctum definitum est. Again, Lex est sanctio sancta jubens, & prohibens contraria, is the definition of all Authors according to truth itself; as is proved from the forecited Authorities; Lex, not only à ligando, from the obliging nature of it, because none are exempt from its cogency as a rule; but also lex à legendo, quia publicè legatur ut omnibus notus sit. For though of late Laws have been printed, and the Laity educated to read and practise them; yet in the elder times, the Laws were only read and proclaimed from the authographon of their Entry, that all might at their peril take notice of it; which was one reason, I conceive, that Magna Charta being declaratory of the ancient Common-Law which obliged all persons, was wont to be read not only at the County Town by the Sheriff, but also in Churches once a year at least, that all persons of what degree soever, though they could not read, or might not, if they could read, come safely to the sight and perusal of it, might hear to know it. Sanctio sancta] Not consensus populi, but sanctio Principis. For, though Plato's rule be much to favour of People in formation of Laws; yet he fixes the sanctional power on the Prince as inseparable from him, as God's Vicar, and under him Legislator, and so our Laws do also. For the enaction which gives being to the Law-Statute, is the Kings; the consent of the Estates is but sine qua non. The Divinity of the King's Unction derives a sacredness on the Law; Subjects co-operation is but to frame them into useful methods, and to draw them to be obeyed more willingly, because consented to by their delegates in their passing. And to render them more probable to be just and wise, when so many Peers, of honour and learning, Spiritual and Lay, and wise and worthy Gentlemen, consider of, and consent to the enaction of them. jubens honesta & prohibens contraria. This I said was added to distinguish between Law and Law; for 'tis not the outward sanction only, but the internal virtue, and the excellency of the end and drift of Sanctions, that makes them obligatory and cogent on men to obey them. Syntagmat. De Diis 13. p. 374. And therefore, if a Law should be any where made like those forecited, or like that which Lilius Giraldus, out of Herodotus, mentions among the Babylonians, that the native women should once a year couple with foreigners, for their recreation and content, that (as it were) they might the better bear the company of their Husbands and Countrymen all the year after. This Law, I suppose, being so hard and obscene, so dishonest, and so unnaturally putrid, would have no force on men and women further, then to make them suffer for disobedience to it; for since the Laws of every Nation are to accommodate the people of it in their way to virtue and serenity, Cic. lib. 3. De Leg. Tertio De Legibus. Plato 9 De Legib. p. 25. according to that of the Orator, Constat profectò ad civium salutem, civitatúmque inc●lumitatem, vitámque omnium quietam, & beatam, conditas esse leges. That the Magistrate is a worded Law, and the Law a silent Magistrate, as tully's words also are, and that his work chiefly is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. to consult and put in execution things good, generous, and just. Considering I say this, there is great cause to look that Laws be made as Laws ought, to the promotion of things honest, and the impediment of immoralities. For Saint Paul, in saying the Law is just, and holy, and good, did but point out to the natural endowment of Law, and those three glorious Attributes of God, which the Laws emanated from, and were regulated by. And hence is it, that abstract these ends from Laws, and they are no remains of God in man, but have the monstrosities of corrupted nature, and execrable contradiction to God, in his intent and purpose of giving them to men; and instead of being the lines of manuduction to Heaven, they are bonds of iniquity, and conducts ● his dishonour in Nature's violation and distortion; and some have thought the Statute of 28. H. 8. c. 7. 31 H. 8. c. 8. 32 H. 8. c. 25. 33 H. 8. c. 21. not to have been founded upon such Piety, and Justice, as Laws ought to have been, and therefore they were soon repealed; it being a good rule, Alteri detrahere sui commodi causâ contra naturam est, & sic injustum, 〈◊〉 6 12. De jure Belli, & 〈◊〉 p. 2. lib. 1. saith Grotius out of Tully. And thereupon considering the precise rule of our Lords, making Justice the completion of the Law, and the Prophets, and finding many men's actions, in administration of Law diametral to it, I cannot but bring in here learned Budaeus his complaint, who makes some men even in their Justicing, so far self-admirers, and self-seekers, Cum, si ad veritatis normam, & ad simplicitatis Evangelicae praescriptum exigere jura velimus, In Epistol. Thom. Lupseto inter Opuscula. Tho. Mori Cancel. Angl. Impress Lovaniae, 1566. nemo sit tam stupidus quin intelligat, nemo tam vecors quin confiteatur, si urgeas, tam jus & fas hodiè, & jam diu in sanctionibus Pontificiis, & jus, atque aequum in legibus civilibus, & Principum placitis desidere, quam Christi rerum humanarum conditoris instituta, ejusque discipulorum ritus ab eorum decretis, & placitis, qui Craesi & Midae acervos, bonorum finem esse putant, & faelicitatis cumulum, adeo si justitiam finire nun● velis, quomodo priscis auctoribus placuit, quae jus suum unicuique tribuat, vel nullibi illam in publico invenias, vel (si dicere id mihi permittam) culinariam quandam dispensatricem esse, ut fateamur necesse est, sive nunc imperitantium mores spectes, sive civium inter se & popularium affectus. So that grave Parisian Chancellor. By all which it appears, that Laws are then only sacred, when they are to purposes sacred, and enjoin what God and Nature dictates them to; when they answer the end of their institution, and are conform to the principle whence they actuate, which being just and good, becomes thereby accounted sacred, because officious to man in his religious, civil, and social capacity; for, sanctum esse oportet, quod sanctum definitum est. Ius enim describi perhibetur, quòd illud est ars boni & aequi. Cujus merito quis Sacerdotes nos meritò appellat. Ulpianus, lib. 1. Instit. Digest. De Justitia, & jure, Tit. 1. p. 54. This definition of the Law, ars aequi & boni, is Celsus', and Ulpian from him quotes it; this the gloss well explains, jus est ars. First, ut dicas definitum jus in genere, & sic est ars, id est, scientia finita quae arctat infinita. For art is nothing else, according to Porphyrius, but the finite learning of things infinite. Secondly, it's called ars arcta, it is artificium hominis, nam auctor juris est homo, justitiae Deus, that is, though God give the rule for justice, yet man fits and disposes the method and way of its convoy and application to men, and so 'tis art; and then aequi & boni, that is, it appoints that which is aequam & utile, good and lawful in itself, useful and beneficial to man. This the gloss. Now this delineation of the Law of equity, which is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the principle and fountain of all good, Author incertus, De Vita Pythag. apud Photium, Bibl. co. 269. Lib. 5. De Moribus, cap. 6. as Antiquity terms it. It is fit, it should be further considered; the Philosopher calls jus, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that evenness that intercurs the extremes; adding, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. If Injustice be inequality, than justice must be equality. And he says, it consists in proportion and comparison, when both rewards and punishments are suited exactly to the merits and demerits of men, and when Magistrates in administration, incline neither to the right hand nor to the left. I know, there are learned men that criticise between jus and lex: by jus they understand that natural obligation on man, which the Hebrews called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and the Greeks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Jur. Belli & pacis, p. 3. and by Lex, constituted positive Laws, which they called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, quod justum, ut quis accipiat ratione Scripturae aut legis aut consuetudinis. But this learned Grotius does not approve of, but shows Ius and Lex, have a promiscuity of use, and homonymous sense in Authors. And therefore I take Ius and Lex to import all one; and though Gaius disjoins them, omnes populi qui moribus & legibus reguntur, partim suo proprio, Lib. 1. Instit. tit. 1. p. 61. partim communi omnium hominum jure utuntur; yet there want not instances of Lex his acceptation in good Authors, in the large sense of Ius. And so I know our Chancellor intended it, Corvinus in Erotematibus Imperial. p. 1. since the Laws of particular Polities, being extracts from the natural Law, and conducing to presentation and order, deserves the definition of ars aequi & boni. Cujus meritò, quis nos Sacerdotes appellat. Here is a ternary of Emphasises; one, in cujus merito; another in Quis; a third in Sacerdotes. The first refers us to the Law thus beneficial to Mankind, as meriting from it, and having praise, as its debt, not donary. I confess, the phrase cujus merito, though in some sense it may be opposed to cujus gratiâ, a good Orator's phrase; yet here it has an identity of sense with it, and lessons us to return praise to desert, and glory to virtue. God himself accounts our praises, a worship of him; He that offereth me praise, glorifieth me: and men are by nothing more pleased and retributed then by praise. Oh! to hear well, is the deliciae vitae and aqua mirabilis, Lib. De Gloria. In lib. 1. Iliad Hometi. Impress. 1538. Majoranus in proemio Eustathii Impress. Romae. 1542. 2 Lib. Hestor. and the aurum potabile that all brave spirits digest contentedly. M●ursius in his Book, De Gloria, has given us a large account of the virtues of men, as their Titles to the glory ascribed to them: and Camerarius, after he has set forth Homer by such Eulogies as are even Hyperbolique to Rhetoric, concludes in this superaddition, that above sixty famous men commentaried on him; and that Eustathius, who extracted his laborious Work out of them, only is now visible, of those many and famous Writers. And yet though near four hundred years before Herodotus, and one thousand before pliny he wrote, or two hundred and seventy years after the Trojan War, according to Porphyry; since which there is no Author so ancient among profane ones: Yet all this Tract of time, and variations of men, he has for his Work sake been honoured. Neque tamen magis vitam conservari, & ad juvari igni & aquá, quam omnem eruditionem hujus poëtae monumentis manifestum est, saith Camerarius. Here's a cujus merito, with a witness, better than that of Sons and Daughters. For whereas few men live in them many Ages; some, not an Age; the best, not to much above twenty descents. This Homer, though blind and ignoble by Birth; yet in the perennity of his Wit, has had praise in above twenty Centuries of years. This is the first Emphasis facti dignè memorati & descripti. Budaeus in Pandect. priores, pag. 25. edit. Basil. The second is, Emphasis personae, quis: This is not quis nescientiae, but eminentiae, a man of name not to be triobolarly prolated. And this was Ulpian, neither he that was a Sub-Tutor to Alexander, and Master of his Rolls, and one of his Circuit, and itinerant Counsel: nor that other, a Tyrian born, and, for his Learning, made the Emperor Adrian's Deputy in France, Vossius, lib. De Scriptor Lat. and slain in an uproar there. But our Ulpian was, Domitius Ulpian the famous Lawyer: he is the Quis, in Budaeus his determination. The Digest tells us, where he calls the Lawyers Sacerdotes, to wit, the first of his Institutes; and the gloss on it gives the why he so calls them. Quia ùt Sacerdotes sacra ministrant, & conficiunt it à & nos cum leges sint sacratissimae & ut jus unicui que tribuit sacerdos in danda paenitentia, sic & nos in judicanda justitia. Indeed, Mystagog. lib. 2. sect. 2. ad sinem. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. the Laws of old were under the custody of the Priests, as the only men of honour and fidelity; and Cressolius gives a good reason of it, Id sapienter machinata est divina providentia, etc. The wisdom of God, saith he, in the modelling of the Holy Tongue, has so providentially ordered it, that the same word should signify Priest, and Prince, endowed with great Nobility; That when the word Priest is named, the mind of man might be lifted up, and exercised upon the thought of some excellent and truly noble person. For since the Law is ars aequi & boni, and all Matters and men are to stand or fall by it: 'tis reason, that sacred Jewel should have a sacred Servitor, and Protector, whom neither favour or fear should be suspected to corrupt. And to preserve this from defection, and the opprobry of it, no means being continuable more probably effectual, than virtue of soul, Plato in Politic. p. 550. and nobility of descent, Antiquity chose to the Priesthood persons thus qualified. Lib. 2. Genial. c. ●. Alexander ab Alexandro, has reported the Customs of all Nations thus to do; and Tiraquellus, his learned Commentator, has added to him in this kind. Diodorus Siculus confirms this, lib. 4. c. 1. and when Plato would have them begotten in holy Marriages, Lib. 6. De Repub. what does he but intent they should be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, be nobly endowed with blood, and educated, that so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. That both from their nourishment, Lib. 5. Stromat. institution, and descent, as Clemens Alexandrinus phrases it,... Stobaeus, Serm. 41. For, according to Pythagoras, they thought 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that noble note they would have upon the Priesthood, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, saith the Philosopher, Lib. 7. Repub. p. 8. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and c. 9 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; without which to determine differences, and distribute justice as Gods to men, Congregations of men cannot subsist, Pag. 436. Vol. 1. Marsilius Ficinus on Plato's Conviv. amoris, p. 103. has told us the Office of these Priests as Heathenly, they were venerated, 〈…〉 officia Deo amica sint, quâ ratione Deo homines amici fiant, nos deccant, qui amoris charitatísque modus ad deum, ad patriam, ad parents, ad alios tam ad vivos quam ●d defanctos sit adhibendus. And hence it may be the Egyptians observed for long time that Law, Plato Politic. p. 550. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. no King reigned but as priested. Plutarch in quaest Romans, p. 291. The same Law had the Greeks in some parts, as Pluta●ch confirms it. Vlpian's appellation then of Sacerdotes, as applying it to Lawyers, was in relation to the old Priesthood of the jews and Heathens, who committed all their sacra to wise and well descended men; who did not make a profession and gain of the Law, but did rectify the people's errors by their learned integrity, In Pandect. p. 24. which Budaeus, on this word of the Pandects, Edit. Basil. 1534. thus expresses; Siquidem sanctissima res est civilis sapientia quemadmodum autem apud antiquos Sacerdotes sui, singulis diis consecrati erant, qui de futuris atque agendis, consulentibus responsa dabant, sic venerandi illi jurisconsulti, omni genere literarum instructissimi, gratuitam non quastuariam jurisprudentiam habentes, in publicum quotidiè prodeuntes, unicnique civi consulentes, se antiquo instituto praebebunt, & tanquam oracula justitiae promebant. So he. Whereupon Athenaeus tells us, these were termed the Heroes, and rightly too; for they were propitious to communities, and nothing studied themselves more, then to be fitted for usefulness. But how the Chancellor should apply this to men now a days, though Lawyers, I not well know; unless in that sense, that they do sacra scire & docere: And if Sacerdotes they must be, they can be only Sacerdotes brevium deorum, as Varro calls some, and Gyraldus after him. It is true indeed, Syntag. 17. De Diis, p. 461. learned Hopperus says as much as may be for them, when he says they were called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; Hopperus, De vera. Jurisprud. lib. 4. tit. 30. and Sophoi, as Sempronius by the Romans was, because they had a concentration of the Philosopher, the Priest, the Lawyer in them, tum quia eà scientiâ praeditus est, tum quia sibi praesit ut Philosophus, Reipubls. ut jurisconsultus, sibi & Reipubls. ut sacerdos. But as learned a man, as he, tells us, whatever the Ancients were, and how great their deserts were; yet though some of their Successors in time, answering them, Budaeus in Pandect. aught to be answered in suffrage of honour from men to them; others ought not to be; the great Parisian Chancellor is the man who reproaches some of his Contemporaries, Disciplinarum omnium non modò ignaros, P. 14. edit. Basil, 1534. sed etiam contemptores, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, quasi omnem literarum elegantiam nitorémque dicendi perosos, Doctrinis humanioribus abhorrentes, Rusticos, invenustos, illepidos, hircosoes. Thus he. But I forbear more of this; though I think the Chancellor's Etymology will not agree to the name, as it denominates universally the men, and is exegetical of them; for they do not always sacra dare, nor do they ever sacra docere. Ferdinand King of Spain knew that; for when he sent Pedrarias Viceroy into the West-Indies, Naudaeus in proemio, De study militari. he forbade him, juris consultos aut causidicos secum deducere; adding the reason, Ne litium semina quae illis regionibus nulla erant, ab ipsis importarentur, & pernitiosâ contagione pacem illarum ac tranquilitatem interficerent. The like is reported of the Pannonians, that when Mathias Corvinus their King, sent for the best Civilians out of Italy to set over them, they requested the King to send them back again, and so he did, ad lites eorum ingeniis natas sedandum. Nor did our Sacerdotes trulier, sacra dare, or docere, here in England; for in H. 3 ds time William York, and Robert Lexington, pretended, as Justice Itinerants over the Land, to reform Justice; but instead thereof, exacted great sums of money from the Subjects for the King, contrary to the Law. So did Thorp, 24 E. 3. berner's, E. 1. line, yea, all the Judges, except Mettingham, and Beckingham, Qui non abierunt in consilium impiorum, 18 E. 1.) were sentenced and executed for baseness and bribery. Gloss. p. 416. ●6 Inst. So 11 R. 2. there was but one skip with qui solus inter impios mansit integer, saith Sir Hen. Spelman; yea, in H. 7. his time, Empson and Dudley were as faulty as any Miscreants before them, and thereupon executed: so that the name of Sacerdotes, as they do sacra dare & docere, in their Etymological import is, not infallibly due to all our late jurisperiti, as to the ancient prementioned Heroiques. Though I know many of them have, and deserve to be remembered as brave and courageous men; especially such as Judge Hales for his fidelity to Queen Mary, Judge Montague in Hen. 8. and Edward the Sixth his time; yea, and before them all, many of the late Judges, Sergeants, and other Professors of the Law, some of which yet living in great honour and dignity, suffered for their loyalty, whatever the savageness of the late troubles, by Fine, Imprisonment, Sequestration, and other severity, could possibly express, to their eclipse and diminution; notwithstanding all which, their loyalty and Consciences kept them close to the principles of Integrity, which they are now deservedly compensated for, in the peace of their Consciences, the favour of their Sovereign, and the love of all good men: Which is a sufficient balance to the levitieses of others, as well elder as later; and gives me the just occasion to assert a truth, to the honour of God, the King, and the Nation; That the Laws of England, distributed by the Reverend Judges, are with more integrity, and impartiality, accommodated to the people then in any part of the World, Laws are: Nor is there any Nation under Heaven so void of corruption in judgement, as England is, wherein the Judges chosen for virtue, knowledge, and gravity, descended mostly out of Knightly Families, and endowed, for the most part, with great Estates. Neither need, nor possibly almost can, those circumstances considered, be suspected of favouring any thing, but Justice in their Judgements; nor fearing any thing, but to offend God, the King, and the Law; if otherwise then according to their Oaths they should do. And hereupon I shall use the Psalmist's words, Blessed are the people that are in such a case, and who do receive the Law, à Talibus Sacerdotibus. Sacerdotes, then, in a borrowed sense, Judges and Lawyers are; but in the true notion of Ulpian, and our Fortescue too, I suppose Laymen were not intended to be expressed by it; for they did militiam potius quam literas administrare; but in all parts, both of France, M. Paris. in Guliel. secundo. 2 Instit. p. 285. on Stat. Westm. 1. and p. 98. Normandy, and other Nations, men in Civil Judicature were, till E. 1. his time, ecclesiastics; and till than 'twas not only nullus Clericus nisi Causidicus, but nullus judex nisi Clericus. And when the Judges of the Courts of Common-Law were Clergymen, they would not suffer any usurpation upon the Common-Law, saith Sir Edward Cook, to their honour. By Sacerdotes then, Ulpian, from whom our Chancellor deduces his instance, meant the flower and prime of men, whom the Ancients expressed by names, alluding to their employments, Syntagm. deorum 17. p. 462. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; the Latins, Sacerdotes, Curiones, Orgyones, and other the like, of which Gyraldus writes; and all to show their dignity and duty, to whom the Mysteries of Law, Justice, and Religion, to God and Man, were delegated. Quia ut disunt jura, leges sacrae sunt quò eas ministrantes, & docentes, Sacerdotes aplantur. In what sense the Laws are sacred, Oratione. Contra Aristogitonem. I have heretofore showed, and that is as they are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the invention of the Gods, and from them delivered by Wisemen, as Demosthenes his words are, as they are so prevalent over men, that they do what is just of their own accord▪ Plutarch. in laconicis Apothegmat. without their rigour over them, as Agesilaus said, his Subjects would. And when they have such a Reverence with the Ministers, and Dispenser's of them, In Prologue. ante lib. legum. Angl. as Glanvil writes of in his time, tantae aequitatis, & suae celsitudinis curia, etc. When, I say, these that do jus dicere, though not dare,) the Judges are such) then as the Laws are holy, so do they deserve to be accounted reverend and worthy; though not Priests, yet Priestly men, Fathers for Wisdom, Oracles for Integrity, and Sanctuaries of every excellent thing; Pleas Crown, 4 part. p. 147. because than they have the duos sales Sir Edward Cook mentions, necessary to their ingrediency, Salem sapientiae nè sit insipidus, & salem Conscientiae ne sit diabolus. And how great Jewels such men are, Cressolius has notably in his anthology, p. 52, 107, ad 174. observed. A Deo enim sunt omnes leges editae; nam cum dicat Apostolus, quòd omnis potest as à Domino Deo est; leges ab homine conditae qui ad hoc à Domino recepit potestatem, etiam à Deo constituuntur: Dicente auctore causarum quicquid facit causa secunda, facit & causa prima altiori, & nobiliori modo. Which words contain an irrefragable Argument, for the sacredness of humane Laws made by a lawful Power. For the Chancellor being to deal in a nice point, wherein Carnal Reason, and Interests in Religion, is apt to bias beyond, and besides the one and only mark of truth; the right fixation of which, having a strong influence on practice, and carrying a not to be retunded Argument of duty, to be obedient to the Laws of Powers for Conscience sake. This so necessary to prevent Murmur and Rebellion, which first by derogation from, then by insolency against Magistratique Power, threatens, if not enervates it, our Chancellor backs and confirms from Scripture and Reason. From Scripture, that of Saint Paul, Rom. xiii. 1. Let every soul be subject to the higher Powers, for there is no Power but of God; the Powers that be, are ordained of God: whosoever therefore resisteth the Power, resisteth the Ordinance of God; and they that resist, shall receive to themselves damnation. This Scripture I have ever held the Magna Charta of Power, and because it hath such a pat and direct aspect on the supportation of it, Pride and Treachery have ever discharged their witty Canon on it, to batter, or at least abate the Obligation of it: nor were there ever more dangerous glosses, and religious cheats, put upon the literal truth of it, then of late by some of our seduced pretended Zealots, and their Theological Enthusiastiques. For though the Apostle has guarded this Canon of so great concern, with all possible strength, through which nothing but levelling fury, and Anabaptistical Treachery can possibly break; yet have as great endeavours been made by men of more pretended sobriety, as could well, by wit and ill-will, be machinated. But this Scripture has, and I hope, ever will hold its own with all sober Christians, as well of these, as of the Primitive Ages; and so Saint Augustine defended it against the Donatists, who would disobey Magistrates, upon pretence, that God was rather to be obeyed than they; which was true, but not in their sense; and then boast, they suffered for Conscience, Lib. De Correctione Donatistarum, c. 6. ad Bonifac. and so were Martyrs, I say, as he reproached them, saying, Non ergo qui propter iniquitatem, & propter Christianae unitatis impiam divisionem, sed qui propter justitiam persecutionem patiuntur, two Martyrs veri sunt. And again, Potest esse impiorum similis pana, sed dissimilis est Martyrum causa. So that divers Orthodoxly amongst us, Dr. F●rn. and by name, and very early, when the poison of it did but pullulate, the late learned Bishop of Chester. So that considering, what is in the Text, and what has been said upon it, one would wonder, what confidence of man durst own so reasonless a Principle, as profanation of this Text, endeavours to set up to the ruin of all Governors, and confusion of all Government. For, first, the Apostle being to preach a Doctrine necessary for the suffering times of the Church, under Ethnique Princes, and rigid Step-fathers', terms them yet Powers, and Powers ordained of God; and then knowing, men-sufferers would be tempted to stand upon terms, when they had multitudes to back them, and so would raise a purpresture against the Design of God in his Church's Clarification by suffering, and on the waste, and to the nuisance of the Lords of these Earthly Soils, publishes obedience and subjection to them. Why; they are Powers, and higher Powers then to be coped with, or resisted by any their Subjects, while they command things lawful and just, actively, when otherwise, passively to be obeyed; Si contrà Proconsul jubeat, Serm. 6. De Verbis Dom secund. Matthaeum. non-utique contemnis potestatem, sed eligis majori sevire nec huic debeat minor irasci, si major praelata est, saith the Father; yea, and as there is by this Rule a latitude of obedience, so of persons, every soul, not one, and not the other, but all, high, low, rich, poor, Christian, Heathen, Master, Servant. Let every soul, saith Saint Paul, hinc jam assumenda est fides tua tanquam scutum in quo possis omnia jacula inimici extinguere, saith the Father. And the reason of Power, to be in all things, and by all persons obeyed, is ratione ortus & authoris; 'tis of God, appointed and commissionated: 'tis of God, his eminently; mens in Magistracy derivatively. Now this the Chancellor proving, in behalf of Powers Constitution, extends to Powers expression. If Magistracy be of God, and Laws be made by it, for the ends itself was constituted, than Laws are of God, because effects of that Power which was ordained by God: so that Scripture is an Assertor of humane Laws as from God. And Reason seconds it, whatever the second cause does, the first cause more singularly and nobly does: Magistrates are the second cause of Laws, and they are of God, their first cause: therefore Laws made by them are of God; Philo. lib. 1. legis Allegor, p. 57 Lib. De Agricultura, p. 182. Lib. quod det Potior Insidias. Sol. p. 190. by men his Delegates, whom he empowring, as he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the soul that enliveneth all, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. the husband and father, that begets and support every thing, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the principle and fountain of original wisdom, as Philo's words are; enables, to make wisely and exactly to see obeyed the Laws they so make, as the Candle lightning argues the Sun, the enlighter of it much more light, and the fountain of the Candle light; and the Earth producing food for man, argues the Earth, the maternal cause of man so supported: so in Laws; Seneca. Ep. 65. Haec exemplaria rerum omnium Deus intra se habet, numerósque universorum quae agenda sunt, & modos ment complexus est; ●plenus his figuris est quas Plato Ideas appellat immortales, immutabiles, indefatigabiles. what Magistrates, as the second cause, do, is by, of, and from God, their first cause. And hence is it, that the Philosopher says of God, that he is not blessed from one good in him, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as he is the general nature of all. And so far as these refer to their first cause, De Republ. lib. 7. c. 1. God, are indispensably to be obeyed, upon penalty of that which the next verse calls damnation, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Quare Josaphat Rex Judae ait judicibus suis, judicia quae vos profertis, judicia Dei sunt, 2 Cor. nineteen. & vobiscum Deus in judicio. This is added to confirm the Preposition, for jehosaphat was a very holy King, 2 Chro. xvii. 3, 4, 5, 6. and, by God's direction, I believe, gave this charge to his Judges; the intent whereof was not so much to incline them to care and integrity, from fear of his severity, and ill resentment of their miscarriage; but from consideration that they were quae Dei sunt acturi; yet the judgements they passed, were vice Dei: therefore they should do as God would, were he himself on the Bench; judge righteously, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, says the Septuagint, that is, ye are temporary Gods, and are such as have reputed infallibility. Take heed, do nothing rashly, nothing contrary to evidence, nothing for favour, King James in his Speech, 1616. fear, or wrath. Remember Kings are properly judges, and judgements properly belong to them from God; and when Kings depute judges to bear part of the subaltern Burden of Government, they are taken into a near conjunction with Kings; for the same conjunction that is between God and the King upward, is between the King his judge, downward, said our once English Solomon of famous memory. This Scripture puts a great dignity on Judges, and calls for a great circumspection in their duty to God and the People they sit upon: For though it was primarily and personally spoken to Iehosaphats Judges, who judged by the Mosaique Law; yet inasmuch as the words are, that God is with them, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, all Judges that have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, are within in it, one way or other, and there is a duty on, and a reverence to them, by virtue of this Scripture. And this wise Princes apprehending, constitute the best of Lawyer●, both for Learning and Integrity, Judges, such as Pomponius mentions, Servius Sulpitius, In Pandect. fo. 2. edit. Basil, 1521. neque enim magis ille juris consultus quam justitiae fuit, itaque quae proficiscebantur à legibus, & à jure civili, semper ad facilitatem, aequitatémque referebat, neque constituere litium actiones malebat quam controversi as tollere, saith Budaeus. And such as Caius Aquilius, Itá justus & bonus vir fuit, (Cicero writes of him) ut naturà non disciplinâ consultus fuisse videatur: ità peritus, & prudens, ut ex jure civili non scientia solùm, verum etiam bonitas nata esse videatur. Fond Judges are to be taught their notes, as Nightingales are by their Mothers, and to make Music as they do, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Not for favour, or affection; nor for reward, or advantage, but for pure justice sake, Plutarch, lib. De Solertia animalium. p. 97●. and in obedience to God, their King, and the Laws. For the Laws are regulae permanentes, non nutantes: and as they punish bribery, and passion, as in the forementioned Examples is made out; so have they punished easiness, and unjust lenity, as a blemish to Justice, and an usurpation upon her. Justice Ingham paid in E. the First his time, eight hundred pounds for a Fine spent on building the Clockhouse at Westminster, for razing a Roll in an Action of Debt recovered against a very poor man, and making the thirteen shillings four pence thereupon entered, Sir Edw. Cook, 4 part Instit. Pleas Crown, p. 72. six shillings eight pence; which Justice Southcot in Queen Elizabeth's time, remembered Catelyn, the Chief-Justice of. For when Catelyn would have expressed such a like mercy to a poor Wretch, Southcot denied assent to it, saying, He meant not to build a Clockhouse. Ex quibus ●rudiris, quòd leges licèt humanas addiscere, est addiscere leges sacras, & editiones dei, quò earum studium non vacat à dulcedine consolationis sanctae. This is a good inference, and carries a great Argument to the study of humane Laws, that they are, in a sense, God's Laws, because made by God's Power, and to God's end, order, and justice; and therefore as study of Gods the primaeve and original Law, whether Natural, National, or Mosaique, is the best adjument to the understanding of those humane Laws, which are form from them: so the comfort, delight, and benefit, which men have by the one in such degrees, reflects on the study of the other, as makes an ample compensation for the time expended about, and impended on them. For though in the Laws of nature and men, there is mysterious abstrusity, which toils and troubles the Learners brain, in perscrutating and understanding them; the effects whereof are visible in the morosity and separation of their Students, from the pleasures of conversation and diversion; yet are the events and issues in comprehension of them to such degrees, as are consectaries and rewards of double diligence, very grateful, and perceptively congenial to the expectation of those excellent minds, who after busy disquisition into them, reap dulcedinem consolationis sanctae. There may God be seen in all his emanations and bounties to man, in the Work of the World, in the harmony and consent of Creatures, in a natural Worship of God, Quae cum se disposuit & partibus suis consensit, & ut ita dicam continuit, summum, bonum ●eligit nihil enim pravi, nihil lubrici superest, nihil, in quo arietet, aut labet, omnia fa●iet ex imperio suo, uthilque inopinatum accidet, sed quicquid agit, in bonum exibit facile, & paratè & sine tergiveratione agentis. Senec. lib. De Vita Beata, p. 654. and a noble conservation of themselves, in the various expressions of virtues and vices, according to the differences of Climates and Tropics, under which Nations are, and the accidents of their Changes, Subversions, Discoveries, and Laws, in the prevalencies of Interests, which hurry up and down, sublevate and depress persons and things, as they are acted by the Furies and Concerns of their Entrigo's and Composures. These, and such like particulars, learned by study of the Laws of Nature, Nations, and Countries, do so enrich and fortify the mind against penury and ignorance, which the divinity of it abhors; that truly 'tis not possible to be a stranger to God, the chief good, and to be ignorant of the wisdom that is above, while we study that, which is revealed of that wisdom, in these several things, Natur. Quaest lib. 3. p. ●67. and in the traditions of them to us. Hence the Moralist lays down a notable Rule for the chief thing, a Wiseman is to propose, Erigere animum supra minas & promissa fortunae, nihil dignum putare quod spears, quid enim habet dignum quod concupiscas, qui à divinorum contemplatione quoties ad humana recederis, non aliter caligabit, quam quorum oculi in densam umbram ex claro sole redi●re. Now this attained, and a man so rarified and abstracted from vulgar feculencies, how can this, effected by study of the Laws of men, be less than dulcedo consolationis; not that dulcedo consolationis is bound up in them, quâ such; for so they do merum corticem hominis tangere, as they are humane, and have man for their scope and circumference, since in his capacity they amount to vanity and vexation of spirit. But as they are Directions and Manuducts to God, to whose wisdom and power all these are subject, and in whom they are what they are, and as they enable the mind to understand itself, designed to serve its principal, and by every exotique advantage, to be improved to its principals, glory, and dignity; so the knowledge of them affords dulcedinem consolationis. Nec tamen, ut tu conjicis dulcedo hujusmodi causa fuit; cur Moses, Reges Israel, Deuteronomium legere praeciperat; nam causa haec, non plus Reges quam plebeios ad ejus lecturam provocat, nec plùs Deuteronomii librum quam alios Pentateuchi libros legere, pulsat causa ista. Here our Text-Master prevents the mistake of Moses his intent in this Prescript to the Israelitish Kings, that Deuteronomy is referred to, because it, in the matter of it, or in the intent of God, relates to the pleasure of a King more than other men. For God and Moses in it takes no notice of this; 'tis an Argument which, by the buy, has a superaddition comes in, like that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, our Lord mentioned, Matth. vi. 33. that which God and Moses from him commends in Deuteronomy to the King, is the utile dulci associatum & conjunctum, the holiness, the justice, the conformity to God, which a holy and divine soul counts its chief comfort, and that peculiar erudition in the method of Kinglyness, which from that Book Entry is perspicuous and knowable. For though all the parts of Scripture are full of Instructions, and savoury Precepts, directive to man in the latitude of his duty, and holy meditation will, by an effectual Chemistry, drain from them spiritual succulency: yet none are so fitted to a King, as those parts of it which treat of Kingly matters; These words, in season, have the beauty of Apples of Gold in Pictures of Silver; all parts alike, all parts of them beauteous. And therefore 'twas not the sweetness of meditation, nor the particular affection that Moses had to this Book, as his joseph, that made him specially refer his love and direction of the Prince thereto: but quia in Deuteronomio, plus quam in aliis libris veteris Testamenti leges inferuntur quibus Rex Israel populum regere obnoxious est, ejusdem mandati circumstantiae manifestè nos informant, that is, as I said before; because in Deuteronomy, as the second thoughts of Moses, the Laws formerly delivered but in part, and, as it were, confusedly, as the emergent occasions produced them, S●e●onius in Claudio, c. 14. is completed and digested into a fit and formal method. And the Prince that follows them, will know how duritiam multarum legum ex aequo & bono moderare; for as it follows, Quo & te princeps câdem causâ non minus quam Reges Israel exhortatur, utlegum quibus populum in futurum Reges, tu sis solus indagator, nam quod Regi Israel dictum est, omni Regi populi videntis deum Typicè dictum fuisse intelligendum est. Still there is a perfect coherence in our Text, every thing ushers in its fellow, every antecedent word its subsequent, and that upon a reason of order; for in that Moses did not write this Law as a Prescript of Israel's Kings, and determined the direction to them, in the line of their order, and succession of their Government; but made it morally typical of all Governors, and Governments, who thence should take pattern. Our Chancellor tells the Prince, the direction of the Law in Deuteronomy, will reach him, as well as the Kings of Israel; and that God having given the Law as a Counsel and Prescript to all Kings, will require the breach or neglect of it from all Kings, as well others, as Israel's. Indeed, some things there were delivered to the jews, which were appropriate to them, and determined with their Oeconomy, the Rites of their Priesthood, the Judicials of their Civil Government, was literally limited to them, though there was some fiber and string, as it were, of moral duration and influence in them also: but for things that relate to conversation with God, men, and one's self; that, being moral in its nature, was adapted to the jews as prior in time to us: but not more obliged by the bond, or privileged by the franchise of it then others their Successors. And therefore as our Lord renews the Precepts of old by his Gospel mentioned Matth. v. and Saint Paul says, What is written, was written for our instruction. So may I say, in this case of the King, as referred to Deuteronomy, God intended the direction there to all Successors to the first Kings in their Kingship, and to such enlargements of Governments, as time should discover, and power and prudence erect; and having done this, the counsel or command there reaches all in their duty to understand, attend, and obey it. And therefore the Chancellor proceeds. Autunc non convenienter utilit érque proposui tibi mandatum regibus Israelis latum de eorum lege addiscenda, dum nedum ejus exemplum, sed & ejus authoritas figuralis te erudivit, & obligavit ad consimiliter faciendum de legibus regni quod annuente domino haereditaturus es. This the Chancellor concludes with as a reddition of the premises, with an appeal to his reason, for justification of his service to the Prince's accomplishment therein; no vain airy Romance, no nugatory delight, no sordid mendication is preferred by our Chancellor; those would weaken, not fortify, the Prince's mind; and beweed, not cultivate it to an artly trimness; that which he promotes, is apparently worthy. 'Tis the Law of God, Nature, Nations, and what is as becoming him, to observe as any of these, because these all brought into, and become the Law of his Government. Now this so ancient, exact, approved, idoneous esteemed, as he conveniently, so profitably presenting to him, was a good office, without all doubt or peradventure: many things, experience tells us, are convenient, but not profitable, (if profit be calculated according to the common notion) many things are profitable, but not convenient: but this being profitable for the nature, and convenient for the season, deserves to derive an honour on the giver, and oblige the receiver to a gratitude. And with this he ends his third Chapter. CHAP. IU. Non solùm ut deum timeas, quò & sapieus eris, princeps colendissime, vocant te leges cum Propheta disente, venite filii, audite me, timorem domini docebo vos; sed etiam ut faelicitatem, beatudinémque (proùt in hac vita nancisci poteris) ipsae leges ad earum disciplinatum te invitant. HEre the Chancellor prosecutes his precedent Argument for the Laws, by showing, that the Laws of Government, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Theolog. apud Stobaeum, Serm. 210. p. 703. and especially those of England, the marrow of all the forementioned Laws, do not only instruct Princes in the way of Religion to God, and of Justice to men; but also of self-conservancy, by a well-ordered virtue, and a through-paced prudence, to attain temporal felicity of state and mind. And the better to possess the Prince with the opinion, that this the Law does, he engages him to the belief and trial of them by these gradations. First, in that he compliments him, as Princeps colendissimus, he does bespeak him to love and follow the Law as that was has all the learning of right living, and just governing in it, De Natur. Deorum. Cic. post r●di●um. and that which makes men submit willingly to, and venture resolutely for him, men being apt piè sanéctque colere naturam excellentem & prastantem, as Tully has it, and memoriam beneficii colere memoriâ sempeternâ, as the same Orator: For though nobilissimus, and clarissimus, may make men dreaded and awed; yet colendissimus supposes a virtue, which seizes on the Reason of man, and awes his Conscience, and thence works a divine veneration, performed to a Prince, as a mortal God, whom Religion commands to honour, because good, just, merciful, as well as because great, terrible, and not to be resisted. Secondly, in that he proposes the Laws of Government, as founded upon the Law of God, Nature, and Nations, to be prescriptive of all virtue, accumulated in the fear of God, the beginning of wisdom, and applies that Text, which King David spoke as a Prophet to the Law, as hers, in his mouth; Come my Children, harken to me, I will teach you the fear of the Lord. Words of weight and wisdom, like those the Moralist calls for, Ep. 75. Senec. Non meherculès jejuna esse & arida volo quae de rebus tam magnis dicentur, neque enim Philosophia ingenium renunciat: for the Psalmist is no dry bone, that lives not in pathetiques, without a miracle; his words here do not so much see, ut res ostendere, but when others are oratorious to no purpose, but to enchant and seduce, to cog and overreach their Auditors, by the lurch of their own credulity, his animi negotium agitur, non quarit ager medicum eloquentem sed sanantem, as the same Moralist goes on: and therefore these words that he transplants to so good purpose, are much to be heeded, since they propose the counsel, command, and practice of a prophetic divine King, to the Prince, that the Chancellor supposes God has appointed, and the men of England ought in due time to have accepted their King, and as such to have valued him. Thirdly, in that he works upon passions of love and desire, which the Prince, as man, and young, might have eager set on felicity and blessedness, as attainable by this fear of God, wrought in him by the Law. This is to decorate, and introduce the Law into his love, by that lata porta, which is august, and by an entertainment of amplitude. Indeed, the Chancellor herein seems more happy, Ep. 5●. then Seneca thought himself, when he was discoursing of Plato, Mille res inciderunt, cum fortè de Platone loqueremur, quae nomina desiderarent nec haberent; for whereas that Rhetorician had an excellent person to speak of, but by exility of words failed in a reddition of him commensurate to his merit, and his mentioners' intendment and ambition, to evidence, our Text-Master, as writing of a better subject, the Laws, than he did of a Plato, who was but a man, passant through the Zodiaque of mutability and infirmity, neither wants words to waste his matter in, nor matter to ballast and carry his Reason to his Readers persuasion; but having temperamentum ad pondus, produces it to a very serious and savoury purpose, telling him, that though life was short, and felicity in, and beatitude after this life, was the instigation and reward of all Endeavours in Kings and Commoners, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Plut. Lib. De Pythiae Oraculis, p. 401. etc. that Princes must devote to God Altars of justice, Temperance, Magnani●ty, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, not of Gold and Silver, but of Virtue, which they rather accept. Yet this so truly the Mistress and Minion of all persons perfections, and persuasions, was lodged in, and acquired by the irritation and irradiation of the Laws. For in that the Laws have the precepts of virtue practised, and vice abhorred, and in that, serenity of soul, and success in affairs associates, and fame and heroic Canonization succeeds their practical punctuality, what can be more truly asserted, nor more really assured a sequacious and virtuous Prince, then that he living according to the Laws, shall be made an amor & deliciae humani generis by them, and attain an Elysium, not fictive, Lib. 6. Benef. p. 117. but real, his hearts wish, not the multa vota quae sibi fateri pudet, as Seneca expresses it, but the pauca quae facere coram teste possimus. Such desires he may obtain of God, by such a demeanour of, and conforming himself to the Laws, as Solomon had granted, when he wisely asked it, a wise and understanding heart; such as Hezekiah prayed for, Let there be peace and truth in my days; ad hunc disciplinatum te leges invitant, saith our Text. Philosophi námque omnes, qui de felicitate tam variè disputabant, in hoc uno convenerunt, viz. quòd felicitas sive beatitudo, finis est omnis humani appetitus. This is brought in to complete the Laws to the purpose of putting the Prince in possibility, and possession of felicity and beatitude, by following the direction of the Laws: for they do not make a man guests, and look upon them by rote, as we say, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. All men may as well do this as wise men, Metaphysic. L●●. 1. c. 2. says Aristotle; but give a man an exact and perfect view of, and direction to, yea an inheritance in them. For as the mind makes the man in whom it resides, Lib. 10. De Motibus. c. ●. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as the same Philosopher lays down the position: so the Laws score out the features of beatitude and felicity, for those are consistent only with Virtue, and Justice, which they also specify. The Philosophers therefore who were the ancient Nomothetae among the Greeks, acknowledged the sum of all the wisdom revealed by the Numina, and acquirable by men, to consist in felicity and blessedness, the adequate end of virtue, beyond which no man could, no man did ever wish; and though Seneca condemns them, as all other things, under that seeming hard sentence, Tota rerum natura umbra est aut inanis aut fallax: yet in his 89. Ep. 8●. Epistle, as he recites the various opinions and definitions of Philosophy, and Philosophers; so does he conclude, Stude, non ut plùs aliquid scias, sed ut meliùs. And this to follow him in, there are two things that are to be touched upon in this Clause; the persons produced, the actions they are reported to do their Conclusion; Philosophers are the men, Disputation concerning felicity and beatitude, their recreation and employment; fixation of their consistency in virtue, that their consent and agreement. Philosophi, these were not only lovers of Wisdom, but men, penè divini, compared to others, Lysis. p. 506. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, omni-scient, as Theodor. in Plato asserts; and Socrates confirms divine; In Sophista. p. 153. The ground of Philosophy being admiration, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as it follows. In Theaetet. p. 115. Philosopher's must needs be admired, as the only men of profundity and miracle that were almost not understood by men, but thought Gods in the likeness of men. And hence Ficinus makes Plato in all his works, Argum. in Repub. lib. 3. p. 609. proposing nothing so requisite to a Philosopher, quam copulam ex fortitudine pariter temperantiáque conflatam, ut per illum alta petantur, per hanc non spernentur humilia, & utrimque nihil unquam nimis aut audeas, aut metuas. Plotinus makes a Philosopher so complete, that he is not conversant with any speculation beneath, Aenead. 1. lib. 3. p. 21, 22. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. A Crafts-Master in the cause and being of them, which he calls, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Plutarch accounts them so exact, that he enjoins the young man that is but saluted such, to be careful to avoid all indecency, lest the jest of Menedemus be applied to them, That they came to Athens to School wise; after became Philosophers; further Proficients then Orators, Lib. De Profectu virtut p. 81. able to utter their Conceptions with applause. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, at last rude, Lib. De Socrat. genio, p. 561. and utterly vain, swollen with arrogance and pride, which was no fruit of Philosophy, but the errors of them the Philosophers, since Philosophy taught, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. every thing that is good, and necessary concerning the Gods. Yea, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Philostr. in vita Apollonii, c. 12. p. 92. he commends Socrates, as grave and good speaking from a right judgement of the causes and natures of things. Philostratus tells us the Indians did much honour to Philosophers, and tried them severely before they approved them for such; and the Philosopher, in making a Philosopher to inquire, Topic. lib. 1. c. 14. p. 119. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, What does he less, then make it Divinity, and the practiser of it divine. So that whatever was possible to be beloved, and admired in man, being concluded in them, we may well fix them for men of remark; and as such, 1 De Oratore. Budzus in Pan. decked. priores. p. 13. record in our minds their memories, for so the Orator characterizes Philosophers worthy, Is qui studeat omnium rerum divinarum & humanarum vim, naturam, causasque nosse, & omnem bene vivendi rationem tenere & persequi, nomine hoc appelletur. The Disputation is next, many men of many minds, and all men so far in love with their own shadow, that they, from different apprehensions, proceed to different determinations, and so to oppositions, heats, and civil Wars, which fill the World with Contests, and Hurries; and, in the end, loses Science in passion, and Reason in opposition. Aristotle, he makes felicity to consist in such a satiation, as arises from the presence of some useful virtues, Rhetotic. lib. 1. c. 6. Lib. 1. D● Mo●ib. c. 5. righteousness, courage, wisdom, etc. joining with them corporal goods, as health, strength, which some call, bona viae; but beatitude he terms 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. the greatest of goods, the perfection of acquirements, the end of action; bonum patriae, as Divines call it: yet the same Philosopher says, that learned and wise men have digladiated about it, and counts the rehearsal of their varieties, Lib. 1. De Morib. c. 2. altogether useless; yet he says, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Well to live, and well to do, is to be blessed. Alexand. ab Alex, gives a large account, that Philosophers thought all bliss consisted in otio & quiet; Genial. lib. 4. c. 14. cum notis Tiraequelli. and surely, if all action be to rest, and rest be cessation from labour, and that be felicity or beatitude, as our Chancellor confuses them; then our Chancellor, and the Philosopher, lib. 10. De Morib. c. 7. are at an accord: And though they do logomachize, to try mastery of words and wit; and thereby to beat out discovery to greater perfection, and to spin a finer thread of art, and give it a renovation of beauty and delight; yet are they confederate in the main, and do not vary in the definition of the nature, but the wording of their apprehension: for they make not felicity or beatitude, to reside in sensuality, or visceration, in violence or depredation, in morosity or sullen incommunicableness; but in that assimilation of nature, to the chief good, and prime cause, God; and to those figures of his immaculate, unalterable, and influential good, which he has communicated to excellent Creatures, and by which they are rendered, esteemed, and unvulgar. And this I take to be the sense of our Chancellor, in making Felicity and Beatitude tant amounts, not that they in Logical acceptations, or in Critical examinations, are exactly the same; for though they mostly agree, yet are they unlike enough, to admit a discrimination; but because the main ingredients to their perfection are the same, and the reward of both one, as to what we apprehend, the same virtue being the via recta to bliss, the finis itineris. And hereupon those learned men, that did disceptare de modo, disagreeing in the collateral, and less material circumstances, coincided in the upshot, which is their determination, quòd finis est omnis humani appetitus. And their conclusion is, that beatitude and felicity is the end of all man's desire; of his desire, as rational; not only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Lib. De Congres. quet. erudit gratia, p. 435. a meditation of wisdom, as Philo calls it; but a wisdom, which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. as he enlarges, and carries a man to such a mastery of himself, and such a magnification of his Mistress nature, and her and his Maker God, as puts us upon desiring him as our chief good, and every thing as our happiness, in order to, and our beatitude with, and in fruition of him; for, as the same Philo observes, no receptacle can be fit for God, Lib. De his Verbis resipuit No, p. 282. Seneca, De Beata vita. p. 653. Epist. 66. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. but the soul that is purged and prepared to receive him, the best good. And therefore the supreme good, take it as Moralists denominate it, animus fortuita despiciens, virtute laetans, an't invicta vis animi perita rerum, placida in actu cum humanitate multa, & conversantium cura; or, summum bonum quod honestum est. Ep. 71. Ex naturae voluntate se gerere, perfectus status in quo quis summum voti sui invenit. Take it for such a Resolution, as makes a man a free man, though in Phalaris his Brazen Bull: yet all this, if it could be separate from virtue, were nothing; Quis sit summi boni losus, Senec. Ep. 87. animus, hic nisi purus & sanctus deum non capit. Alas! alas! they are but refracted, and minute determinations of the chief good that Philosophers make; They are strangers from the Commonwealth of Israel, and ignorant of the Covenant of grace, and without God in the world of their fancy and opination. Their wits are a woolgathering, they seek living light in the dismal and tenebrious Caves of their obcecated mind, where the true light is not; all the good they can reach to, is, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, In Epictet. lib. 3. c. 7. as Arrianus says, to live according to Nature's norm and discovery: nay, though Porphyry be the director to seek good, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. in conjunction with the Author of it, the soul. Though therefore they agree, the desires are carried to beatitude and felicity; yet in that they specify it so different from the truth of its being, they confer little to satisfaction: nor have they at all satiated in their discourses of Philosophy about these, and other points, the World in any age; though they have been the Patriarches of Heresies, and illaqueated many in snares of ill belief, Philosophi, Patriarcha Haereticorum, E●● clesia puritatem perversa maculavere doctrinâ Sanctus Hieronim. ad Cresiphontem adu. Pelagianos. and suffurated time and parts from other matters, (more Books being writ of Philosophy, and Philosophers, then of any Science whatsoever,) as is evident in Fabian Iustinian's Index, and in other Bibliotheckes. For there have none of the great Sects of them agreed, but been, if not diametral, yet divers from one another. For while the Peripatetics, Aristotelians, or walking Philosophers, Cic. 1 Acad. c. 24 3 Tuscul. than which sort of men, Tully says, Nihil est uberius, nihil eruditius, nihil gravius, determined felicity, or beatitude in virtue. The Stoiques, or Zenonists, whom their Master taught in a Porch, called in Greek, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and thence are named Stoiques, though they do re concinere, 1 De Nat. deo. rum. yet verbis do discrepare, as tully's words are, with the Peripatetics; for their Beatitude is in honesty. From both these, Epicurus his followers with him differ; for these either determined it to reside in pleasure, as reflecting on the Garden where Epicurus is said first to principle his Clients, according to Demetrius Magnesius his account of their Institution; or in exemption from sorrow, and a vacuity from all passion, and the felicity of it. Now, though I say all these, orè tenus, did differ; yet in the upshot and conclusion, they coincided: for the Stoiques honestly, and the Epicureans pleasure, is butlin other words, the Peripatetics virtue, since the one and other abstracted from virtue, as the mean and rule of them are but vana & exilia nihila; Senec. Lib. De Beata Vita, p. 653. De Vita Pythagorae, p. 198, 199. Holstein Interp. and so Epicurus himself is quoted by our Chancellor. To conclude, nihil esse voluptuosum sine virture; and so Forphyrius limiteth beatitude and felicity, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. not to be fascinating and venereous pleasure that enchants the mind, but grave and serious pleasure, which consists in pureness of virtue: 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. exercising itself in just, good, and necessary actions of life. And therefore Philiscus in Dion, miscalculated Beatitude, while he made it to be in a sound body, and an avoidance of cares, which whoever enjoys, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. has the fruit of all felicity. This, I say, is not rightly accented, Dionis Hist. Lib. 38. Cicero Exal. p. 71. because it terminated felicity to a self-fruition, and not to any thing without, and above it, which Porphyry rightly called conjunction, which its Author, and the Scriptures, make to be in the knowledge of God. This is life eternal, to know thee the only true God, and whom thou hast sent Jesus Christ, and in the enjoyment of God in grace and glory. Blessed is the man, to whom the Lord imputeth no sin, and in whose spirit there is no guile. There is God enjoyed by his potent presence in the soul, chase away all corruption inconsistent with him, and refining the soul from the impurity of its lees and dregs. And they shall be with me, that where I am, there shall they be also, which is the promise of Christ to his, as their compensation and beatitude; which is the fruition of them in glory. For so said the Spirit, Blessed are the dead, that die in the Lord, for they rest from their labours, and their works follow them. Vnde sectae illae, ut dicit Leonardus Aretinus, in hoc concordaverunt, quod sola virtus est quae felicitatem operatur. This Author, In Fasciculo rerum expetendarum & fugiendarum, so. 154. Draudius Bibliothec. Class. p. 1041, 1087, 1095, 1116, 1117, 1251, 1366. Leonardus Aretinus, is not that Florentine, which Poggius so acclamates, in the Epistle he writes to him about jerom of Prague, but one of the same name and kindred much elder: Possevine, and Gesner, make no mention of this Author; but Draudius does to his infinite advantage, making him the Author of many excellent Books; amongst which, this Isagoge here quoted, containing ten Books on Aristotle ad Nichomach is not the least worthy. It was, I suppose, a Manuscript in our Text-Master his time; but about 1607. it was printed at jean. And it is a notable Discourse of Moral Philosophy, that part of Philosophy that concerns the manners of men. Epist. 121● Now though that of Seneca be true, Non quicquid morale est, bonos mores facit; yet may they be called Morals, Notis in loc●●. quae si non apertè & statim flexu, vel subsidio aliquo ad bonos mores ducunt, saith Lipsius. And of this nature are Morals in Philosophy, because they do componere animum, as natural Philosophy does search into causes of things, and rational Philosophy discuss the propriety of words, and structure of Arguments. Seneca in his 89. Epistle, gives us a large account of Philosophy, and the contrariancy of Philosophers one to another, in stating and dissecting Philosophy: yet his conclusion is, causae rerum ex naturali parte sunt, argumenta ex rationali, actiones ex morali: so that Aretine writing of the moral part of Philosophy, had unavoidably to do; which felicity, and beatitude, as the end of all man's desire and tendency, in the practice of virtue. And that which he is quoted for, Est autem secta disciplinae certa quaedam disciplinae formula, factio, studium, ratio vitae. Cic. 1 De Orator. Secta & ratio vita. Cic pro Caelio. as coagulating all the Sects of Philosophers, (and Sects denoted habitus animorum & instituta Philosophica circa Disciplinam, that is, additions to a particular profession, according to the reverence men have of him that institutes, and as chief in it professes it) all these Sects, I say, he amassing, as it were, into one term of expression, declares them to own virtue alone, the means to attain felicity; that is, in other words, no felicity is enjoyable by man, but in a state of reduction of nature to its primaeve purity, and in a subserviency to its Maker, in all those actions wherein his pleasure is notified: which Seneca words more elegantly to my sense then ordinarily; Vt quanti quidque sit, judices, that we rightly understand what everything is; Vt impetum ad illa sapias ordinatum, temperatummque, that is, that we love and hate, use and not use it, according as it is auxiliary, or obstructive to our end, in pleasing God and ourselves. Vt inter impetum tuum actionemque conveniat, ut in omnibus istis tibi ipsi consentias, that is, that in the rise to, and action of our virtue, we do nothing but what is rational and proportionable to our being, who are made after the Image of God on our reasonable soul. Laertius, p. 795. edit. Colon. 1616. Laertius in Epicuro, p. 791. edit. Colon. 1616. Gassendus Aethicae, Lib. 1. De Faelic. This is truly to be happy, to be what we ought, and only such; all other felicity is but nominal, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, weak remiss felicity, but a Badgers footed felicity, halting before the best friend it hath to commend it; for so Epicurus concludes, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. all virtue consists in pleasure, and to live delightfully, is to be happy. So that all Sects of Learning and Wisdom, though diversely denominated, as those from the place of their birth, or first appearing; as the Elienses, Megarenses, Eretrici, Cyrenaici; or of their teaching and Institutor's School, as the Academiques, and Stoiques; or from guises and accidents, as the Peripatetics; or from reproaches, as the Cyniques; or from effects, as the Endemonici; or from their height and pride, as the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉: From the nature of their Writings, and names of their Masters, as the Socratists, In Proemio. and Epicureans. These, and all other Sects of them recited by Laertius, yet do all make up an harmonious suffrage, that virtue only operates felicity. And this Aretine assenting to, and corroborating, is here quoted by our Author, in the following words. Quo & Philosephus, 7 Politic. felicitatem definiens dicit, quòd ipsa est perfectus usus virtutum. 1 De Morib. c. 11. This definition of Aristotle, is the same with what he says otherwhere; for discoursing of felicity, and aggravating the glory and lustre of it, he says it is termed by some 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; by others 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. This, or that excellent endowment, as Prudence, Wisdom, Beauty, Strength, Riches, Friends, which were but slips from, and diminutives of it; but he concludes it, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that it was a concentration of them all in their end, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 5 Metaphys. c. 16. p. 196. and noblest resolution, and an arrival at that which was the meta ultima, ultra quod non: And hereupon he concludes it, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the perfect enjoyment of the end, and that perfectly. Now in that he calls felicity the perfect use of virtue, he means, that virtue is the means to it, and then is perfect, when it has its end for which it was designed, and to which end it is the vehiculation: So that felicity being the perfect use of virtue, argues its end in that endless beatitude, which we living having not, cannot be properly said to have the perfect use of virtue; yet comparatively we may, as we are laid by others, who are less virtuous; and so Heathens that know not God, lodging Beatitude in these inferior accomplishments, to any remarkable degree obtained, above the vulgar account, that perfects virtue which is by them expressed. So the Philosop calls that perfect, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; 5 Metaphys. c. 16. p. 896. Virtus propriè dicta est habitus constituens potentiam in ubtimo gradu perfectionis suo actui debitus, Arragonius in Sanctum Thom. Artic. ●. De virtute sidei Explic. Text. p. 110. to which there is nothing to be expected addable, because virtue is perfection itself. This is their notion of perfect use of virtue, when a man is so assueted to virtue, and has such a conquest over his passions of all sorts, that he can conform himself to his exact duty, and neither desire more than he has, nor fear more than he ought, nor endeavour to do otherwise to God, Man, or himself, then as perfect virtue limits. This is the perfectus usus virtutum, which Saint Paul translates into carrying a Conscience void of offence both towards God, and towards man. But Saint Paul's definition of it, transcending the Heathen's notion, is not to be insisted on as Aristotle's meaning, which went no further, than that beforementioned. More of this might be added out of Durand, Suarez, Saint Thomas, and Arragonius, and Aurelius on him: In Lib. De Migratione Abrahami, p. 399. Also from Scotus, Parisiensis, Turrecremata, and others the Schoolmen, who have created of perfect virtue, and the use of it. But I refer the Reader to them, avoiding the superfluity of quoting them here, and concluding with that of Philo, that God doing all things like himself in weight and measure, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. indulges his Creature nothing defective beneath perfect, though not in the absolute and exact act, yet in such degrees as he accepts perfect. And thus Noah, Daniel, job, and others have been accounted perfect by him, and been blessed, in such the perfect use of virtue, from him. His jam praesuppositis considerare te volo, etiam ea quae sequuntur leges humanae, non aliud sunt quam regula quibus perfectè justitia edocetur.] This is to set forth, that as beatitude is attainable by virtue, so virtue is by knowledge of the Law: And as all virtue, so that, which though inclusively, is general; yet, in common understanding, one particular justice. This the Law inclines to, and teaches a Prince so the method of, as nothing else besides it can, or does. For Laws being the wisdom of Ages, and men having such additions, and subtractions, as make their compilements symmetrious to their end, must needs be the most faithful, and unerring Counselors, which has caused Monarches, in power and wisdom, to die for Laws, and the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as well as for Religion, because Religion and they, directing one rule of Justice equally, call for courage and constancy in men's observance of them. Now, though it were too bold a confidence, for any one to arrogate this rule of perfect justice to any single body of humane Law; yet it is well-beseeming a sober man, to own the Chancellor in his vindication of humane Laws as such; because some, or other Laws of men, do supply what others want; and so amongst them, while yet they are together, but humanae leges, do notwithstanding perfect justitiam edocere. For since the Rule of Justice with men, is the Laws of their Government, and the topique Customs of the place of their being, and those are knowable by study and practice, and the knowledge of them in both kind; is the perfectest acquisition, our nature is capable of. In the same sense they may perfectly be known, may they be accounted perfect Rules of virtue; since the virtue perfected in us by the Law, is but a conformity in practice to the speculation we have of it. And hence it is, that, as in common speech, we call that á perfect Copy, which is verbatim to the original; and that a perfect Child which has all the integral parts, and that a perfect book which has no leaves torn out: so the Law may be taken for a perfect Mistress of Justice, when it gives, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Rules for justice, and is as indefectuous in it, as integrity of method and prudence, equity and exactness, composed by man, and generally approved by experience, can arrive at; which Budaeus well expresses, Quod in legibus; senatus consultis, rebus judicatis, juris peritorum authoritate, In Pandect. Priores. p. 19 edis. Basil. edictis Magistratuum, more, aequitate consistis, etc. This is the rather to be insisted on warily, because all Laws, like all Lawmakers, are not always such as virtue requires. Nay, no Laws or men, how transcendent soever, are either in their present times so well balanced, or against the necessity of emergent changes and accidences, so omnisciently provided for: but there will need some either abolition of, or mitigation from, or declaration about them, Lib. 10. De Constantino. and their senses in them. Constantine was a brave man, and intended splendidly, in building anew, as to the Laws and Polity of it, Constantinople. No doubt but he had all the thoughts of perpetuity in his head imaginable, and resolved to live in the glorious memorial of that justly ordered Government, which in the memorial of his name, did, in a sort, immortalize him: yet Ignatius remembers us, multas leges rogavit, quasdam ex bono & aequo, plaerásque superfluas, nonnull ásque severas, primúsque urbem nominis sui ad tantum fastigium euchere molitus est, ut Romae aemulam faceret. And Grotius, that memorable man, than whom, I think, few have been more profitably learned, acknowledges some Laws imperial are not just; as that of wrecks at Sea, Nullâ enim praecedente probabili causâ, dominium suum alicui auferre mera injustitia est, saith he: yea, he further shows, that the Heathens abominated any thing like this, that men should lose their lives and goods for submitting to God, who causes, and allays winds and storms at his pleasure. Jur. Belli, & pacis, lib. 2. c 7. p. 175. A like hard, not to say unjust, they thought those Laws of the Nations, that punished Children for their Father's crimes, which God Interdicts in Israel, as Ethnique, and irrational, saying, The Son shall not bear the iniquity of the Father, Brechaeus ad legem. 42. Lib. De Verborum significatione, p. 121. Lib. 2. p. 377. Budaeus in Pand. p. 185. edit. Basil. Eustathius in 9 Iliad. nor the Father of the Son, but the soul that sinneth, it shall die. The like in justice was in the Laws of the Persians, and Macedonians, vowing their Neighbour's heads in sacrifice: These, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Laws made by men, like the Poets, Ate, offensionis & noxae contubernalis, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, for her enmity and spite, as it were, to Mankind, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as she is set forth diule-like, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith Suidas. I say, Laws so made, are not probable to have any rectitude in them; and therefore the Statute of 1 M. 2 Sess. c. 1. censures and repeals those Statutes of 25 H. 8. c. 22. 28 H. 8. c. 7. for though Laws they were, because the establishments of Power; yet just Laws they were not, mistaken and misnamed Laws only Cousin-germen to those of Nabuchadnezzar, Dan. iii which made denial to worship the Image he idolatrously set up capital, Laws they may be, and those accepted by great and wise Nations, as the Salic Laws are; but yet hard, and against the opinion of Nations; yea, determination of God in Zelophehad's Daughters cases; yea, and against the experience of Females fit to rule, where righted to it; Lipsius' in Notis ad secundum, Politic. Tom. 1. Oper. so. 130. witness Q. Elizabeth, and witness the judgement of our state and Law, which establishes the Crown on the Heirs Female of our Kings, for want of Male, 1 Q. Marry, the second Parl. c. 1. These, and the like Laws, may be unjust, and therefore are not regulae, quibus perfectè justitia edocetur, but injuries to Governments, and unjust Usurpations upon the reasons of the Subjects to be governed, Qui leges injustas constituit, non Dei, sed suo ore loqui disitur, suis niti inventionibus, ex ambitionis, libidinis, avaritiae sontibus deductis enjusmodi sunt omnes leges Tyrannorum, & Hypocritarum, quâ non ad justitiam in Rempub. Lib. 1. De Vera Jurisprud. tit. 23. inducendam, sed ad opinatum, & falsum commodum eorum qui illas condunt, diriguntur, saith Hopperus. Regula est plurium rerum compendiosa narratione facta traditio. Gloss. in Tit. 3. Digest. De legibus Sena●usque consultis, p. 74. Which considered, our Chancellors shafts against this inconvenience and mischief, are not shot at random, but prudently leveled at the mark he aims at; satisfaction of the Prince, that the Law, as ars aequi est boni, is the best and safest discipline of administrative virtue. And hence is it, that he calls Laws, Rules; now Rules do not incline to things, but things conform to Rules; because there is no ametry in Rules, but a fixed and exact rectitude, Rules being truth adapted to ends of use, and tracks, according to Wisdoms discovery of herself, in the practics of Sciences and Mysteries: so the Laws, as Rules, are not to condescend to men's mutable humours, but to retain their majesty, and immobility, as Rules do, and aught; allowing always Reason and Magistracy regent in it, liberty, in licitis & honestis, to alter, as Prudence advises, and Providence, in affairs, shall overrule them. While then Laws are Rules, and such as do perfectè justitiam edocere, they must be of high descent, From the Father of Lights, larded with virtue and wisdom, in every part and nook of them: not framed, as if Epicurus were their Patron, who taught, that nothing was just, suâ naturâ sed metu: or according to Thrasimachus his latitude, whom Plato brings in, Lib. 1. De Legib. asserting that to be right, which is pleasing to the chief Power; but understood, as Sulpitius intended, whom Tully reports to have referred all things, ad aequitatem facilitatemmque; and as the ancient Lawyers directed their learning, Tollere controversias non constituere. And that purely, Vt pax, & inter homines, & in unius, cujusque servetur animo, In 22 c. lib. 19 Sancti Augustini. De Civit Dei. quâ nil majus natura ipsa gaudet, saith Vives. And good reason there is, that the Law should be a Rule, by which virtue is so perfectly taught, since it has all that can go to make a Rule, such as it ought, and is pretended to be, Papinianus, lib. 1. definite. c. 1. Digest. lib. 1. tit. 3. p. 73. Lib. 4. De Benefic. c. 12. mensura aequi & boni: For besides its influence from God, Papinian in his definition of it, Lex est commune praeceptum, virorum prudentiam consultum, delictorum quae sponte, vel ignorantia contrahuntur, coercitio, communis Reipubls. sponsio. I say, in this, he has published the deserts of the Law to be received for a Rule. For besides that Seneca in the name of all wise men, calls the Law, justi injustique regula; and writing of honesty, Ep. 71. says, Hoc nec remitti nec intendi posse, non magis quam regulam, quâ rectum probari solet, quam si flectes, quicquid ex illa mutaveris, injuria est recti, Passing by this, the Rule has profit, firmness, and delight in it, which makes is accommodate to every Artist, Lib. 7. De tectorio opere. and to every person that is concerned in it. And hence, as Vitruvius observes, the Rule in every part of Architecture, though he reduces lengths ad lineam & regulam; heights add perpendiculum; and corners, ad normam, and respond they all must to these, or else there is not just mensuration. So does our Chancellor, in terming the Law a Rule, refer perfect virtue to it, as well to be gained by, as protected in it. Nor is there any virtue learnable by any man, but what the Law can, and will teach him, if he will hear, and obey it. And as Demosthenes, Ep. 203. whom Pliny styles, ille norma Oratoris & regula, had not been an Orator so eminent; nor at all, if he had not conformed norma loquendi. Nor he, in Tully, Pro Muraena, 2. a good man, had he not resolved, Dirigere vitam ad normam rationis. So cannot the Prince be, what be aught in charity to be; good to his own soul, nisi servatâ illâ, qua quasi delapsa de caelo est, ad cognitionem omnium regulâ, ad quam omnia judicia rerum dirigentur; as Tully smartly. Which considered, Lib. 1. De Finib. 97. no wonder though the Chancellor make Justice that is in man's Law, inseparable from the Law; because God, the Fountain of it, has instructed, and commanded man in place and power under him, to promote and practise it, as that which is a Ray of him, and raised by him to an esteem, as the Architectonique Virtue that includes all others, since Consequens, est ut qui ad legem se applicet, justitiae quoque tâdem operâ adhaerescat, Lib De Vera Jurisprud 2. tit. 3. nam secundum regulas Geometricas quaecunque uni, & cidem sunt aequalia, inter se sunt aequalia, saith Hopperus. justitia verò quam leges revelant, non est illa quae commutativa, vel distributiva vocatur, seu alia quaevis particularis virtus, sed est virtus perfecta, quae justitia legalis nomine designatur. Here our Master disclaims that narrow sense of Justice, which mistake may impose upon him, and lays claim to the latitude of Justice, as that which is in, and teaches men, from the Law, the practice of it. And this the better to obtain, he premises, that Justice, as it is in fonte, and essentially in God, is like God himself inscrutable, having the vail of inaccessible glory before it, and dazzling mortal eyes to an inperception of it; which yet, through the mediation of the Laws composed by wise men, and worded aptly to ordinary capacity, is in such a measure revealed, as it may be learned in some competent measure by them. And this adds much to the renown of the Law, that it discovers so excellent a Jewel, as harmonizes the World, and keeps it in any tolerable Concord; which because Justice does, 'twill be pertinent here to write somewhat additional, to what is before delivered of her. Justice, either is considerable alone, as one of the Virtues, or as complex, and including all virtues in her. In the first sense, my Text-Master intends her not here; nor shall I in that here enlarge on it: but as she is the Lesson, that the Law learns both Prince and People; so she is to be acknowledged summarily all virtue. The Schools define Justice to be rectitudo impressa voluntati à rectitudine rationis quae dicitur veritas, Sanctus Thom. prima secunda, 960. art. 3. O. Lessius De justit, & Jure. and vast disputes they have about her: yet all agree, that she is the Aurora of all Perfections, attended by such an equipage, as no Monarch beneath jehovah has. For if Solomon in all his Royalty, be not clothed like a tender and trite Lily of the Field, which every eye may look upon, till it have looked itself into darkness; and every hand touch, till it hath deflowered its glory, and withered into deformity: How unlike, in the pomp and grandeur of their Train, are Solomon's Peers to this his Peerless Mistress that is to them. Tanquam inter stell as luna minores. Tully makes six Virtues to attend the Train of Justice, Macrobius seven, Andronicus nine, Lib. 5. De Morib. c. 3 & 5. Lib. 4. De factis, & dictis Socratis. Serm. 51. p. 188, 189. Lib. 10. De Republics. Aristotle and Theogius all virtues, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Xeno phon says the same, call it, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. The greatest Art the Queen of all excellent Virtues, Polus the Pythagorean, as I find him in Stobaeus, is so transported with it, that he calls it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and adds no man, without it can be accounted wise or magnanimous. Plato makes it so beloved of the gods, that be his condition never so distressed, they will never forsake him alive or dead, because he is useful to the Public, and so like the gods themselves. Epictetus makes the same account of it, Stobaeus, p. 206. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. every place is safe, where a just man lodges. Infinite to this purpose are the accounts might be given of the Encomiums of justice: but those are but tinsel trickings to the glorious tires, and invaluable ornaments, Scripture puts on her, Aug. lib. 19 De civet Dei. Budaeus, in Pandect. p. 73. edit. Basil. justice is the habitation of God's Throne, the exemplication of his essential Magnitude, and illustricity to us. The Lord is known by the judgement he executeth. Justice is the whole duty of man, and that which prepares him for every good, against every evil: 'tis the Establisher of Thrones, the credit of Weights and Measures, the sweetner of Crosses, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Saint chrysostom notes it; yea, that which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, round every way, universally the same at all times, and to all persons, Methodius. according to the differences of circumstances, which are to be taken in, in exercitial justice.. So that the Laws of Nations being arts aequi & boni, and administering to People under the regency of them, such just proportions of punishment and reward, good instruction, and seasonable prevention, in good and evil; and being strait, certain, safe, useful rules of life, both in the ruling, and ruled parts of Societies, and the tropiques upon which Communities are harmoniously managed, they may, in very right, be allowed Weight, according to our Text-Master's Balance, in those words, Quibus perfectè justitia edocetur. Lib. 1. Com. Juris Civilis, c. 13. For so Donellus also asserts them, in the intendment of his words, and in that sense which Wisemen dispense them in, sequamur potius quod justum & aequum quam quod strictum est, quòd strictum jus nihil habet auctoris praeter verba, efficit ut sit maximè contra ejus sententiam & voluntatem, at verò sententia non verbis astringenda est, sed verba potius sententiae atque adeò aequitati servirè debent, quam servari, Dion. Calls. Hist. lib. 44. p. 256. Partis primae, p. 280. est ex ment legis; and that the performance of this is a necessary part of the Laws Justice, Salmuth upon Pancirol, doth in many examples, and by sundry authorities, make good. This shall suffice, for what our Chancellor, out of Leonardus Aretinus, Homer, and Aristotle quotes, to the phrase of Justice, as it is the Parent of all other Virtue; and particularly the Prerogative, and Royal Embelishment of Kings: For so it follows. justitia vero haec, subjectum est omnis regalis curae, quo sinc illa Rex justè non judicat, nec rectè pugnare potest. In this sentence, our Master applies Justice to the King, as the Rudder that must move and actuate him that is the Mover and Spirit of all his Government: For in Government, the King and the Law, though two in number, yet are but one in nature, both making but one Head; which Head, our Author says, aught to be filled with no Proclamations but Justice, Eurypid. in Alemaeo, in Stobaeus, p. 148, 504. and the care of it. Care did I say, yes to purpose; Princes find it so, that rule well and justly, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉: Oh! the tortures and troubles of Crowns! what anxious thoughts, what discomposed pleasures, what Earthquakes of popular murmur and insolence, does greatness totter upon? Antigonus had so much of it, that on a day, when a poor Woman admired him for his Diadem and Purple Robe; he cried out to her, O Mother, if thou knewest the guilt and trouble of thése, Stobaeus, Serm. 148. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. that is, thou wouldst not take it up from the ground, if there it lay, and thou mayst have it for taking up, the charge attends it. Indeed, did people know how real deservers Princes are of their duties, what laborious Bees they are to bring them the honey of peace; what Clouds of plenty they are, and all to disgorge their Tributes and Customs in protection and orderly government of them, they would make more Conscience of duty to them then now they do. Est enim ea hominum conditio, Corda in vita Virgilii. ut si quando justum Regem nacti sunt velint potius illi subdi quam esse liberi, etiamsi Rex hic sit Tyrannus, quare Dominarite & tibi Orbi conducit, was Virgil's counsel to Augustus, when he was in a quandary, whether to hold, or resign the Empire. In Panegyr. For what Pliny said to one is here true, Parens tibi imperium dedit, tuilli reddidisti, ultro dantem obligasti, communicato enim imperio solicitior tu, ille securior factus est. People have more from Princes, in care and vigilance, for, and over them, than Princes have from people, in tributes and perquisites of their Crown, which they carefully wear, Dion. Cass. Hist. lib. 55. p. 557. edit. Leunclavii. to those purposes of public good. Which considered, that speech of Augustus to his Livia, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Who woman can be quiet a moment, who has so many and great Enemies within this Government, etc. is but what all Kings and Chiefs do in their minds speak, and have too just cause to bemoan; as that which makes them sometimes necessarily act, what they do not applaud, as exactly just. What then they do besides the Rule, and beyond Justice, lies on them to answer to God; for their square and tether is Justice that's the only subject matter that Regality should express care in; and that done, security will flow in upon King and Kingdom. For to promote this there is a kind of necessity in a Prince to take this glorious Mancipation on him. And did not God kindle ambitions of glory, by public beneficencies in great minds, they would never deny themselves the delights of private living, to take the envy and murmur of Government and Rule upon them; for when Subjects sleep, Princes wake; when they eat and drink to freedom, Princes are to keep cool heads, that they may be ripe and ready in counsel and action; when they love and marry whom they please, Princes are, and must be bound up by Reason of State, and marry to their best Interest, and strongest Alliance; when they command hours for private devotions, and hug their pillows as their ease, casting off care with their clothes; Princes are masters of no privacies; hurried they are up and down in the day, and perplexed in the night with myriads of thoughts, tumultuating one upon another; every shadow presents suspicion and fear to them. And they knowing not what a moment may bring forth, are in no moment hereby quiet: when they see a Subject popular and wise, they fear his discontent, disaffection, and the fruits of it Rebellion: When they hear of Multitudes querulous, and parties among the people, their prudence aims to head none of them; but to balance them both, so that neither may have the advantage of other, but the Law regulate both. When they observe Princes their Neighbours, in warlike paradoe, they must arm too, that the noise of their vigilance and preparation, may prevent what is malevolently designed from abroad against them. And when their own Subjects are in Arms, they take care, lest they should not be distributed into their first particles without inconvenience. When they are to court Foreign Favourites, they are dubious to trust, where they have not tried, and found fidelity; and when their way is made, than their care is to improve by subtlety, what prudently they have gained. For not to proceed wisely in what is begun, is to retrograde in public reputation; and to proceed faster than the good speed of Affairs dictates, is to be less advised than Princes ought to be. When Affairs are on foot, they must be supplied with Instructions, money and all other necessaries; and when they are brought to their growth and birth, than the case is, how to produce them gallantly, and to be moderate under the interpretation of them with men, whose bolts will be diversely shot, and censures boldly delivered upon them. These, and myriads of such like emergencies, discompose the lives and peaces of Princes, and great men, and deny them the serenatoes and calms that privacy delights their possessors with. When Bajazet the Fourth had lost his Son Orthobulus, and his City Sebastia, he could sing no Notes so cherrily as the shepherd, whom he sighingly cried out happy, because he had none of them to lose. Yet these cares are all but in order to the highest care of Kings; Justice, which being the project of God, in the government of the World, calls them as dutiful Children, wise servants, and worthy Patrons of Popularities, to imitate him the Father, Master, and Defender of his Creation, and the Polities in it, which they can no ways to the life do, but by Justice. Justice is the cement and soul of all Polities, the hinge upon which order winds itself into humane accommodation. Bibliothec. lib. 5. Diodorus writing of the virtues of Noah, concludes that he taught them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. justice and integrity of soul above all. And Trogus speaking of the Golden Age under Saturn, Justin. lib. 43. attributes this to it, Tantae justitiae fuisse fertur, ut neque servierit sub illo quisquam, nec quicquam privatae rei habuerit, sed omnia communia, Sanctus August. lib. 4. De civet Dei Alciat. lib. De Verborum signif. p. 42. ad legem 15. & indivisa omnibus fueriut, veluti unum cunctis patrimonium esset. Take away Justice, and all that we see and read of, becomes Chaos. Take away Justice, and what are Kingdoms but Magna Latrocinia; and Kings, but violentiae numina. Take away Justice, and what are Laws but nudae & nugatoriae Ceremoniae; pompous nothings, and ridiculous Glowworms. Take away Justice, and what is property and privilege, but libidini holocaustum: and who may not by Ahabs, and sons of Belial, be made a Naboth for his Vineyard? Set aside Justice, and all Religion to God, and order amongst men, Lib. De Justit. Principis. ceases. Yea, Justice being the end of Government, (cujus quidem rei argumentum est, quod qui primus inter mortales à Deo constitutus fuit, Melchisedec, id est, Rex justitiae, saith Hopperus) is so necessary, that it cannot be removed without the dissolution of all: 'Tis the Sun in the Firmament, God's Bow in the Clouds, an eternal witness of his love to man. Quo sine illa Rex justè non judicat, nec rectè pugnare potest. This is added, to show the necessity of the presence of Justice in every act of Regality, Peace and War are the two hands of Government; and both these are to be bound and loosed by Justice. And hence has it ever been the care of good Princes to be just, that they may be beloved, and well reported of: and thus only they knowing, they must be by the Laws of their Government strictly stood to, has made them keep to it resolutely and throughly, Boni Principis est summum honorem legibus exhibere, nec quicquam sine illis nisi ultimâ necessitate tanquam tempestate cogente agere, Mopperus, lib. De Instit. Principis. ne si aliter faciat, in anceps periculum se conjiciat, & loco Regis Tyrannum se exhibeat, is a Statesman's rule from the great Secretary of Nature; who, because the Laws are respective of the good of many concerned in them, Lib. 8. De Morib. c. 12. makes the observation of them so important, that he concludes That a good King more eyes his People's good, than his own greatness. That then Peace and War are regulated by the Laws. Lib. 4. Reipub. c. 10. proceeds from the justice of the King who is Head-Dispenser and Protector of his Laws. And hence it is, that the Wisdom of Kings has ever admitted their Laws to be of the quorum, in conclusions about them: yea, and from this is it that mostly Peace and War has been successfully managed where Justice according to Law, has associated them. For God having entrusted power with Princes, to felicifie, and not ruin their people by it, prescribes Justice, as the method of its dispensation to this end; Alciat. ad leg. 15. Lib. De Verbor. signific p. 43. and the Laws of God and men stating Justice in every application to them, conducts Princes to their Prerogative, and instructs people in their Allegiance readily and religiously; so that the Law being ars aequi & boni, and justice the end of it, being that which Prince and people are made happy by, there is reason that the Law, in assertion of Justice, should be adhered to. Unde cum perfectus usus virtutum sit faelicitas, & justitia humana quae non nisi per legem perfectè nanciscitur, aut docetur, nedum sit virtutum effectus sed & omnis virtus. This is the recollection of the premises to produce the conclusion, which our Text-Master makes in justification of the Law, and of the excellency of Justice taught by it. For since the end of all active virtue is felicity, & that is acquired by nothing more than Justice; and that Justice is specificated by the Law, which is the Rule and Model of it, and which only can teach it perfectly, and make the knowledge of it productive of those fruits, which are comportable with Justice, in all the latitude of her relation to God, men, and a man's self, it reasonably follows, that not only the Law is excellent, as it is replete with Wisdom, and answers the ends of Gubernative Policy; but as it implants in, and exercises the mind that is furnished from it, with that perfect notion of felicity by virtue; which because it is a complex of all attainable goodness, and furnishes a man to every good word and work, is here called Justice; for so are the next words. Sequitur quòd justitia fruens faelix per legem est, & per eam ipse sit beatus, cum idem sit beatitudo, & faelicitas in hac fugaci vita. justitia fruens faelix per legem est. The phrase fruens referring to the Will, Quia frui est in voluntate, helps much to the comprehension of the Chancellour's meaning, That the felicity which man attains by the knowledge of the Law, ariseth from the delight of the subject, in which it is to Justice; when in the Apostle Paul's words, I delight in thy Law in my inward parts; or as the Prophet David said, I had hid thy Law in my heart, that I should not sin against thee. In this case, the Soul that is every way quadrate, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Stobaeus, Serm. 1. p. 2. and that looks to all God's Commandments with an indifferent and just eye, not daring to dispense with any part of his duty, may well be pronounced happy by the Verdict of Law. For God has given it that just confidence, that it shall stand in Judgement, that it shall not fear evil tidings, since its principle, which is fixed on the Rule, leads to Beatitude, and to what is the Porch of it, humble confidence. And indeed, what can make a man happy, but that Justice of principle and practice, which the Law justifies? Injuria semper injusta est. Laedi etiam aliques justè potest. Name & qui jure damnantur, laduntur, sed non injuriâ. Asconius Praedianus, apud Philoxenum. Lib. De Serm. Latino, p. 747. And what of this nature does the Law allow as a virtue, worthy its encouragement, but that which is tending to Justice: There is a mutual reciprocating of Echoes, 'twixt Law, Happiness, and Justice; they answer each other, as parts of that Line of Communication which connects Heaven and Earth together: For when all things are at a stun, when Beauty gives way to putrefaction, Riches, Honours, and Wisdom weep out their woeful farewell, Righteousness delivereth from death; not from death, as a debt to Nature, for it is appointed for all men once to die: but from death, as a terror; from the despair of comfort in, and mercy after death. This it delivereth from, thus in Hezekiah's case, That Remember, O Lord, I have walked before thee with an upright heart, was his Cordial against the cutting off of his days; it being the course of God, to give unto all men somewhat of comfort, or terror in their departure, suitable to the merit, or demerit of their lives. But, I trow, there is another sense more genuine of this justitia fruens faelix per legemest; which is this, he that has the benefit of Justice, is by the Law happy; for that the Magistrate, which is the living Law, is appointed by God to speak, and do comfortably to those that live under his charge, and are inoffensive to his power. And truly, it is no mean degree of happiness, which the Justice of Magistrates conveys to those under their charge, if the particulars of it be duly weighed; To live peaceable lives in all godliness and honesty, to sit under our own Vine and Figtree, and to possess one's good things in peace; to drink of the water of our own Fountain, and to have the credit and comfort of God's blessing on our propagation; to keep our fleece on our backs, and not to have them shaved, and our lives taken from us, to colour the injury. To have the knowledge of God run down in the Land like a mighty stream, is happiness, carrying its witness with it. And blessed are the people that are in such a case; and with this outward advantage, have the Lord for their God. But all this is from that justice, which the Law, by the Magistrate, Quod sol mundo est & sanitas corpori, hoc animo & Reipubls. est justitia. Nam res ad vitam necessarias non ideo quaerimus ut simus, hoc enim brutorum est, sed ut benè simus, quod est justitia, & bellum cum hostibus gerimus, non ut vincamus, aliósque servitute opprimamus, nam hoc Tyranni faciunt, sed ut in Pace beati vivamus, quod à justitia prostuit. Hoppe●rus. De Instit. Principis. makes good to us. Were it not for justice, the Laws Grnadsir, and from the fruitful Womb of Order, which Magistracy doth impregnate, who would be happy, but those whose powerful wickedness carried them forth to drink healths in the Bowls of the Sanctuary, to profane the holy things of God, and to violate the sacred rights of men. But blessed be God, there is a bright Star in the Firmament of Rule, which illuminates the cloudy face of Force, and makes us see justice expanding her Wings of Protection, sovency, and comfort to all her Clients, and she can do no less than cheer all that love and follow her; for she is a Ray of the Light sprung from on high, and is descended with a Cornucopia of good to Mankind. And therefore the Chancellor had a good reach when he said, justitia fruens faelix per legem est; for as he told the governed their happiness, so the Governor his duty, which is to love justice in himself, that he may administer it to his Subjects. For it is a sin not to be just, and a greater in the Prince, then in the People, because of the eminency of the one above the other. And that Prince that is unjust, and yet will be owned as Custos utriúsque tabuls, had need seize his Subject's reason as an Escheat, and make a Law, that people should believe nothing good or bad, but as it is published to be by him; for if men be left to the just latitude of their Reason, they will conclude him no worthy Prince that is not just. Wherefore the happiness that people enjoy under just Princes, is not only from their good will, free concession, and gracious indulgence, but from a benefit also drilling down from Princes by the Laws of Nations, on People, as the Valleys which they water, and therefore Laws are accounted public Treasuries, that buy out common slavery into Enfranchisement. And therefore the Law is called by the Greeks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, some say 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which signifies, to distribute; as telling us, that whatever happiness subjection has, is from the justice of Kings by their Laws. Eurypides says there are but three virtues which he would have his Child learn, Stobaeus, Serm. 1. p. 1. To fear the Gods, to honour our Parents, and to reverence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the common Laws of Greece; as conceiving the reverence of the Law to be next duty to God, and our Parents: and whatever assurance Government has, is from the same source; for the Law of Natural Justice teaches, that protection is to be recompensed with subjection, and subjection to be maintained by protection; both which are best kept up by Justice; which Justice makes man happy according to Law. Quo & per cam ipse fit beatus, etc. Well added, for no man can be sure of a good end from an ill beginning, non habet eventus sordida praeda bonos; the just God has joined together Justice, which is in effect, all virtue, to happiness, that men may know the way to the one by the other. For men must pay toll at the Castle of Justice, before they come to the Basileopolis of Happiness. And since Pairs are so beautiful in their conjunction, the Chancellor has by an elegant Synonyma identified beatitudo & faelicitas, at least in has fugaci vita, in the condition whereof, we men are only meet apprehenders of them. For he supposes, that the upshot of all man's motion in his calling and sphere, is but to attain rest; and that rest, from the toil of life, he fixeth in his Chair of State old Age, under the Canopy of his Nightcap, and in the Robe of his Gown, having in his hand the sceptre of his staff, and his Cough as the Herald, making room for him to the grave. Now that obtained, he accounts himself happy to live in credit, die in peace, leave a good name to survive him; that's all that the beatitude and felicity of this life amounts to, and this is only attainable by Justice. The just, saith the Wiseman, shall he had in everlasting remembrance; and in another place, the memory of the dead shall be blessed. And this blessedness shall the Law pronounce, when it testifies, that we have lived to the true and just purposes of life. For we were not made to study, serve, love, and delight in ourselves, but to serve our Maker, to love our Neighbour, to promote Virtue in ourselves and others. And this we ought to do, considering that it is our duty, and we must give an account, Quid, quando, quibus, quare, fecimus; what, for the nature; when, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sophocles apud Stobaeum, p. 807. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dictum Sotadis apud Stob. p. 808. for the time; to whom, for the persons; wherefore, for the motive to our doing; yea, and considering above all, that the time we have to work in, is but fugax vita, short time, slippery time, gone like a tale that is told, passing as shadow, as a brook; time passed before us, time past after us, time present, called life, only ours: therefore we ought to be active, while the day lasts, because the night comes, wherein no man can work. Cujus & per justitiam ipse summum habet bonum. The Chancellor, as one in love with Justice, makes the summum bonum of life to consist in it; and so it must, considering he asserts it beatitude and felicity, which is the summum bonum of any thing; for what is the beatitude of a thing more than the perfection, and what is the perfection less than the felicity of it: so that there being as perfect a concord in the Chancellour's words, In Pandect. fo. 58. Basil edit. 1534. as soul; I cannot but wish, that may be in our times, which learned Budaeus, speaking of the Areopagitas, says of them, they were such friends to justice, Qui quidam ordo cum invertitur, & major opum armorúmque, potentiae, quam religionis, & justitia ratio habetur, fit, ut res illae primum fastu & luxu civium corrumpant deinde autem ipsaemet aufugiant, & pro libertate ac opulentiâ, extremam servitutem, & paupertatem relinquunt. Hopperus, lib. De Instit Principis. that they would endure no Oratory, left their affection should be led aside from the truth, to favour that party which had the best Language in its defence, and did fit on Judgements in the dark, that they might not be led by favour, or know friend or foe; yea, that their integrity might appear, he adds out of Isocrates, Tantum priscos illos Areopagitas monumentum virtutis ac continentiae suae, illo in loco posteritati reliquisse, ut etiam suo tempore quo jam mores antiquos multùm degenerasse conqueritur, observatum effet eos qui moribus alioquin intolerandis antea fuisse videbantur, si quovis modo Ad Areopagiticum fortè consilium obrepserant, tum demum temperare sibi solitos esse, & tanquam loci genio afflatos, ex ingenio suo migrare▪ malléque institutis tanti consilii quam insitis sibi vitiis, aut ingenitis insistere. To this I say, Budaeus adds, Utiream benignitate divinâ, in amplissima curia nostra similis aliquis posthàc genius existat. By all which it appears, that Justice is a most excellent virtue, and that which our Chancellor both practised, when in office, and had the comfort of having so done, when exofficed; and this makes me conclude, in commendation of Justice. Tamen non nisi per gratiam lex poterit ista operari. Herein, as in other places, the Chancellor, like a devout man, and a knowing Christian, recalls his former extolling of the Law (as the Rule of Justice bestowing upon man the felicity of this life) by interpreting himself, as ascribing the main work to Grace, and to God the giver of it. For though that be true of Laws, which Plato desires of men, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. When God intends well to any man, or place, he raises up, and increases good men in it, which Morellus says, has been verified in France, Praefatione in lib. Senec. De Provident. p. 14. wherein Reges sapienter & justè regnantes ad noucis septenos concessit: yet all that ever Art or Nature does to our perfection, is nothing, without God's concurrence and benediction in that gracious Providence, which effectuates what it will. Now this the Ancients called by many names, as desirous to convey it most to the advantage of its splendour. Moses termed it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the finger of God; and Solomon, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, God's Hand; Pindar, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, God's Palm; Plato, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, God's Lot; Aristotle, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that divine virtue which contains every thing in, and brings every thing about to it; the old Academiques, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Reason moderating, and ruling powerfully in all, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that divine gubernation and order of all things. These, I say, in other terms, mean the same with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that special grace and favour which he bestows on man, and by which he makes the Law effectual to this purpose in him. For though I well know the Law is just, holy, and good, and all Laws have the most presumptions of success, in what they undertake to teach, and seldom do lead into any thing beneath the most exact habit and action of virtue; yet in that they do this in conjunction with, not abstracted from divine grace, I think it just to ascribe all the perfection in virtue that man attains to by the Law, to God's blessing which derives energy to it. Indeed the Law can, as a System, and collection of divine truths, and prudent Rules, method us in justice, and teach us to use virtues, Durand. Dist. 26. q. 3. lib. 2. in order to beatitude; that is, excite the faculties apt to take and retain principles, it can propose the rule to the understanding, and thence to the will and affections. But it cannot persuade his ear to hear, and his heart to embrace what is good, and accordingly to do it, Dist. 27. q. 3. p. 397. Bradward. lib. 2. c. 5. De Causa Dei. Quia ad bunc actum Deus nos adjuvat & interiùs confirmando voluntatem, ut adactum perveniat, & exteriùs facultatem operandi praebendo; as Durand notably. This is solely an act of grace from God, whose Prerogative it is to do, and not to do, as he pleases; and therefore without God, man's free will is nothing; nothing without God's co-operation. He, he, must carry our endeavours to their issue, or they will be abortive, Bonaventur▪ lib. 2 Dist. 27. Distinct. 26. Queen 3. lib. 2. and have no figures of amiableness in them. And therefore our Chancellor has written no more here of grace, than the Schools generally assert. And Brulifer, though he would allow as much to man's will, and Piety's merit, as may be presumptuously arrogated, yet brings in a fourfold grace of God indulged man, suitable to the fourfold evil he is immersed in: The evils are, 1. Combat with Satan's temptation. 2. The wrath of God. 3. The guilt of sin. 4. The sequel of sin. The grace that God vouchsafes, are, Protection, Deliverance, Extraction, Salvation. So that the triumph of a sinner over his toil and impossibilities, is from this grace of God, which enables him to every good word and work. This grace is therefore as the gift of God to, so the work of God in us; 'tis that which excites us to, retains us in, and rewards us for well-doing; because it is a largess of God to us expressive of eudochy, and complacentialness; it's that which God answers men by: if not secundum identitatem desideriorum, yet secundum aequivalentiam: if not just as they desire, yet in the best exposition of their desire, P. Mirandul. in Hexap. c. 5. p. 30. that is, in such good as he sees best for them. No wonder then that Heathens, in all great undertake, addressed to their Gods, praying their aid and influence, since they found themselves impotent to reach any things of remoteness without them. For God himself has declared it his Prerogative, to bless, and curse; to raise up, and pull down. And the Law can do nothing, either to convince of sin, or conduct to virtue, but as God's fescue in Magistrates hand. 'Tis God above, that must open the eye of the understanding, and incline the heart to good; yea, and 'tis God's grace only, that when the good and excellent path of life is discovered, puts man in, Dist. 26. q. 1. lib. 2. p. 395 and keeps him on from halting or deviation; not only by an act informationis & denominationis subjecti, presenting good to us, sed redditionis operis meritorii; as Durand too durely phrases it, that is, rendering it accepted in the beloved Lord jesus. The consideration of which brings in grace in Scripture, under so many honourable, and useful attributes, that it's hard to think of benefits, whereof our nature and condition is capable, which this grace and favour of God does not accommodate us with; it restrains from sin, it excites to duty, it conflicts with despair, it actuates faith, it erects fortitude, it debases pride, it adorns humility, it promotes self-denial, it is victoriously valiant against the enemies of the soul; yea, it keeps the heart equanimous, neither presumptuous, nor despondent, but equilibrious, as a Son should be, between the fear of duty and mercenariness. Hereupon St. Paul ascribes this mutation from a Pharisee to an Apostle, to be of grace; By the grace of God I am that I am, teaching us to put ourselves for the fortunation and felicitous sequel of actions on the mercy of the Almighty, wherein no man that rightly aims, and religiously means to that end, can possibly miscarry. Non te oxistixnes donum Dei jure hareditario possidere, ità videlicet securus de eo quasi nunquam perdere possis, nè subito cum fortè retraxerit manum, & substraxerit donum, tu animo concidas & tristior quâm opportet, fias. Sanctus Bernard. Serm. 21, in Cant. Cantic. All that we have to do, is to walk regularly and humbly before God, and thereby our inward man will be kept from predominancies inconsistent with this grace. For, as in the body, the prepotency of malignant humours, impedes the operation of the noblest Potions; so in the soul, till grace have obtained the mastery over the brutal and lower Regent's, there is no effects of grace probable to appear. It must be God that first excites, then by a concomitation crowns our endeavours with a desired issue. He gives recompense to diligence by wealth; to patience by victory; to humility by exaltation; to penitence by pardon. All that art and industry can do (abstracted from this grace as its benediction, which includes its fiat) is nothing. Lewis the Ninth of France was a wise and pious Prince, yet he made but two Voyages against Infidels; one into Egypt, and the other into Barbary, and miscarried in both. In the first, he himself was taken prisoner, and his whole Army overthrown. In the latter, he died of the Plague. Caesar Borgia fearing that his Father Pope Alexander the sixth dying, the Papacy would come into the hands of his Enemy, ordered affairs so dexterously as he thought, that which way soever they steered, he should be out of danger: Pope Alexander shortly after died; and Caesar Borgia fell so sick, that he could execute nothing he had designed; and so the Popedom came nnto his professed Enemy: so that the Chancellour's Position is most true, Non nisi per gratiam lex poterit ista operarii. Neque legem aut virtutem sine gratia tu addiscere poteris, vel appetere, cum ùt dicit Parisiensis (in libro suo cur Deus homo) virtus hominis appetitiva interior per peccatum originale it à vitiata est, ut sibi vitiorum suavia, & virtutum aspera opera sapiant. This is added, to show how impotent the best Prescripts of Nature are to any excellent and certain end, in their abstraction from God's grace: neither the whole duty of man, which our Chancellor means by the Law, in which 'tis proposed; nor any part of it contained in single virtues, can be either desired, or practised by us, but with assistance of God's grace. First, we cannot, appetere legem aut virtutem, without grace; for appetuntur quae secundum naturam sunt, Lib. 3. De Natur. deorum. deelinantur contraria, is Tully's rule. Now the nature of man is so averse to virtue, as subverted from its created rectitude, that it opposes itself to it, and declines it so, that if it be brought upon the love and practice of it, it must be by a divine persuasion, and sweet compulsion, from grace moving the Will to follow an enlightened understanding, and engaged affections. And then secondly, man cannot addiscere, 1 Offic. 21. that is, not only learn, as Orators sometimes use the word, but quasi aliquid addere adea quae didiceris, as our Text intends. No man can add to what nature instructs him in, concerning virtues divine and moral, but by grace; for thereby only corruption is discovered, and the means of recuperation and restitution, by improvement, revealed. Neither of these so necessary to our compleatness, are attainable, but by the grace of God, Non dat natura virtutem, ars est bonum sieri. Deerat illis justitia, deerat prudentia, deerat temperantiae ac fortitudo, omnibus his virtutibus babebat similiae quaedam rudis vita, virtus non contingit animo nisi instituto & edocto, & ad summum assiduà exercitatione perdacto Senec. Ep. 90. which brings the light and truth of God's discovery to the Conscience, in compunction and contrition; and then carries the convinced subject to jesus, the anchor, the price, the pattern, the donour of integrity, from which corrupted nature is the lapse. Indeed, in Heathens, and pure moral men, there may be sudden options, and passionate transports, reflected from the terrors of natural Conscience, which may cajole a man to ingenuous confessions, and seemingly serious protestations of amendment. But these being the products of no solid and sincere conviction, but the fruits of God's terror, which he often injects into, and sometimes long continues upon wicked men, are but splendida peccata, no acts of grace, but of power: which as a Creator, not a Father, God expresses himself to his Creature in. By these he overwrought Balaam to bless, whom he resolved to curse, and Abimelech, not to take Sarah, whom he resolved to prostitute; which had they not been, neither the good words of the one, Let me die the death of the Righteous, and let my latter end be like unto his, Numb. xxiii. nor the chaste deeds of the other, in not touching carnally Abraham's Sarah, had not succeeded their actions, which were praevious and ordinated to the contrary. So that whatever these, and other Heathens did, in order to self-mastery, magnanimity, contentation, patience, justice, charity, though they are effects of general grace, that is, of the largess of God the Creator, to man his creature, yet are they but imperfect works, because they did them as lures to their own same, and as defensatives of themselves from miscarrying in the deluge of censure and defamation, which hurries down into the lake of dishonour all sordid, illiberal, debauched courses; and hence they deserve to be accounted not so properly virtues, as the umbras of them: because, beyond the Elysium of fame, there is no reward for these; for so, according to their calculation, is their reward in this World: for all they aimed at, was to appear to men; God, the principle of their activity, was superior to, though not at all in their intendment and purpose; Bradward; De Causa Dei, lib. 20 c. 5. p. 287. and subjected they were, to what they could not oppose. Bona ipsa opera quae faciunt infideles, non ipsorum esse, sed illius qui benè utitur malis, said that renowned Father of our Church against the Pelagians. And therefore there is vast difference between the Works of Grace and Nature, of Heathens and Christians; because, though in the externity, and materials of them, they may have an equipollency; yet in the intention, rule, Beda, cap. 13. contra Julianum. principle, and purpose, (which bears away the reputation with God) there is no agreement. The righteousness of these gracious souls, exceeds the righteousness of Scribes and Pharisees, who yet were exact and rigid in the Rites of their Worship. The wisdom of these reaches to eternity; Malè velle, malè facere, malè dicere, malè cogitare de quoquam ex aquo vetamur. Tertullianus Apolog. c. 36. they consider their latter end, and desire God to teach them to apply their hearts to wisdom. The charity of these, is not only to those of the household of Faith, but to all Mankind; not only to a cup of cold water, but to actions of heroickness, whereby Coals of fire are heaped upon their Enemy's heads. The patience of these, is not to the loss of their gods, but lives, so they may keep their souls spotless. The perseverance of these is such, that with job, though God kill them, they will put their trust in him: the humility of these is so real, that they put their mouths in the dust, the bemoan themselves with Ephraim, If I have done evil, I will do so no more. These are the fruits of God's Canaan in the soul, which worldly men, as false Spies misreport. These are Iacob's hands, as well as Iacob's voice; the same in deed, as in word: there is no tincture of Alchemy or alloy in these, they are all Gold, whereas nature gives men but the Vermilion of seeming: this presents the Rose and Lily of perfect beauty. And hence comes it to pass, that God owns it as his work, and promises himself the reward of it unto the soul, Bradward, lib. 2. c. 5. p. 487. vide quid Christiani facere possint quorum in meliùs per Christum restaurata est natura, & qui divinae gratiae juvantur auxilio, saith the Father. Which considered, 'tis well added by our Chancellor, that thus to do, is divinae bonitatis beneficium, non humanae virtutis. For as it is not flesh and blood that reveals it, so is it not flesh and blood that performs it, natura humana etiamsi in illa integritate, quâ condita est, permaneret, nullo modo seipsam creatore suo non adjuvante servaret, quum igitur sine gratia Dei salutem non potuit custodire, quam accepit, quomodo sine gratia Dei potest reparare, Epist. 106. ad Paulinum. quod perdidit, is Saint Augustine's judgement. For if by the power of nature separate from grace, the virtue of justice could by the Law have been taught and learned, man needed no other School but that to teach him his duty, and to make him actually perform its dictate. But inasmuch as our Lord has taught us, that without him we can do nothing as we ought, and God will accept, and the holy men of all Ages have recurred to God's grace, as the sine quâ non to their progress and success: it highly besits us to ascribe all to grace, and to disclaim merit and selfsufficiency, that he alone may have the honour, who is the author and finisher of all good in us. For it is one of the great and undeniable explorations of Omnipotence, and that which argues God the Regent and Provider of the World; that he makes every thing accountable to his end, and subservient to his purpose, not only the proper effects of grace, renovation of principle, and melioration of practice, but also the punishments of grace despised and neglected, St. Augustin. Ep. 59 Sicut mali Dei bonis malè utuntur dum non corriguntur, sic contrà Deus, etiam malis corum benè utitur ad justitiam suam, & exercitationem suorum, said the Father; and to the same purpose Synesius, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. that is, Epist. 57 even the sinful liberties men take to satiate themselves with sin, work out God's justification in their punishment, and satisfic the pious, that he must needs be good, who gives so just rules to life, and they be out of measure sinful, that obey them not. No wonder then the Scripture says, obedience is better than sacrifice, because sacrifice being a devoir of the man externally conforming, may flow from the less noble and degenerous proposal that men make to themselves, of assimulation to those they converse with, and are planted amongst, by complying with whom same and advantage is acquirable, which they call humana virtus, and from reason and experience is moved and promoted; but to obey God, in owning his goodness the motive, and his power the Parent of what we attain to by study, action, friends, fortune, and to account ourselves and all collateral aids, blind and passive seconds to his omnisciency and wisdom, the energy and effectuality of the first cause God, must be divinae bonitatis beneficium, no man can disclaim what he loves so dearly himself, but he that in the glass of God's perfection sees his weakness and insufficiency, and by the mastery of mercy over his corruption, ascribes all he is, or does, to his Maker's goodwill to him, and the enablement he has from it. Nam tunc leges, quae praeveniente & concomitante gratiâ omnia praemissa operantur toto conamine addiscendae sunt, dum faelicitatem, quae secundum Philosophos est hìc finis & complementum humani desiderii, earum apprehensor obtinebit, quo & beatus ille erit in hac vita ejus, possidens summum bonum. This is a good inference from the premised assertion; since all man's chief good, by Philosophy is made to consist in felicity or beatitude, this felicity or beatitude is attainable by Justice; this Justice taught and learned by the Law, the Law made effectual by God's grace accompanying it. Hence argues the Chancellor; if such be the attainments by the Laws, than the Laws of God, Nature, Nations, are to be chiefly learned by a Prince, Indeed the Argument has as much of cogency, as utile and decorum can give it; and while there is a tye of grace upon the Laws, without which they are counted ineffectual, there is no fear, supererogation, or attribution of aught to them in derogation to grace, which is the gift of God by them; as it is not bread that supports life, nor air that cools and refreshes the inwards, nor light that promotes order, nor physic that procures health, but God's fiat and creative permission and benediction, whereby not only their innate and specifique virtue, in a beneficent exertion, accommodates itself to, but is conducted and confirmed by the omnipotence of God so to do: so is it not the Law that can bring the mind by understanding the definition, to affect the direction, and execution of justice, except God incline, and circumact the heart to the completion of it; and that by a grace of prevention, taking out of our way those rubs that imply avocation, making us of unwilling willing; and then by carrying on those beginnings to procedure, by breaking out the crepusculum into the bright day, nè frustra velimus, that is, by assisting us to run the race with patience that is set before us, looking unto jesus. O 'tis a rare Prospect of the Crucifix, that brings us to make ourselves vild, and of no reputation, that we may be obtainers of preventing grace, and do the will of God, by aid of his co-operating grace. Our Lord jesus gave us the precedent to follow him, that we might be enjoyers of happiness with him, Gratias agamus domino & salvatori nostro, qui nos nullis praecedentibus meritis vulneratos curavit, & inimicos reconciliavit, & de captivitate redemit, de tenebris ad lucem reduxit, de morte ad vitam revocavit, & hxmiliter confitentes fragilitatem nostram illius misericordiam deprecemur, ùt quia nos misericordia sua praevertit, Lib. 1 Homil. Homil. 14. dignetur in nobis non solùm non custodire, sed & augere munera, & beneficia sua quae ipse dignatus est dare, was Saint Augustine's counsel: The Author's Prayer to God. And, O Lord, grant me, who am thy poor valet, and have presumed to write of thy grace, such assistance of thy preventing and concomitating grace, that I may neither sin against them by my pen, or in my life, but that I may so write of grace, and so live to grace, that it may appear I covet the grace I write of, and magnify the assistance, that in this unworthy endeavour of mine, thy grace afford me; while my heart conscious to itself of many falsehoods in friendship, and coolness in zeal, to the glory of thy grace, yet presumes to cry out with Saint jerom, Semper largitor, semperque donator est, etc. Thou, O Lord, art always bountiful and givest, O let me be an ever receiver from thee, for it will not suffice my hungering soul, that once thou givest, unless thou often and ever givest; I am covetous to have the most I can of thy gracious bounty: as my soul is never satisfied with receiving, so let not thy grace be satisfied with giving to it; for the more it has, the more it desires of thee. The Author's Ejaculation. Thus that Father, and I from him: For, without this continual, and effectual inflex, how shall I write aright of grace, which worketh in us whatever is right in the sight of thee my gracious judge. Without grace then, the Law is ineffectual to bring Princes by Justice to beatitude, since it will not inform them of the excellency of virtue, nor subdue them to its method by efficacy of conviction, which makes practic virtue, and carries to, and ends in beatitude, but by help from above. Moral swasions are weak Physic, to carry away peccant humours prepossessing: it must be grace from God that vehiculates them to the parts disaffected, and by them works evacuation and restitution to a better habit. If our righteousnesses, that are as filthy rags, become clean garments before God: if our Salt that has lost its savour, be savoured by his acceptance; if our darkness become light in the Lord, through the Lord of Lights irradiation on us; if our covetousness of the Earthly Mammon be converted into the earnest covering of the best things; if instead of crying out against ourselves, when we have done all we can, that we are unprofitable servants, as our Lord commands us. It must be the work of grace. Our Lord, Quieunque est victoriâ dignus, non est ex se dignus sed ex Dei gratuita voluntate, quae & dignum victoriâ efficit, & victorem. Bradward, lib. 2. c. 6. ad finem, p. 490. in room of that, makes himself that blessed Call to us, Come ye blessed children of my Father receive the Kingdom prepared for you. This happy change is from something of God in, on, and with us, his grace of prevention and concomitance. This, this, is the soul, rule, guide to the Laws, wherein Justice, as the way to beatitude, is deposited. And without this grace of God, the World's Philosophy, the Laws learning, nay, Justice to the highest proportion imaginable for man to arrive at, will be but Apples of Sodom, beauteous in appearance, but rottenness and nullity in the proof of it: so true is that of the Wiseman, even in this riches, as well as in any other; The blessing of the Lord maketh rich, and he addeth no sorrow thereto. And therefore no wonder, though our Chancellor says, toto conamine addiscendae sunt leges, when he joins the grace of God with the Law, and makes the Law sacred by its conjunction with, or rather subserviency to God's grace. For this premised, nothing can be imagined more pleasing and profitable to the Reason and Religion of a Prince, than the Laws, because they lead to the chief good by the best aids; to God, by God. This is no other than Scripture Divinity, God the chief good apprehended by Faith in the eye, Hope in the heart, Charity in the hand, Humility in the knee, perseverance in the foot, which are all but other wordings of grace, preventing and accompanying. Since to attain these, as there is no means but that of God's grace in chief, and our obsequiousness to it, as the consequent of it: so are those to be followed to this heavenly purpose toto conamine, no saint, remiss, refracted, minute desires, will do to purpose this deed. This Heaven on Earth is for the violent and laborious Bees, that let no endeavour pass untried to attain it, refuse no hazard or toil to conquer and achieve it. He that wrestles with God in prayer night and day, he it is that toto conamine, endeavour knowledge of the Laws: For Conamen here signifies not so much the act, as the endeavour and desire to it, which expresses itself in a fixation and unmovableness of intention upon it, when all the man sets to it (conari manibus, pedibus, Andr. 5. 4. Pro Quinto 27. Pro Scylla 56. as Terence says,) 'tis such an expression as Cicero meant, when he uses magno conatu studioque agere, to set out industry, or a conatus cum impetu, such an one, as Beast and Bruits express, when they are carried to or fro from things they love or hate; To do what we do with all our might, as Solomon's words are: This is toto conamine addiscere; nor can it well be otherwise, for it is in order to the greatest and utmost good, to Justice, the delight of God, and perfection of a Prince: yet this, though insisted on with all imaginable strenuity, will not be effected but by grace; and that present and concurring, nothing can be wanting; That God has declared the true Elixir that makes what ever it touches partaker of its virtue, and transforms it from what it was, Theatrum Chymicum. p. 481. to what is more excellent; not by Sir Edward Kellets mystical juggling (no better than commerce with Satan) whereby brass is transformed to silver, and copper-wyre into gold, as some Chemists report him to have done. For that lightly and unlawfully come by, as lightly and loosely goes; as it is said to do with him, who was so vain as to give four thousand pounds worth of gold wire away in Rings at a Maidservants Wedding; no such effect of this Elixir: Grace, it turns an hard into a soft, a proud into an humble, an hypocritical into a sincere heart; yea, it teaches a man to delight in the Law of God in the inward man, and to be deservedly what Pits reports Feckenham Abbot of Westminster to be, Erat in eo (saith he) insignis piet as in Deum, Scriptorib. lic. p. 786. mirae charitas in proximos, singularis observantia in majores, mitis affabilitas in inferiores, dulcis humanitas in omnes, multiplex doctrina, redundans facundia, incredibilis Religionis Catholicae zelus; and while a man obtains this by the Law, is he not amply compensated? has he not the utmost bliss, this state of viatoriness is capable of ● I trow yes, and if so, than the Laws of God and men from them are the most ready and useful accomplishments of Kings and great men, because they put them into bliss, in their deepest miseries, and in the unnaturallest desertions their vicissitudes can acquaint them with. For that Princes may be unhappy in accidents of life, is but what has been, Lib. De Exulio, p. 605. edit. Paris. will be, must be, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Now, saith Plutarch, the most deserving men have been most encumbered, most afflicted, most ruined; but in that they can be cheerful, patient, humble, and holy, under the pressures Providence permits to impend them, argues a great enablement from God, who gives grace to those that beg it, suitable to his own glory, and their good. And this I conceive our Text-Master found experimentally in himself, God had made him a Martyr for Loyalty, a Champion for the Laws, whom because they could not bend, (who would have their wills the Law, and not make the Law their Wills) they resolve to banish, and break in mind, fortune, body; and he, though he had undoubtedly many friends of Henry the Fourth's party, who would, and could have made his peace, and procured his freedom to live at home, yet he rather chose to live free abroad, than a slave in a free Country, and under a free Law, as England ought to have been, but was not. Hereupon his leisure, and loss of practice by business at home, proves his opportunity to study God, affliction, men, his own heart, more and more throughly. Psal. 119. And now he cries out, If it had not been for God's Law his delight, he had perished in his affliction. Now he owns gratefully to God, that it was good for him to be afflicted. Now the fruits and comforts of Justice in his profession, place, practice, quondamly return on him the reward of their integrity: Sure he that writes so divinely of Justice, & presses the Law as the Rule of Princes in it, found the Justice of Laws great subterfuges to his disconsolacy, and retreats to his once mistakes of God's dealings. The greatest discoveries men have of God's light and truth, are from the midst of Lightnings and Thunders, Afflictions Storms end in a calm of merciful sublevation; when the bush burns, and is not consumed, Isaac's throat is under the knife, than the Ram caught by the horns is welcome to Abraham, as God's provision for a sacrifice of redemption. So often as I think of Patmos, the place of Saint John's Revelation of, and prospect into the mysteries of glory, of which the fuller sight is reserved for hereafter, I cannot but conclude our Chancellor, was made what he so divinely by his being driven from house and home; for now he being taken off from the troubles of visits, and distractions of business, which storm-like, come in crowds, and cross waves of different import, has thereby leisure to converse with God, and to commune with his own heart; and being removed from the impulsion of this World's Hell, which by force and fraud either terrify or allure men into snares. The judgement that he (in this condition of separation being more impartial) gives, carries the stronger reason, and will be more influential, by how much the more sincere it is presumed to be, since nothing so embases counsel and instruction, as the prae-occupation of interest, to the proportion and scope of which it is often experimented mercenary: Leges Magistratus & judicia quaedam quasi sunt numina divinitùs constituta in Republics Hopperus, lib. unico, De justitia Principis. which being not to be suspected in our Chancellor, renders his words not only swasive but in a sort imperative, as they flow from the almost infallible Oracle and Fountain of great Learning, grave Experience, entire Affection, and noble Loyalty. Verè etsi non haec te moveant qui regnum recturus es, movebunt te, & arctabunt ad disciplinatum legis Prophetae verba, dicentis, erudimini, qui judicatis terram. Still our Text-Master proceeds to inculcate on the Prince a valuation of the Law, which, though he had by many pregnant Arguments, commended to him, he yet further urges from a higher Authority then that of Philosophers, and men of age and wisdom: For though it were enough to youth, that antiquity found in the way of righteousness, commended this or that to them, because multitude of years teach wisdom, and the Spirit of God in that counsel or command, Thou shalt rise up before the Hoar-headed, gives youth to know his acceptation of respect showed to them, than which, greater cannot be testified then to be directed and instructed by them: yet the Chancellor brings in the irrefragable advice of God's Spirit, by the Kingly Prophet, in the person of Christ Jesus, who being the Prince of peace, as well as power, allures all his Delegates, to submit themselves to his Sceptre willingly, throughly, constantly, and to be lessoned, that thus to do, is to advance their power, and atone the displeasure, that obstinacy may treasure up against them: Be instructed (saith he) ye judges of the Earth. Now this he brings in out of the second Psalm, not primarily, (for then he might have been thought to distrust the efficacy of his pre-engagements of the Prin ces reason, since Justice lodged in, and learned from the Law, is of concern enough to move a man, a Prince, in order to a King, to value, and endeavour to understand the notion and practice of it, as the sine quâ non, to his very essence and being quâ such.) But the cause that this Scripture is superinduced, is rhetorically to overbear the Prince, that all excuse laid aside, he should as a man, and as a King, incessantly apply himself to holy instruction in the will of God, revealed in his Law moral, and in the extracts from it, the National Laws fitted to his Government. For though true it be, that perhaps when our Chancellor wrote to the Prince, Henry the Sixth was alive; or if dead, the Prince was not actually King, as in Title and Truth after his Father the Chancellor conceived he ought to have been: yet the good Chancellor bespeaks him, to prepare before against the time of trial, to imitate Solomon's Pismire, that laid up in the Winter of ruins store, against the Summer of rule, provokes him by all the engagements of Providence and probability, to antedate his Regality, and become a King in Learning and Endowment, before he becomes King in fact and acknowledgement. And this he does not, by kindling in him thoughts of revenge, and flames of abhorrence to those persons and practices, that raised War against his Father, and forced him abroad; yea, threatened his never return, but by courting him to learn of God, how to want, and how to abound; how to be without subject or subsistence, and how to use both moderately, and to the ends of God's glory, and Governors' institution: which wisely, and well to learn, he directs him to attend the counsel of holy David, a King and a Prophet, Ex utroque Caesar, a man of valour, and a Prince of piety, to be instructed, and that because he is to judge others: and thereupon that he may not either not do what, or do otherwise then what he ought to do to men, as one of the Judges of the Earth, to be well grounded in knowledge, the rule of action. Now, though I know it becomes not any Subject to treat of the duties of Princes but with reverence, which many men have forgot in their late Treatises concerning them: yet shall I be hold to touch upon this subject here, as my method leads me, in the Exposition of this Scripture, though that but shortly, modestly, and I hope with submissive wisdom above offence. The quotation then out of Psal. two. 3. Erudimini qui judicatis terram, though it was largely intended to all, to whom instruction is proper; yet presly and primarily was directed to the great men of the World, whom the Prophet foresaw to be industriously composed, and pertinaciously resolved, against the reception of Christ in his Gospel, Government, and Doctrine. And this I suppose the Psalmist had revealed to him particularly from God, whose prescience and omniscience discovered it to be such in the Revolutions of time, and productions of men, that both the prenunciation of it might accord with other Prophecies in the testimony and truth of men's opposition to the Son of God; and that as the godly might be prepared not to stumble at it, so the wicked might be left without excuse, when their pertinacy suffers the just indignation of God's Son against them. Which premised, the words have respect to somewhat employed, and somewhat expressed: The implication is, that great men, Judges of the Earth, need instruction: not only as they are men in common with others, subjected to the consequences of sin, which have labefacted all the Integrals of created Faculties, and made us dark in our Intellects, averse in our Wills, dull in our affections to good; yea, in a sort estranged us from the love of duty to, and subjection under God, but as they are persons peculiarly elevated above others, apt to be flattered by, and inflamed from the vain delusions of their Parasites, that they are made believe (unless God give them more humility to know themselves) the best and happiest of men, when (God knows) their Cedar height, lies in the storm and heat of all temptations; and having such snares about them, better were it for them to hear of the frailty of man, of the justice of God, of the duty of humility. These more commemorated in their representation of things to them, would render them more happy in their souls and bodies, than often they are. Ahab loved not Micaiah, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Dion. Cass. lib. 55. p. 552. the Holy Ghost says, because he told him the truth, when all the Prophets of Baal covertly betrayed him to sin and judgement; yet Augustus did not so by Maecenas, when he was more sharp them some think he needed; for since he kept him a favourite, as one that should bring him off anger, and cool his enragings, he gently bore, yea, he kindly took, and accordingly desisted from his severity, when his friend put in that rubrique, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Arise Sir, you have been terrible enough. It is, I confess, a happiness to serve Princes of mild and ductile natures, whose hearts reflect on soft and virtuous friends with candour and kindness; which Augustus was so frequent and fervent in, that next to the indulgence of God, who gave him a good nature, and a docibleness to be guided by love and experience, which sedates jealousy and rage; he owed as much of his stability and glory to his noble Livia; and his prudent Maecenas, as to any other Princely endowment, Lib. 1. De Clement. p. 624. c. 10. or benediction he enjoyed; which that florid, and stupendiously eloquent Moralist does incomparably mention, Haec eum clementia ad salutem securitat émque perduxit, etc. This Piety, saith Seneca, accompanied with Clemency, arrived him at safety and security: this made him a Conqueror, before he had actually conquered his insolent and implacable Foes: This, at this day, makes him dead, famous above most living Princes; men voluntarily for this, not by command, account him of a Godlike goodness, descendedly a Parent, and a good Prince to his Country; and that because he passed by contumelies, which Princes often take worse than injuries, and revenged them not. Thus Seneca of him. But he could not say so of Nero, though his Pupil, and one whom he put more milk, than blood, in the principles of his education; his Quinquennium showed what he was from his Master's tuition, before the vices of greatness, and the luxuries of effeminacy had enchanted him, he ought to have reasoned with himself, Ego ex omnibus mortalibus placui, electúsque sum qui in terris deorum vice fungerer, etc. ay, Lib. 1. De Clem. c. 1. of all men, am favoured of the Gods, and deputed to be their Deputy on Earth; this favour and prelation, shall not make me wrathful and cruel; nor shall either the heat of youth, or the rashness of choler, or the vainglory of being known in my dreadful power, provoke me to be savage: but my ambition shall be to purchase glory by virtue, and to carry the sword as an emblem of severity to awe vice, but to support virtue: so will I be ruled by Law and Reason, as if I kept them within my heart, and would make use of them as I had occasion. This aught to have been his thoughts, and according to this his Master, the Cultivator of him, hoped he would prove. But Nero had so debauched his mind by effeminate transports, that all the imbibings of his educations were expectorated. Now all the Lenitives and Morals that art can prescribe, are Apocryphal, and come too late either to be welcome, or followed. Nero was proceeded Tiger, such a degree in inhumanity, as had no name before him. To tell him, non regem decet saeva, & inexorabilis ira, to proclaim to him affability, love, compliance, as that which would not make him execrable, but adorable, was such a Solaecism to his ranting Resolution, that he counted it meliùs non nasci quam inter publico bono natos numerari; Postea. adeò sui dissimilis evasit, ut monstrum non homo dici mereatur. Sueton. De Nerone. yea, so impatiently did he suffer his fury to be in danger of allaying, by the mildness of his Master, and the majesty of his Reason, that he opened tyrannously the veins of that body, the soul whereof lodging in the blood and spirits than expiring, had impregnated him with better principles. Die Seneca did a Martyr to Nero's rage, who endeavoured to make Nero mild and virtuous? I could tell you of Demetrius Poliorcetes, Pausanias, the Lacedaemonian Alcibiades, Agathocles, Pisistratus, Sylla, Catiline, Mark Anthony, Domitian, Manuel Comnenus, Offa King of Mercia, Pope Alexander the Sixth: All which, and sundry others, who had eminent vices as well as virtues, and not well observing the Rules of practic virtue, had need to be instructed against forgetting God, themselves, and their people. This confirms, that they need instruction, because their plethorique fortunes and stations are subject to more predominant vices, and their ears are less (than is necessary) suppled by virtuous freedoms, and serious monitions, softening the heart, and lifting it up in gratitude to God. This our late martyred King Charles the First, considering, breaks out into this expression, Public Reformers had need first act in private, C. 20. Eicon Basih p. 187. and practice that on their own hearts, which they purpose to try on others. Christ's Government will confirm mine, not overthrow it, since as I own mine from him; so I desire to rule for his glory, and the Churches good. So he that was the best of men and Kings his contemporaries, discovered the teachings of God to him in his afflictions: And as that they need instruction, is employed, so that they may, and aught to be instructed, is expressed, and that by a King, Peer to any Successor in Kingship, and a Prophet, which no King after him I think was, Solomon excepted, who was his Son; if a Prophet he was, which I am not sure of. Erudimini, said he, to the Judges of the Earth, who was himself a Judge of the Earth; not thereby to become an authority to insolent spirits, to reproach or discover the nakedness of Princes, if any such there be, as Cham's in all times have cursedly done: no, nor to render Majesty cheap by these abasements, which even suspicion of defect in some degree, occasions. But the Erudimini here is, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, 'tis to follow and imitate nature; embrace plain and naked truth, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, to see good Laws and right Constitutions obeyed in all parts of Government, Lib. De Temulentia, p 2●5 p. 261. as Philo's words are; and this to do, as to do it, is that which is insculpt on the Table of man's heart, to obey God, who has fixed Governors to rule for him, and will have account of their trusts from them. So is it to be followers of God as dear children, in all those imitable acts, which as a Father, and King of order, he proposes to them in his example. The prophetic King here takes great men to task as their Monitor, and he bids them, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, castigate vos, he bids them understand, that whereas God has given them exemption from men's castigation, yet he requires they should restrain and curb themselves; for the root, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, signifies such a restriction, Pagninus in Verbo. as men in bonds and setters have, nè pro sua libidine evagetur & vivaet: 'tis not barely to know; for that the Holy Ghost have expressed by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, for of that the wise King speaketh, Prov. xxii. 6. Teach a child in the trade of his youth, that is, as Rabbi jonah expounds it, teach him pausatim paulatim, ut ferre possit; nor is it an instruction like that of Tyro's, who learn methods of War and Combat by exercise; for then the word would have been 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as the Psalmist uses it, Psal. xxxiv. 12. Come my little children, harken unto me, and I will teach you the fear of the Lord: nor is it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, such a fear as is preparatory to God's instruction, such, as Kimchi says, implies, praeparationem verborum cujuspiam in alterum cum rationibus, & ostensione juris; but it is chiefly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that is here used. And the Prophet's sense is, Learn to know God's mercy to you, that though he has prelated you, yet 'tis, that you should deny yourselves what you might, to do what you ought. This is that the holy King invites his fellow Kings to; and the holy Prophet counsels them that govern the Earth, in God's name to do, and that because they are judicare terram. Indeed, the consideration of duties incumbent on men in power, should make them as less seekers, so less servers of themselves in it: for besides that it is a burden too heavy for the most Atlantic shoulders, which has ever been the reason why Deputations have been so frequent, and that of old, as jethro counselled Moses, and as Paterculus tells us, was among the Romans, and as is in use at this day with us, and amongst our Neighbours. Rarò eminentes viri, non magnis adjutoribus ad gubernandum fortunam suam usi sunt, ut duo Scipiones, duob●s Laeliis quos per omniae aequaverunt sibi, ut divus Augustus, M. Agrippa & maximè ab illo Statilio Tauro, quibus novitas familiae hàud obstitit, quò minùs ad maltiplices consulatus, triumphósque, & complura niterentur sacerdotia. Patercul. lib. 2. Men in power had need to have extraordinary parts, and self-masteries, to know and perform their places to a conscientious and creditable latitude. God requires Talents for Talents, every ten Talents of power must have ten Talents of Justice to men, and glory to God returned for it. And hence comes it to pass, that the Erudimini here has much more in the scope, than the mere phrase carries with it. For my part, I humbly conceive those three heads of Saint Paul's, predicated of the Gospel's Revelation, that is, 2 Titus 11. teacheth to deny ungodlyness, and to live soberly, righteously, and godly in this present evil World, is whatever this Erudimini imports, nay, whatever God has in expectation from Kings, the best and God-likest of men. To live soberly to ones self, so as to have a reverence to ones body, becomes every man, but especially a Prince, because he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a deity in flesh; and if he be the Oracle that men repair to for solution of doubts, reparation of wrongs, preservation from violence, and example to virtue; to keep his head cool, his affections restrained, his desires moderate, is the way to be quadrate to his dignity, than he will not err in judgement, when he judges impartially first his own body and soul, and keeps such quarter in them, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. that he suffers nothing to be done by him, but what is suitable to nature's rule, Lib. 4. Sect. 12. edit Gatakeri. and the good of Mankind. This the Emperor Mark Antoninus prescribes. This takes off all those exuberances, that besot and lose Princes in obscenity and dissoluteness. To live righteously, that is the joy of all Subjects; because where it is radicated in the soul, 'twill distribute itself in all expressions of power. The same Emperor gives a noble advice 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Lib. 4. Sect. 22. p 27. not to wander from the punct and indivisibility of justice, but ever to have justice as the Rudder that steers us, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. to watch over the understanding, and hold it free from love of any appearance. The learned Gataker glosses thus on the words, In lib. 4. c. 22. p. 145. Commentar. Epist. 89. Nè aberres vel tantùm, aut ab aquitate in conatibus, aut à veritate in assentionibus. This is that which Seneca magnifies so, in that it does not virtutem daré voluptati, sed nullum bonum putat nisi hones●um, quae nec hominis nec fortunae maneribus deliniri potest, cujus boc pretium est, non posse praecio capi. But to live godly, that's the top-lesson of Princes, 'tis doctrina principi congrua, because it keeps all the Springs and Artifices of action and contemplation in awe; Esay xlv. 23. God himself declares this use to be made of it, I am a great King, saith the Lord of Hosts, and I swear by myself every knee shall bow to me. Kings, though compared to men, they are Gods, not to be bowed against their wills, but to be bowed to that they may will well; yet to God, they are men subject to his Iron Rod, and his word of mutation works on their souls, bodies, and affairs. Hence, not only the Apostle prefixes the true fear of God to the honour of the King; but Antoninus, according to the sense of Scripture, gives the rule to all Kings, as well as other, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Fear, saith he, the Gods, and then 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Lib. 6. Sect. 30. p. 52. preserve men. All government of men ought to be to that end, which julian alleadges Marcus Antoninus to answer to Silenus, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, So to live over men, as to be both just and merciful to them, as God is just in point of punishing errors, merciful in point of relaxing burdens. Deus est mortalis juvare mortalem, & haec aed aeternam gloriam via, hic est vetustissimus referendi benè merentibus gratiam mos, ut tales numinibus adscribant, Hist. Nat. l 2. c. 1. saith Pliny. So that all these considered, the Erudimini here has much in it, and a strong force it carries to the gaining of Princes to follow it, if they would be subject to the reason of it, the Prophet is no lax and saint Rhetorician in this soft, yet significant language; but he does by a pathetic, arctare & movere verbis, as our Text-Master comments on him; he does movere vigore, and arctare ratione, and as he sets all his spiritual love on work to persuade, so all his learned Reason to compel and overrule the Judges of the Earth, scire institutum Dei, & sequi disciplinatum legis; for as learned King james of happy memory once wrote. King james to Prince Henry. lib. 1. Basilic. Doron, Sonnet before the first Book. God gives not Kings the stile of Gods in vain, For on his Throne his Sceptre do they sway, And, as their Subjects, ought them to obey, So Kings should fear, and serve their God again. If then you would enjoy a happy Reign, Observe the Statutes of your Heavenly King, And from his Law make all your Laws to spring, Since his Lieutenant here ye should remain. Reward the just, be steadfast, true, and plain, Repress the proud, maintaining aye the right, Walk always so, as ever in his sight, Who guards the godly, plaguing the profane; And so ye shall in Princely virtues shine, Resembling right your mighty King Divine. And this our Chancellor setting out so emphatically, makes me conclude him to be Rara avis in terris. One in his own soul so just, and so incessant an Orator with the Prince, for Law and Justice according to it, that to other Acursiusses, Leguleiviliora eligentes, non juris consulti, as Budaeus words it, he deserves to be accounted a Servius, a Pomponius, a what not, that proclaims him a Saint of the Long-Robe: And as Budaeus wished to France in his time, (and a learned and wise Chancellor he in his time was) so in my humble and hearty wish to England, utinam verò nunc tres servos haberemus pro sexcentis illis Accursianis, id est, tres viros justos, pios, germanósque, & ut ita dicam, majorum gentium juris consultos; that is, say I, not as he, in the specifique words, but in analogy of good wishes, would to God we had more good, and less bad Lawyers than we have. And this I wish, for God, the King, and the Country's sake, that Religion, Allegiance, Justice, and Charity, might be, by their Learning and practice, the more and better promoted. But I return to the Text. Non enim ad eruditionem artis sactivae aut mechanicae hìc movet Propheta, cum non dicat, Erudimini qui colitis terram, nec ad eruditionem scientiae tantùm theoreticae quamvis opportuna fuerit incolis terrae, quia generaliter non dicit, Erudimini qui inhabitatis terram, sed solùm ad disciplinam legis, quâ judicia redduntur, reges specialiter invitat propheta in his verbis, Erudimini qui judicatis terram. These words our Text-Master adds, as an expatiation and ornament of his main Argument; not that he thought it not sufficient to carry the weight he superstructed it, but to obviate any mistake of the sense of Scripture, apt to be distorted through peevishness, or mistaken by ignorance. To rectify which digressions, from the intendment of the Prophet, our Chancellor proposes this allegation of the Holy Ghosts, as directly relative to Rulers of all ranks; not only as they are men, for so they are concerned in common with all others; but also, and chiefly, as they are the highest and most influential of men, either to good or evil. And because they may be engaged to do good, their Architect who has built their power so many Stories high beyond other men's, whose foundations are more in the dust, and whose houses are of Clay, when theirs are of Cedar and Marble; whose Companions are the Dogs of the Flock; when these sit among the Gods, is by the Prophet more presly catechetique to Princes, not only to call them to, but to instigate them by the commemoration of their received bounties from God, to learn their duty, and practise their subjection to, and zeal for him, that has so dignified them. It's true indeed, there is an Erudimini, which all men, at all times, in all stations, need; the Apostle, by the Spirit of God, calls on Christians to study, and exhibit to view that Catholicon that cures prejudice, Phil. 4.5. and commends to peace and Charity, Let your moderation, saith he, be known to all; and there are particular Scriptures exhortative to men in mechanic and active Callings, which are to be heeded, God has left no man without his mortalis genius, his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; yea, and his Monitor from above, such Scripture-dictates as if he follow, he will please God, and pleasure himself in the peace of a rightly informed from, and rightly conforming Conscience to, God. To this purpose are Scriptures applicable to particular conditions: The Priests are to read the Law, Mark 9.50. 2 Tim. 2.15. 1 Cor. 9.19. Mal. 2.7. 1 Tim. 5.17. Jam. 1. ●1. 2 Pet. 1.10. Phillip 3.14. to preserve their savour as salt, and lustre as light, to study to show themselves workmen; To carry Consciences void of offence both towards God, and towards men; To become all to all, that they may gain some; and the people are to inquire the Law at the Priest's lips. Count those that labour in the Word and Doctrine worthy of double honour; receive with all meekness the engrafted Word able to save their souls; To labour to make their calling and election sure; To press forward to the mark of the price of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus. These, and such like Scriptures, are accommodated for instruction of Priest and People. There are other Scriptures adapted to other purposes of practic use, Jam 4.6. Adag. Chil. ●. Cent. 6. Adag. 22, 23. p. 236. Jer. 9.23. Gal. 6.14. not to be proud, for God resists the proud; not to glory in abundant Revelations, not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, to lift up our horn on high; not to glory in riches, wisdom, beauty, strength, but to glory in this, that we know God; to glory in the cross of our Lord Jesus, whereby the World is crucified unto us, and we unto the World. To Parents, not to provoke their Children; Ephes. 6.5, 6. to Children, not to disobey their Parents; to Servants, to be obedient to their Masters; and to Masters, not to be hard and severe to them; to Wives, to submit themselves to their own Husbands; Ephes. 5.22, 25. and to Husbands, to love their Wives as their own flesh; to Christians, to love one another, and to provoke each other to love, and to good works; Luke 3.14 to Soldiers, to be content with their wages, and to do violence to no man. To Scholars, to be wise to sobriety, and not to search into the secret things which belong to God, Deut. 29.29. but content themselves with things revealed. To people, to obey those that are set over them. To fear God, and honour the King, and to give subjection to every Ordinance of man, Heb. 13 17. 1 Pet. 2.13. for the Lord's sake. These, and such like Scriptures, are inserted into God's Holy Word, as particular documents, to particular persons, stations, degrees of men. But this Scripture before us, Erudimini qui judicatis terram, is the Scripture that concerns Kings and Judges, that they should consider what God requires from them, and what their Prelacies, ex aequo, imports them to do. And this, if ever any man did, I believe our late King Charles the blessed, was taught by God to do: Hear him, Eicon. Basilic. ● 19 p. 177. I never had any victory, which was without my sorrow, because it was on mine own Subjects, who, like Absalon, died many of them in their sin; and yet I never suffered any defeat, which made me despair of God's mercy and defence: when Providence gave me, or denied me victory, my desire was neither to boast of my power, nor to charge God foolishly, who I believed at last would make all things work together for my good. I wished no greater advantages by the War, then to bring mine enemies to moderation, and my friends to peace. I was afraid of the temptations of an absolute Conquest, and never prayed more for victory over others, then over myself: When the first was denied me, the second was granted me, which God saw best for me. This was the Piety and probity of a King, vivendo nobilis, moriendo nobilior, which I believe he had conveyed to him, through the mercy of God, by the instructions of his learned and pious Father of happy memory King james, Basilicon. Doron, Book 1. p. 14●. fol. the first King of England of his name, and the second Solomon in the World, as I believe. For hear him, concerning a King's Christian duty towards God. Think not therefore that the highness of your dignity diminisheth your faults, much less giveth you a licence to sin; but by the contrary, your fault shall be aggravated, according to the height of your dignity, any sin that ye commit not being a single sin, procuring but the fall of one, but being an exemplare sin, and therefore drawing the whole multitude to be guilty of the same; remember then that this glittering worldly glory of Kings is given them by God, to teach them to press, so to glister and shine before their people, in all works of sanctification and righteousness, that their persons, as bright lamps of godliness and virtue, may, going in and out before their people, Pag. 156. Book 2. give light to all their steps. And in the second Book, treating of the King's duty in his office, he saith, A good King thinking his highest honour to consist in the discharge of his calling, employeth all his study and pains to procure and maintain, by the making and execution of good Laws, the welfare and peace of his people; and as their natural Father, and kindly Master, thinketh his greatest contentment standeth in their prosperity, and his greatest surety, in having their hearts, subjecting his own private affections and appetites to the weal and standing of his Subjects, ever thinking the common interest his chiefest particular; which, by the contrary, an usurping Tyrant thinking his greatest honour and felicity to consist in attaining per fas vel nefas, to his ambitious pretences, thinketh never himself sure, but by the dissension and factions among his people, and counterfeiting the Saint, while he once creep in credit, Will then (by inverting all good Laws, to serve only for his unruly private affections) frame the Commonwealth ever to advance his particular, building his surety upon his people's misery, and in the end, as a stepfather, and an uncouth hireling, make up his own hand, upon the ruins of the Republic. Thus incomparably that King. By these, and the like senses, which good Kings have had of their duty to God and men, it appears, that the Prophet's words here to Kings, are of more consequence, by how much they tend by the greatest project, to end in the greatest emolument, that of Kings bettered both to God and men in their beneficence, as I may so say to both, in that they do as Marcus Antoninus advises, Lib. 4. Sect. 2. p. 23. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Do nothing rashly nor vainly, nor otherwise, then as exactly corresponds with the rule. When they do as Artists do, Gatakeri Annotat. n lib. 4. sect. 2. p. 122. in minutissimis quibúsque artis suae, & praecepta observant, & specimen edunt, it à & Apelles ex lineae unicae ductu solo, Protogeni innotuit, saith this learned Commentator on him. Which considered, as good Princes are to be ever solicitous of their duties, and vigilant over their thoughts and works, that they wander not to an eccentricity, and dishonour themselves by the returns of the ventures they have made unhappily on them: So are all good Subjects to pray for their Princes in secret, and pity their temptations, rather than revile their seductions by them. For Princes had need of great graces, and self-denials, Quod in Caesaribus rarum comperies perpetuo sa●●s. Erasm. in Epist. ad Suetonium De Augusto. that remain virtuous, where every Wit, every Beauty, every Courage, is their humble Servant, and gives themselves a freewill offering to before they ask, them. No wonder then the fear of God is called the beginning of wisdom, and justice the establisher of the Throne, and both pressed by our Chancellor from Moses and Solomon, as Prescripts to Kings, because they being in excelso positi, as they have great storms to shake them, so had need to be firmly rooted in the love of God, and in care and watchfulness over themselves, for their Subjects sakes. For if they that are the Guard be surprised; if the Wall of the Vineyard be broken down; if the shepherd wander out of the way, Malos principes faciunt nimia licentia, rerum copta, amici improbi, satellites detestandi. Vopiscus in Aureliano. and be lost in the Wilderness of sin, where no path of God is; Religion, Peace, Order, Honesty, Renown, Power, all, evaporates and dissolves; Kings are Bonds that keep all together they are nerves and sinews, veins and arteries, that preserve strength, and convey nutriment to the body: they are Suns, and Moons, and Stars, all Constellations of felicity to the inferior World their Subjects, who move from them, if they keep their brightness by day and night, suffering no sin vastative of the Conscience to reign in and over them; but by humility, and severity of life, rescue themselves from the Eclipses of immortalities; Vulcatus Gallic. in Avidio Cassio, p. 156. Rom. Scriptorum. All the World will love and fear them, as good, and great, and all mouths will be filled with acclamation of them, as they did in Solomon's Case; Blessed be God who has given to David a wise Son to reign over this great People; and as they did to Antoninus, whom the Senate acclamated thus, Antonine pie, dii te servant. The like to Alexander, (b) Lampridius in Severo, p. 208. to Severus, (c) Capitolinus in Severo, p. 221. to Gordianus, (d) Idem, p. 228. to Claudius, (e) Trebellius Pollio, p. 267. to Tacitus, (f) Flau. Vopisc. p. 284. to Probus. (g) Idem, p. 292. Ul●ichus Huttenus ad Leonem x Pontif. in Praefat. ante Vallam. Yea, 'twill be said of them, as 'twas of the Medicean Family. In Cosmo Mediceo fuit hoc in primis admirandum, etc. This was most admirable in Cosmo Medici's, that though he himself were unlearned, he loved the Learned, and alured them to him by rewards and honours; and his Father Laurentius Medici's was both himself a learned man, and loved the learned; which caused the World to say, that the family of Medici's, were the Patrons of Learning, who restored Arts almost lost, and gave the Greek and Latin Tongues a resurrection in their learning and bounty. Oh 'tis a rare Character the Princely Pope Leo the 10th has, Tu ille orbis amor, etc. Thou, Ulrichus Huttenus de Leone x. Papa, in Praef. ante Vallam. Isocrates, Ep. 7. Xenophon. Paedag. lib. 8. O sacred Leo, art the World's darling and delight, the restorer of Peace, the determiner of War, the author of safety, the settler of troubles, the Father of Studies, the Nurse of Arts, the restorer of all decay in Science. For when a Prince follows the Orator's rule, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. When he seeks rather to be rich in fame then wealth, when he endeavours, as Chrysantas says, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. a good King differeth nothing from a good Father, as Tullius, the old Roman King, was to his Subjects, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. when he accounts his Subjects children, Dyonis. Halicarnass. lib. 4. Herodot. lib. 3. and is to them a Father; when he is in his Reign not a Darius, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a narrow minded Prince; nor a Cambyses, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a severe and violent Lord, whom no man can either obey, or resist; but a Cyrus, a Father, quia mitis, bonus, beneficus, benignus: A Prince that thus is taught of God to know his mercy, and to make men bless God for the fruits of it that they find, in living peaceable lives under him in all godliness and honesty: such a Prince deserves to have the happiness, which Nicoles said Physicians had, Anton. Collect. lib. 1. c 56. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. whose virtues the Sun and all eyed men see with admiration, and their frailties not see in charity, but bury them in grateful forgetfulness. Et sequitur nè quando irascatur dominus, & pereatis de via justa. This is quoted, as it is added in the Psalm, to acculeate the persuasion, to learn to know how to judge for, as God, that is righteously. For though it be enough to a good man, to do what is good and just, because good and just are the properties of God, and the provisions of his Institution in Magistracy: yet forasmuch as the servility of our nature being the effect of sin, evidences us more driven by fear, then drawn by love, the Holy Ghost has brought up the duty with a danger in the failer of it: And the sense is this, that the wisdom of God is not to be perverted by us, nor the power which he has entrusted great men with, to be abused to rage and fury, which is but the backside, and dark Representation of that Cloud, in which Magistracy is wrapped, for its further and fuller awe on Mankind's disorders, left God reveal from Heaven his wrath against such unrighteousness of great men, and they perish from the right way, that is, lest when they are too big for men to deal with, God take them short by death, or other anticipation, and they have not the just power continued to them, which, while they had, they unjustly abused. And this indeed, is a great Argument, which should move men in power to study knowledge, and practice of their duty; to consider, that God is higher than they, that they are but dispensers of his talents; and that therefore they ought to carry wise minds, and wary hands, in ordering public affairs. Oh! happy was that Goth, Theodorick, and happy those people under him. In bonis jactibus tacet, in malis ridet, in neutris irascitur, in utrisque philosophatur; when Governors are concerned in no passion, Sidonius, lib. 1. Ep. 2. but as it still is in subserviency to God's end in their Governments felicity, then are they out of fear of the Son of God's wrath, and their perishing from the right way. Nay then that is more true, than Seneca perhaps meant it, Dedit tibi natura, Ep. 31. illa quae si non deserveris, par Deo surges, hoc est summum bonum, quod si occupas, incipis deorum esse ●ocius, non supplex. Nec solum legibus quibus justitiam consequeris, fili Regis, imbui te jubet sacra Scriptura, sed & ipsam justitiam diligere. Tibi alibi praecepit, cum dicat, diligite justitiam, qui judicatis terram, Sapientiae, c. 1. Still our Chancellor fills the Prince's ears with fresh Reasons; fain he would that he should be just, who is a King's Son, and he hopes is to be a King in God's time: And hereupon, as he had formerly acquainted him, that Justice he must know and practice; sonow he tells him, that the must do what he does not so much in policy, as in love to Justice: not because he would be well thought and spoken of; not for that it is commodious to fix Government, though this is a warrantable motive; but from love to Justice, as the imitation of God, and a partaking of his essential perfection in such a measure as we are capable of, and it is possible to be derived on us. And hereupon Princes are to love Justice, and to hear the Laws that commend it; Lib. 1. De Abstinentia, p. 7. which Laws were not made by men of force, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Porphyrus' words are, but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, by wise and worthy men, who considered them, as they were suitable to the reason of Nature, and the Religion of right Reason. And thus our Chancellor presses it from the first of Wisdom, v. 1. as both a Moral Divinity, and a Divine Morality. That which both to Heathens and Christians as men, is commendable, and without it, whatever is seraphiquely pretended in either, is just nothing. For whereas the Text in Wisdom is, Love righteousness, ye that be judges of the Earth: our Translators referring to Texts in the Canon, suitable to this Apocrypha in the Margin, mentioned 1 Kings three 3. The words are, Solomon loved the Lord, walking in the Statutes of David his Father; and Esay lvi. 1. where the words are, Thus saith the Lord, keep ye judgement, and do justice: which put together, do in their, and any good man's sense, amount to our Chancellour's drift, That to love Righteousness, is to love the Lord the fountain of it, and the best way to see him with his reward with him, that is, with comfort and salvation from him, is to keep Judgement, and do Justice, that is, to do Justice, by keeping Judgement, since no King can be just to his own power, and people's preservation, who keepeth not the Judgement to discern of good and evil, and diligently searcheth not out the conveniencies and contraries that are in his Government, and suits not Laws congruous to them. And so our Chancellor, and I after him, conclude the fourth Chapter. CHAP. V. Sed quomodo justitiam diligere poteris, si non primò legum scientiam quibus ipsa cognoscatur, utcunque apprehenderis. IN this Chapter, the Chancellor presents the key to this invaluable Cabinet of Justice, in which all the Wealth of Heaven and Earth lodges; and though he has before me, and I, in all humility, after this great example, have been bold to write of it, what to rude and loose minds may seem superfluous; yet on so noble and necessary a head, containing under it all virtue, especially in a Prince, as he has not sparingly invited me to proceed; so shall I not abruptly, and with disrespect to so superior a precedent and command, desist, but further ampliate the dignity of Justice, as in these words of this Chapter, introductory to its subsequents, 'tis expressed to us. Lib. De Abraham, p. 353. Lib. 1. legis Allegoria●um, p. 53. That Justice is lovely, besides those many precited Authorities, Philo's attribution to it, is notably confirming of it, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Nothing, saith he, excels justice, but it presides all other things, and adorns them all: yea, it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. a fruitful guest, cherishing the soul in all conditions. But how to come at Justice, to know, and love, and possess her, is that which the Chancellor most drives at, to inform the Prince of, and to enamour him with. This he resolves to be the knowledge of the Laws, as the Repertory and Mine of Justice, In the case of the Postnatis. wherein God has manifested himself to Mankind. Hopperus, a very learned Counsellor to the King of Spain, an Author, for the knowledge and use of whom, I owe the first discovery to the Lord Chancellor Ellesmore, Lib. 1. De Vera Jurisprud. tit. 20. though the fuller, to my very learned and worthy friend Mr. Langford, a Bencher of Grays-Inn, a notable Contemplatour of this Author. I say, Hopperus calls the Law, summam divinae mentis rationem, & vocem cum bonitate & potentiâ conjunctam, quae posita in Republ. jubet ea, quae facienda sunt, & prohibet contraria, ut exhausta injustitiâ justitiâ particeps efficiatur: Accord to which computation, all Laws are essentially the same, as they came from one God, but differ gradually, as they came to be revealed, or as the subjects they respect, are various. By reason of the latitude whereof, and the denomination of things just and unjust, according to the varieties of Laws, there was a necessity that the wisest of men, should both at first make them, and after expound, and administer them. And good reason, the best and bravest of men, should have to do with Laws; since they are the Standards of Justice, and the Rules of Conscience, in matters civil, and nor mala per se, both to Kings and People; and upon this ground, not made by advice of raw and hotheaded youth, those, of old assistebant curiae foribus, & concilii publici spectatores, Budaeus in Pandect p. 54. edit. 1521. so●. Parte primâ, De Excellentia hominis, c. 59 p. 172. antequam, consortes erant, as Tacitus teaches us, but as Justice was specificated by nine several Laws, the divine Law, the Law of Nature, of Nations, of the Church, the Civil Law, Customary Law, the Law of Honesty, Necessity, Positivity, as Phavorinus has noted it, and according to all these things are determined just; so the Justicers of these Laws had need have great abilities to know and apply their Judgements to the severalities of them, and their emergencies. The consideration of which, in the consequence of it, has dictated to men, prudently to acquiesce in the judgements of learned and well-parted men, as the competentest distributers of Justice to the rest of the World, who being better qualified to act, yet are less exact in matters of design and decision than they: So that the great work of enablement to Legislation, for which Fabius and Sabinus were called the Cato's; Domitius Ulpian, and julius Paulus, the two Poles Vertices Legum; Pomponius the Oracle skilled, usque ad finibriam & extrema scientiarum; Papinian juris Asylum, the Prince of Law, and Refuge of distress: I say, that which proclaimed these so useful in their times, was the universal Science they had of right and wrong, good and evil, and the Catholic disquisition that they had made of the usages and apprehensions of Nations, and men concerning them. This they termed Knowledge, the door to practic Justice, and wisdom of action: So Epictetus, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. first Knowledge enters into man, than her sister's Fortitude and justice.. In Cebetis Tabula, p. 43. For as in the World, the first Creature was Light; so in man, the initial virtue is Knowledge, which is not barely the use of Reason, but a distinct and applicative apposite use of it to persons and things. For by this method, doth God in nature carry man to improvement and action; by his speculative Intellect he understands good; by his practical Intellect affects it; by his reason, he discerns between good and evil; by his freedom of will he chooses, by his will consents, by his wit finds out mediums to his end, and by a close of all, comes to the mark he aims at. Quod sensus percipit, imaginatio representat, cogitatio format, ingenium investigat: ratio judicat, memoria servat, intelligentia approhendit, contemplationèmque adducit, scientia est. Parte primâ c. 59 p. 172. So that as Phavorinus marshals them; that which Sense perceives, Imagination represents, Cogitation forms, the Wit searches out, Reason judges of, Memory retains, and the Understanding apprehends, and is brought on by contemplation, that is said to be Knowledge: So that the knowledge of the Law, that the Chancellor ushers in here, is not knowledge of comprehension, which the Greeks call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; for that, though some Orators use promiscuously with apprehendere; Lib. 2. c. 5.10. yet Quintilian discriminates, Latior comprehensio, says he. For so to know the Law, and Justice from it, is impossible for man, unnecessary for a Prince; comprehension in this sense being bonum patriae non viae, peculiar Dei & deisicorum, non hominum, according to that of Saint Paul, We know but in part. But knowledge of apprehension is that quae ad mensuram refertur, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 'Tis to see as far into a Millstone, as the opacity and compactness of the body will suffer, and our optic vigour can pierce to. This mediocrity, in our knowledge of the Law, is that which the Chancellor puts the Prince upon attaining: For although deep speculations become Professors of Arts, who live and thrive by the fame and gain of their procedures therein, yet to men who study for delight, and to know how to regulate themselves to God, and to others, lesser proportions of criticalness and profundity will serve: yea, it sometimes falls out by God's judgement on curiosity, that our sin, in searching beyond our tether, brings us to arrive at aversation from God the chief God, and enmity against his Image in his adorers, and to be made up of ill ingredients, as Porphyry was; of whom Holstenius professes, he can give no other reason of his hatred of Christianity, De Vita & Scripti●. Porphyrii, c. 6. and that madness, that he vented against it, quam quod animus atrae bilis fermento turgens, & nimia eruditionis copia inflatus, semet ipsum non caperet, ita & hujus exemplo patuit, mundi sapientiam insipientiam esse apud deum. So that the apprehenderis here, is a term of restraint, wherein the prescriber limits the universality of his counsel, the Prince he would have to know the Law, because it's the Rule of Justice, and that the Crown of Government, and that the Earthly Paradise of Kings: But this knowledge he would have modest and moderate, true for the nature, but not ambitious of ultimacy, to know ultra quod non, to boast and brave with, but as the Stoic advices, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. to show ourselves bettered by it; men that are intent upon, and act according to reason, and are not acted by transports, and giddy fanaticismes, which makes much of what is little, and most of what is nothing, but folly and madness. Dicit namque Philosophus quòd nihil amatum nisi cognitum. This the Text adds, to make knowledge of the Law, more to be affected by the Prince, because 'tis the means of loves both admission and perfection. For as there is no desire of that we know not, so no degree of desire of it and love to it, further or other, than the knowledge of it is in us. 'Tis true good is the object of love; but because good, is not to us good, but as known and apprehended so by us: therefore the Philosopher first, and our Chancellor next from him, tells us, nihil amatum nisi cognitum, Aenead. 3. lib. 5. p. 5. which brings to my thought the wisdom of Plotinus, in making love the consequence of knowledge, to be descended from the two extremes of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 indigence, and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 affluence, to show, that it is the mean between their excesses, Amor cum ex pulchro ama●● quasi ex patre & ex pulchri cognitione unà cum ejus absentia in amante conspecta quasi ex matre ducat originem. Phàvorinus, lib. De excel. hom. Parte prima, c. 7. p. 38. Lib. 6. p. 299. and compounds want and abundance, to make a conjunct content; for as if it were all good, and wanted nothing, 'twould not look abroad in the power of a communicative effect: so if it were wholly void of good, and clogged with misery, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, it would never endeavour after good. The power and providence of God is then notable, in so dexterously composing things, that as knowledge occasions love, so love improveth knowledge; since as that we love we inquire into; so that we inquire into we love: so says experience from reason by the Philosopher here quoted, Dicit námque Philosophus. This Philosophe here is Aristotle, the Master of Alexander the Great, called here so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, because no less a Conqueror of Art and Nature, than his Pupil was of People and Country's: as the one did reduce all to his power by puissant Armies, laying level all opposition against him, and making the inaccessableness of their situation and obstruction plain before him, that every one might see Alexander a Conqueror, who chalked out his quarters every where, and had no more to do then veni, vidi, vici: so the other, in his subtle Philosophy, and laborious History of Nature, did denude those secrecies that before him were not known, and made men after him a fair access to the most cryptique, and obstruse Veins and Mines of intellectual riches; which the learned World finding, attribute to him more than mortal Eulogies, and prefer him in their Doxologies beyond any that is mere man. I know the Greeks had high value of Socrates, and Pythagoras; the Indians of Apollonius Tyanaeus; the Poets of Hercules and Tully, taking this rise from the interpretation of the Oracle, which from the Bees sitting on Plato's lips, when but in swaddling clouts, presaged his incomparable Eloquence; 1. D● Divinitat. Lib. 2. Denat. Deorum. though I say Tully admire Plato so far, that he terms him, Deus Philosophorum, Deus ille noster Plato, as he wrote to his friend, Princeps ingenii & doctrinae, Cic. Quint. fratri. lib. 1. Exagitator omnium rhetorum in Orat. 2.4. though he calls Plato gravissimus; Cic. Attico. lib. 4. 85. Vossius Hist. Graec. lib. 1. p. 15. Cel. Rhodig. 1. Antiq c. 22. Dugardus in sappl. ad Vigers Idiotism. Graec. Livy Impress. hom. 1647. p. 387. yet Aristotle will carry the name of the Philosopher, a name given him for his eminency in knowledge, for which the Ancients gave names of honour according to their peculiar merits; Bion they call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Rhetorician; Arrianus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the lover of truth, Atheneus, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Wiseman at Meals; Strabo 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Geographer; Dyonisius: 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Describer; Stephanus Bizautinus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Writer of Nations and Customs; julian 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Apostate; Hermogenes Rhetor, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the writer of the state of causes; Herodian Grammaticus, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Artist; Chaeroboscus, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Country Artist; Charon, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Ferryman, etc. Yea, in our own Nation, it has, and is used thus, Bede was called the venerable, Halensis the accurate, Scotus the subtle, Bradwardine the profound, Ockham the invincible, Hooker the judicious. All which names were given them, not ad excitandam invidiam, sed ad perpetuandam memoriam of their incomparable respective merits. In like manner, as the Holy Ghost does affix reproaches on evil men, 1 King. 14.16. 1 King. 21.26. Math. 26. as on jeroboam, he who made Israel to sin, & malo exemplo, & malo, praecepto; and Ahab, he who sold himself to do wickedness, ex malo proposito, & in malum finem, and judas, he that was called Iscariot the Traitor, because he sold his Master, Malo genio, & pro malo lucro; and commends the virtues of good men, by terms of Diginity, as Abraham, the Father of the faithful; Noah, the Preacher of Righteousness, Moses, the Lawgiver, and friend of God; Job the patientest man; David, the man after God's own heart; Solomon, the wisest of men; Paul, the Apostle of the Gentiles; John the Divine. So other profane Authors, in the like cases, have done, and by so doing, as they have stained and battooned the Coat-Armour of divers Hector's in villainy and Heresy, so have they adorned with all possible Trophies of virtue the memories and names of others. Amongst whom, our Aristotle the Philosopher, is not the least nor last to be placed; to make good which Verdict, a Jury of Authors, good men and true, shall be produced to confirm this Title on him, not so much in the name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, for all Authors allow that to him, but in the merit so to be called. Porphyrius says, Devita Pythagorae p. 205. Incertus Author de vita Pythagorae e Photio. p. 210. the Pythagoreans did account Aristotle a Collector from, and a Resiner of Pythagoras his Discoveries and Doctrine, as he was the tenth eminent person from him, after Plato the ninth: and this must argue him, as both judicious to be able to do it, so notably benefited in Science by so doing. Plato gives so large a testimony of him, in calling him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Reader of all Authors, that he almost deifies him, and makes him to Books by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, what Saint Paul asserts God to men in his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Quintilian knows not, Lib. 10. Instit. Orator. p. 156. (though he himself be, of Orators one of the first three) what to write worthy him, Quid Aristotelem, etc. What shall I say of Aristotle, whom I know not whence mostly to commend, for knowledge of things and Books beyond measure, sweetness of expression, In vita Aristot. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Lacitius in vita edit. Causabon. Lib. de virtute & fort. Alexandri. acuteness of invention, and variety of all Learning. Ammonius records of him, that in Philosophy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, he exceeded the proportions of man, having gone through the exact course of that study. And what could Laertius say more than he does of him, when he publishes him the great Master of Arts, and sums up his Works to 445290 Verses. Plutarch ascribes much of Alexander's Victory to the parts that Aristotle's institution raised and enlarged in him. In Trismegist Pymand. lib. 1. c. 4. p. 36. Averro (as I find him in Rosselius) accounting him a Prodogie, and Blazing Star of knowledge, breaks out into these words, Laudemus deum qui seperavit hunc unum ab aliis, etc. Let us give thanks to God, that has separated this one he to a perfect knowledge of all things, having appropriated wisdom to him, whom he calls the Father of Philosophy, Historia Natur. lib. 8. c. 16. & lib. 18. c. 34. 4 Academic. In Orat. 3. 2 De Oratore. and Master of Method. Pliny publishes him, vir summus in omni doctrina; which is as much as if he had said, He had read whatever was written, and digested into use whatever he had read. Tully extols him as the flumen orationis aureum, etc. the Golden Sea of Speech, most admirable, and abundantly knowing. Yea, so far exceeds himself, that he positively avers Aristoteles is the He, Lib. de Brevitate vitae. whom I most admire. Seneca grants him, the Captain of all good Arts, making Theophrastus his famous Disciple beloved by him. Vossius calls him Magnus Aristoteles, Lib. 4. c. 9 De Historicis Graecis. non Philosophus modo summus, etc. not only a great Philosopher, but a Patron to History and Poetry. In Epist. ant● Opera. Causabon protests him, summum (bone Deus) virum, etc. the most excellent man, the Eagle of Philosophy. In Epist. Brulat●o Cancellatio Gal. Duval compares Aristotle's Works, and so him, to the Purple Vest, which Alcisthenes had to the Wonder end; for which Dyonisius the elder gave one hundred and twenty Talents; adding, nihil hìc vile videas, nihil abjectum, etc. omnia pulchra, honesta, optima, praestantissima. In Pandect. priores. Edit. Basil. p. 198. And Budaeus says as much as they all in those words, Is author qui res omnes ratione, etc. He is the man who rationally, and in a way of Science, treats of all things; yea, even of those things, which without him, would hardly have held capable of such treatment. Well then might Aristotle be called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, though he had, as Aldrovandus, Gassendus, and even Plutarch himself make good, sundry mistakes, as no man is without them (no not his Correctors) though after him incomparable Authors, since he not only showed the way to all after ingenuity, but even made it so facile, that not to exceed him, In Apologia, p. 79. (which is not ever the happiness, though the possibility of after discoveries, is a piece of nonproficiency,) as Picus Mirandula has at large discoursed. This I the rather here touch upon, because the passions of men have been so keen and virulent upon account of this Author; some crying him up as the only he, panè post Deos Deus, and making his Philosophy, and all of him, so far divine, that to vary from him in a tittle, has been by them censured of folly, and to oppose and decline him, Vossins' c●ntra Des Chartem in Censura Novae Philosophiae. condemned for a kind of Sacrilege. Others so servently acted against him, that they thought no envy truculent enough to his person, no severity too tart for his Writings. As when he lived, he was fain to peragrate, to avoid the fury of destruction in his own Country, every Mom●s carping at him, and bedirting his name with their mordacious Libels, till at last he made the Proverb good, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; for his learning made him welcome abroad, whom it could not render quiet at home; which shows the benefit of breeding, whereby men support themselves under the vicissitudes of fortunes, which Nero comforted himself with, when he was foretell by the Mathematicians, Sueton in Nerone. that he should be deprived of his Empire; and Dyonis●us of Syracuse, found his only refuge, when his Tyranny left him, to take up the Trade of teaching Arts and Music. I say, as Aristotle had these ruffles alive, so since has he been coursely dealt with by passionate men, and the storms of their servours impelled by interess. The whole Parisian College, in Anno 1229. decreed his Books to be burned, Rigordus in Vita Philippi August ad Annum 1229. Campanella. Nè quis eos de catero scribere aut leg●re praesumerst. vel quocunque modo habere. as ill Doctrine to men, and Blasphemy against God. And Philo long ago, though he debacchates not against him, yet speaks with an indifferency, which amounts to a reproach, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Lib. quòd mundus sit incorruptibilis, p. 940. etc. Aristotle, saith he, whom I know not how piously and sound learned, says so. All which tells us, that envy attends great parts, as many have to their sorrow found it; and further more shall. And therefore, though great parts are seldom so kept in, but time and actions evidence them: so do they often make their havers unhappy; some in making them feared, and packed abroad, lest, as Eclipses to Favourites, they should darken them, that would be all that lustre and favour can make them, or putting them upon such thristless searches, as waste fortune, and reduce them to need. So far are men from admiring and loving, what God has made conspicuous, as was this Philosopher Aristotle, Lib. 3. c. 17. in Astrol. who had consummatam scientiam rerum omnium, as Mirandula makes good against the Astrologers, that their eye is evil, because his has been good. So much of this Philosophus in our Text. Now of what he wrote, Nihil amatum nisi cognitum. Analytic prior. lib. 1. ad initium. This Position, in terminis, as here, is not from aught I can find in the Philosopher, but the sense, and very near the words of it, is in him, in these words, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. that is, all Learning, and Discipline in Art, is from antecedent knowledge, which is so necessary, that, as without the senses, no orderly and pleasant life, if any at all, can be; Rhetor●e. lib. 2. c. 4. Aenead. ●. lib. 5. p. 291. so neither without knowledge can life of love be. Hence the Philosopher makes society, familiarity, and alliance, furtherances and progresses to love, and the height of it friendship. Plotinus confirms Aristotle; for he calls love to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. an implanted apprehension, Comment in Plotin lib. 9 Ennead. 3. p. 355. notion and cognation, on which his Commentator observes, Actus quidem intellectus omnino immobilis est, actus imaginationis omnino mobilis, actus denique rationis est mixtus, neque potest anima esse congruum universi mediam nisi tria hec inse possideret, And Plato calling love Eros, and Plotinus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 having its substance from vision, seems to conclude love a matter of knowledge: for though it be true, that love may not know, neither that which is most lovely, nor all, that is lovely in the Object it loves, yet it is also true, that where ever any degree of love is, there is some knowledge introductory to, and obsignative of it; for love moves from the understanding to its termination in the will, and before the act of the will, Lege Rosselium in Pymand lib. 2. c. 2. p. 67. & ●. ●. there is no liberty in the intellect; so that when, what the understanding presents, the will complyes with, then love warms itself in the affections, and thence communicates itself to the object of it, and the object of love being good, and good being the object of knowledge, it follows, that as whatsoever we desire to know, we love to obtain, so what we obtain by knowledge, we love, as good: and nothing can be the object of love, but what is so made by the prospect of knowleeg, which God confirms by several Texts in holy Writ, when he promises that all his shall know him, from the least to the greatest, and what then, they shall know him as the means to their trust in him, which is the perfectest act of love, They that know thy name, will put their trust in thee. And our Lord intended this in the order of those words, If ye know these things, blessed are ye, if ye do them. Quare Fabius Orator ait, quòd faelices essent artes si de illis soli Artifices judicarent. This sentence of Quintilians is some what like that of Plato's, which Marcus Antoninus had almost always in his mouth florere Civitates, Julius Capitolinus in vita Antonini. etc. That Cities flourished when either Philosophers ruled them, or they that ruled them, were Philosophers. Now this Fabius was Fabius Quintilian, (son to Fabius Causidicus, Grandson to the Quintilian Declamator, Lib. 6. divisionum. which Seneca makes his Contemporary, and the renowned tutor to Caelius, and honourably mentioned by Martial, Quintiliane vagae moderator summae juventae Gloria Romanae Quintiliane togae. To Rome's youth learnings law Quintilian gave, Their long Robe by his glory became brave. yea, not only famous in Rome for notable defence of causes viuâ voce, but evidencing a Magistry in that faculty by his institutions of Oratory, and his Declamations which to this day are of great esteem and authority, and that so upon the account not only of parts but virtue, if he practised what he wrote; for besides, that he began his twelfth Book with a Chapter entitled, Non posse Oratorem esse, nisi virum bonum; backing his assertion with nervous reasons, Lib. 12. Instit. Orat. c. 1. concluding Mutos ●ascere, & egore omni ratione satiùs fuisset, quam providentiae munera in mutuam perniciem convertere; all good Authors do give him Characters not contrary to the merit of such virtue and learning: Trebellius Pollio publishes him Declamatorem Generis humani acutissimum; In Posthumio Jun. lib. 5. Ep. 10. Sidonius Apollinaris mentions acrimoniam Quintiliani, others term him Romanae eloquentiae Censor, Coriphaeus Oratorum, Dempster. Lib. 3. de Finib. Criticorum omnium 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Optimus decendi artifex, Orator, eximius ac necessarius. Now this Fabius is not called Rhetor (as those were, qui artem Oratoriam profitentur, & dicendi praeceptatradunt, as Tully's words are; for these, though by some made equivalent to Orators, I take a form below them) but Orator of the rank of those whom Tully describes, Orator est vir bonus dicendi peritus, qui in causis publicis, 1. De Orator. 2. De Legib. & privatis, plenâ & perfectâ utitur Eloquentiâ; such as were not only Advocates at home but Ambassadors abroad, Faederum, pacis, belli, induciarum Oratores, of these Seneca in his 40, and 100 Epistle writes notably. Thus much of our Fabius Orator who, now of what he wrote here quoted, Faelices essent artes si de illis soli judicarent artifices: by arts he means that which Sipontinus defines esse facultatem quae praeceptis quibu●dam ac regalis continetur, Tully makes it constare ex multis animi conceptionibus; 4. Academi. 450 4. De Finib. indeed when all is said, it is but reason of practice and observation followed by diligence which comes to be dux certior quam natura. As all ingenious inventions are termed arts, so have arts attributions from Authors suitable to the variety and diversity of such Inventions, Quintilian. lib. ●. c. 7 c. 17. there is Imperatoria ars, armorum ars, Medentium ars, Magica ars, Palaestrica ars, every thing that is what it is, ex cognition & comprehensione rerum, 3. De Finibus. Tully allows art. Now whereas he says, Faelices essent arts, he means as much as fortunate & succedentes: Pro Fontcio. 1 De Divinat. 165. so Virgil 3. Aeneid. Vivite faelices quibus est fortuna peracta: so Tully, ad casum fortunámque faelix vir; so quoth bonum, faustum, faelix, fortunatúmque esset, praefabantur rebus omnibus agendis antiqui, his meaning is, 'twould be a gaudy time, and arts would be undoubtedly prosperous, if only they which had art, were Judges of art. Si de illis soli judicarent artifices, that is, if only men of Judgement in arts might judge of arts, for though I know any man is counted an Artificer, who exercises an art, Lib. 2. ●. 14.4. yet as to this sense of Quintilian, that is required to be taken in, which he says, artifex est qui percipit artem: and so Festus, Artifices dicti quòd scientiam suam per, actus exerceant, sive quòd aptè opera inter se arctent, so Plin. lib. 22. c. 24. 1. De Orator. Quantò magis hos Anacharsis deno●âsset imprudentes de prudentibus judicantes quam immusicos de musicis. Tertullianus Apol. c. 1. So that Artifices here are men of proficiency, Masters; so Tully calls exact men, dicendi artifices & doctores, and suavitatis artifex consuetudo, and morbi artifex, and generally every Excellency is called artifice; from whence I gather, our Text-Master thought arts then only well dealt with, when they were not concluded before heard, nor judged by injudicious men, but had a legal and rational trial per pares. Which if it were, arts would not hear so ill as they do, some reproach them as the roads to ruin; breed up a man ingeniously, and a beggar by all means he must be; that is the prattle of ignorance 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Eras. Adag. Chil. 1. Cent. 7. p. ●82. etc. Art is to men the Port of misfortune: and julius Graecinus found it so, whom the Historian writes to be a Senator of great eloquence and wisdom in ordering public affairs, but he adds iísque virtutibus iram Caii Caesaris meritus. Indeed many brave men find it so through the occult providence of God, Lib. 1. Metaphy. and the manifest envy of men, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Ignorance make a fortune where knowledge only discovers art, this is the lot of scientifiquenesse often, but not always; many multitudes of men have by learning and arts, come to riches, honour, what not? when they have been so happy to be understood aright, and lived in an age and place, where arts were acceptable and fairly valued; for which Virgil was not only by Augustus, who therefore was his munificent Patron, but also by the great wits of ages, Lib. 1. Saturnal. Macrobius long ago gave a noble testimony of him, Est tam scientiâ profundus quam amaenus ingenio, miranda est hujus Poëtae, & circa nostra, & circa externa sacra doctrina, non potest intelligi profunditas Maronis sine divini, & humani juris scientia; Lib. 17. so Pliny terms him solertissimarum aurium solertissimus blanditor; Cerda, Donatus and Servius are not behind, but above all Scaliger, Resplendent gemma in ejus carmine; Sealig. lib. 5. d● Virgilio. compovit mellita, & nectarea; addit tot venustates quot verba; Inest in eo phrasis regia & ipsius Apollinis ore digna, sic puto loqui deorum proceres in caelestibus conciliis, non si ipse Jupiter Poëta sit, meliùs loquatur; these encouragements do the learned give learning by the values of them. And hence comes it to pass that learning is so necessary for a man in power. For learning in a man of power and place makes him unprejudiced, and clears his Eyesight to an Eagle-eyed clarity, it distinguishes between Subjects and accidents, between what learning does, and what the man in which learning is, does; and when it condemns the man, it justifies his art; hence comes Quintilian to account arts happy, if Artists only judged of them: because, they will not only value them as they are, but not undervalue them for some adjunct defects; Protogenes valued one plain line of Apelles, and the foam, or any minute and unbeautified particle of Picture from Zeuxis, or any he that does pingere aternitatem. Or one sentence of Masculine wit boldly and bravely worded, shall have more Commendation from a knowing and accomplished Master, than all the Hecatombs and Pyramids of rodomontadoed Impertenances, which are Darlings to the plebs, shall have: whereas others judge of arts as blind men do of colours, hab-nab, hit or miss, no matter whether, crying up as the superstitious Athenians did, a false god; nay inscribing an Altar to the unknown God, when they decry the true one only God; so they advancing trite, vain vile, artless art, decry real and regular art, reversing the Escutcheon of rectitude, and making that vile which is excellent, as Polaemon the Grammarian did by Marcus Varro, Petrus Crinitus lib. 9 c. 10. De honesta discipl. the most learned of the Romans, whom he called Porcus, when he was the Jewel of his age; and the Jews did by our Lord, whom they made a Devil, and a friend of Publicans and sinners, and the Ethniques, did by the Christians, whom they proclaimed disturbers of Governments, and flagitious, when none were more holy, humble and submiss than they; I say while men and things are thus misjudged, and the keen edge of ill will, or the blunt of ignorance is turned to them in their judgement of them, no Halcyon days of art can be hoped for. But when God reduces things to rights, and puts men of art in place and power, than arts are like to thrive, quia judicantur ab artificibus, as the Poét said of that Pope, Excoluit doctos, doctior ipse prius. And therefore that reproof of Tully is very appositely to be brought in here, 1. Tusc. Quaest Hic quidem quamuìs eruditus sit sicut est, haec Magistro concedat Aristoteli cavere ipse doceat, benè enim illo Proverbio Graecorum praecipitur, quam quisque nôrit artem, in ea se exerceat: Lib. 8. De. pnosophist. for since that of the Harper in Athenaeus, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, every man is the properest judge of his own harp; learning and arts are never properly judged, nor to the proportion of their merits, till they be judged by Artists. Ignotum vero non solum non amari, sed & sperni solet, quo Poëta quidem sic ait, omnia quae nescit, dicet spernenda Colonus. If knowledge be the window that lets in love, ignorance is the nuisance that annoys and obscures the light and lustre of it, for it does not only cause an inexpression of love, but an expression of hatred its contrary, since hatred of good arises from ignorance of it; for did we know good to be what it is, we would love it as we ought, which caused the Philosopher not only to light a Candle at noon day, to seek a wise man in the multitude; but profess that if virtue could be denuded, so that men could see her pulchritude, they would be impatient to be absent from her, and to be in any condition without her. Indeed it is a part of the penal pravity of our natures to be ignorant of the life of God, and without him in our understandings, and while we continue in this obccecation, as God is not in all our thoughts, so is nothing more the study of our corruption then to set light by his Counsel, Commands, Rule, Spirits, Son, all that has his Impress on it, and the reason is only from our ignorance of God, he is not in all our thoughts, and hereupon not before our eyes, but instead of loving him as the most excellent, (which knowledge of him would represent and perfectly assure to us) we postpone him to all objects we prefer before him in love as we apprehend above him by our Knowledge; and so the rule is in all things, so far they are loved and despised, as they are more or less known by us. Every thing says Solomon, has a season in which it is most gay, and in every man, and creature there is a pleasure and grandeur which with the contraries of them are appropriate to them, Plutarch. lib. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. said the Moralist, the horse delights in his traces, the Ox becomes his Yoke, the Dolphin pleaseth himself to pass by the Ship under sail, and to see men his darlings aboard them; the Boar loves hunting and the prey of it; the Dog is eager on his sport according to the scent of his kind: Athenaeus dipnosophist. lib. 8. and so amongst men, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. The Coulter pleases the Swain as well as the Sceptre the Prince; and the sword as highly accomplishes as the Soldier thinks, as the book does the Scholar him, so much is the love of man tethered to himself, and so does he philautize his own feature and the objects of his pompous Fancy, that he is apt to make that his Canton, which Seneca lays down, Tantùm sapienti sua quantùm Deo omnis aet as patet, est aliquod quò sapiens antecedat Deum, Epist. 53. on which Muretus writes, Impia & intollerabilis arrogantia Stoicorum, quò non satìs esse docebant sapientem suum cum Deo ex aequo componere, nisi etiam anteponerent, and justly, for the excess of his pride ought he to be condemned, who thus raises a Scalade against the Knowledge of God and the humbling effects of it. Which alas to their just grief, if they had eyes to see and hearts to mourn for it, not only the best of men are subject to, but even the basest; not almost he, that is hardly worthy to be followed with the dogs of a wise man's flock, but abounds in conceit of himself; not only Alexander will be a God, julius Caesar make a Marriage between Heaven and earth in his power over both, Octavian reduce the metal of Rome to a Vassalage under him, beginning to dare the Senate at twenty years of age, and keeping Roisters about him, who shall nose the Senators, and tell them pointing to their Swords, Sueton. in Octav. c. 26. Hic faciet si vos non feceritis, No wonder, though these Monsters in Manhood Leviathan like, swallowing up all thought of God, Mali malorum daemonum & fictores & Sacerdotes & cultores, Raro simul hominibus & bona fortuna & bona mens datur. Liv. lib. 30. as the Father terms them, are so hotheaded, but to find the foex and tail of Mankind thus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, to smell of pride, that's somewhat strange; yet most true, so it follows, Quo dicipoëta quidam, Omnia quae nescit dicit spernenda colonus. This is a Verse out of some of the Poet Minors, the sense of it is, That even the reasonlessest of men, who are but one degree on this side Beasts, have yet the sensuality, or senselessness rather, to contemn what they know not; which made Maro, the Socrates of Poets, say, O fortunatos nimium cives bona si sua norint, Agricolas. 1 Georg. O fortunate the Country Swain, Though his life be a life of pain. Accounting them happy in that Country serenity, which their life of exemption from trouble gives them: though God knows, stupid souls that they are, they are seldom thankful, or contented with what they have. This only they excel in, that they can judge as well of utile and dulce, as any men, and make as little use of it, beyond rude huffs, Adag 5. Cent. 3. Chil. 3. and high-shooe insolence, in which sense the Adage is verified of them, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 proud and ignorant; not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, conspicuous and illustrious in acts of hospitality and kindness; but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, whom their happiness affects not, because they understand it not. This makes them think themselves the best of the pack of men that live in Kingdoms, because they know not wherein by men of more exact breeding and parts, they are outgone. 2. De Oratore. Cic. 3. De Nat. deorum. What this Colonus is, needs little explication; properly it imported cultor agrorum, a husbandman, whom Tully gives Epithets of Optimus, parcissimus, modestissimus, frugalissimus; and as it imported a Citizen of Rome sent abroad to plant, and obliged to live according to the Roman Laws, In Asin. 7. so had it also a note of depreciation on it, and differed a little from a slave: to which Plautus alludes, when he scoffingly speaks of Colonus catenarum, for one held in prison. And Tully, when he would turn men to the most barbarous Masters of reason, Pro C●cinna. Lib. De verborum signific. p. 490. bids us, à colono rationes accipere. Concerning these, the Digest speaks much; and Alciate on the 227th Law. Our Law also, because they are men of narrowest reason, and lowest breeding decryes them all offices of note; no man of this rank can be Justice of Peace, Knight, High Sheriff, or Member to Parliament. Yet these men having skill in Country affairs, and being ignorant of any thing beyond the Plough, and the Utensils of Husbandry, contemn Books and Arts, as useless and unnecessary. Et non coloni solùm vox hae est, sed & doctorum peritissimorum quoque virorum. Which he adds, in confirmation of the rule he gave, that nothing is beloved further than 'tis known: for not only the vulgar sort of men, who covet no accomplishments besides how to dig, delve, sow, reap, hedge, ditch, whistle, and tend horses; yet are in love with their employments, because they know them, and are only intellectual proficients in them, but even artly men value Art upon no other grounds; for as their knowledge is of, so their addiction to, and affection for them, is. For though it be common to all men, to know the common notions of night and day, black and white, which perhaps gave rise to the Proverb, Adag. 98. I'll 1. Cent. 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, yet to search into the abscondita of things, and thence to report the nature of them, where men and things do as the Sepia, or Cottle-fish do, to prevent its being surprised, send forth a quantity of black blood, which so thickens the water, that its white body cannot be seen: to which Athenaeus alludes, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 O'er her fair body she can draw a Cloud, Then lose her takers, and her own life shroud. And Catallus describes Caesar, notwithstanding all his disguises, Nil nimium studeo Caesar tibi velle placere, Nec scire utrum sis, albus an after homo. I nothing study much, not Caesar thee, Whether th' art white or black, is nought to me. This, I say, to do, must proceed from knowledge, and is called art in him that knows how thus to demean himself. Hence Tully makes Rubrius Cassinas', who took one that was little of eminency in appearance, and made him his Heir, and thereupon minds him of his love to him; 2. Philip. Te is quem nunquam vidisti, fecit haeredem, & quidem vide quàmte amar it is qui albus atérve fueris ignorans, fratris filium praeteriit. I say, Tully not only in that remembers the person so favoured to be mindful of, and thankful for it, but censures Rubrius, as more doting by passion then directed by judgement, as doctissimi and peritissimi hear aught to be. For Tully has matched these Epithets together, to set forth the double nature of art, both in speculation and action. Doctissimi theoria, peritissimi praxi; for unless they both go together, they make no fair show to perform the excellent end of right judgement, and to fix love upon the foundation of Arts known, and thence delighted in. Nam si ad Philosophum naturalem, qui in Mathematica nunquam studet, Metaphisicus dicat, quòd scientia sua considerat res separatas ab omni materia, & motu secundum esse, & secundum rationem, vel Mathematicus dicat, quòd sua scientia consideratres conjunctas materiae, & motui secundùm esse, sed seperatas secundum rationem, ambos hos licet Philosophos, Philosophus ille naturalis, qui nunquam novit res aliquas seperatas à materia, & motu essentia vel ratione, spernet, corúmque scientias licet sua scientia nobiliores ipse deridebit, non alia ductus causa, nisi quia corum sententias ipse penitus ignorat. Here the Chancellor instances in Philosophers, the wisest and learnedest of men, as dissenting and detracting from one another, as the parts of Philosophy, which they are particularly versed in, and bend to prosecute, are divers from each other in the object of their Science, Tullius. 1. Offic. and the reason of them. For since Philosophy is the study of wisdom, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Aristot. lib. De. 6 Mundo prasat. ad Alexand. A Study of divine and admirable Mystery: And Philosophers are not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, men of prate and discourse, versed in no good and profitable method of art, having heads swollen with vapour and ostentation, but men that the wholly give up themselves to contemplation and disquisition of nature, as Philo at large discourses, Lib. De Vita Contemplativa, pag. 890. since they are Asaphs, men that do wisely ruminate, Cum sapientes propriè vocemus eos qui sublimia quadam, & a vulgi captu remota intelligunt, Quomodo Anaxagoram, Thalotem, Democritum, Sapientes nominavit antiquitas, certè qui adeae per quirenda o●▪ study incumbunt, quae qui tenent, sapientes habentur, two propriè dicendi sunt Philosophari, Muretus, innotis ad primum Natur. Quest. Senecae. p. 842. and perpend what they do. This considered, (as heretofore in the Notes on the fourth Chapter, has been larglyer written of) invests Philosophers with great respects, and expects them men of much reason, and therefore probable to be exact and scrupulous. Now these Philosophers our Text calls by three several names, as they intent three distinct parts of Philosophy; the natural Philosopher; the Metaphysitian; the Mathematician: all which, says our Text, have principles so different each from other, that as the one may be ignorant in, so obstinate against the principles and practices of the other; and that from this ground, that every one reduces Art to his own Standard, and will have all that is not what he knows and loves, false and useless. Here now I might ravel out into a large field, and discourse of Philosophers and Philosophy to an infinity of needless trouble to myself, and my Reader: but I shall study more thrift of time, and compose my discourse to those modest limits, and soft touches, as best suit with a Commentator that intends profit and delight to his Reader. Certainly Philosophy is a most excellent gift of God, and ornament of man; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Lib. De Mundi Opificio, p. 11. Aenead. 1. Lib. 3. p. 20. Parte prima, De excel. Homi. c. 59 p. 173. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lib. De Specialibus legibus, pag. 806. Philo says it's the chief ingredient into man's prerogative, above the other works of God's hand; and Plotinus calls men learned in it, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, prepared to fly high even to Heaven, in the power of their mental endowments thereby, which was the reason, that Architas said a Philosopher was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and Homer styles him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as one, habilis ad omnes disciplinas, according to Phavorinus, which should mind him that professes it, to live as one that has his mind divinely endowed, and called upon to all exemplary and practical virtue, which Philo makes so peculiarly the part of a Philosopher, as nothing more is: For as it is not bags but money; nor deeds but lands, nor books but knowledge, to make use of them; nor numbers of men, but discipline and courage, that declares a man rich, learned, fortunate, victorious; so is it not the notion, but practice of Philosophy, that derives on men the honour of being true Philosophers. This was the cause Plato was wont to say, Julius Capitolinus in Antonino. p. 148. Edit. Sylb. and M. Antoninus repeat from him that saying, Then City's flourish, when Philosophers govern them, or when they that govern them are governed by Philosophers; which the Ancients were so zealous in, that Seneca answers us, Antiqua Philosophia nihil aliud quam facienda & vitanda praecepit, etc. The ancient pristine Philosophy consisted only in rules of doing good, and eschewing evil, and then Philosophers were most excellent plain men; but when they came to be so critically learned, as afterwards they became, Epist. 95. all sincerity took leave, and learning was judged rather to consist in subtiliy then virtue, in wrangling wit, rather than in a good life. So he. And hence it is, that whereas virtue was the study of Philosophers, and their heats and passions were lulled asleep in the pursuit of her. Now since she has been deserted, and her professors have pretended, rather than practised Philosophy, she hath degenerated into cavil and contest about words and forms. In notis ad Senec. ludum. p. 936. Rhenanus hath learnedly collected a large Catalogue of dissents amongst Philosophers, which argues only the disproportion of Mortals apprehension, and the vehement chollers that they are upon interesses of fame and fury expressive of, vitia●es not the reputation of art, for that still remains sacrum quoddam & venerabile, Epictetus' apud A. Gellium. lib. 17. c. 19 as Seneca terms it. Ep. 56. Vitae lex, Ep. 95. Ultimum instrumentum & additamentum, Ep. 17. inexpugnabilis murus quem fortuna multis machinis lacessitam non transit. Ep. 83. Omnibus praeferenda artibus, rebusque. Ep. 29. and the Philosophers, not being defective to themselves, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, &c high talkers of, while little livers to virtue, make not themselves a reproach, but rather recover their antique reputation by such severities, as may eliminate all vice, and stop the mouth of all detraction. Lib. 2. De Ira. 14. So Seneca's rule is, Sapient omnia quae debet sine ullius malae rei ministerio efficiet, nihilque admiscebit cujus modum solicitus observet. Which premised, the divisions of Philosophy into parts, is rather a matter of method and order, than any thing else; and since it is the contemplation of wisdom, in preparation for action, can have no variety in it, but what is gradual, and has a sense of ministration to the consecution of the noble end of it, to wit, how to know to do. Whereunto, because the several Atoms and minute Particles (making the mass and bulk) with the variety of their use, and operation in ascent to the culmen of it, is to be considered, Anead. 1. lib. 3. p. 21. which perhaps is somewhat towards that which Plotinus lays down, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. the understanding gives perspicuous principles, which done, the soul compounds couples, and distributes them, till they come to perfect understanding. I crave leave therefore not so much to cherish and confirm debate of words, and variety of expression, as to write somewhat useful to the practical Philosophy, to which the speculative is but ducent. For to little purpose is all knowledge of essences, and abstracted notions, if they refine not the reason, and brighten it to a perfect oriency in a life of exemplary virtue. In Prologo art. 2. p. 57 In Sententias. Aureolus ingenuously casts the Sciences, which is Philosophy, into this model: the first three he calls Scientiae Sermocinales Sciences of Speech; Grammar, Logic, Rhetoric. To speak properly and according to use, subtly and according to rule, floridly to the height of captation and eloquence, either in prose or verse. The second three he calls purely sensible and experimental, Natural, Moral, Medicinal. To know the nature the virtues, vices of things, and the adjuments to rectitude, and the restoration of declensions from it. Two purely Mathematical, Arithmetic, and Geometry, which instruct the use of Numbers, Weights, and Measures. Three medious between the Mathematics and experimental Sciences, Astrology, Harmony, Perspective; one merely intellectual metaphysics. Thus that Golden Wit. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Lib. De Agricult. p. 189. Nor is Philo the jew much, if at all behind him, who compares Philosophy to a gallant Plantation: the Physics answers trees and plants, the Moral fruits, the Rational to hedges and bounds; now (says he) as the fences and hedges secures the fruits, so the rational Philosophy is the defence of the Moral and Natural. From both which I collect, that God has made a harmony in art, the preservation of which is the life of Science; there is then no difference in Philosophy, but what arises by accident, and either pride, or wilful mistake of men: For as the Fly does as well set forth the majesty and power of God in this production, as the Elephant; so in the least principle of service, the bounty and wisdom of God is patefied, as well as in the greatest. The natural Philosopher he searches into the nature of compound things, Aristot. Auscult' lib. 2. c. 2. p. 329 Volume. primo. Phavorinus. part● prima, cap. 95. p. 171. Vives in censura operum Aristotelis, tit. Metaphisic. Basil. 1542. and their Revolutions, Elements, Generation, Corruption, Meteors, Minerals, tendency of Beasts, Vegetables, and all their species; the Metaphysitian he understands indeed substance, accidents all sensible beings, yet separate from matter, the Mathematician he makes disquisition of those things which he can make good the reason of, by demonstration obvious and plain to the sense; but Metaphysics, being the contemplation of divine and abstract beings, that is of things separate from matter and form, is the foundation of all other things, not the Mathematics excepted; yea, and all these improving (to that we call practical Philosophy) makes up Budaeus his complete character of a Philosopher, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Metaphys. lib. 1. c. 1. ad initium. Is qui studeat omnium rerum, etc. He that studies to know the nature of all things divine and humane with the causes of them, and applies his knowledge, to produce a life of virtue and reason, suitable to such knowledge, In Pandect. priores, p. 13. he deserves worthy to be counted a Philosopher, are his words full of weight and worth. Order then is to be kept in Sciences, which will best be done by love to them, founded upon knowledge of them; for whence come heats but upon ignorance, on the assailants part, and zeal of knowledge on the Defendants: the composure of which will best be brought about by their unanimity, to credit study with practice. For when all is done that art can witness to, and woe the world by to love her; if it leave the man that has it like Barlaam the Monk, whom the Historian makes a rare Critic in Euclid, Aristotle, Plato, but vitiating all this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, by filling a peaceable Church with discord and cavils, Contacuzenus Hist. lib. 2. c. 39 fire-balls thrown about by his wit. Better I say, know nothing, then thus to know any thing: better to know a little usefully, then much to no other end; but to dishonour God, and disturb men. As then there must be knowledge in Science to make men value them, so where there is not, there will be contempt of them, which their followers not enduring, proceeds to enmity at last between them; yea, and if the learned side get the Victory by argument, yet if they have not a strenuity of practice to consort with their learning, well they may obtain of men flashes of fame, but real and true Victors they will not be. Philo elegantly reason's this with the learned man in these words, Lib. De ho●inum mutatione. p. 1055. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. What reason, says he, hast thou, O man, to consider the nature of Heavenly bodies, and vault up into the knowledge of things beyond thy reach: What sensuality hast thou by this skill purged out of thee? What mastery over desires and passions obtained? art thou more divine, and less carnal by this then thou wast? if not, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. as Trees signify nothing, if they be barren, and bear no fruit; so the knowledge of nature amounts to nothing, if it advance not virtue in us. From all which, argued upon occasion of our Texts instance of Arts so far, and no farther loved then known, the conclusion is, that knowledge is the key to love, and all the fruits of it. And where it truly and soberly is, does not heighten passion, but trims and polishes it to a serious purpose, that is, to magnify God, accord with men, and exemplify virtue in a daily practice of it; which well executed, will evidence to men, that God has made a connection of Sciences, and that where any truly is, there are such degrees of universality, Caelius Calcagninus nepoti suo. Quaestionum, lib. 2. as make men civil to those Arts they are not Masters of, and rude Dictator's in nothing that is cryptique and mutable: so true is that of Calcagninus, Ità juncta & copulata sunt inter se naturâ, ùt sine piaculo disjungi non possunt; nam sicut. in corpore humano nihil frustrà positum est, quod ad suum opus est institutum, caterisque partibus respondeat, ut non sine pernicie avelli possit, ità disciplina, id est, humanae vitae membra inter se connexa sunt, ut seorsim positae mancae & mutiles sunt, nemo ergo Phisica sine Logicis, nemo Logica sine Mathematicis, nemo omnia sine orationis praesidio assequatur. Though therefore, there may be upon various degrees of apprehension, more or less proportions of zeal and indifferency towards Arts, and the Rules of them, according to the measure of men's expending of themselves upon them; yet will there ever be in true Philosophers such a moderation, as keeps from the deridebit of our Text. For though our Chancellor phrases thus the effect of ignorance and disaffection, yet does he uses this Hyperbole, rather to make his Arguments more weighty, then to affirm the very specifique effect of them to be derision. For that, importing scorn, argues enmity, and superb prevalency in the soul against the principles of wisdom, which calm and soften it. now a wise and virtuous man will rather pity, and pray for men's reductions from errors prejudices and mistakes, then contemn and reproach them for such their defects and alloys. Fictus amor oculorum nitet in lumine, sapit in ore, mulc●t in aure, ridet in fancy, placet in cute, intus autem est venenum Sardinium quod nimirum quos peremit, risu perire facit, Cyrillus lib. 1. Apolog. Moralis. c. 19 And hence is it seen, that those that are the merry mad Satirists of Ages, whose wits run to waste in pasquillous invectives, and mordacities, Lucian-like, sprout into such prodigious excesses of folly, that they need no Hell more than the vanity of their own actions procures them; while every calm mind acquiesces in the serious study of himself, and in the charitable opinion of others, whom because he knows not erroneous from pertinacy, In Apolog. per Platone. he uncharitably censures not to be abominated; so that though wise men may with Plato smile, yea and laugh, which Bessarion says he never did; yet do they not do it with levity, so as to reproach their internal gravity, or to injure their brother in nature, whom they are bound by the Laws of civility, to preserve in his reputation, Adag. 39 Cent. 6 Chil. 2. as to that vanity they are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, neither 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that laughter which makes men quake till they tickle again; which Philostratus renders by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, latè diductógue ore ridere, which we call, to laugh out, and is ascribed to fools and madmen, nor that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which the profuse effeminate Greeks were overtaken with in their feasts of lubricity and compotation: Cent. 5. Chil. 1. p. 215 nor that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, when men laugh deceitfully, and from a heart enraged and malicious, which Eudemus understands the meaning of that phrase 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, thou lookest down upon me, In collectaneis dictionum Rhetoric. and deridest me. I say none of these laughters are good and grave men subject to, because this is not only to profane the gravity of their own minds, but to reproach God, who having made nothing in vain, abhors the contempt of any work of his hands. Deridere atque contemnere, lib. 3. De Oratore Cic. And therefore, though men of learning and charity may disapprove what some other say and write, from the better apprehension they have of things, than those who attend them not perhaps have; yet still will they abstain from that which the Text says, is the too common consequent of different Judgements to deride. Ipsos deridebit. Sic & tu Princeps Legis Angliae peritum miraberis, si dicat quod frater, fratri ne quaquam uterino non succedet in haereditate paternae, sed potius haereditas illa, sorori integri sanguinis sui descendet, aut capitali domino feodi accidet, ut escaeta sua; cum causam legis hujus tu ignoras, in lege tamen Angliae doctum hujus cusus difficultas nullatenus perturbat; quare & unlgariter dicitur, quod ars non habet inimicum praeter ignorantem. This Clause was that for which the foregoing was instanced in; for the Chancellor intending instigation of the Prince to the study of the Law, as before he had enforced it from the excellency of the Law, as the guide to Justice, which Justice he proposes as the desert of fame, and the foundation of duration in Government: so now does he in this Clause show how impossible it is to love what we know not, and to be zealous for that, which our Conviction of the excellency and use of it, does not excite us to. And this, as he does rhetorically, by presenting the worst effect of ignorance, opposition, and that with vehemence of whatever is unknown to, and unbeloved by us, so does he discover the dreadful effect of that prepossession by deridere, a carriage of contempt and vilipendency. And this he tells the Prince, if he knows not the Law, he will make appear by his personal demeanour to men of Law, whom thereby he will disoblige and discourage. To prevent which, he inculcates his counsel of him to the study of the Law, which alone can make him love it, because acquaiut him with, and sit him for the execution of it. The great consequence of which wise men foreseeing, do so direct Princes in their education, that next the knowledge of God, they prefer the instruction of them in the Laws of their Polities above all other parts of breeding, as that which mightily relieus them in all the exigencies of Government, and shows them the Prescript of serenity, if any there be in those heights of honour and sublimation, which Charles the 5. assured his Son he never found in them; and thereupon in the Session at Brussels, when he resigned up the Government to Philip the second his Son, he thus spoke to him, Compatlor tibi, mi fili, etc. I pity thee my Son, on whise shoulders, by my resignation of my Crown and Government to thee, I put a very weighty burden; for in all the years that I possessed it, I enjoyed not a minute's time of ease and joy, free from cares and fears. So that the Chancellour's application to the Prince in the precedent clause, being confirmative of nihil amatum nisi cognitum, points at some inconveniencies; which unskil'dness in the Law will devolve on him. First, the Municipe Law, which is obvious and clear, Angliae perito & in lege Angliae docto, will be strange to him. Secondly, he will be to seek of the Law and reason of that, which as King he must defend, and according to which, by his Judges in his Courts, he must determine in cases of the half and whole blood. Thirdly, he will not know whether estates go, if they have no legal Inheritor, and the owner of them dies, sine haerede sanguinis. Fourthly, he will be grieved, when he sees the ill effects of them, which are only avoided, and the trouble of them waded through by knowledge of mind. Fifthly, a Prince will know, that if ignorance does so incommodate him and his affairs, and art so promote and beautify them, in pure Justice this art and knowledge, where by such advantages are acquired, aught to be promoted and valued, since ars non habet inimicum praeter ignorantem. First, As all arts are obvious to Artists, so is it in the Laws, they are plain peritis, & in legibus doctis, such the Chancellor calls not those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, who are all for prate and noise, 1. De Oratore. Litium strepitu gaudentes; but such as p●nè omnia profitentur, men versed in all points of Law, in no portion of its necessary Knowledge defective, rerum divinarum, humanarúmque notione, justi atque injustique scientia instructi, according to Ulpian; I mean not, nor do I think our Chancellor did mean such an Attainment of Knowledge, as is to a perfection so properly called; for so no man is capable of Knowledge, the perfect God is only thus perfect, In Legem 139. ad Legem Juliam & Papiam p. 319. lib. de verborum signifis. but such a perfection as is haveable, cum factum est, illud quod fieri inter partes convenit, qui ità consummavit scientiam, ut jam in usu esse possit, as Alciat note is, such as enables a man to give counsel and direction, what to do in every case, and a judgement, in cases determined and adjudged. This is the sense of peritus & doctus in legibus, Peritus coming from an old Verb perio, or (according to Nonius) aperio, as if one peritus had not only opened the way, but gone through the path of learning; some have made these two words nothing discrepant, Itaque quum si docti, à peritis facilè desistunt sententia 3. Offic. 19 Pro Fronteio 14. but Tully has given peritus the cast beyond doctus, for doctus a man may be in point of reading, and the wisdom of the mind, who is not peritus, for that implies doctus and a faculty to set it forth to the utmost advantage, which we call a dexterity; so Tully mentions, Sapiens homo, & multarum rerum peritus, and he commends Aelius as one, antiquitatis, veterúmque scriptorum literatè peritus, so a good Orator is called dicendi peritus; De Clar. Oratoribus 108. Quintil●●● 1. c. ●. Virgil. 10. Eclog. 3. Offic. 79. Varro 1. de R● Rustica. c. 2. a good Soldier, peritissimus homo belligerandi; a good teacher of youth, docendi peritus; a good Musician at the voice, cantare peritus; one that defines things well, definiendi peritus; yea a Husbandman, that is thoroughly versed in culture, perisissimus de Agricultura: all which are Excellencies of action, and demonstrative Skills: so here [peritis] intends the Masters of them so well versed in Law cases, that not only the present Age wherein they that thus excel, live; but after-Ages by their writing conclude them learned, and for that cause reverence them. Secondly, To these then, though the case may be clear, that the Brother of the half blood, shall not succeed to his Brother, but rather the Sister of the whole blood; yet to a man, that knows not the Law, 'twill be strange. Hereupon, if the King knows not the Law, he will be ignorant of the reason of the Law; which is this, The Brother of the half blood shall not inherit, because, he not being of the complete blood, is not a complete heir: Lib. 4. p. 279. B. & lib. 2. p. 65. 1. Instit. lib. 1. Fee-simple. p. 14. so Bracton says, the Law ever was, that an Heir must have sanguinem duplicatum; and Fleta lib. 6. c. 1. de propinquitate haeredum, so Littleton sect. 6. and so is my Lord Cook's opinion on him, not only, Quòd linea recta praefertur transversali, but because the whole blood is, pluis digne de sank, and the general allowed Law of England, Propinquior excludit propinquum, propinquus remotum, remotus remotiorem. Reg. I●ris. Thirdly, Nor will a Prince without Knowledge (in some degree) of the Law, know whether estates will go: if there be not fratres uterini, yet the law directs to the Sisters of the whole blood; and in this case the Law is clear, a Sister of the whole bood shall be in statu, Lib. 1. sect. 9 as a Brother, and inherit quasi he, so Littleton, and all other Authorities; the reason whereof is, because proximity of blood, takes of all defects, not only in the Crown where no Salic law is good, but in particular Estates to the injury of Sisters, whom God admitted Heirs to their Father's Estates, they having no Brothers, Numb. xxxvi. and for defect of these Heirs, either of the body, or the blood, or by will testamentary Heirs; though I know till the Statute 32 H. 8. c. 1. Lands were not devisable by will. Lands are to descend as an Escheat to the Grand Lord, either the King as the supremus Dominus & haeres; or to the Lord to whom he has granted this Benefit of his Prerogative, Cap. quod non absolvitur. as his Escheat. Escaeta a word of art, Escaetae vulgò dicuntur, (saith Ockam) qua, decedentibus his qui de rege tenent, etc. Cum non existit ratione sanguinis haeres, 1. Instit. on Littl. p. 13. ad fiscum relabuntur, these Sir Edward Cock makes to happen, aut per defectum sanguinis, aut per delictum tenentis, see more of Escheats in Fleta lib. 3. c. 10. What the Common Law calls Eschaeta, the Civil Laws I suppose names Caduca; Digest. lib. 23. Tit. 2. de ritu nuptiarum. p. 2114. Virgil. lib. 1. Georg. 10. Phil. & lib. 3. De Oratore. so Paulus, Veterem sponsam in Provincia, quam quis administrat, uxorem ducere potest. & does data, non fit Caduca. This word Caduca from cadere, they apply to all things that do casually happen, Caducas frondes, for leaves ready to fall: Caduca Haereditas is used by Tully, and juvenal. 9 satire. 9 — propter me scriberis haeres Legatum omne cupis, nec non & dulce Caducum. And that he is called Caducarius, Advers. lib. 28. c. 15. that is Heir to him, that has no Heir, Turnebus is Authority; see Brech●us ad legem 30. p. 92. lib. de verborum significatione. Fourthly, These things as they are obvious to men of parts, study, and business in the Law, so would be very troublous and hard for a Prince to understand, that wholly neglects the consideration of them; to prevent which, the Chancellor conjures the Prince to study the Law, that he may be ready in understanding of, and right judgement concerning it. And lastly, All the precedent Arguments he presses to hinder a dangerous and necessary effect of ignorance, Enmity to Art and Law: for notwithstanding all the good Offices, Knowledge of Art, and of that of the Law, doth, yet will it not carry a letterlesse mind above a barbarous hatred of that which is most beneficial; nor has ever learning been more coarsely dealt with, then from those that know it least, Ars non habet inimicum nisi ignorantem. For God having made man after his own Inage, in the Endowments of his reasonable Soul, with those Perfections in remiss Degrees which are eminently in himself, has no doubt in him, if improved to the utmost of his ingenuity, a capacity to act to the life the specifique actions of every creature under his Subjection, as Phavorinus very notably asserts: Parte primá De Excel. Hom. c. 55. p. 160. and that he does not effect great things by the illuminations of his intellect, proceeds, partly from the penal accessions of sin, which have blunted their edge, and dulled their perception; and partly from the torpor and negligence of us, who do not put forth what of the remains of our creation is yet upon us. From whence alone it is, that we are so ignorant of our duty, and so unprovided to comply with the Providences of God towards us: this makes us ignorant of and pertinacious against things, because we are at a loss concerning them, Ep. 56. Si bona fide sumus, etc. If we were in earnest, and answered the Prescript of God, we would contemn the meretricious avocations of this world, no delights of sense should interrupt our commerce with divine objects; 'tis a light wit that looks nothing inward, but is wholly swallowed up in the gaiety of externals. And in his 95. Epistle, Totum mundum (saith he) scrutor, etc. I search the whole world and give myself a liberty of delight, great things rouse me up to contemplate their transcendency, this makes me fortified against all unpleasing accidents, which I eye not as casualties, but God's designs, which I am readily to comply with, and cheerfully to follow, not as that I cannot, but will not wave, because it is the best fruit of my duty. Thus does Divine learning fit a man to deny himself, and to be free to pursue the Errand of his Maker, St. jerom tells us, that Hippias the Philosopher called by the Greeks Omniscius, was wont to glory that he made every thing about him with his own hand, Ep. ad Heliodor. while he had a knowing head, and a contented mind, his hand was able to supply him with necessaries to nature; and for humour and fantasy he had the Mastery of those; his learning had made him free from all those little states and airy Punctilios, that ignorance affects, and now he being arrived at wisdom, was by it manu-mitted: no wonder then Galen calls arts, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and Aristotle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which Budeus opposes to those, In reliquis pandectis p. 298. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, because when these deceive a man, and prove no subtersuges in want; the liberal arts are a kind of portable Mines, and Magnetequs that draw fame and fortune to them every where, which confirms that as all knowing men do love Knowledge in others and promote it, so none are Enemies to, and oppose themselves against it, but such as are ignorant; which that the Prince may not be, the Chancellor proceeds to dehort him in the subsequent words. Sed absit à te, fili Regis, ut inimiceris legibus regni, quo tu successurus es; vel, ut eas spernas quum justitiam deligere, praedicta sapientae lectio te erudiat. These words do signify some fears in the Chancellor, and those probably not groundless ones, that the Prince being young, bred abroad, and martially addicted, might be drawn by those treacherous lures of love and revenge, to decline the love of the common-Law, and admire some other Law, which had more compliance with absoluteness, and Martial rigour than our Law has: now this the grave Judge foreseeing of evil consequence, the people of England admiring nothing above their Laws, nor loving any Governor further than he rules according to them; he seriously dehorts him from, and cautions him against such humours, and that not coolly and Courtlyly, but by an amicitial vehemence, and oratorious Pathos, in which all arguments of dissuasion were couched. Absit àte, as much as if he had said, Sir, such an error in judgement and choice becomes you not, nay rather you are so to abominate, as men do Carrions, and Sacrileges, Incests and Sodomies; the Hebrews express this absit by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, quoth profane & impurae rei notionem habet, and the learned say 'tis used cum rem diram atque atrocem abominamur, Masius in Josh xxii. 29. when the Children of Reuben were charged to have built an Altar to confront God's Altar, their answer begins with this absit, God forbid that we should rebel against the Lord, and turn this day from following the Lord, c. xxii. v. 24. res prophana est, servis tuis hujusmodi facinus designare, so the Chaldee Paraphrase; absit abominantis sermo est, Estius, Erasmus, and Grotius jointly affirm, and so Saint Paul uses it, Rom. iii 4, 6, 13. vi. 2, 15. seven. 13. ix. 14. xi. 1. 1 Cor vi. 15. Gal. two. 17. iii 21. vi. 14. yea the Jews long afore Gen. xliv. 7. 1 Sam. xii. 13. xx. 2. 1 Chron. xi. 19 job. xxvii. 5. Luk. xx. 16. To the same purpose the Latins absit procul, 2 Offic. 9 so Cic. Vt illiberalitatis, avaritiaeque absit suspicio, and Martial, Absit à jocorum nostrorum simplicitate malignus interpres, so Pliny, procul à nobis, nostrisque literis absint ista: lib. 1. 29. thus 'tis in its own nature to be avoided. But absit à te, fili Regis, there's another step to the dehortation, Sir, You are Son to a King, and a pious King, who, though he suffered, yet was more than a Conqueror, your Father loved and lived in Rule according to the Laws, and he has principled you with justice, according to those Laws the Standard of it; do not slain your high blood and noble greatness by actions of meanness, let Peasants and men of low birth express lubricity and weakness by such illiberal courses as inconsist with regal Magnanimity; let the Laws (Sir) have the honour of your studying of them, that they may have the fruit of Proficiency, your love. And truly if the considerations of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 will not work with men, Quod decat, honestum est, & quod honestum est. decet. Cic. 1. Offic. what will. For since the glory and praise of every thing is from that decency, which it carries with it, and that Conformity which it expresses to the Canon of its regulation; Plaut. Deos decet opulentia. Decet me haec vestis, Plaut. Decet me his verbis fabulari, Plaut. as to fight advisedly, and with courage, commends a Soldier, to speak fluently, and with apt tones of Elevation and Cadence, a true Orator; to argue subtly and with nervosity, Exemplis grandioribus decuit ●li, Cic. 1. Divinat. an exact Logician, to distinguish critically and with Scripture clearness, a ready Casuist, to dance nimbly and with erect body, a trim Courtier; to plead boldly and with apt strains of captivation, a good Advocate; so to love the Laws from experience of the use, worth, and benefit of them, to the ends of gubernative virtue, becomes a Governor, and he that reasons not with himself from the point of honour and decency, Decentia, Convenientia quadam & pulcbritudo Cic. 2. Nat. Deod. to the Motives of his action, will never act as becomes him: this was it that made Abraham implead God's purpose against Sodom (as with reverence I write it) using a Phrase of Cogency with men, Gen. xviii. 25. when he supplicated God, Shall not the judge of all the world do right? to slay the righteous with the wicked, that be far from thee; he takes advantage from the nature of God, to plead for the actions suitable to it; God is the Judge of all the world, and Judges are to do right, now says he, far be it from the Judge of all the world to put good and bad into the same common calamity, and to reward good with evil; that's, O Lord, contrary to thy nature as just, to thy Prerogative as a Judge, the Judge; to thy eminency of all the world, to that interest in thy Justice which all men thy creatures, and the good especially, expect, To have right done; that be far from thee not to do. So joseph when he considered Potipher's confidence in him, and the reservation of his wife to his own fruitions, yea the contradiction that was between a Servant and a Paramour, and the ingratitude that his acceptance of the invitation to his Mistress' embrace employed to God and Potiphar, reasons thus, Gen xxxix. 9 Nehem. vi. two. How can I do this wickedness, so Nehemiah rescued himself from subtle inactivity, when God's cause was so concerned, by this shall such a man as I fly. Indeed all the great actions of Heroiquenesse that men do, are (next the grace of God) upon the Instigations of the congruity to do, or to forbear, which actions have with our Conditions, professions, obligations, and such like circumstances; Because Kings runned not at the Olympic games, Baffus noster videbatur mihi prosequi se, & componere, & vivere lanquam superstes sibi & fortiter serre decidium sui Senee. Epist. 30. Alexander would not; because Pompey saw his affairs lost without his Presence, he contemned the danger of his Attempt with this, necesse est ut eam non ut vivam. Because julius Caesar had the resolutions to be the Phoenix of his age, he overlooked the dread of resolute Senators, eyeing him as their Supplanter and vowing his death; and hence became he their sacrifice, who, had he observed his precautions, had evaded them; what shall I say? Non est viri timere sudorem, huc & illuc accedat, ut perfecta virtus sit, aqualitas ac. tenor nor vitae per ●mnia consonans sibi, quód non potest esse, nisi rerum scientia contingat, & arse, per quam divina & humana noscuntur. Seneca Ep. 31. Nimirum existimo praserendum non in virture trajanum, non Antoninum in clementia, non in gravitate Nervam, non in gubernando arario Vespasianum, etc. Trebellius Follio in Victorino. Seneca makes this an argument beyond most, when he advises to debate with a man's own heart, when proclive to sin, Major sum, & ad majora genitus, quam ut mancipium sim carnis meae; which had Victorinus the fifth of the thirty Tyrants done, he would not have left that one Record to his blemish that he has: julius Aterianus sets him forth as the Deputy in France after Posthumus, and second to none in the office: not to Trajan in virtue, not to Antonine in clemency, not to Nerva in Gravity, not to Vespasian in ordering his Treasury, not to Pertinax, or Severus in martialling his Military course of life; but all the glory, and same of these virtues, his libidinous desire and use of women defamed; so that no Historian durst applaud his virtues, so stained by his vices. And therefore no wonder though our Chancellor brings in this (fili Regis) to back his absit; so did the Mother of King Lemuel do to him: Trov. xxxi. c. It is not for Kings O Lemuel, it is not for Kings to drink wine, nor for Princes strong drink, lest they drink and forget the Law, and pervert the judgement of any of the afflicted. Especially when this to do, is an Inimiceris; for to be ignorant of the Law is not to love it, and not to love the Law the rule of justice, is to affect injustice, and to resolve irregularity, and that is to proclaim an enmity against the Law, and against such a Law as is the Law of your own Country, to which your Father and his Progenitors swore Observation, in the presence of the great God of Heaven, and the great men of your Nation. This is the force of the Text, Absit à te, fili Regis, ut inimiceris legibus regni tui, why? 'tis inimicari tibi, & tuis, 'tis to proclaim thyself not a Royal minded Prince, who art a Father to thy people, but a severe Lord, who wilt rule them by will, and rule over them by power: 'tis to decline the Oath in the Coronation, which wise King james said, True Law of freè Monarchies, p. 195. of his works. Is the clearest civil and fundamental Law, whereby the King's Office is properly defined, yea and the office of a Father, which by the Law of Nature (as well as Policy) the King becomes to all his Liege's at his Coronation: 'tis spernere justitiam, to think justice too trite a path to walk in, though it be the path of peace and subtlety, For certainly a King that governs not by his Law, can neither be countable to God for his administration, nor have a happy and established Reign: and a good King will not only delight to rule his Subjects by the Law, but even will conform himself in his own actions thereunto, always keeping that ground, that the health of the Commonwealth be his chief Law. Pag. 203. So wrote a King that knew how to rule, and to value the Law too, learned King james. Praedicta sapientiae lectio te erudiat. This refers not to the vulgar saying immediately before, Art hath no Enemy but ignorance; but to the passage out of the second Psalm, mentioned in the fourth Chapter, Be wise, O ye Kings, and be instructed, ye judges of the Earth, Kiss the Son, lest he be angry, and ye perish from the way. Which being the counsel of the Holy Ghost, and penned by his amanuensis, and that to the intent of pressing Justice on them (upon account of propitiating the chief Justice of quick and dead, the Son of God Christ jesus) may well be called electio sapientiae, and justly termed illos erudire; for if any prudence be by man in this militant state expressed, 'tis this, of laying up a good foundation, of labouring for the meat that perisheth not, of confirming him our friend, who is commissionated by God with all power in Heaven and Earth. And if any method be more indubitate and exquisite to this end then other, 'tis that which Justice, known, beloved, and practised, directs us how, when, and where to use, this virtue therefore as the rhapsody and accumulation of all excellency. Our Chancellor does evertouch upon, as that which is subjectum regalis curae, and without which the foundations of the Earth will be out of order. Iterum igitur, atque iterum, Princeps inclytissime, te adjuro, ut leges regni patris cui successurus, addiscas. The consequence of Justice, as our Chancellor has largely explicated in the fourth Chapter, so does he here re-intimate, by his earnest and vehement conjuration, seizing upon all that is tender and noble in him, to love and embrace Justice, treasured up in the Laws of England. And first he bespeaks him to do this, as what best becomes him, as he is Princeps inclytissimus; the first Head on a Subject's shoulders; the second in the Kingdom, because the Heir, but one degree, as was supposed, on this side the Throne; and then he is as Inclytissimus, one that was for endowment of mind as conspicuous, as for external accomplishment acclamated; for so Inclytus (of which Inclytissimus is the superlative) signifies in its bare positive notion, inclytus, insignis, gloriosus, veluti fulgore quodam samae resplendens. Hence every thing of remarkable and signal eminency, is expressed by this word. Livy writing of the justice of the elder Roman times, expresses it thus, Livius I. aburts 73. Plautus in milite Virgil 6. Aeneid. 96. Inclyta justitia, religióque eâ tempestate Numa Pompilii erat, and Plautus his Inclytus apud mulieres Virgil's Armis inclytus & gloria inclyta famae; and Maenia inclyta bello. These, and such like expressions, in florid Authors, argue our Chancellor here, using the word in the highest notion of it, to intend the height of prevalence with the Prince, whom thus highly he prefers. And then the Chancellour's edge to propend the Prince to the Law, as the rule of Justice expresses itself by such rhetorical Charms as are not to be avoided, Iterum atque iterum te adjuro, a form of comprecation, which emphatizes itself in the reduplication, 2. A●neid. 3. Aeneid. Prolege Manilia. Iterum atque iterum te adjuro, a form of comprecation, which emphatizes itself in the reduplication, Iterum atque iterum, a Flower transplanted from Maro's Garden, Iterumque iterumque monebo, iterum atque iterum fragor intonat ingens, Iterum & saepius in Tully, Iterum as sapius in Pliny, lib. 10. c. 12. And then to adjure him thus multiplied thats more than usual, jurare vehementius & gravius. for it has not the sense of entreaty only, but of obligation by Oath, so swear by all that's obliging and sacred: so Terence, And. 4.2. II. 2 Philip. 36. Lorinus in 19 Actorum. v. 13. Baron. Annal. To. 4. p. 103. ad. annum Christi, ●62. per omnes tibi adjuro deos nunquam eam me deserturum: so Tully, Adjurásque idte invito me non esse facturum. This adjuro the Exorcists in Act. nineteen. 13. used to the evil spirit, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, say they to the evil spirit, which Lorinus says, was a constant adjuration of the devil by certain words, in the elder Ages fewer, after consisting of more, s the devil grew more impudent, and adhesive to his possession. Now, though in some Authors, Orators, and others, adjuro signifies no more than juro; yet in the Scripture and Ecclesiastical use, it implies obtestationem ac reverentiam divini numinis, reique cujuspiam sacrae, and is not used only by good men, to persuade to do, or not to do; but also by unclean spirits, to set their delusion more firm on them that heat it. Thus the evil spirit that came out of the man, Mark 5.7. uses the word, I adjure thee by God, that thou torment me not. For as the Apostles, and primitive Worthies, did cast out evil spirits by miraculous power indulged them for the Church's honour, and Religion's prevalence, against the Heathen Superstition; so has the devil in the World, prophani circulatores & agrytae, Gualtperius. In. 19 Actorum, v. 13. such as the seven Sons of Sceva were, to delude them by into the blindness of error, and under the power of Satan to hold them: which tie he possessed the World to be so sacred, that vengeance attended the violation of it, which made Orpheus of old mention 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, I adjure thee by Heaven, as somewhat sacramental in its intendment. Add to this, Vt leges regni patris tui addiscas, and then there is as much of suasion, as wit and love can allure by. For what can bear rule more with a Son then the precedent practice approbation of his Father, and since Henry the sixth had the Laws of England for his guide, and appreciated the knowledge of them, as the means to value and love Justice commended by them, what can be more probable to prevail with his Son to love and allow them, than the consideration of his Fathers doing, which when he follows and improves, he does what addiscas imports, and what the Text thereby presents him; for addiscere is addere ad quae didiceris; and so Tully writes it, 1 De Oratore 32. Quid quòd etiam addiscunt aliquid, ut Solonem in versibus gloriantem vidimus, quise quotidiè addiscentem senem fieri dicit. Nè dum ut inconvenientias has tu evites, sed quia meus humana qua naturaliter bonum appetit, & nihil potest appetere nisi sub ratione boni, mox ut per dictrinam bonum apprehendere gandet, & illud amat, ac quanto deinceps illud plus recordatur tanto amplius delectatur in eodem. This Clause has indeed the marrow of all persuasion in it; for it not only acquaints the Prince with what is fit for him to learn from the Law concerning Justice, as it is therein prescribed; but it presents him with solid Reasons, why in love to himself, and in reason resulting from it, the Law (ars aequi & boni) ought to be known, and delighted in by him. Ea debent in historia poni ab Historiographis. qua aut sugienda sint aut sequenda Julius Capitolin. in Gordian. Tr. p. 238. edit. Sylb. Cic. lib. 1, office 23. 2 De Nat. Deorum 78. And these Reasons are privative, and positive. There are inconveniencies, that a Prince by knowledge of the Law shall avoid, and there are advantages to be acquired; for by knowledge love is gained, and by love delight in, and joy at the prevalence of the Law over injury and disorder. This is the sum of this Clause. And indeed what can be prescribed to a Prince's accomplishment, which this method leads not to: For as to attain conveniencies, is to possess one's self of virtue; so to avoid inconveniencies, is to shun all the diversions from it, and from the comfort of its enjoyment. As than convenientia is an Oratour's word for fitness and aptitude of any thing to our purpose, and that in a measure of proportion between extremes, as wholesome and nutritive diet is called convenient food by Agur, and a house suitable to one's degree and family, a convenient house, and a fortune proportionable to a man's charge and breeding, a convenient fortune, and a wind to fill out the sails, yet not endanger the Mast, a convenient wind; so is inconvenientia the opposite thereto, betokening exaberance, and somewhat uncomely redundant: which flaw in the Crystal, or rather Adamant of Princes, Vide Heresbachium, lib. De Educandis Principum liberis. much abates them. For as in Architecture, the essential beauties of building are delight, firmness, convenience; so in the formation of Prince's minds, and in the building of them up to their after glory, no delight in, no firmness of their esteem, except there be a proportionation of their loves and natures to the Nation they preside over. The best help to which is, the knowledge of Laws, for they rightly understood and conformed to, take away wholly, or at least lessen inconveniencies in Government; so that the rule of Law, Quod est inconveniens aut contra rationem non est permissum in lege, reduces inconveniencies of disproportion to the Law, as the firstborn of Reason, the King is caput regui & legum; for an inconvenience it would be, that the Head should be thought incapable to direct, judge, and order, what is to be done, both regally and judicially. The King is, though a Child, plevae aetatis; it would be inconvenient that his Council should not supply his corporal inabilities, during his personal nonage. The King can do no wrong, because he judges in curia, by Judges, and not in camera by his Will, and it would be inconvenient, it otherwise should be. These, and such like inconveniencies, being publico malo, and injurious to the complete and indefectuous being of Majesty, the Law supplies, by directing how they shall either not wholly be, or be wholly compensated for. Thus as men stop up an inconvenient light, and fill an inconvenient Pond, and repair an inconvenient way, and improve an inconvenient house, and change an inconvenient air, and avoid inconvenient company and diet; so does a wise Prince by the Law judge of what is inconvenient in Government, and either wholly abrogate, or mutilate and new form it to an improvement; and hereby does he avoid the inconveniencies of either real vilipendency, (for in that he discerns by the Law evil from good, he vindicates his knowledge of, and affection to the means of such his judiciousness) or reputed negligence, which being so great a fear to him, will best be disowned by his acceptation of the Laws for his rule to govern by. For he that governs men rationally by Laws, and justly by the Laws of their own Government; doth not only intra se vivere & addiscendo leges sapere, but appeals to God for protection and success in his Government, and cannot easily fall into the paroxisms and distempers, which extrajudicial courses occasion, and in which Princes and people are unhappy. For a sure rule it is, vim facit qui patitur, Princes that either abate their Subjects of their rights, or suffer themselves to be abated (by their Subjects) of their Royal Rights, are accessary to the inconveniencies that follow them, and by so much the less know they the Law, as they permit the invasion and breach of it, either in themselves, or others. The Chancellor than that counsels, quomodo tu● evites has inconvenientias, is well to be listened to; for as the counsel is grave in the conception and mind of the giver, so is it generous wise and affectionate in its tendency and scope, which is gravem & securum reddere principem, dum modum rectè evitandi inconvenientias, & realis & suppositiae ignorantis legis addiscit. For since the mind of man will be busy in some disquisitive activity, and natural desires are to nothing but what is either really and in very deed good, or else semblably, and in appearance such, which is the reason, the Schools say, finis & bonum convertuntur, the Chancellor does wisely and worthily, to bespeak the Prince's youth to adhere to the Law, as his choice and pleasure, and to expect no good as a man, and a King, but such as that informs him of, prepares him for, and only will render useful to him; as Antoninus Pius found it, who by the Historian is charactered to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. An honest upright private man, but signally, and to a greater degree, honest and upright, when made public. For no sooner was he in the Throne; but he grew the admiration of all; terrible he was to none, bountiful to all; moderate in using power, a preserver of just men to rule under him. Learning then in the Law must not only enter the Prince in the love, but confirm and establish him in such love, to a delight in, O praeclara informatio doctrina rum munere cale sti indulta felicibus quae vel vittosas naruras sape excolusti. Ammianus Marcellinus, lib. 29 p. 483. in Valentiliano & Valente. and a resolution of prelating the Law above all. For else, as in a calm, the ship moves not though all the sails be out; and in the midst of dainties, there is yet want where there is no stomach; so in the love of the Law, there will be but remissness, if knowledge and valuation of its use, enhance not its appreciation, valuation is the daughter of discovery and Science, and so far do we esteem, as we understand: therefore all the ports of Science are to be set open, that love and delight may enter at them; yea, and daily increase, as the knowledge of them increaseth. For so it follows in the words. Quo doceris quod si leges praedictas quas jam ignoras; intellexeris per doctrinam, cum optimae illa sint, amabis eas, & quanto plus easdem ment pertractaveris, delectabiliùs tu frueris. This the Chancellor subjoins by way of application, for having reasoned before with him, that knowledge causes love, and love desires to enjoy, and enjoyment fixeth delight, and crowns it with a non ultra of felicity, he deduces this from it, That the Laws of England being the measure and Mistress of her Governors' happiness, not to know them, is not to know how and whereby to be happy: And therefore he advises him once and again, not only to content himself only to know there is a Law, and to appoint men of Learning to judge in Courts of Law according to the Law, and to see that right be done to all, as well poor as rich, and to punish them that do contrary; though this, I say, be a rare Princely virtue: yet is not this the very specifique virtue, he persuades the Prince hereto; which is intelligere leges per doctrinam, that is, to dig for the wisdom of them, as for hidden treasure: to knock early, often, and loud at Wisdoms gate; to gain by search, and sweat, the language, terms, books, sense, and reason of the Laws, and in search after this to be exact and studious; not to follow Pompey who in his wars was effeminate, In castris Pompeii videre licuit triclinia strata, Magnum argenti pondus expositum, recentibus cespitibus tabernacula constrata, as Ammianus Marcellinus reports: that is, not to think an hour or two enough for study, and then perhaps when the mind is overcharged with other thoughts: but to follow that course in study, which julian did in the wars, Hist. bell. Civil. lib. 25. in Juliano stans interdum more militiae cibum brevem, vilémque sumere visebatur; according to the Laws of learning to keep close to the book, and to admit no interruption, till somewhat toward the Helm of art be gained, this once obtained, and the Laws and our Reasons kindly cohabiting our Minds, than they will be loved as good, materially formally finally good, since all their Precepts are ordinated to the bonum suprà, intrà, infrà, circà, to God, man, ourselves, and all the things that relate to them. Nam omne, quod amatur, trahit amatorem suum in naturam ejus; unde ùt dicit Philosophus, usus altera fit natura. These words give the reason of the former from the mouth of Nature by the hand of her Secretary Aristotle, whose position is, that love is of a transforming quality, making the lover become so much what it loves, that he rather lives where he loves, Tuned quantum vales, Anaxarchum non ranges, tuned quantum voles, opinionem non mutabis; nihil Anaxarchus bonum esse credidit, quod animi non esset, nihil malum quod ad animum non pertineret. than where he lives; which is the reason, that of all the effects of love that's mentioned by Solomon, he is the most conclusive of this, Love is stronger than death; not only because it survives and evicts death, having abode in Heaven where death is not, Heinsius in Orat. de Stoica Philosophia annexa Senec. p. 48. ad●sine●● but chiefly because death can but part the bodies, which by union of souls were combined in a fierce and firm resolvedness of willing, nilling, joying, fearing, delighting, abhorring, choosing, refusing, embracing, avoiding; but it cannot by its terror cause those latent similarities to be inexpressive or neglectful of keeping an unisone in touch and time: for while they continue a capacity to love, they will express the fervour and Constancy of the resolution they have to each other, and the reason is, because love is a perfect surprise and conquest which rests not in a bare Sympathy, but passes from those inchoat Novicisms to the non ultrà of Con-naturality; nor is it hard for any man or woman to be brought of to be of the same judgement, diet, delight with those they love; for in the assimilation each to other is the Continuation maintained, and the Degrees of love sublimated: there was no Key to Sampson's strength till the dallying with Dalilah delivered it to her, and taught her how to ruin him, who, but for that lubricity, had not been to be dealt with by Philistines; nor could David's warmth so have afflicted his own Soul, and blasphemed his God, (as in the case of Vriah slain and Bathsheba enjoyed) it did, but that his love was the sole Provocation to that action of Infamy. No wonder then the Philosopher attributes so much to use, as to call it as another Nature (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉,) and quotes Evenus his verses to confirm it. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. What many years' men are accustomed to, As second Nature they delight to do. This is the reason that Authors assign such Potency to use and custom, Lib. de Amicitia. 60. in Dialog. De Oratore. Epitome Dionis in Commodo. 18. p. 374. Edit. Sylburg. Orthographia per totum librum. In lib. 1. Enead. 3. p. 226. art. 3. Namsi is possit ab ca sese derepente avellere qui cum tot consuescit annos, non ●um horninem ducerem. Ancyr. 4. as amounts to a second Nature, not less effectual in her influences and ducts, than the first; Tully tells us of vetustatis & consuetudinis vis maxima; Tacitus makes in consuetudinem vertere, to be all one with in naturam. Xiphilinus reports that Comedies was what he was, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, first, by ignorance of what was good, then by ill customs, he at last arrived at sordid and effeminate manners flowing from a contaminated and debauched nature. Quintilian, Dorsquius, A Gellius, make all parts of Grammar and learning, even to Orthography, to be ruled by use; and Marsilius Ficinus on Plotinus makes good the force of use and custom as another nature; yea Terence when he expresses a man's application to a woman that pleases him, and from whom he can as soon die as part, calls it, consuescere cum aliqua. The consideration of which should turn men to right usages and customs, if they would preserve themselves virtuous, for if nature be by them altered and the course and current of it diverted, there ought to be great care that we habituate no evil to us, Scholastici. Consuetudo peccandi tollit sensum peccati, and this amongst others I conceive to be one reason, why Solomon advises to teach a Child in the trade of his youth, virtue, that when he is old, he may not depart from it; but of this Saint Jerome in his Epistle to Demetriades writes at large, and Cornelius A Lapide on Ecclus. xxx. 1. and Heresbachius de educ. Principum liberis. Pag. 133. Sic ramusculus pyristipiti pomi insertus, post quam coaluerit, trahit in naturam pyri, ut ambo deinceps meritò pyrus appellentur, fructúsque producent pyri, sic & usitatae virtus habitum generat, ut utens eâ deinde à virtute illa denominetur, quo modestiâ praeditus, usu modestus nominatur, continentiâ continens, & sapientiâ sapiens. Here the Text-Master instances the force of custom and conjunction from that, which is somewhat equivalent to it in vegetables, and has analogy in that kind with the effects of virtues and vices on the mind; for though it be true, that no general rule is exempt from an exception, and no second cause is so absolute but may be overruled by its first cause, yet is it also ordinarily true, that God leaves Nature to her work, and impedes her not but upon high Concerns, and in notable Cases: indeed there are Instances that God, contrary to all humane probability, has brought men and things into esteem and renown which have been unlikely so to be. Valerius Maximus brings in Tarqvinius Priscus in the Head of these, Lib. 3. c. 4. a man born at Corinth, and Damaratus a Hogherd his father, and a bastard to boot, yet for all this miraculously brought to Rome, and that with such multiform advantages to his greatness, that in short time, he grew the Love, Dread, and Sovereign of all degrees, and the Historian gives us such a Record of his Bravery, as eternally monuments him for a Mirror of men, Dilatavit fines Romani Imperii, etc. He enlarged the Roman Empire by brave Conquests, he honoured the Solemnities of religion with additional graces to them, he made the Senate and Orders of Knighthood more ample and capacious for great merits; and besides these the great virtue in him, was, that he so demeaned himself in his charge, that the City of Rome had no cause to repent she chose a stranger for her Emperor, and passed by her own Sons. Lib. 2. Pop. Rome Valer. Max. lib. 3. c. 4 The like doth Egnatius report of the Emperor justine, a Thracian born; and so of Mahomet: Basilius, Tullus Hostilius, Photion, Iphicrates, Viriatus, Narses, jacobus Paresotus, Mutius the Founder of the S-Forzan family, and sundry others meanly bred and born, who yet have come to great fortunes, and brought about mighty designs to the amazement of men, that beheld or read them. These things, I say, have been and yet are at the pleasure of God further to permit, but this extraordinary course is not God's frequent Method of his Manifestation to men; his usual direction to Attainments are by Industry and Assuescency of ones self to labours of the mind and body, and by that he gives men the success of facility and pleasure in that, which before they were habituated to, was difficult and displeasing; that as in Vegetables, fruits generically the same, are reconciled in their specifique difference by inserting them into one another's stock, the Cyons of a Pare or Apple being grasted on the stock each of other, and Plumbs inoculated into each other will produce the fruit of the stock and kind, into which they are let: so in the mind of men, there is a real transformation suitable to the nature of the Company men consort with, and the Objects they fix their delight upon; for use begets an habit, and habits delight in suitable activity, and such as the soul and mind of man is, such will be his delight either in good or evil, Lib. De beata vita p. 654. lib. De Tranquil. p. 620. so true is that of Seneca, Naturâ duce utendum est, have ratio observat, hanc consulit, idem est ergo beatè vivere & secundum naturam, and surely where virtue is in the soul, in quocunque habitu est, prodest, as he notably. For it is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of virtue habituated to, and radicated in man, that transforms him; naturally he is void of all good, and sets himself in a resolved hostility against whatever is divine, and may dissociate him and his rude praepossessions by vice and enmity to virtue: but when God touches the natural Conscience, and causes the beauty of virtue to irradiate, when there is one Beam of discovery let into the understanding, of a more excellent way than it has found, this causes it so to augment and dilate itself in desires and endeavours, that at last it brings in the perfect discovery of virtue, and releases men from their bondage to sins service, so that they once being accustomed to be continent, just, modest, patient, liberal, magnanimous, cannot tell how to be other, nay wonder at themselves for bruits and not men, when they were in their pristine barbarity, this was that made Seneca profess with truth, Nihil cogor, nihil patior invitus, I do not serve God being compelled, Lib. De Providentia, p. 526 f. and obey him because I must, but I am willing to be what he would have me because I ought; I know nothing is casual but certain, as to him who has laid out every occurrent of my life, so that whatever falls out is but the very effect of his disposition. O this habituation of the soul to virtue is the felicity and upshot of all acquirements, 'tis the viaticum, that supports the Journey of life, and serves us with all necessaries to our conclusion. Porphyry made it peculiar to wise men to enjoy, for while he allowed all men to die the way of all flesh, In Sententiis Holstenio interpret, p. 221. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, by a departure of their bodies from their souls, yet he restrains the departure of the soul from the body only to Philosophers, supposing them only to live chiefly in the joy of those abstracted virtues, which they contemplated in order to practice: this St. Paul meant more metaphysically than any Philosopher could understand or act it, I live, not I, Gal. two. 20. 1. Cor. ix. last v. Phil. three 8. but Christ that liveth in me: I bring down my body, I account all things loss in comparison of Christ: How so, holy Paul? the love of Christ constrained him to deny himself for him, who had called him from a Persecutor to become an Apostle. Thus prevalent was the habituation of sanctity to St. Paul, that he could deny himself in all his complacencies, and in all his transcendencies, so he might fulfil the will of his Master, whose vassal he was, and from whom he had command so to do; yea, and no further is the Philosophy of this World rational, and religiously moral, than it fixes us in this resolution of training up our minds to virtue, and choosing apt helps to advance it in us, good rules, good company, good discourse, good pleasures, that by all these, we ourselves may be good. For true is that which Apollonius Tyanaeus spoke of to the Emperor Vespasian, Philostratus in Vita ejus. lib. 2 c. 14. p. 100 My companions, said he, in Philosophy, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, keep their heads cool, and undizie, that they may see clearly what they ought to do in the course of steady virtue; nor are they ambitious to know what is not fit for them, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. they hourly, and every minute consider with themselves, what is their duty to do, and intent, they are upon it, early and late. This, this is the way, to be every way what God and Nature requires, to keep ourselves up to the precise rules of virtue and to be habitually and dispositively good, is not only the path of being, but also of doing good: By this the Elders obtained a good report; and through this, difficulties have been rendered facile, and impossibilities compossible. What makes the Nightingale out-note her fellow Choristers, in the suavity and perfection of her modulation, but her continual singing fifteen days, Plinius Hist. Nat. and fifteen nights without intermission, till she has made her notes natural to her? What makes the Sun to shine, and all things in their Elements to move with vigour and indesession; but that position of natures to such perfect actions in those spheres? And what makes Martyr's constancy not only to lie hid in a Well six whole years without seeing light, In Athanasii persecutiones universum conjuratum orbem, & commotos fuisse principes terrae; gentesetiam, regua, exercitus coiisse adversus eum, Russinu●; lib. 1. c. 18.19. as Athanasius did, but even to die all sorts of cruel death, and that with joy and exultation? but this contemplation of dying daily, this mortifying of their Earthly Members, glorying in the Cross, endeavouring to have the same mind in them that was in Christ Jesus. The habituation of themselves to those virtues of self-denial and humility, made them not only prepared for, but Proficients in, all excellent virtues. For knowing the nature and use of them, they delighted in, and at last were partakers of the plenitude of them. Thus David made the Law of God his delight, by meditating in it day and night. And thus the Law of God made David the delight of God and Man, while it made him in wisdom to excel all his teachers, and in integrity to be a man after God's own heart, and to fulfil all his will. Quare & tu Princeps, post quam justitia delectabiliter functus faeris, habitúmque legis indutus fueris, meritò denominaberis justus, cujus gratia tibi dicetur, dilexisti justitiam quo & odisti iniquitatem, propterea unxit te dominus Deus tuus oleo latitiae prae consortibus tuis regibus terrae. The former Clause was but illustrative of the force of Use and Custom; this is applicative to the Prince, in the habituation of whose mind to Justice, as the Law propounds pounds it, there will be a suitable effect: For since all Laws that are just, being extracts out of the Law of God in nature, and the positive enlargement of it as emergencies required them, are to all respective Countries, and the men in them, the measures of just and unjust; and the Law of England is such to the King and People respectively therein, his humble address to the Prince is, that the Law he would study, and by considering of, so delight in it, that his principles being Law and Justice, his practice may be also such, and so he not err in Judgement, nor cause the people to wander out of the way by his ill example, or complain of hard usage under his Government, when God should reduce him to it. This is the scope of the Chancellor, which he wisely prosecutes, by not only commending the Law as a study of delightful knowledge, the Magazine of Justice, but as that which is attainable to some kind of intellectual plenitude, I mean to such a proportion as is necessary for him: so that from knowledge of, he shall proceed to love, delight, and take a complacentiality in the Law, as the Scheme of Justice, that his mind ought to be conformed to, and thence his actions. And this once had, he concludes him not parasitically, but meritoriously just, and applies to him that of the Psalm xlv. 7. Thou hast loved righteousness, and hated iniquity; therefore God, even thine own God, hath anointed thee with the oil of gladness above thy fellows. Which the Author of the Hebrews, chap. i. 8. applies to Christ, the King of Righteousness, whom he makes super-eminently endowed with, and superlatively honoured for it, Thou hast loved Righteousness; not greatness, not victory, not riches, but righteousness, that's the darling of thy soul, that's the secret of thy Government. Thou hast not only said to Kings, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as much as Laws are not to be violated, Inter dicta Phythagorae, apud Porphyrium in vita ejus, pag. 199. because they are the exemplars of justice, the glory of Crowns; and injustice in the Soul of a Prince, is the riot of sensuality against Reason, and a warp of the less noble faculties from the Law of their conjunction with, and subserviency to the more noble: but thou hast (O Lord Jesus) to thine eternal honour and admiration, Injustitia in anima, est ig●●bilium partium à naturali lege dissidium. Tapia, lib. 9 p. 9 De Triplici bono & verâ hominis nobilitate. Grot. in Locum. loved righteousness as thy choice, thyself, bonum tuum quiae bonum te; Oh! but how does that appear ● the next words confirms it, ●disti iniquitatem, as thou lovest Justice, so thou hatest whatever is contrary to, and inconsistent with it. Thou hatest thy Sceptre which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, should be other then of pure Gold, and endure the touch of all tongues, thine enemies being Judges; thou wilt not by that oppress the weak, nor bruise the broken, but bind them up, because thy Sceptre is like thy Kingdom, which represents all righteousness, having no fellowship with iniquity. Here, O holy soul, thine eyes may see the King of Saints in his beauty, far greater than Solomon in all his Royalty, loving justice, and hating iniquity, as never man or King did, or could do before, or ever can, or shall do after him. Now also consider the compensation that the Father is mentioned to give the Son for this his love to righteousness; that follows, Wherefore God, even thy God, hath anointed thee; because thou art so qualified to rule as a King, God has called thee to Kinglyness by unction; Phil. 2. as he has given thee a name above every name, so has he preferred thee in thy unction above all unctions of men. Their unctions make their heads and hearts often ache with care, because their affairs are sometimes disastrous, and at best troublesome: their Crowns gird their Brows, and make them bend them for pain; but God hath anointed thee, O blessed jesus, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, with such oil, as cheers and incandorates thy face, (for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies the same with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, oblectumentum, ornamentum, honestamentum.) God has put such sovereign oil into the Springs of thy Rule, Psal. 110 3. Cant. 1. 4. that thy Sceptre easily turns thy Subjects to thee; Thy people are a willing people in this day of thy power, and they call unto thee to draw them, and promise to run after thee gladly and constantly, and all this above thy fellows; no Angels in Heaven, no Kings on Earth, are so anointed as the King of the Church was: For whereas their unction is but the work of art, Christ's unction was the work and spirit of God whereas theirs was but poured out in measure, Christ's was an effluxion of divine virtue without measure, whereas theirs was but temporary, as their Kingdoms are: Christ's was eternal and perpetual, as his Kinglyness is; whereas theirs was but to signify their separation and sanctification to the rule of their Subjects only, and those only during their lives, Christ's was emblematical of his indeterminable and capacious power, which was to extend to all persons, and to endure beyond all time; and therefore well expressed, Prae consortibus tuis, regibus terrae; quip qui etiam habuit potestatem, etc. For Christ the King of the Church had the prerogative above all Kings, to forgive all sins on Earth, and to have an everlasting Kingdom, as he had deserved, so to have his glory be by his purchase of it with his body on the Cross, which was an expiatory sacrifice for the sins of the World, as Manster and Clarius both on the Text. This Scripture thus applied to Christ, our Chancellor brings in here to his aid, the better to prevail upon the Prince to love the Laws, that declare the measure and proportion of English Justice: For as the end of Laws is to determine right and wrong, Brompton in Chronicis, pag. 956, 958, edit. Londini. (and the Common-Laws of England were composed and methodised so to do out of the farrago of Laws that of old were here amongst us, and which Brompton says, were nimis partiales; and therefore by Saint Edward the Confessor meliorated, Legum ministri magistratus, legum interpretes judices, legum idcirco omnes servi sumus, ut liberi esse possumus. Cic. pro Cluenti. and by all Princes added to, explained, or substracted from, as their wisdom in Counsel saw fit:) so is the exactest and unerringst method of Justice to be learned by Prince and People from these Laws; which they that addict themselves to know, will love, and in loving be just and happy in life and death. And so our grave Master, and after him, I conclude the fifth Chapter. CHAP. VI Nun tune Princeps serenissime, haec te satis concitant ad legis rudimentae, cum per eam, justitiam induere valeas quâ & appellaberis justus, ignorantiae quoque legis evitare poteris ignominiam, ac per legem faelicitate fruens, beatus esse poteris in hac vita, & demum filiali timore imbutus, qui Dei sapientia est, charitatem quae amor in deum est, imperturbatus consequeris, quâ Deo adherens per Apostoli sententiam fie s'unus spiritus cum eo. Edit. Edw. Whitchurch. HIc epilogat Cancellarius totius persuasionis suae effectus, saith the Editor of my Text in Hen. the 8. time on this Chapter: And not amiss, for having prediscoursed of the excellency of Justice, and the consequentiality of its being, and being beloved in a King, who is to distribute it according to the Law of his Government, which Law known, will be delighted in, and conformed to by him: He now comes to annex, by way of motive and assurance, the felicities that do flow in upon just Princes, and do distinguish them from others, both in life and death. And this he doth; first, by telling him, that Righteousness and Justice is so peculiarly the Garment of Kings, that they must wrap up their whole man in it, as garments cover all the body, and the Robes of Princes are long from top to toe, significative of their plenary power and augustness. In which sense, God is said to put on Righteousness as a Garment, and the Saints are said to be clothed in the garment of their elder brother, and that to render them beloved. So the Chancellor intimates to the Prince, that by knowledge of, and love to the Law, he shall be so invested with, and habituated to Justice, that it shall be his nature, and as impossible for him not to be just, as not to be in warmth motion and sense while living. Secondly, he presents him with another benefit, ignorantiae legis evitare poteris ignominiam, and that's no small one: For as ignorance is the botch and deformity of humane nature, (which God has endowed with a reasonable soul, divinae particula aurae, and made capable by the vastness of its intellect, to understand and judge of all things:) so is ignorance of the Law in a Prince, so great a deformity, as no corporal one comes near in the despicableness of it. For as he will make but an ill oration, that knows not the rules of speaking, and he but a pitiful Seaman, that skils not the use of the Compass, and he a rash Soldier, that considers not of the advantages and disadvantages, which he is to provide for in fight; and he an ill Counsellor, who has never read the Rules of Policy, nor seen the effects of them in practice, so will he prove himself but a sost and despicable Prince, who knows little or nothing at all of the Law, according to which he is sworn to govern. For as all other men's eating, sleeping, fruitions, are inbeneficial to him, if he have not health to enjoy them himself; so is the knowledge of all other things incontributive to his real quiet and effulgency; if in the Law, which is anima regiminis, he be unversed, and letterless, frustra foris strenuè si domi malè vivitur. 3. As knowledge of the Law will avoid the shame of ignorating it, so will it accrue a complication of positive goods, contributive to the comfort of life and acquirement of same after death, Per legem felicitate fruens beatus esse poter is in hac vitâ, that is, the Conscience of just governing his people, according to his Oath and his Laws, which are their Birthright, will give him such a calm and stability on his Subjects love, and such an humble confidence in God's mercy and protection, that he shall not fear the evil day that it should come on him; or if it do, he shall be assured to overcome it by magnanimity, and innocent Hectorism. And whereas guilt makes Kings succumbere, ashamed and unbold to assert themselves, the Justice of a royal soul, notably evidenced in a just Reign, shall make him that has it, more than a Conqueror in life, and nothing less than a Martyr at death; yea, it shall go near, (though not come home to the pitch of merit, for that's no proper phrase in reformed Oratory and Doctrine.) to deserve a Canonization, by the favour of him that accepts and rewards all admirable actions flowing from virtuous principles; Quomodo justitiae vindex erit, qui expoliat alios? quomodo suam amabit Remp. qui de Thesauris cogendis, dies, noctésque cogitat? quomodo rebus agendis advertet animum, quilucro totus inhiat? Nihil rectè geritur quod rei privatae studio geritur, nullum facinus generosum suscipitur absque famae existimatione. Hanc verò in pracio non habet animus vilis, abj●ctúsque avaritiae deditus. Savedra in Symbolis Politicis. yea, inasmuch as such a procedure in beneficence, must argue an intern fear of God, and a wisdom effected by it in the soul of the practiser; who therefore is such to men, his equals in nature, and his inferiors in polity and order, because Charity commands him so to be, and the love of God towards him in his prelation above others, and in him, provoking him to crown worth in all he sees it in, and to proportion his favours according to the Justice of his divine office. I say these effects of Justice, resulting from the knowledge and practice of the Law, will so exhilerate and quicken the spirits of a Prince, that he will not only be calm within, and not encumbered with the terrors of the Almighty, but be abundantly beloved by his Subjects, live in peace and plenty, die renowned and lamented, I King. iii last v. All Israel heard of the judgement which the King had judged, and they feared the King, for they saw that the wisdom of God was in him to do judgement. Yea, and be made as the Chancellor reports, from the Apostle Saint Paul, Be made one spirit with him, that is, not only submit to God, and follow him in all his Directions and Prescripts of virtue, as a good Child does, who makes his Fathers will his Law; Nemo enim Deo conjungi ullo modo potest, in cujus voluntate situm non sit, vel illius d●sciplinam, & imperium sequi, vel ingratè repudiare, cum autem beata, tota sit in divina conjunctione posita vita sequitur, ut astrictâ voluntate, nemo possit vitam beatam adipisci, but also as a fruit and consectary of that conjunctness, have a fameness of glory in Heaven, as they had a sameness of sovereignty here, always understanding the sameness secundum mensuram hominis, though secundum veritatem Dei, as true a conjunction with God in glory, as they had here in power, a reward commensurate to their actions rightly and religiously performed, sic autem fit ut justis hominibus regnum illud immortal, non solùm, ut merces, & praemium; sed etiam, ut legitimum patrimonium patris sapientia, & benignitate fondatum, optimo jure debeatur: si enim aequitatis ratio postulat, ut servis operâ suâ egregiè functis, merces domini benignitati consentanea persolvatur, si leges amicitiae praescribunt, us omnia bona sint amicis communia, si jure statutum est, ut filii legitimi in paternorum bonorum possessione collocentur, non obscurum est juris aeterni rationem flagitare, ut summus ille omnium dominus qui bonorum amicus, & pater est, vel servis diligentibus, vel amicis fidelibus, Lib. 1. De Justitia. p. 85. vel filiis charissimis sempiternae gloriae fructum largiatur, saith Orosius. Sed quia lex sine gratia ista operari nequit, tibi illam super omnia explorare necesse est, legisquoque divinae, & sacrarum scripturaram indagare scientiam, This is judiciously inserted here to abate too much recumbence on the Law, and too high admiration of Justice, as she is proposed by it, for as the beauty of the sun overdoted on, proved an argument to the Eastern world to adore it, and as the learning of Nature besotted Philosophers unreasonably to expend themselves about it, till they despised the wisdom of God and undervalved it, Rom. i 16. the power of God to Salvation, beneath their delirancies and Enthusiastic conceits, so is justice though beloved of God, and that which he commends to man as his duty and glory, apt to be mistaken as the only acquirement of study, and the lesson of the Law alone, if the Prince be not informed of the proper cause, from whence only it is blessed to be what it is; and that is God by his will in his word: indeed God permits us to own study as a means, and that by which he ordinarily begets and expatiates virtue in man: as the mind of man from what he reads or hears, has the principle of his actuation excited, so arts and study so Laws and Systems of Justice may be owned by him as great helps and methods to those excellent ends; but God endures them not partakers in the glory of success, and prevalence, which only is his, and theirs only by his permission, and so far as he pleases: so that though the Laws of men, and of England may be most just, and such as can teach the Prince how to be just actively, and that to all the proportions of Kinglynesse; yet can it not do this ex insita vi, L●ge P. Mirandul. in c. 5. Heptapli p. 10. or ratione i●natae potentiae, but must be helped to do this by grace, the gift of God: which grace and favour thus to be adjuvated, is, to be obtained by prayer; so Solomon obtained wisdom, and so every good thing is to be obtained. And to that must be added diligent Meditation of Scripture, not a light, and oscitant reading, but a deep and solid rumination, not now and then, but constantly and affectively; indagare is to seek as men do at the bottom of wells, and in blind corners, wherein, if they look not intently, they cannot find what they seek. God will have us call earnestly and seek passionately for his blessing on our endeavours, before he will give us our desires: were justice an easy lesson, did the Law infallibly make the Student of it just, there were no more to do, then to read over the Law Books, and consider the judgements in them, and then the whole attainment of justice were had. But because the Law is but (of itself) a dead Letter to this quickening Issue, therefore God will have his fiat begged by Prayers, and this Method learned from his mind revealed; and the Knowledge of these, proves ever the readiest way to the blessing of them. The Law, saith St. Paul, is holy, and just, and good Rom. seven. 12. where 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is v. 14. explained by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, utpotè à spirituali bono profecta, God indeed has intended the Law, holy, quoad ceremonialia; just, quoad judicialia; good, In locu●. quoad moralia; as St. Thomas observes: O but whatever it is, it proves not without God's blessing, that opens the Mystery, and applies the Energy of it to the understanding and will, and thence lets a man into the pleasure, and profit of it: nor is God's blessing on endeavours obtainable but according to the Enaction of his word; therein he has taught, that Prayer is the Scaladoe of heaven, and that the violent in holy devotion take it by force, Psal. ●. 15. ascendat oratio, ut descendat miseratio; he has invited his to call, and promised to hear and answer them, and our Lord bid his Disciples ask, assuring them that whatsoever they shall ask the Father in his name, Matth. xxi. 22. shall be given them: which the Psalmist in his own experience confirms so to be, as promised, The Lord heareth the righteous, and his ●ares are open unto his cry. As then to beg the blessing of God on studies, not only humane, but those of Scripture, is the way to obtain it; so is study without it as unsanctified so mostly unsuccessful, 'tis to labour for things of naught, 'tis to loose time on shadows and bubbles, sapienter descendere ad infernum; so it follows in our Text, Cum dicat sacra Scriptura, quòd vani sunt omnes in quibus non subsit scientia Dei, Sapientiae. c. 13. This sentence is true, and collectable from Texts of holy writ, but as it is a part of the Book of wisdom, Prafat. in lib. Solomonis. Eu●eb. Lib. 2. c. 17. not written by Solomon, for St. jerom says, Liber sapientiae apud Hebraeos nus quam est, verum & ipse stilus Graecam magìs eloquentiam redolet; but by Philo probably, whom the learned think so to have named it, because Christ the wisdom of God is therein set forth both in his Advent and Passion, because of which, the jews, Magdeburg. Cent. 9 c. 4. p. 111. as the Centurists tell me, wholly rejected it; this Book I say, being written by none of God's Penmen, ought not, as I humby conceive, to be accounted Caenon in the Catholic Church: though I know Lorinus and generally all the Romanists account it sacred, and part of the Canon, Praefat. in Com. in lib. Sapientiae c. 1. but our Church rejects it, and so does Chamier. lib. 5. c. De Canone. The learned Bishop of Durham, now one of the Reverend Fathers of our Church, has notably vindicated the Canon of Scripture against Apocryphal intrusions, as well as unwritten Legends, to him therefore, as matchless in that Argument, I refer my Reader, humbly protesting against all Novelty on either extreme; for though some wholly reject, and others fond extol them to a kind of rivalry with Scripture, yet our Church's moderation shall be my temper towards them, to allow them their place, as rules of Prudence, Secundae lectionis vel ordinis, Bellarminus De verbo Dei c. 4. King James to all Christian Monarches p. 303. oper. Lib. 15. De Civitate Dei, c. 23. In Catalogue. Haeres. and direction for manners; not as foundations of faith, and this I suppose, has been ever the Catholic account of them; so St. Augustine, Etsi in iis invenitur aliqua veritas, tamen propter multa falsa, nulla est Canonica authoritas; and Philastrius, Etsi legi debent morum causâ, à perfectis, non ab omnibus legi debent, quia non intelligentes multa addiderunt, & tulerunt, quae voluerunt Haeretici; and Angelom, when he gives the reason of their Reception in the Church, concludes yet, Hi à quibusdam excipiuntur, In. c. 9 & 10. 1 Regum. non proptere à ut illos approbent, sed ●a quae necessaria sunt ad confirmandum, recipiant. Though therefore most true it is, that all Knowledge that leads us not to God, Reddidit causam, quare in ea peccata de quibus suprà dixit, inciderint Aegyptii & Cànanaei, ac illorum occ●sione incipit in genere tractare de idolorum superstitione quae triplex erat; quaedam enim animalia viva cole●ant pro diis; alia ●reaturas ut elementa, & corpora caelestia; alia verò etiam imagines verarum rerum. Jansenius Annotat. in Loc. in love to, admiration of, and conformity with him, be unprofitable, and therefore vain, forasmuch as it leaves a man, short of the best good, and the only perfection, and argues his soul unactive to the immense nature of its Divinity in God's purpose of infusion; yet is not the book out of which this is quoted sacred Canon: but God having made use of the Author of that Book, as a notable Instancer of truth in that which the wisdom of the world often deceives great Scholars by, (as it did particularly that Abel Bishop of St. Andrews, spotswood's History Church Scotland. p. 44. who upon the Gate of the Cathedral there wrote, Haec mihi sunt tria Lex, Canon, Philosophia, and was wittyly replied upon, Te levant absque tria, fraus, favour, vana sophia.) There is reason there should be regard done it, next to that of Canon. His igitur Princeps, dum adolescens es, & animae tua velut tabula rasa, depinge eam, nè in futurum, ipsa figuris minoris frugi delectabilius depingatur. Here the grave Knight improves the Maxim of Philosophers, intùs existens prohibet alienum, for finding by experience the mind of man taken up with action, and youth the warmest, and most vicious part of life, (being the time from fifteen to twenty five,) carrying the man to good or evil with impetuosity, Petr. Crinit. de honesta discipl. lib. 5. c. 9 he bespeaks the Prince to anticipate vice by prepossession of his soul with virtue; and that he may the more successfully rivet on, and drive home his suasion; he not only considers the soul as the mint, and formatory of all things, which have their rise in youth, and their ripeness in age; the soul of man in its actions on the body being like the seasons of the year, loaden with sap in the spring, and blowings and leaves after, and then with knitting and increase in the youth and Midsummer of it, and then withering, and returning to its first Principle as the sap doth: but as a Virgin-Table on which there is a space to write what a man will, and hence as one that is yet a Novice in vice, and has a mind like the Galaxy pure and undebauched, he commends to him the fair Arras and Imagery of virtue to adorn himself with, and prays him if he would be one of Justice his Triarii, sub vexillis innocentiae subsidere, to keep himself unarmed, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Dionyssus Halliearnass. lib. 5. etc. that he may come to the succour of justice, when things are desperate and hope of recovering almost ceases; for as in wars and Combats the bravest Hectors are those that are so bred up from their youth, because to them courage in, and contempt of danger is a second nature, and no need there is of terrifying them by such a Law as the Megaritans had, who decreed, to fight disorderly or fly cowardly, should bedeath; their resolution being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Herodor. lib. 7. &c, not to fly any disadvantage of an enemy in battle, but either die or overcome: so are they the most just men, whose youth is accustomed to justice, and who inure themselves to love Laws, and orderly courses even from their Cradles: this was Solomon's reason in his counsel, A prima adolescentia observandis sideribus deditus Gassendus, Tom. 5. in praefat. ad vitam Tichon. Brahe. Zuniger. Theatrum vitae huma●ae, vol. 1. lib. 4. p. 94, 95. Heresbachius de Instit. Principum liberis. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Laertiu● in vita ejus. Picus Mirandul. lib. 2. c. 2. Train up a child in the trade of his youth, and he will not depart from it in his age, Prov. xxii. 6. And the experience of the necessity, and importance hereof has so swayed with wise Parents, that as they have omitted no improvements of their children, which their tenderest ages were capable of: so have they chosen the most professed Masters and Tutors, b●th in learning, prudence and piety, to instruct them, and accounted them their Benefactors and Parents, as to those fair fortunes of fame and usefulness, which those educations have fitted them for, and admitted them unto in aftertimes. For though natural ingeny give men great helps to excellency in what ever they undertake, yet the main is God's blessing upon industry and diligence, provided those be prudently directed, and that they be so, helps of exact Masters are great furtherances, nor have any men in the world proved so noble Lustres to their Orbs, as those that have had their youths well seasoned with all the varieties of complete institution, as was Laurentius Medici's, whom Mirandula thus writes of, In praemio de ente & bono ad Angel. Politianum. p. 159. Efficaci adeò vir ingenio, etc. Of so ready and generally a dexterous wit was he, that he seemed equally exact in every kind of ability, and has this admirable in him, that though he were ever taken up with state affairs, yet he always either spoke or meditated some learned and scientifique thing. And our Edward the sixth, of whom 'tis hard to write any thing to such a height of Hyperbole, which his just deserts advanced him not to be represented by. Since than it is incident to youth to be ill-principled, as he was, In Nerone. c. 16. whom Suetonius reports, Luxuriam, libidinem, crudelitatem veluti juvenili errore exercuit; and as Coligui, who was heard often to say, That neither Alexander nor Julius Caesar were superior to himself, and the ill habits that are atcheiued then, are seldom if ever receded from, but remain as dead flies to inquinate the compositions of the most eminent virtues. It is of high concernment to inure the mind of youth to virtue and humility, to courage and justice, for this will so ballast and steer the after-ages, that nothing will disseise them but death, which is the great Usurper of all mortal glories and triumphs in their determination. Which premised, our Chancellor does most worthily to attack the youth of our Prince with such desensatives, as may abortivate the Attempts of passion and lubricity upon him; for in that he commends not airy Romances, not Poëtique fictions, not parasitique drolleries, but sober reason and sacred Scripture to his rumination: what doth he less than endeavour to make his choice in youth, an Iliads to repose his fame in, and teach him to live in the glory of a matchless piety, far more than Homer did in his Poems; which yet Tully says were so contributive to their Author, Vt nisi Ilias extitisset illa, idem tumulus qui corpus ejus contexerat, nomen ejus obruisset. And truly if the holy Scriptures, which are the most ancient record extant, far before the Peleponesian war, Bochartus praefat. in lib. de Coloniis beyond which Thucydides acknowledges in the Greek stories nothing is certain, and which was but about Artaxerxes and Nehemiah's time; I say, if the Scripture does discover to us, Moses, job, Samuel, three notable Instances of sober youth, and such men in their age as few exceeded, and thus probably they became by the seasoning of their youth with piety and probity. Is there not much more from the authority of the Book, from whence these authorities are quoted, and the nature of the Instances hence made to persuade a Prince of reason and religion, then from any Ethnique Author, or less credible Examples: surely I think, yes, and so I believe the Chancellor doubted not but to convince the Prince of; for since the word of God is a sword and a Hammer to cut asunder and maul down all opposition against and interposition between it and its end and drift, the Chancellor has done well to draw forth this weapon to terrify all contradictions, that he did but fear probable; for since nothing became a young Prince more than readiness to learn, and ductility to take learning in that Method his Tutors should convey it to him, it was a dexterous practice that our Chancellor uses to implant virtue by, to wit, the Commendation of Justice from the Law of God and the Law of England. Nè in futurum ipsa figuris minoris frugi delectabiliùs depingatur, quia etiam, ùt sapiens quidam ait, quod nova testa capit, inveterata sapit. As the former Clause had argumentum ab utili, so this has an argument à damno contrarii; if virtue be not suprerinduced, vice will be; for natura non patitur vacuum: so his Motive to virtue is not only a decoro from the beauty, but a damno evitato; for if he give up himself to virtue (and abandon every evil way, and every evil consort; then there will be no vacuity for vanity and vice to portray itself on: that, as probably of old, Candidates in any arts had Tables in which they wrote, or on which drew; what they had to say or do, which when all was full, and no room left; those that had no place therein could not be carried up to the Judges to be approved of and chosen: so from thence does he apply to the Prince the simile, beseeching him so to fill up the Virgin-Table of his mind with virtues of all kinds to his Princely completeness; that when the heat and vigour of youth importunes him to release that severity his resolution has virtuously brought him under, he may deny those insinuations admission and acceptance, considering that what's once well done, ought not to be undone: nay, there is a kind of necessity to persist in an inexorableness, where to change is to become worse, and to retreat the field, to lose it. For youth is the foundation of age's superstructure, and though it sometimes falls out, that dissolute youths prove staunch ages, yet mostly 'tis otherways, since the indications of Manhood are conjecturable even from youth, julius Caesar told the world what he would be man, Cuspinian, in vita ejus. when but a boy, animum habuit semper ingentia semper infinita expetentem, and those drowsy inactivities that many have, who do plùs quietè, quam ag●ndo, atque movendo proficere, show, that to place them in active lives is to make them unhappy and useless, so that the great secret of institution is to know the Genius and delight of youth, and to give it prospect and scope that way, not to abate their courage by continual droppings of displeasure, nor to raise their insolence by intemperate praises, but so to carry a mean in all things, that they may be kept warm, and not put into a flame and fever of distemper, for tantùm ingenii, quantùm irae, and so to be cooled as not to be chilled and mortified; for if wisdom said, vellem in juvene aliquid amputandum, and Politian foretold of Peter de Medici's, that he was like to make a wise man, who was so forward a Boy; then there is danger in breaking the spirit of youth by frequent and imprudent discouragements. As barren grounds brings forth nothing good, so over-lusty grounds too much to be good; extremes are the errors which Mediocrity corrects: such a strength of Soil as enables production kindly and plentifully, and no more than does enable so to do, is good in ground. The like proportion of discretion is to be allowed to the Tillage of youth, neither too much severity, or too great liberty, but an even hand is to be exercised here; for hereby not only the ingenuity will be dexterously fed, and the stomach of it kept quick and unnauseate, but the memory will also remain unbroken; and that being the sine qua non to all learning, Quintilian allows a youth only capable of so much ingenuity to learn, as he has memory to retain; because it is the Crystal Glass, which has in it lives, yea arts Elixir, set that over too great a flame, and the Glass breaks and the Elixir is lost: burden a youth's memory with immense cares and manifold studies transcending his proportion, and he is ruined by an immemorativenesse: and again, wholly disuse memory, and it will shrivel up into a narrowness and incapacity; the right use of memory is moderately to exercise it, for action perfits habits as food and motion increase life and all the concomitants of it; yea and this prudence will exercise itself towards youth in a right disposing of it to delights, and a real principling of it against ill manners, Alexand. ab Alexand. l. 2. c. 25. and ill Maxims. Timotheus the Musician would have a double reward from those Scholars, whom he took to teach from other Masters, with whom they were entered; and his reason was, because he had a double labour with them, dedocendi, docendi, unlea●ning them what they had been ill taught, and then teaching them what was better: and true it is, that he that will be a good Tutor to youth, must imitate both the plastic Artist and the Carver, add and subtract as he sees occasion, as they do; which made Michael Angelo to say, Sculpture was nothlng else but a purgation of superfluities, which being better done abroad then at home, the cockering of Parent's fostering an impatience in Children to be corrected for faults, and directed how not hereafter to commit them, makes breeding of children of such consequence; that as the women of Nombre de dios seldom are brought to bed there, where they conceive, but choose a better air in which to bring forth; Pag. 364. Of his works. so wits (saith Sir Henry Wotton) thrive better transplanted then in their native soil. Youth then being such tinder, 'tis good to prevent that by care, Pag. 254. which negligence makes fatal; For as in Picture Gladness, and Grief, though opposites in nature, are such Confiners each on other in art, that the least touch of a Pencil will translate a crying into a laughing face: so in education of youth, vice and virtue are so near Borderers one upon another, that it is easy to plant either of them on young stocks; and many hopeful Persons through the inobservance of Parents, Guardians, and Tutor's shipwreck, which had their Pilots been knowing and careful, had brought the rich Gargazon of their minds to a Market of gain to their reputation, and advantage to the age of its Production, which was the unhappiness of Robert de Veer, In Hypodeigm. Neustriae. p. 146. of whom Walsingham thus writes, Qui quidem juvenis aptus fuerit ad c●ncta probitatis officia, si non defuisset ei in pueritia disciplina. The palpability of which injury to Children is such, that even the grossest sort of men avoid it, and train up their Children to courses of life suitable to their aptitude, and probable to afford them supports for life. So in the next words it follows: Quis artifex tam negligens profectus suae prolis est, ut non eam dum pubescit artibus instruat, quibus posteâ vitae solatia nanciscatur, sic lignarius faber secare de labro, Ferrarius ferire malleo filium instruit, & quem in spiritualibus ministrare ●upit, literis imbui facit, sic & Princeps filium ' suum qui pòst eum populum regulabit, legibus instrui dum minor est, convenit. Here the Chancellor tells the Prince, that the zeal that he has to his understanding of, and delight in the Law as the rule of English Justice, arises from that principle of paternal sagacity, which age and experience has brought to perfection in him, and his duty to Henry the sixth, his Liege Lord, and the Prince's Father, (now either in prison, or made away, could not in regard of the troubles of his life, and the absence of the Prince from him disenable him to) commanded from him. For though it be true, that young Princes, probable Heirs to Crowns, are in reputation above all other persons; yet may they want helps of instruction from their inferiors in station, who being zealous for their good, may not be rude and uncourtly, in communicating their counsels to them, in words pregnant, and with reasons solid. Nor will any but Rehoboam's despise it, since whatever love offers, is not to be reproached, though discretion may not accept it at the rate it is offered. If our Lord commended the Widow's Mite cast into the Treasury, because she gave it freely according to the penury of her condition; surely any address that good will makes, is to be received with kindness, especially when it comes a digno, and dignè, when the Chancellor, a Father in years, presents to the Prince, as a youth of Majesty, his humble and hearty counsel; yea, indeed not to be concerned in the education and principling of this Prince, according to Honour, Law, and Justice, had been an offence against, and a breach of all the Laws of Charity and gratitude, which called the Chancellor forth to a more than usual manifestation of himself; that by producing a proportionation of care and zeal in Parents, quâ such to their Children, he might convince the Prince, that what other discipline to meaner men's Children is, that, the Justice of Law known, is to a Prince, who without it, will be to seek of one of the Flowers, and choicest Jewel of his Crown. As therefore it is the care of worthy Parents to provide for their Children, fortunes to live splendidly upon, if God please to succeed them in that just and commendable solicitousness; so is it no less their study, to instruct them in such Arts, Callings, and courses of life, as renders honest industry, and convenient support and reward. And this the very reason of nature, in the lowest impartment of it, teaches Parents to do to their Children; for besides that Brutes do teach their young how to forage, prowl, and provide for themselves according to the nature of their kind. The most rude, as well as knowing of men do train up their Children in Callings, that they may know how to live another day, as the Proverb is. The Carpenter he accustoms his Child to cut with an Axe, and a Saw; the Smith to beat with the hammer; and if a Child prove, as that brave Butcher's Son of Ipswich did Cardinal Woolsey, so spriteful and eager after Learning, so zealous in Religion, that a Clerk, or a Churchman he must be; then all that the Father can wrap and wring shall be expended in Schooling, and all this that youth may be sitted to the purpose his genius directs him to, and best furnishes him for performance of; so does it become Princes to express a proportionable care of their Sons educations, as their proof is of greater consequence for good or evil: nay, there is no such a convenit, that a common Parent should be intent on his Child, to provide him good breeding and a Calling on which he may live comfortably, as for a Prince, because his influence being general, the care of him, in order to a general good, concerns the generality, whom his not being virtuous, endangers to be in no degree happy. The Kingdom of Macedon was lost by the covetousness of Perseus the King of it. The Treason of one Count julian was the cause that the Moors conquered Spain, Plutarch in P. Aemilio. Tolet. l 5. c. 14. Liv. De●. 3. li●. 2. and possessed it six or seven hundred years. The temerity of Consul Varro, in giving battle to Hannibal, was the loss of the Romans at Canna. These, and such like evils, are produced by the defects of men in place, and therefore great care is to be used in their education and conduct, that they appear in their actions complete to the extent of their quality, and the proportion of their influence. To promote which, in a more than ordinary measure, the Chancellor presents Justice, resident in the English Law, as the aptest aidant of him, and the thriftiest enterprise he can set upon; yea, because the pliancy of youth gives advantage to the perfection of acquirements, and fixes attained habits in an unalteredness to their age, he persuades him to accept of serious and virtuous institution in his youth, and to believe that the Laws of England are the best study he can engage in, because they are not only the effects of reason experienced and methodised, but the peculiar Rule of right Government, and Religious Order; the learning of which will be most facilitated, by beginning early, and persisting earnestly in the love and study of it from one's youth; which the Chancellor inculcates on him the rather, because he sees the inconveniencies that want of Justice in the minds of Princes, brings on them and their Subjects, making them not meditative of their respective duties, but vigilant to overreach and afflict each other: which evil spirit, so contrary to God's institution, and approbation, he beseeches him to abhor and discredit, by being the example of a just Monarch, who by a religious and righteous Reign over Subjects, conjures them to a subjection suitable to his Government: and this, if he does, he will not only be a Son of his incomparable Father Henry the sixth, but of his Heavenly Father GOD, whose place he in reigning bears. And so the sixth Chapter, and the Notes on it end. CHAP. VII. Silente extunc Cancellario Princeps ipse sic exors●s est, vicisti me vir egregie suavissimâ oratione tuâ, quâ & animum meum ardore non minimo, legis fecisti sitire documentum. THis Chapter represents the Prince, as sweetly and gratefully recoiling upon the Chancellor, whom he not only confesses potently oratorious, but sweetly a Victor of his Reason, into a resignation of practice to his Precept; so mild so ductile was our Prince, that though it was not Iob's handmaid, whose counsel he despised not, yet in that he was so observant of the wise advice of his inferior, it argued him not only not evil, like him the Prophet mentions, who hated him that reproved in the gate, but very good, whom sober suasion, and affectionate tenderness did so effectually move, which is not ever the issue of good counsel given, to be kindly taken, and exactly followed. For mostly good advice is like to water spilt upon the ground, lightly set by, till it be dearly paid for, in the neglect of timely observance, which would have asserted the Sovereignty of it. Solon lessoned Croesus' the right use of prosperity, by preparing for its contrary before it came, Plutarch in vita ejus. but the Philosopher was thought pedantic, and censured of pragmatique arrogance, till the time of Croesus his trouble rushed on him; and then in his distress he cries out, Solon, Solon, wishing he had credited his premonition, when there might have been hopes of anticipating his now miserable surprise: Caesar had an intimation not to be at the Senate the day he had his stab, but he contemned it, and lost his life by it. The Duke of Guise, in Henry the third of France his time, was fore▪ warned of his being slain not only by nature, when she swooned a little before the Duke sat at Council, Per intempestivam libertatem & su perbam scultitiam Ar●ian●s lib. 8. de gestis Alexand. Venenum perimentis sub pallio consulentis. Garimbertus. but by a note sent him by a friend; to neither of which he harkening, was murdered; Archias had had notice of the Conspiracy against him, but he putting off the Messenger that brought it, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, till to morrow, and it acted on him before he would hear the discovery of it. But the Prince here was better instructed by our Master, who prefaced his advice, not as Calisthenes fond did, by freedom more bold than becoming, more rude than welcome and friendly, bringing death in by the ushery of love, and using the cloak of counsel to palliate the dagger of dispatch. No such Projector, and half-faced Traitor, was our good Chancellor; a Gentleman he was born and bred, and a Christian spirit, his piety and misfortunes by God sanctified, had begot in him; and therefore he was not of Cardinal Prato's spirit, whom Francis the first of France condemned to an Iron Cage, which was only able to keep his pride within compass, nor of Cardinal Patavinus', who rather than miss his plenty and extravagancies, would comply with any party, In Epist. de Theodorico. and serve any vices: no such miscreant our Chancellor, he chose (good man) the noble attendance of his Prince's Pilgrimage, before the enjoyment of his Country, without his King ruling in and over it, and being of so Masculine a soul, Gladiatori quam S●natori propior, Vel Patercul. l. 2. that, as prosperity made him not to boast, adversity not complain, neither passionate; under all calm and conscientious: this, I say, being the virtue of our Chancellor, deserved from the Prince the Title he here gives him, to be vir Egregius. And justly such, for he was no Rufus Egnatius, more a Ruffian then a Long-robeman, but one singled out to this service, Egregius, quasi ex toto grege electus, saith Festus; one, not to be pared in his age, nor to be followed for loyalty, not like Nazianzens' Country of Ozizala, abounding in flowers but barren of Corn, that is a man of show and talk, but of no sincerity and truth of wisdom; no such man was our Chancellor, but a Sage of incomparable honour, piety and ability, whom no advantage would buy off from Loyalty, and such he being, good reason he should be accounted, as indeed he was vir Egregius; yea, and without dishonour might his Sovereign son say to him, vicisti me suavissimâ or atione tuâ; for surely whatever his judgement dictated fit, his love put him to promote to his Prince's improvement; no unprincely narrowness did he principle him in, or counsel him to follow; though undoubtedly he had Metrodorusses enough to solicit him to accept of treachery to a good end: for his brave soul, like that of Sextus Pompeius, disdained to gain great things by indirect means; and thus he serving his Prince, could not but be acceptable to him, and the only man of influence on him; yea happy in some sort beyond the usual proportion of superlutive meriters; for least he should have enter commoned with them in the misfortunes that the brave old Marshal Memorancy (had by a remove from ●ourt, and Mounsienr de Vins notwithstanding his receiving a Bullet at the Siege of Rochel into his body to save King Henry the third, D Avila p. 25. p. 507. to his grief found true, according to the saying of Lewis the ninth of France, Il perd● sowent d' avoir, trop bien serui. too good service often undoes many men;) God called him out of life before he came to try what compensation his loyalty would have; so that as he lived so he died an honourable Victor over all difficulties, and received the testimony, that he had not only asserted reason, but advantaged it by suaviloquious Oratory, which is here termed, suavis oratio. And indeed if any thing have Potency in it, 'tis the Rhetoric of affection, and the words of the soul warbled froma passionate and surprised lip, for its near alliance to if not sameness with the heart, having the merit of all possible acceptation, can never fail of the utmost reception of kindness, and that is, victory over the ear and heart it addresses to: this pleasing effect, language expresses by sweetness as deleble to the ear as so also to the taste, to both which senses 'tis applied in Prov. ix. 17. and xx. 17. Stolen waters are said to be sweet, and bread of deceit is sweet. In job. xx. 12. wickedness is termed sweet: the influence of the Pleyades are termed sweet, xxxviii. 31. friendly counsel is termed sweet, Psal. lv. 14. quiet sleep, sweet, Prov. iii 24. supply in necessity, sweet, xxvii. 7. yea, God himself condescending to the terms of mortal infirmity and apprehension, expresses his value of persons and things under this notion of sweet, Cant. two. 14. Let me hear thy voice, for sweet is thy voice; and the Church is permitted, yea dictated to language her holy Enamourments to Christ in that Pathetic acclamation of his sweetness, Cant. v. 13. His cheeks (says she of Christ) are as a bed of spices, as sweet flowers, his lips like Lilies dropping sweet smelling Myrrh, and Cant. two. 3. she says, his fruit was sweet unto my taste, the delight that God takes in his servants and their sacrifices is termed sweet, We are unto God (saith St. Paul 2 Cor. two. 15.) a sweet savour of Christ, and Phil. iv. 18. An odour of a a sweet smell, a sacrifice acceptable and wellpleasing to God, yea the sacrifice of our our Lord jesus is termed an offering and a sacrifice to God for a sweet-smelling savour, Ephes. v. 2. So that the Prince in acknowledging the Chancellors satisfaction of his doubts, and delighting his ears with words of reason and eloquence adapted to the Conquest of his understanding and will, may well be expected, to not only honour his Chancellors gravity and learning, but to own his particular seizure into the power of efficacy of them. As it follows, Quâ & animum meum ardore non minimo legis fecisti sitire documenta. By this it should seem, the Chancellor baited his hooks to catch the Prince by very subtly like a Master of the Assembly, Eras. Adaq. Chil. 1. Cent. 6. p. 254. not with airy notions and soft triflings of canting words, but jovis & Regis Cerebro, with the brain of jupiter, with that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that flower of Nectar, that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that milk of Venus, yea that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that food of Helen, which the Poets express their Hyperbolique fancies in; for Princes being born, what Subjects are by accomplishment, cannot be surprised with ordinary forces of reason and quaintness, their Mother understandings and abilities being Paramount to them. In that therefore the Text says, vicisti me suavi oratione tuâ sitire documenta legis, and that, non minimo ardore, it insinuates to us that there was somewhat above ordinary art, expressed by the Chancellor, upon which so notable an effect followed, and 'tis easy to be believed, if the consideration of the Chancellor's Origin, Education, Practice, Office, Ingenuity, all which speak him probable to be a Master of language, as well as judgement; yea, and if we consider to whom he applies himself, and about what Errand, to a Prince, and for his polishing to a general after-benefit, these things premised will easily offer a conclusion on grounds of reason, that he did speak apt words to every purpose of prevalence, yea, and in that he bore away the testimony of making the discovery he tended to, our Chancellor seems more fortunated by God, than every brave Actor in his brave action is; for whereas they often miscarry through the Inconformity of events to the latitude of their Projects, he seems (if this language be the Prince's) to be arrived at absolute success, and to be in the Conclusion what he intended in the Attempt: the Prince his affection, and respect he has gained, no man has his ears, no delight his heart more than the Chancellor and his counsel has, the only scruple resting unsatisfied now, is to appear, which if he can resolve, he's what he would be, and that's shortly this, Sed tamen duobus me huc illúcque agitantibus animus ipse affligitur, ut tanquam in turbido mari cymba, nesciat quorsum dirigere pror as; unum est dum recolit quot annorum curriculis legis addiscentes●earum studiose conferant, antequam sufficientem ●arumdem peritiam nanciscantur, quo timet animus ipse, nè consimiliter ego praeteream annos juventutis meae, etc. Herein the Text-Master brings in the Prince acting a part of great anxiety, and as it were labouring against Wind and tied the swift stream of his Mastership's reason; for his Highness being but young and unfixed, and being mismatched by such a masculine and sturdy Artist, who was to seek of no Ram, Petar, Morter-piece, or Canon of Reason and Art, to make his way through and through this Royal Stripling, had so distressed his Proselyte, that he professes no Cockboat rides more untowardly, and with greater danger of shipwreck; then he does in the high sea, & on the superficies of those surly doubts, and dissatisfactions, that possess him to a menace of o'rebearing him, fain he would please the grave Chancellor, in being, as he would have him, a Student of the Law by knowledge, as well as the probable Protector of it by office, and to the acquisition of skill in it, any reasonable time and toil he would allow the study of it, but he fears the Lion in the way that stands between the Law and his attainment, he sees many men spend many years in study of that, and that only, and the abstrusity of it infructuates all their endeavours, their pleasure, their age, their strength intending its vestal fire spends; yet they find no Elixir of perfection, still they are to learn, and cases every day emerge to their non-plussing, and loath the Prince is to engage on a long, desperate, profitless attempt, which will, after many years, and much industry, return him nothing but unsatisfiedness, loathe the Prince is to have vanity and vexation of spirit inscribed on all his pains and time allotted the study of the Law. This is the force of his first Argument. His next is, An Angliae legum, vel civilium, quae per orbem percelebres sunt, study operam dabo. Nam non nisi optimis legibus populum regere licet, etiam ut dicit Philosophus, natura deprecatur optima. Indeed he is willing to be directed what well and wisely to do, and since he cannot better be by any then this aged Knight, learned Judge, and incomparable Chancellor, to whom he promises indisputable obedience, (Quare libenter super his quod tu consulis, In immenso aliarum super alias acervatarum legum cumulo, sons omnis publici privatique juris, Livius, De x. Tabulis. auseultaremus, are his very words.) He desires solution, which of all Laws are the best to study to know, and know to govern by. Whether the particular municipe Laws of this Island, which are purely strange to all Nations, or the Laws Roman and Imperial, which are the directory of all civilised Nations, and are as famous for their justice and reason, as the Roman Government, which introduced them, was for its Conquest and prevalence. This is the sum of his Argument, which because he starts not out of curiosity, as one nice and inquisitive, but that thereby he might be skilled in the best method of Law, to the best end, order, peace, and charity. This evidence of his choice to be of the best, when he shall be directed to it, adds emphasis to the Arguments scruple, Q. 1. Instit. p. 75. and calls for the answerers' care and cordiality, which the Chancellor assents to undertake, professing, that though there be weight in the objections, and they are worthy the Son of a King to make them: yet is not the Law under such an obscurity of phrase and form, nor the Books of it so many and divers, but that as little time and toil will be taken up in the study of them, as of other Laws; and thereupon he proceeds to answer the particulars in the following Chapter, in these words. CHAP. VIII. Philosophus in primo Physicorumdicit, quod tunc unum quodque scire arbitramur, cum causas & principia ejus cognoscamus usque ad elementa. THis our Chancellor begins his Reply to the Prince, that he may appear to him resolved, to give his scruples a fit and full satisfaction. The Law indeed, the Prince very much seemed to approve, and the study of it to acknowledge convenient, and in a sort necessary for a Prince; but that which he doubted of, was his possibility to attain it to any competent degree, in some convenient time; as also which of the Laws he should adhere to as his choice, to study and govern by. To both these our Text-Master gives solution in this Chapter, and that by such a breadth and depth of foundation, as will carry currently all his superstructure. To explicate which his design, he brings in what he has to write with this Position of Aristotels, That every thing is then said to be known and understood, when its cause and principle, even to its elements, is considered and ruminated upon. This sentence quoted out of the 1. Lib 2. Natur. Auscult. Tract. 3. c. 3. p. 330. C. 19, Tract 4. D● Cognit. primorum principiorum. Phys. is, in sense, in other places of that Author, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 etc. Nor can we be said to know any thing, till we apprehend the cause of it, for which, and by which it is such. So Analytic. Poster. lib. 2. c. 11. and in other places. Yea since God has so connected things in nature, that they depend on him, and from him on each other, and pass through changes and degrees to their accomplishment, there is no understanding of the World in its mass, but from the apprehension of its 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, its efficient cause, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the cause from whence, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the matter of which, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the end for which, or the exemplar after which it is made. For since the material principle of the World is Atoms, which amassed, makes by their infinity the Moles to swell in bulk, Glassend. Physic. sect. 1. lib. 3. De Materiali rerum Princip●o, c. 8. and by God's art in Nature's work, to be in very deed beautiful, as it is necessary to contemplate, and venerate God as the prime cause and efficient; for they are both one, though nominally they differ: so is it also the readyest and only way to conceive rationally and judiciously of the whole by the apprehension of the minute, Lib 4. De Causis rerum, c. 1. vol. 1. p. 283. particles, and small beginnings of them, and the advances they being (blessed by God) make to after grandeur. Which Philosophers, as wise searchers after nature and reason, do therefore busy themselves in, because they find the ascent to a close view, and accurate prospect of them attainable only by these degrees of motion from the Centre, God and Nature, to the Circumference, effects of them. Three words then here are proposed to couch the gradations of knowledge under; the causes, principles, elements of things: which the Commentator, probably Averro, thus explains, Per principia intellexit causas efficientes, etc. By the principles, he understands the causes efficient; by the causes, the causes final; by the Elements, matter and form. Thus that Commentator. Indeed, without these three, understood in some competent measure, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Lib. 1. De partu animal. c. 2. 5 Metaphys. c. 1. De causis Analytic. lib. 2. Tract. 3. c. 11. knowledge of any natural body or thing, is but dark and undelightful. The principle of every thing some say is the nature, rather than the matter of it; so says the Philosopher, for he makes it somewhat above what is gross; therefore he says, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that from which any thing moves, is called the principle of it; and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, this is common to all beginnings to be first in order of time, existence and influence. Hence is it, that Philosophers call these principles efficient causes, because they are the Parents of all increase, and the products of all existence; for whatever is, is, what it is, by force and actuation of its principle, God the first cause, and his benediction on the specifique nature, to which it appertains, and is principle. Thus the principle of all Being is in God, and the delegation of it from him to every created form and species under him. Gassendus lib. ● De causa efficiente rerum, c. 2. c. 5. c. 7. And therefore that passage of the Apostle, In him we live, and move, and have our being, is exegetical of our dependence on God, as our supreme and sovereign principle. The causes here termed final, are in effect, the same with principles: Metaphys. lib. 5. c. 1. Lib. 5. c. 2. so says the Philosopher, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that is, a principle whence any th●ng is known: therefore inasmuch as effects discover causes, and so things, they are principles, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. that is, a cause from which any thing is what it is, saith the same Philosopher. Now though there be variety of causes, according to the several notion of men and things, which Philosophers and Schoolmen abound in, to a needless extravagancy, and men lose their time and judgement sometimes, in considering about them in the vastness and variety of their elaboration; yet as they are soberly stated and considered▪ they are very useful, Causae habent inter se ordine●, quia finis est ratio● Agentis, Sanctus Thom. primae part●, q. 5● a●t. ●. and assistant to the understanding of all Science. For causes have order in their operation, because the end is the reason of the agent, as the Schools say, and thereupon because acts declare ends; (for knowledge is not secundum quod est in potentia, sed quod est in actu) we are only made knowing by the perception of causes in their actings, which we call effects, or the ends of their regency over, and energy in things. And thus God being the cause of the cause, is cause of the thing caused, because he gave to such causes power in subserviency to him the chief, and what the under causes does, the upper cause is entitled to, either as effecting, or permitting. For though reason be the order of procession from the cause, yet the cause is the impulse producing the act: And hence is it, that some learned men have derived causae from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, ardour and incendium because men are inflamed and set on fire with desire to do, as if they could do no other, but do what they do. Vox el●menti fuerit primili●s attributa igni, aeri, aqua, terra, hoc est, quatuor corporibus. Gassend●s li●. 3. De Materiali Principio. c. 1. To. 1. p 226. Quip author naturae, legibus naturae non adstringitur, ac infinita pollet vi, quâ distan●iam illam quasi infinita saperet, qua interjacet inter aliquid & nihil. Idem. The last word in our Text is elementum, that which supposes matter and form; this in compound bodies is so necessary, that without all the four, Water, Fire, Earth, Air, in some or other degree, nothing can ordinarily subsist. This is confirmed by the Philosopher in that Chapter, where he makes it necessary to have four Elements; Lib. 4. De Caelo, c. 5. now that which is the first discovery of every thing, is its Element; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. and whatever being one and little, if useful to increase, Lib. 4. Metap. c. 4. that's an Element, in which sense, metaphorically, the Greeks call the letter a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the first elemental letter, because it leads on to all the other, Metaphys. lib. 4. c. 3. by which words are made, and things written upon; and Priscian terms a letter, the figure of an Element, Litera Elementi figura, elementum lit●ra vis & potestas propriè. Priscianus, lib. 1. De Litera. and an Element properly the force and power of the letter. So that Elements are the sine qua non's to all composition, and the understanding of all things; Non nim inquit ex una re sicut Thales ex humore sed ex suis prori●s principiis quasque res nasci putavi●, qua rerum principia singularum eredidit esse infinita, Sanctus Augustinus De Anaximandio. apud Gassend. Physi● sect. 1. lib. 3. Tom. 1. p. 237. which without them would be dark to, and inperceptible by us. And though there be a great affinity between principles and causes, yet is there nothing less than difference between principles and elements, I mean in the diversity of their nature, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Principles are immortal, increate, without beginning or end, Elements are corruptible because created, and the ingredients of all compounds. Yet even the prima literarum elementa, Suidas in verbo 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Lib. 1. c. 1.17. Cicero 1. De Orato. as Quintilian terms the ABC of Arts, are to be learned, because they are the principles of Speech and Science, and lead to the greater mark, which they call matter and form, that which distinguishes all bodies each from other, and defines their particular Species. Thus knowledge is perfected by understanding the principle, whence all things arose, God's power, goodness, wisdom, manifested in nature's order and efficacy. The Causes final, or end, wherefore God reduced them to the position they are in, and has given them a Law which they cannot disobey without Rebellion and Apostasy, that is, his glory and praise, for which they are, and were all created. And thus to know to the least punct of our duty, as rational Creatures, is that which the Philosopher intends by scire arbitramur, because made up of the knowledge of causes and principles to the very Elements, that is, somewhat of insight into the whole Chain of Art, and into every Link of it. In legibus verò, non sunt materia & forma, ùt in Physicis, & Compositis; sed tamen sunt in iis elementa quaedam, unde ipse profluunt, út ex materia & forma, quae sunt consuetudines, statuta & jus Naturae, ex quibus sunt omnia jura regni, ùt ex materia & forma sunt quaeque naturalia. Here the Text-Master shows the agreement which is between natural Bodies, that consist of matter and form, and politic bodies, beautified by Laws of order and use, which have the same accommodations to the ends of their contexture, as natural bodies have to the purpose of theirs; as the matter of bodies natural are elementary, and the form flowing from the soulary Nature of every species is active and energical according to the denomination of its being, so is there in the Laws, reason, wisdom, justice, aptly worded, and orderly digested, which is called anima Legis, and ushers in formam Legis, which the Lawyers understand by modo & formâ, and forma legalis, so frequent amongst them. Now the Chancellor says, these Elemenss of the Laws do give occasion to those effluxions, which are equally correspondent in the Law to matter and form in natural bodies, 1 Instit. c. 10. lib. 2. sect. 165. and of three forts he makes them, (as Sir Edward Cook does also after him;) Customs, Statutes, and the Law of Nature. Mr. Perkins makes six grounds of the Law of England. First, the Law of Reason. Secondly, the Law of God. Thirdly, General Customs of the Realm. Doctor & Student, p. ●. b. Fourthly, Principles or Maxims. Fifthly, Particular Customs. Sixthly, Statues. The Law of Nature what it is, Prima illa De●. ac naturae data sive seonna in annis nostris insita, unde quicquid 〈◊〉 orbe juris est. ac legum, en ascitur lib. 3. Tit. 7. de vera jurispro Lib. 3. Tit. 24. is to high for me to determine, only the use of it, God foreseeing, stamped the Characters of it on all men's minds; so that it is the seeds, and prime bounty of God and nature, whence what ever is right and Law in the world between man and man, proceeds, thus Hopperus; and the same learned man, after he has spent much profitable discourse about it, concludes, That nothing is more peculiar to man to excel in, than justice, for the practice of which virtue God especially created him, and appointed him the earthly Temple of it. And hence is it, that the Scripture has not only commended Justice, and set forth God the Precedent and reward of it, but in the Law of Nature has so instituted man, that if he follow it precisely, he cannot but in propriis actionibus convenienter agere, that is, do every thing according to what God requires, Vide Tractatum Durandi Episc. Meldonsis de Legibus circà initium. and the Law of his maker's pleasure: for though positive Laws do variate according to diversity of men and times, yet this Law of Nature being moral and permanent altars not, but is central and fixed, and so the main ingredient of all obligations to virtue, and abhorrencies of the contrary. And on this ground the Law of England is said to be built upon the Law of Nature, because it opposes every thing malum per se, and discovers the turpitude of it, and promotes what ever is just, honest, and of good report, which is the sum and end of the Law of Nature, concernwhich, see the notes on the third Chapter. Customs are the second Triangle, and these are of an high nature, so that in the Philosopher's sense, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Lib. 7 de Mor●●. c. 11. they are the great Regent's in all the world, so favourable to evil, that God charges the vanity and provocation of Idolatry to the account of Ethnique customs learned by Israel, and reproaches them for vain, jer. x. 3. but these are not the Customs the common-Law is built upon, for whereas they are mala per se, and tend to evil, setting up mischief as a Law. The Customs of the Common-Law are the harmless and approved usages of the Nation, time out of mind, and without interruption, and these are so far from being evil, or if they be so, from being continued such, that nothing of that nature can justly be charged upon them, which the Prudence of Kings in Parliament have not, and may further as they see wisely and worthily fit, remedy. The Jews (great doters on Customs) have several words to express them by, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, denoting the addiction men have to it, while they make it their path and way to walk in, natural to and beloved by them, Ezech. xx. ●0. and Gen xxxi. 35. by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, so Ps. cx. 4. Thou art a Priest for ever, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, secundum morem vel consuetudinem Melchisedec, which the Author to the Hebrews renders 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, according to the order of Melchisedec, or as vers. 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, according to the likeness of Melchisedec: by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, denoting a long use from the Law of Nature and Nations, by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Levit. xviii. last, derived from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, statuere, inscultere, vel imprimere effigiem, alluding to the force of Custom, which transforms man from what he was into somewhat which Custom makes him to be, as a Carver makes a piece of wood rude and rough, by his art, symmetrious and lovely, or the contrary; ●o Custom rules men to what itself in nature is, pro decreto & statuto habetur, saith Kimchi, these words so various and significant express the Jewish notion of Customs. The Greeks called Custom 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Suida● in v●l● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. the unwritten Law; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as a sign or direction to what is to be done, and whereas Law is written Custom, that is, the mos gentis vel loci, is presumed for the good of people, and by them as such observed: this Custom as here understood is not, as Suidas says, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. only the invention of men, but the act of life and time, not working 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, by force and fear as Laws of penalty do, but by inclining men willingly to a resignation of themselves to it, makes in time itself absolute Lord of them, and brings them under a pleasing subjection, in which they are resolute and unwearied. Our Law under the word Custom couches many things, 2 Instit. p. 58. 1. Common-Law, 2. Statute Law. 3. Particular Customs. Rent-Services. 5. Tributes and Impositions. 6. Subsidies. But these are large notions of Custom, that which the Text intends by Custom, is more press common usage, 1. Instit. p. 100 time out of mind, and peaceable without lawful interruption; of this Bracton a learned Judge in Henry the third his time writes thus, Consuetudo quandoque, Lib. 1. c. ●. etc. Custom sometimes is observed for a Law, especially where it is generally approved, for there it is the Law, for use of ancient times and customs is not of mean authority. This of Bracton is the voice of Policy and Gubernative wisdom in all Laws, Inveterata consuetudo, etc. Ancient Custom is most deservedly allowed Law, saith julian; the like say Ulpian, Hermogenianus, Paulus, Calistratus, more destinies, and all Lawyers, yea those Passages in the Civil Laws, consuetudo dat jurisdictionem, est optima Legum interpres, That Custom gives jurisdiction, is the b●st interpreter of Law, that the Custom of a place derogat legi● in illo loco, prevails against the rule of Law in that place: 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 jus or justitia, Homer takes also for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Custom, yet such a custom, as is jure receptum. These and hundreds of such affirmations indulgent to local customs, Lib. 94. Digest. Digest. lib. 1. Tit. 1.32. p. 81. declare the vigour and virtue of Customs, Digest. lib. 3. Tit. 4. Gloss. margin. p. 407. Digest. lib. 1. Tit. 3. de legibus, Senatúque consultis. p. 82. as that unwritten Law that is ancient, acceptable, and convenient for that place; hence is it, that the Law of England allows Customs (clothed with time and usage, long and quiet without legal interruption) of great Authority: for as every place almost, so every Court has its peculiar Customs, which are Laws to it, yea the High Court of Parliament, suis propriis consuetudinibus subsistit, has its peculiar Customs, which are called lex & consuetudo Parliamenti; and though, saith Sir Edward Cook, Ista lex ab omnibus est quaerenda, à multis ignorata, à paucis cognita, yet such a Law and Custom that sacred Sanbedrim hath. Indeed Customs, mala per se, are void in Law, and so are those that are contrary to National Justice; 2 Instit. p. 46. p. 654. as were the Customs in 43 E. 3. mentioned by Sir Edward Cook, and that other in the case of William of Brimington, and the Tenants of Bramsgreen and Norton, which therefore were judged void, Consuetudo licèt magna sit authoritatis, vunquam tamen praejudicat veritati, Reg. Juris. 17 Ed. 2. c. 16. Cambden in Gloucester shire p. 385. because they were contrary to reason: and some will be apt to say of that nature, may be that Custom in some part of Gloucester-shire, That the goods and Lands of condemned persons fall into the King's hands only for a year and a day, and after that expired, return to the next heirs: but in other cases where Customs are reasonable, just and good, there they are presumed of great validity, and to have a good and sage Commencement, though we know not the precise moment and manner of it, Titles honour p. 714, 715. Lib. 3. fol. 69. so resolves the learned Selden in the many cases he instances in. And so is the Judgement of Linwood, who describes the proofs of custom thus, the witnesses are upon their Oaths and Consciences to say, Quòd semper sic viderunt tempore suo, etc. That they have always seen it so in their time, and heard it so from their Elders, neither did they ever hear or know the contrary, and that the common Opinion is, that so it is, and has been in all times, in the memory of all men, and it is required, saith he, that the witnesses that depose a Custom should be born in, and dwellers near the Country and place, where the Controversy is: thus Linwood in the case of a particular Custom, which yet is far short of a general one: for that being the Common-Law of the Nation bears down all pleas against it, Doctor and Student c. 7. See the 7. Stat. of Eliz. c. 23. 4 Instit. p. 25. notes on Chap. 1. of Parliaments. for that being the Common-Law of the Nation bears down all pleas against it, that are not established by regal Sanction in Parliament, which the Text calls Statata. These are the Laws of the King made by the Assent of the three Estates his Subjects by his Authority called and kept together; Statutes, not Statutes of Omri, of disloyalty, treachery, disorder, but Statutes of loyalty, piety, probity, humbly preferred, judiciously considered, sovereignly passed; these, and these only our Laws allows Statutes; Cook Jurisdict. Parliamenti. p. 24.25. See the Preamble to the Stat. 7 H. 4. c. 1. Ann. Dom. 1405. favours of the King to his people upon the presentations of their requests by their trusties the Commons, and the Advise and Assent of the Noble Peers, the Lords of the Clergy and Laity, to his Majesty for his Assent and Consent, which is the inspiration of their soul into them. These Laws thus form and emanating are the third Basis of our Laws, and indeed the most probable Engine of our rectification imaginable, since by this blessed act of wise and worthy Legislation, Laws in cases omitted may be made, in cases dubious explained, in cases obsolete be vacated, in cases hard be indulged; in all cases be accommodated to God's glory, the King's honour, and safety, the Peers lustre and dignity, the people's peace and prosperity. But because, of this I should have occasion to write in the notes on the 18. Chap. I'll desist further proceedure on them here. Only in that the Chancellor says, all the Laws of England do proceed from these as their Elements, and constituent parts, there is a good Argument to admire the Laws of England, as most useful in, and most just for the Government of the people. For since the wisdom of God in the Law of Nature, the Customs of People in the common consent of the Nation, the divine soul and sentence of the King assisted with his Peers, reverend Prelates, and renowned Lay-Lords, (men in whose Counsel, there is science, seriousness, and security.) Since these, I say, do all cooperate in maintaining the Laws in this their Triangularity, there is a most undeniable Argument, that the Law of England is a choice Law, extracted from, composed of the quintessence of all Laws, and suitable to all gubernative purposes, and in no sort defective to the carrying on of piety to God, loyalty to the Prince, and charity to one another. And therefore, though the Rules and forms of Law, are the marrow of the knowledge of it, yet are the letters of which the words, and the words which make the ●ense of Law, as of all other Learning, to be well understood by the Student, since they are as the elements of compound bodies, the grounds and inchoat ducts to the more consequential parts. 'Tis true, as in the body, the eye, brain, heart, face, as the most conspicuous and useful parts, are first honoured, yet cannot the body subsist, nor the anatomist exactly read of the structure of it, without knowledge of the less useful and honourable parts, and consideration of them in their respective position and use: so in Arts and Sciences, as this of the Law, without elementary knowledge, all other is unattainable, not possible to subsist: therefore the Text says, Et ut ex literis, quae etiam elementa appelantur, sunt omnia quae leguntur. What Atoms are to the Earth, Drops to the Ocean, Rays to the Sun, Sparkles to the Centre of fire, that are Letters to Science. Nature works gradually, and her increment is by progression from little to more, and from more to most of her capacity. And hence is it, that as Painters that are Masters in Picture, have Pencils of all sizes and colours, intense and remiss, in the equality of whose mixture, the vigour of colours, mediocrities of shades consist: so is there in the Rule of Nature such a Lesson taught us, as first to inure our minds to the smaller and less burdensome things of Science, Letters, before we approach those that are ingenerated by their introduction: Principles must, in this sense, follow Elements, as words do succeed Letters. Principia autem, quae commentator dicit esse causas efficientes, sunt quaedam universalia, quae in legibus Angliae docti s●militer, & Mathematici maximas vocant, Rhetorici Paradoxas, & Civilistae regulas juris. The Chancellor pretermits no Animadversion that may adorn the Law, and make it venust and taking, for though it has its Pendants and knots of Elements, which trick and adorn only, yet has it also the more elaborate and becoming parts of lovelyness and feature, which are so necessary to its operation, and rational acceptance, that without them it would not evidence so just and ingenuous a merit. Now these he calls Maxims, which carries a sense of grandeur in it, as intending to dignify the things understood by it with a note of transcendency. These Maxims are the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the depths, and restorative quintessences of Law; that from whence all inferior things have their invigoration and spiriting. Thus the Lawyers, as the Mathematicians in their Art call Maxims, such notions as are the best in their kind, and productive of many excellentillations from them, and that from the authority of Antiquity, which not only termed God the Architect of the Universe, Maximus, but all things superlative in their kind by this Title. The greatest Overseer of the Roman Ward, was termed Maximus Curio, and Celsus calls Land held by a high tenure, Optimus Maximus fundus, and the Lady Princess of the Vestal Nuns, is by Valerius and Suetonius, called Maxima Virgo, and Maxima Vestalis: so that our Lawyer by Maximus understands, Edit. Basil. Mores certè & instituta nostra, júsque ●mnino morib●s nostris introductam receptúmque, quas consuetudines dicimus. Budaeus in Pandect. priores, p. 314. 1 justit. p. 10. Ploughed. Com. p. 27. b. a sure foundation or ground of Art, and a conclusion of Reason. So saith Sir Edward Cook, and Plowden seconds him, Quia Maximae est, etc. Because great is its authority and dignity, as that reason which is indisputable, and not to be contradicted. So is the Authority of 12 Henry the first, N'est my a disputer l'ancient principles deal L●y. Doctor & Stud. c. ●. Of the same nature also are the Rhetoricians Paradoxes, Suidas in ●erbo. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that which is beyond the common notion of men: and admirable in their opinion, is a Paradox. Regula est plurium rerumcompendiosa narratione facta traditio. Marcianus lib. 1. Instit. Tit 2. So the Civilians have their notable Observations represented under what is equivalent to either of these, and they call them Rules, which they define, a Rule, say they, is a delivery made of many things, by a compendious narrative of them, that is, a short account of the substance of things of moment. And as the Law is by Chrysippus called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the King of all; so the Rule is, Legis Regina, the Queen, and most excellent part of the Law; that which there is no receding from, but upon unavoidable necessity. It needeth not to a assign any reason, why at first they were received for Maxims, for it sufficeth that they be not against the Law of Reason, Doct. & Stud. ●●. nor the Law of God, and that they have always been taken for a Law, saith Doctor and Student. Ipsa reverâ non argumentorum vi ant demonstrationibus logicis dignoscuntur, sed, ut secundo Posteriorum docetur, inductions, viâ sensus, & memoriae adipiseuntur. In these words, the Text-Master shows the nature of principles transcending grosseness of sense, and therefore not to be examined by, and calculated exactly according to it. For as in matters of Faith, there is no reduction of it to the narrow limits of humane bruitishness, but the Rule of belief is the persuasion of the truth believed, & the recumbency of the believer on God, who is truth itself, in the assertion of that which from him man's understanding is informed of, and affections sharpened on to believe: So in Maxims and Principles of Science, there is no pre-existency to be imagined to them in the art; but all that is knowable, is emanation from them, and the majesty and reason of their conclusion and positivity, which is the reason that the Philosopher allows no disputer to deny a principle; for that done, undoes all that is subsequent, and takes away the very being of Argumentation. For how can any Artist advance an Argument in any Art beyond the first discoveries of that Art? And how can any demonstration be made beyond the line of discovery, and demonstrability? For the Rule and Principle being the ultra avod non, beyond that there is no discourse or discovery. Let then Principles remain Mysteries, not to be dived into, but adored, because of their coparcenry with Divinity, and let the senses and memory of man content itself with such attainments, as are conceded them by God, in the right improvement of Nature, and the religious use of her indulgencies. And as no man can define light, as it is in its principle, because it is like God, indiscribable, being a Ray from his essential glory: so can no wise man properly and wisely determine principles by any common notion, or rational apprehension of them. For though they are, and are declared to be what they are by their effects, yet are they hidden, and cryptically reserved by God from the plenary discovery of our senses, that we by them unknown, might be kept humble and dependant on his Omniscience, which only has access to all things, or rather, from whose brightness all natural things are illuminated: And this being, as I humbly conceive, the true apprehension of Principles according to the here alleged authorities of the Philosopher, primo Physic. and Topic, his inference is rational. Igitur Principiis imbuendi sunt, quiqui gliscunt aliquas intelligere facultates, ex eis etenim revelantuar causae finales, ad quas rationis ducta per principioram agnitionem pervenitur. That is, as no man can regularly build without square and line, which do measure proportion, and keep the symmetry inviolate; and no man can war, except he have knowledge of, and care to adhere to the principles of Conduct and Battle; so no man can understand Science, unless he allows Principles, and conform his notions to the Canon of them. For his end in study and disquisition, being to attain knowledge in, and mastery over the difficulties of the Art, and so subjugate them to his understanding, and to accomplish himself by helps of them, there is a necessity (miracle not being taken in) that Reason operating, by the Principles yielded to, can only bring him, and his end together. For Principles are the advances, to the end knowledge; they are the single numbers, by which the numerals of Art are made up; they are the guttulae, which in their Musters, and Rendevouzes, amount to a Sea of Art. And those that contemn these steps of ascent, will never mount the Throne of Science. Take away the knowledge of these, and Arts will be under as great an Eclipse as the Earth would be, when the Sun were routed the Firmament: dispute these, and deny them to be their own testimony: we shall be all sceptics, and seekers after what we know not, nor shall ever find: and as he that builds without a foundation, will be but a foolish builder; so he that studies, without acquainting himself with these fundamental universals, shall bring his study to a vain issue, and prove ridiculous; for as by the pregnancy of the soul, the faetus is fomented and invigorated to birth, and from the life thence commenced, takes augmentation by the nourishment of its Mother; so Art is quickened by the principles of observation and experience, which imbibed, render the means study (next under God) able to produce something towards perfection of knowledge. And as where there is not a hailness of constitution, & the body is not prepared by the common good habits of health, to nourish the embryo to quickening, and after to assist it in birth, no complete vigorous Infant comes forth, but rather a Chix, or a lump of flesh and blood, appearing articulately perfect, but not complete, as to the integrals of internal soundness; So where there is an unsavouriness of Conception, and the mind, by being vitiated by ill prepossessions, cavils at, and is carried with a leaven against old Rules and Maxims received, there the greater pains is taken, to know the further perplexity, and mental fury is contracted, and men grow rather averse and obstinate, tetrical and opinionative, then sober, civil, useful, and learned. For true knowledge begins first at ourselves, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and proceeds to know others aright, by valuing their virtues, and pitying their infirmities, than it comes to view in the glass of a pure speculation, what it may possibly, ought rationally, and doth effectually know; and because it finds its knowledge, is but as a point in the latitude of the Universe, it more endeavours to search, then boasts of attainment. And hence it comes to pass, that the great boasters are not the great gainers, nor are men of singular ways and expressions, always of soundest judgement, and sincerest hearts: For as Creatures that are of wild & ravenous nature, affect devious paths and avoid the ways of conversation; so men of design, to be tragical, and ruinous to any cause or profession, forsake the old way, the good way, and in just return, are often forsaken; for as the truth makes men free, so error leaves them in bondage. And therefore the old Chancellor has drawn herein to the life the portraiture of a good Artist, while he presents him oculo ad calum, manu ad clavum, calling on God for a blessing, and expecting it from him, while he keeps in his way. God has an especial favour to order, 'tis himself, and what of it is in us, is of him, a drop from his Ocean, a Ray from his Sun, a beam from his light, an emblem of his infinite perfection. And those that go the way of God and Nature, may expect the reward of both. For minds and bodies are so near of kin, that a roving head seldom keeps a healthy man; and none are so apt to lose all that is in this world of value, time and health of body and mind, as those that are inquisitive after more than is fit for them to find, or appointed for them to know. God has confined study to his Rules; and the principles of every Art, are to bond the Artist; for they are necessary to the knowledge of it, necessitate medii. Therefore (faith the Chancellor) Principiis imbuendi sunt, etc. Ex eis enim revelantur causae finales, ad quas rationis ductu per principiorum agnitionem pervenitur. Now that a Pythagorean, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, may not bind up the Prince to a rigid conformity, and implicit belief, without any conviction of his own reason, which is a kind of Divine Judicatory in him, the Chancellor here shows the necessity of knowing the principles of any Science from this consideration, that they are the Lines of Communication, which reach to the end, centre, tendency, and drift of every Profession; for the Rule and Principle is of the height and marrow of every Constitution, and the end is the perfection of every thing. Since it is that, for which every thing is; and therefore because it is to be advanced to with much consideration and resolution, notwithstanding the impediments to proceed, and not to be hindered, the Chancellor adds, Ad quas rationis ductu per Principiorum agnitionem pervenitur. For as there can be no motion without life, no augmentation without motion, no sensation without organs of sense; so there can be no apprehension of principles without rational organs: for it is Reason which apprehends and improves every rational Creature, not only by directing it to what is good, but forewarning it against what is hurtful. And therefore no man's procedure is less or more than his reason; nor his reason other then suitable to the organs prepared for them. For the soul in the formatory of all our Reason, and the emanation of it, and the actions of rational Creatures are so far praiseworthy, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as they are directed to a good end, which ever is carried on by good means. Vnde his tribus Principiis, causis, & elementis ignoratis, scientia de qua ipsa sunt, penitus ignoratur. That is, the Science consisting of the knowledge of the efficient cause, the final cause, and the elements. If these be not known in their command, subserviency, and congruity each to other, all that is thought to be known is but Babel, Rubbish and Mortar to the noble structure of Art, a Chaos of notions or omniformity of fancy, no polished or trim fabric of Learning. For example, In the point of Law, and knowledge of that, the efficient cause of the Law are Governors and People excited by God, out of ends of good to civil society, to make Laws by consent, or obey good Laws made by command of their Superiors, though against their wills, yet for their good; For Laws are the effects of Power, and have the stamp of Empire before they are owned such. And again, Laws are in remedium & tutelam, and therefore are ever acknowledged to be made for good, or at least so apprehended, therefore I term them made for ends of good, and I consent to them, as made by men excited by God: for since Laws are advantageous to good, and hindrances of evil, and man naturally is evil, and inclinable to evil. What he is an efficient of good, must needs be by the overruling of the supreme cause God, who is the author of every good and perfect gift, and who emphatically is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Lawgiver. For Kings, Princes, Parliaments, and all the learning of men and ages, are but feskues in the hands of God to point us to duty; and if he does not sit in the Assembly and Judge among the Gods, Laws will be ligule non regulae, Withs to bind the Poor, but not able to hold Sampson's, whereas Laws ought to be regulae ad omnes. Then the causae finales of Law are Order, Justice, Concord, Peace. These were in the mind of God, when he thought upon making man, and politizing the World; and these he works in the hearts of men in place and power, to propagate and effect, as they have opportunity. And therefore the Student of the Law must endeavour to know what Justice is, and how it respects not only the peace of his own soul, but of the whole Nation, and how it has regard also to for reign correspondency. For justice is indeed all virtue. Hence was it that Athenaes' tells us, that Antiquity represented Justice to have, Deipnos. lib. 12. p. 547. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. a golden face, and golden eyes, tokens of amability, and purity; yea, the first Altars they erected were to justice, as the deity subsidiary of all. And he that is deservedly an Aristides 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, may well be prayed for, that his Children may be numerous, and that they may in Justice be like their Father; since justice is like the Cement, which keeps the parts of the structure together under the common bond of union; and by such connexion, prevents scissure and fraction, which in time, effects dissolution. And therefore as Divines that preach sanctity of life, and likeness to God, that call on the people to be mortified, and to be subject for Conscience, should themselves, of all others, be most holy, most pure, precedents of piety and patience to others; not heady, highminded, effeminate, disturbers of order because they have daily Lectures of preciseness herein from the severity of their profession, and the effect it should have on their own lives: so of all men none should be so averse to injury, so free from strife, so gentle in bearing with the follies of the plebs. so resolute to propagate order, honour, and learning, as men of Law. For their profession is jus dicere & docere, Right is the genius of their study; and to prevent wrong, aught to be their practice. Since the end of Laws, is to keep men in government by the contexture of Law, and the distribution of Justice according to it; and they who profess the Law, and use it only as a decoy, to call fortune to them, by overreaching weak men, and suppressing right by power of argument and favour, are Lawyers per Antiphrasin, as Richard the third was Heir to his Nephews, of whom the Bishop of Carlisle said, he was malus haeres, they are possessors of the name, but not virtues of those pristine Lawyers, Pomponius, Cajus, Aquilius, Servius, Papinianus, Bracton, Glanvil, Littleton, Gascoyn, and others since, who were not temptable to injury, neither by favour nor frown. Vnde his tribus, videlicet principiis, causis, & elementis ignoratis: scientia de qua ipsa sunt, penitùs ignoratur. That is the media and passes to perfections being obstructed, or rather not made; there is no possibility of the perfection to be attained which they are ducts and convoys to; as without eyes and ears man can see or hear no Letters, without reason not judge, without Memory not retain, so without consistency and sobriety, not submit to Principles, and be ruled and swayed by them; the want of which rational passivity causes all the pedantry and scepticism that is in the world. I or though it be a brave daringness of reason to consider and search into things, and perfection, as it is attainable by man, is thus advanced to, yet is there danger in too far ventures, to be immerged and in the depth of new discoveries to lose all footing of pristine science; for laxation of Principle once assaulting new Discoverers, brings them to such a levity and itch of Progress, that they acquiesce in nothing but uncertainty, and grow unnatural to the pristine Principle of their fixation, which if they would as to the main adhear to, would encourage them to many rational advances, by which from the concluded root and maxim of art, many notable slips of science might be attained, which would make a pleasant show in the knots and borders of arts implantation: though I well know it's a very hard matter to form with nobly ingenious des Cartes a new Philosophy, and not with his transcendent Genius to resolve to do it by a declension of all former preconceptions, and a pleasure to unlearn whatever he has afore learned. Thus as the civil Law accounts a house or ship, that has been so much and so often mended, ut nihil ex pristina materia supersit, Tit. De legatis. 1, lib. 65 si ●à ss. 2. that it is nothing of what it first was, but all new; yet the same it first was, notwithstanding all its changes; so is it to be accounted possible, that men may find out new discoveries, Doctor Harvy. Mr. boil and others, most worthy Honour. as has been abundantly by our famous Country men in Physic and Mathematics of late, yet be still loyal to the Principles, Elements and causes of science, which they overturn not, but understand more rightly, and apply not contraryly but diversely, as their notion and indagation directs them to. For since all the knowledge and discovery our nature can make, is but confused and dark, by effects to know the causes, so far as they explicate themselves, and are served by proper instruments. As it becomes the reasonable soul of man to actuate itself proportionably to the Divinity of its constitution, so does it also import it to keep close to truth, and to be conducted by sobriety to the search and service of truth, lest while it peeps into the secrets of God to see what there is, (which it ought only to admire, contenting itself with what God has revealed as its boundary) it fall into a frenzy and raving in which it loses its self, and gives too just cause to censure, that not desire to know, as knowledge is the Image of God, and in the rectitude and sanctity of it is useful to man to inform him of his duty to God, his neighbour and himself, was the Motive to disquisition, and the unctuous liquor that fed the Lamp of its persistency, but pride and sacrilegious ambition to exceed others, and thereupon to brave with, and boast against them: that I say these were sinister proposes of their minds, which kept them in this fruitless toil. But it follows, Sic Legem divinam nos nôsse judicamus, dum fidem, charitatem, & spem, sacramenta quoque Ecclesiae, ac Dei mandata nos intelligere sentiamus, cetera Theologiae my●eria Ecclesiae praesidentibus relinquentes. This is added to show, that all men in the Church called Christians, as they have not alike in place and office, so have not like endowments, nor ought necessarily to be alike knowing and scientifique. All men without doubt that believe there is a God, and are baptised into the name of Christ, and have resigned up themselves by Baptismal vow to be God's, in knowing his will that they may do it, and deny all ungodliness contrary to, and inconsistent with it. I say all Christians within the Pale of the Church and Cruse signati, are without dispute to know the Elements, Principles, and Fundamentals of Religion, which (though all may not) yet are chiefly and in their vividst representation brought in here under the ternary, that St. Paul makes the sum of all Religion, Fides, spes, & charitas sunt virtutes theologicae, propriè in ment sita, sicut in intelligontia fides sit, in memoria spe●, in voluntate charitas, Hopperus lib. 2. de vera jurisprud. Tit. 5● p. 36. Faith in God as, He is, and is a rewarder of all that seek him, as all the promises of God are in Christ jesus, yea and Amen. As it is the evidence of things not seen, and the substance of things hoped for. Love to God for his own sake, as the infinite, eternal good, and to men for God's sake, since he that loves not his Brother whom he hath seen, cannot love God whom he hath not seen, and hope, as the soul's Anchor, that keeps the heart from breaking of from God by temptation or despair, and knits it to him according to that of King David, I had veryly fainted in my affliction, but that I hoped to see the goodness of the Lord in the Land of the living. I say, these graces as the principles of adhaesion to God, discretion and religion towards men, support and comfort to a man's own soul, aught to be the study, and diligent intentness of every man to get, not only to talk, and in the notion and superficiality of their apprehension to understand, but plenarily and affectionately to know that they may apply the comforts of them to their souls; for Theology being an affective and practic science, is then only rightly known, when 'tis applied in the comfort and practice of those excellent graces it speculates and professes. Then we know and understand what faith is, when we live not by sense, not by the impulses of putid reason, but as seeing him that is invisible, as having an eye to Christ the precedent of sanctity, who calls us in our desires and delights from this world, Quid non invenit fides? attingit in accessa, deprehendit ignota, comprehendit immensa, apprehendit novissima, ipsam denigue aeter●itatem vastissi. more suo sinu quodammodo circumcludit. Sanctus Bernard. Sermone 76. in Cantie. Pr●cepta qu● Deus per scipsu●●●, mandata qua per alios mandavit. Aquin. prima secunda Quaest 99 art. 5. Conslus. in which we are but strangers and Pilgrims to our Country above, the Inheritance amongst the Saints in light. Then we hope upon good grounds, when our Conscience witnesses with God's Spirit, that we are God's purchase, and thereupon may expect and hope for his promise: that we are those that live to God, and having this hope in us, purify ourselves as he is pure. Then we love God as we ought, when his love shed abroad in our hearts, makes in love all his Commandments by keeping them, and not thinking them grievous, all his Servants for his likeness in them and love towards them, all his Ordinances for his impress upon and glory from them. For though the Schools and after them the wits of men may distinguish Praceptum and Mandatum, making those only Precepts, which God by himsel f commanded, and those Commandments which by others he gives to his people: and hold themselves obliged to know and practise the former when they dispense with the latter, which surely is of equal Authority; and so our Lord saith, He that heareth you, heareth me, and he that despiseth, you despiseth me: though I say these partialityes and haltings in duty to God, according to the measure of our enlightening, may hurry some unstable minds into Precipices in which they will find no Comfort. Yet this is, Mandata Dei intelligere; when the intellect officiates in order to practical piety and devout zeal, when it puts a man not so much upon Myriad of accumulated notions, and ingenuous speculations, as upon the one thing that is necessary, parting with all we have and are for God, counting all our parts but as filthy rags and prostituted loathsomnesses in comparison of his glory. Indeed if a Christian reaches but this note, he bath voice enough to beg heaven with, and obtain it by, no nee d of the vast learning, subtle arguments, acquaint strains of seraphic Philosophers, and potent Orators; these graces in truth, will bring heaven down into the soul of their Possessors, and carry their Possessors into the Mansions Christ has purchased and prepared, which if so they will in a competent measure enworthy us for the right use of the sacraments of the Church, which, they only know comfortably, who live in faith, hope and charity: for suppose a man could discourse of the Sacraments not of, but rather in the Church (for the two, Baptism and the Lords Supper are Christ's Sacraments, instituted for the Church's edification) though Baronias tells us the Apostolic times expressed some other things by the term Sacrament, Tom. 1. p. 249, 440, 248.245, 596. Bellarminus lib. De Sacramentis. Fides sine ope charitatis non justisi cat. Bellarminus lib. 1. de justific: c. 5. the other five being the Romish Churches, shall be no part of my Discourse.) Suppose, I say, a man could dispute and write of them, as never man did, rather, as the best of men have done; yet if the power of them appear not in his life, all is to no purpose. Christ will never own men for their Knowledge but Practice, nor shall any man have a place in glory as a reward of his ingenuity but virtue; wits make men sometimes favourites here, but grace only is the object of ●acceptation with God: The Author's application to himself. Be, O my soul, a good Christian in the holiness of an humble life, and live up to the bond of thy Baptismal vow, examine thyself of thy sincerity, resolve against that sin, which makes and continues thee unworthy of the body and blood of thy Saviour in the Sacrament, and thou hast learning enough to make the happy, and outshine all this world's Lucifers; thou shalt not need to envy the greatest parts, or the gravest years, or the goodliest growth of learning's splendour; thou hast all in thy unfeigned devotion, and in thy firmer affiance in God for the reward and interpretation of it. Caetera Theologiae mysteria Ecclesiae praesidentibus relinquentes, etc. This is subjoined, to teach us, that there are many things in knowledge appendicious, and exploratory of compleatness, which are not fundamental, and requisite absolutely to make us secure from the wrath to come. God, as he has not made all men of one mould and stature, of one likeness and capacity, so has he not in his Wisdom and Justice appointed one and the same proportion of parts to be in all men; nor will he judge all men according to one and same expression of themselves. Fides gignitur & nutritur per scientiam extrinsecè tantum persua dendo. Sanctus Thom. 1. part. art. 2 q. 22. Indeed, the chief extrinsique Wheel of Faith is Science, which through persuasion blessed by God, works the soul into a submission to God; but God alone is the first mover, and the intern cause of our motion towards him; and therefore there needs nothing to our security, beyond our humility before God, our sincerity to God. This will avail for our happiness, as much as we shall need; yet are there accomplishments, which men in place and extraordinarily gifted attain to, which are not only Ornaments to them, but influences of good to others. The Church of God has her 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and her 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as well as any other society of men, and the Bishops and Governors of her are the proper Oracles of them; men of years, learning, piety as they are and aught to be, are the probablest to know, and the meetest to handle those sacred Rites, and renowned Mysteries, which are then perverted and distorted, when the discourse of ignorant and impudent men; wherefore Antiquity (to make Religion venerable with, and influential on the people) kept the plebs at a distance from the s●ght and audience of the mysteries of Religion, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Suidas in verté etc. because the hearers of them were by the Law of their constitution, to shut their mouths, and to tell what they heard to no man. Of all the Religious Rites and Mysteries, none were among the Heathen like the Eleusinian ones; those were so serious and solemn, that none who were not sacris initiati, were to be present at them, and while they were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which was a twelve month, for their probation, they were kept at distance; after that, they were admitted to the greater mysteries, and were called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; to which Saint Peter alludes, 2 Pet. 1.16. but were eye-witnesses of his Majesty: yea, so much further reverence were these 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 enjoined, that they had an oath given them, not to reveal any of the great mysteries to the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, those that were but entered. These devoted to the service of Ceres and Proserpina, Cicero alludes to, when he enjoins the Orator to conceal what his Client has committed to his secrecy, Tantum tanquam mysterium tenere aliquid. 3. De Orator. Ad Attic. lib. 4.87. as if it were a mystery. Of these mysteries, Alexander ab Alexand. Agellius, jul. Caepitolinus, Aelius Lampridius, Ammianus Marcellinus, Xiphilinus in Epitome. In Alexand. Sever. p. 213. lib. 19 p. 364. & 481.407. Dionis, p. 356. In Adrian, Herodian, lib. 3. p. 527. and particularly Lilius Gyraldus, these, and multitudes of other Authors, In Symbol, Pythagoric p. 493. Titulo Silentium, & p. 413. Histor. Deorum Syntag. 17. have written of the trash and trumpery of these devotions; which here to mention, were to abuse the Reader, and to misuse time. The mysteries of Christianity are no such silent nothings; God has indeed committed to his Churchmen, the Oracles of God, the Word of Reconciliation; and the Church, as the Spouse of Christ, Civitas est Ecclesia, vigilate ad custodiam; sponsa est, studete ornatus; over sunt, intetidite quastus. Serm. 76. in Cantic. 7. is to be conducted in her march towards Heaven, by these Prasidentes Ecclesia, who are Guard to her, which is a City by them watched, the Spouse of Christ by them adorned, the sheep of Christ by them fed, as Saint Bernard notably; and therefore it being their duty and office, Se●m. 77. ornare spons 'em now spoliare, To adorn, not rob, to keep, not ruin; to institute, not prostitute the Church; God has given them power suitable to their trust. They are now lifted up above the meaner degrees of men sacrated to God, and are made Watch- men and Overseers of their Spiritualities: and the presidency God has invested them with, being for edification, not destruction, deserves from them double honour, who by their care and conduct are kept from wander and error; yea fed with the sincere milk of the Word, and may, and aught to grow spiritually thereby. Though then all men are bound to know the things of God which are revealed in his Word, as matter of their duty, and which by reason of God's postulation of them, he has given them possibility, and convenient helps; to their indoctrination, such as are the grounds of Faith, the Law of Conversation, the Institutions of Christianity, which are all couched in those words, Dum fidem, charitatem, & spem, Sacramenta quoque Ecclesiae: Yet are those whom he hath made his Ambassadors and workers together with him, secondary Apostles, not stinted to this proportion. There are Caetera Theologiae Mysteria to be studied, and understood by them, over and above those, merè necessaria, which other Christians are obliged to. They are to be salt and light, furnished with greater proportions of illumination and discretion, than the people are; because the people are to inquire the Law at the Priest's Lips, therefore God has promised those, their lips shall preserve knowledge, and chiefly sure, that knowledge that is peculiar to their Calling. For though it be commendable in Divines to know every part of Science, and the more accomplished they are in the universality of their reading, the probabler they are to show themselves Workmen that need not to be ashamed: yet for them that are in Holy Orders, catholicly, Apostolically, Can●niquely ordained, for these to be Goliath and Apollos' in other skills, and rude and unstrenuous in Divinity, for them to know least in that which they profess, and by reason of which they have care of souls in the Church, is very much a blemish, and I had almost said, a Blasphemy: Sure I am, 'tis a botch and spot, which is not the spot of God's people in the Priesthood. Whether then the Presidents Ecclesiae be here meant largely, for such as are in the Order of Evangelique Priesthood, which (a) Lib. 1. cap. 2. Sum. Eccles. Turrecremata affirms to be instituted by Christ in his Holy Supper, when he himself Priested all his Apostles: whence (b) In Psal 86. Qu. 2. Disput. 1. p. 225. Benzoniu●, out of Saint (c) Tract. Perri De Palude, De causa immediata Eccles. Potestatis. chrysostom, as he alleadges him, calls them Vicarios Christi, immo ipsum Christum; and out of others, Sacerdotes Deos quosdam esse inter homines, etc. Or for the Fathers of the Church, the Episcopal Order, which he says Christ instituted, when he consecrated Saint Peter, and in him, all his Successors in that Superior Order. Or if not so ordered, yet of Apostolic Origin, and Catholic approbation, as is evident in all the Histories of the Church, Durandus Epise. Meldensis, lib. De Orig. Jurisdiction●m, art. 5. De potest Episcoporum. Tom. 1. Annal. p. 435, 497, 498, 567. Sanctus Cyprianus apud Baronium. To. 1. Annal. p. 134. which do unanimously give testimony to Episcopal jurisdiction and pre-eminence. I say, whether the Text be understood in the lax sense, or rather in this more press one, for Governors in the Church, (called by the Statute of the 13. of Eliz. c. 12. the Bishop or Guardian of the Spiritualities: by the 8. of Eliz. c. 1. the State of the Clergy, one of the greatest States of this Realm, Arch-Bishops and Bishops; who by reason of their dignity, deserts, and influence, are termed the Church; and so also are expressed in the Statute of 25 Hen. 8. c. 21 and which Baronius tells us the honourable account this Order had, being early after Christ called Apostles, which perhaps Saint Cyprian might allude to in these words, Vnde scire debes Episcopum in Ecclesia est, & Ecclesia in Episcopum.) The Rule is very good; that the more copious and curious knowledge of Religion is proper and peculiar to them to know, that they may be able Ministers of the New Testament, and be meet to every Ministerial purpose. Quare Dominus Discipulis suis dicit. Vobis datum est nôsse mysterium regni calorum, caeteris autem in Parabolis, ut videntes non videant. This Scripture, in Mark iv. 11. comes in patly to confirm the Proposition; God's Ministers, Bishops and Presbyters presiding in the Church, are to know the mysteries of Religion beyond the proportion of other men: Why? because they are set apart to that work: Eruditio & Scientia Pontificis in Ecclesia Evangelica, tanta esse debet, ut & gressus ejus & motus, & manus, item digiti, & universae partes corporis vocales sint ita, ut veritatem ment concipiens, & t●to eam habitu resonet & ornatu, Benzonius in Psal. 86. quest. 17. p. 348. how? by God specially qualified to such accomplishment, not as men, for so they partake in common with others, and are more or less apt, as they are more or less endowed with natural parts, and noble acquisitions; but as they are haereditarii Christi Apostoli, as they are set apart to God, and have renounced this World; so they seem to be entitled to greater proportions of illumination, even by virtue of this Scripture, which though spoken to the Apostles on a particular occasion, yet has a kind of promissory benediction in it, which is descendable on all the successions of men in the Ministry of the Church. And because this Scripture is alleged here so pertinently, and carries so much of the pregnancy of divine reason in it, I shall take leave to touch upon the particulars of it so far, as they illustrate the purpose of our Text-Master. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To you,] who were they? not the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the multitude spoken of v. 1. who sat on the Sea side to hear him, and to whom he taught 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, many things by parable, v. 2. but the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 refers to the tenth verse, when he said when he was alone 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, those that were about him with the twelve; That is, Hoc autem 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, veteres explicârunt 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 laxiore notione. Grot. in Mar. iv. 11. some candidate Disciples that had given Testimony of their extraordinary sincerity, in resigning themselves up to our Lord; These with the twelve Apostles, who were of our Lord's Family, and stood daily before him, his Reverend Privy Chamber-men, who had daily access to, and acceptation with him; to these is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 intended, for these being the persons that took a welcome confidence to seek solution of their doubts from his infallibility, he assures this Privilege to of knowing plainly what others do but in shadows, darkly and imperfectly. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉.] It is given, 'Tis not gotten by your Industry, nor deserved by your Excellency, nor purchased by your Wealth, but given; God bestows his largesses as fruits of his Bounty, and tokens of his Munificence, and his word to lesson us humility phrases all our receivings as matter of grace and gift, the gift of God is eternal life; so God loved the Word, Rom. 6.23. John 3.16. Luke 11.13. Phil. 2.13. Jam. 1.17. that he gave his only begotten Son; if thou knewest the gift of God; I will give you another Comforter; he will give the Holy Spirit to them that ask it; it is GOD that worketh in us both to will, and to do of his good pleasure; and every good gift, and every perfect gift cometh from above. These are the Scripture phrases, and in this tone does our Lord convey the impartment of his Indulgence to his Disciples above others; To you 'tis given, freely without your merit, fully without his restraint. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To know,] not only to hear and to see, by which two senses the intellect has great additions; but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as much as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, to judge and discern, which is the knowledge of a practic understanding, and a discreet judgement, to know so as to be able to make others know our knowledge, to know with assurance and demonstration far beyond the reach and certainty of pure rational Evidence; this the knowledge of Faith, the Evidence of things not seen, is that which is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here, Christ had wrought faith in their hearts which drew the from them world to the love and reliance on him; and he tells them that they had received an ample reward for their service, to wit, the gift to know the mystery of the Kingdom of Heaven. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉;] The mystery of the Kingdom of God, that is a singular expression to a plural sense; the knowledge of the Apostles was of all the necessary matters to their comfort and compleatness, God is one and all that is knowable of him, he teaches his the mystery of; Thus complex is the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. xi. 25. I would not Brethren that you should be ignorant of this Mystery, so 1 Cor. two. v. 7. We speak the wisdom of God in a Mystery, Ephes. iii 4. whereby when ye read, ye may understand my knowledge in the Mystery of Christ Coloss. two. 2. unto all the riches of the full assurance of understanding, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, to the acknowledgement of the Mystery of God, to you 'tis given to know the Mystery, that is, God calls you into the Mount to a close view of him, when others see in dark and uncertain proportions, and through thick cloathings of Divine Glory interposing between them and their seings. When they hear but part, and not the full mind of God in the latitude of an affectionate bounty: ye shall know the Mystery of the Kingdom of God, Non communicandum prophanis, In Mat. 4.11. saith Erasmus, in the Sacramental efficacy of it, ye shall have the Kingdom of God in the graces of your hearts; which shall by a Mystery of love and goodness change and refine you. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. But to th●se without.] This alludes to the people and plebs of followers, so is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, taken, 1 Cor. v. 12, 13. Col. iv. 5. 1 Thess. iv. 12. and so Grotius says, St. Clem●nt, In Lo●● and the Ancient Christians held all that were not professed Disciples who heard Christ non discendae pietatis animo, to profit by his Doctrine, and to be in a Conformity to it, but as the Athenians are said to spend their time, Acts xvii. 21. In hearing and telling news; These who are only eye servants, and hearers for fashion sake, whom the loaves and the miracles, and the sublimity of our Lord's Divinity, made to follow him as a satisfaction of their curiosity, necessity, or such like self gratification, such who were touched with no zeal, inflamed with no ardour, ballasted with no judgement in their following of him: our Lord feeds only with the Crumbs, somewhat these dogs of the Flock must have from the Lords bounty, and that they have, is but hard food, which has such an Incrustation in it as the power of nature will hardly break through. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉,] All things are propounded in Parables, that is, whereas Christ to his Family speaks familiarly, though he show these his followers, and as it were fellow-Ambassadors, all the Treasures of his Wisdom and Knowledge, though he make them privy to all his secrets, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, sine ●arum apertiore explic●tione, Grot. in Lo●. and give them the Key of his Cabinet, in which are locked up his Receipts and Prescripts, for pleasing God, and following him accurately and acceptably, though these patefactions of the mystery of his Eudochy be the children's bread; yet to those that are without, all that he discovers to them, is only in Parables. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Suidas in verbo. Now Parables were dark and mysterious speeches, which in few words carried large senses, and truly profitable; anciently these were much in use, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a Parable is the explication of words of Antiquity, the discovery of what wisdom in the beginning of time thought. Samson in Holy Writ, is first that I remember mentioned to use them, judg. xiv. 12. I will now put forth a Riddle to you, saith he, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, I will deliver my dark saying to you. So the LXX. Heb. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, comes from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to speak smartly and mystically, as we use to say, with a guard upon our words; and the learned make it synomous with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, to speak acutely, and with all the dexterity that oratorious emphatiqueness can advance to and arrive at. This form of Speech, God not only in nature taught man, but expressly and by the positivity of a command, put the Prophet Ezech. upon using, for in the 17. of his Prophecy, v. 2. God bids him put forth to the Son of man a Riddle, and speak a Parable to the house of Israel, where 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, to speak a Parable parabolically, is read oftener by dominari, and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, then by any thing of a soft sense. God would have his Prophet speak to them in a form of speech, that had authority and majesty in it, that could command their attention and obedience, like those words of our Lord in the Gospel, which were by his Adversaries testified to be spoken with authority, and not as the Scribes. Hence it is, that learned men say, Adages, Sentences, and Parables, which Principatum in sermone tenent, none used, but those that were eminent, and far above the vulgar, Thus our Lord Jesus here uses Parables, to convey to the jews, what he saw they were capable of, and fitted to improve. He knew they were a rough and fierce people, whose ingratitude had obliterated all the memorial of mercy, and that divine favour had not bettered them, but yet they were settled upon their lees, and were under a confirmed obduration; and therefore, though he could not but propose his love and light to them anew, and usher it into their acceptance, with all advantages of probable success; De Parabolis l●g● Hieronimum De la Rua Tole tanum c●n●rovers. non● de Psalmis, & sensib●● S. Scriptura, p 814. Imp. Ma●riti, Anno. 1620. yet he soresaw their obstinacy would reproach his goodness, and thereupon he reveals himself to them in Parables; to tell us that whatever God conceals of himself from us, is in condescension to our weakness, and in punishment of our wantonness. For if there be any Scalado to the secrets of God, 'tis that of humility and holy fear; the secrets of the Lord are with them that fear him. And if the eyes of men be blinded judicially, 'tis penal of their Primitive sinful choice; because they would not see when they might, God has concluded them under a Sentence of irreversible blindness, ut videntes non videant. So dangerous obstinacy, against God's conviction and approaches to us, is, that it is just with him to suffer us not to know at all the things of our peace, who will not know it in his time, and by his means, and according to his proportion; which they do not, that abound in their own sense, and limit not their studies to sobriety; as the Apostle in the first of Rom. 22. and 12.16. cautions, and our Text-Master after him. Sic & tibi, Princeps, necessarium non erit mysteria legis Angliae longo disciplinatu rimare, sufficiet tibi ut in Grammatica tu profecisti, etiam & in legibus proficias. Here the Chancellor applies the Premises, and makes the Prince to apprehend the substance and drift of them, which is, that in every Profession, the exact and utmost notions and possibilities of Science, are not so usually the labours of men of fortune, and speculative pleasure, as of Artists that intent to live by, and to be exact in them; and that from their progress, fix a reputation and advantage to themselves from them: So in knowledge of the Law, though Lawyers may toil and travel to apprehend every nicety, and take view of every punctilio in their Profession; yet the Prince being so great a Personage, and having others in substitution under him, to judge according to the Laws, shall not need to search year Books, view Records, turn over Precedents, and toil in the varieties of these many mysterious niceties, that's not necessary, nor what the Chancellor judges correspondent to his state and degree. For as in Grammar a man may be competently learned, so as to deserve the name of a Grammatian, though he be not able to answer the nice questions Tiberius put to the Grammarians he delighted in, Suetonius in Tibet. c. 70. Quae Mater Hecubae, etc. Who was the Mother of Hecuba, of what account Achilles was among Virgins, what was the subject matter of the Sirens ●otes. Yea, though he attain not to the exactness of (a) Erotemata Impr. Paris. Calcondylas. 1547. Chrysoloras, (b) De ecto partibus orationis. Lascaris, (c) Introductiones Grammaticae. Basil, 1529. Gaeza, (d) Institutiones Graecae Linquae, Basil, Imp. per Sebastianum Henric. Petri. Vrbanus, (e) Instit. Gram. edit Wolmarii Basileae. Calcondylas Minutius, or other later, not inferior to the best of them, because the excellency of their knowledge, was rather in the curiosities and niceties of words and speech, then in the necessary rules which are indispensably to be known; and therefore those that know the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and make a right use of them to all the four parts of Grammar, and the issues from them, may with credit enough to themselves, and benefit to others, rest contented in their acquirements: So in the Law, though the Prince be not a Littleton, a Cook, a Dyer, a Plowden, yet if he be but acquainted with the terms, language, and maxims of the Law, that will be enough to accomplish him, without any further travel into obstrusities of discouragement. Now the Chancellor urges Grammar knowledge, as the Introduction to all that is Technical; Ars caeterarum omnium veluti fons & origo, cujus fundamentum nisi quis fideliter jecerit, quicquid superstruxerit, corruet, lib. 1. c. 4. Instit. so Quintilian terms it, and he adds, That unless a good foundation be laid in that, all after-superstructures will totter and fall; and judicious (a) Praefat. Epist. ad Grammat. Suidas in verbo. Necessariae pueris, jucundae senibus, dulcis secretorum comes, & quae v●lsola, omnium studiorum genere plus habet artis quam ostentationis, Fab. lib. 1. c. 4. Institut. Orator. Melancthou seconds him, The other Studies succeed according to Grammars tyrocinie; for Grammar being not well grounded in, all other Institutions are to little purpose; and the use of it being taken, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, to teach the first Elements: thereby it becomes necessary to Youth, and in its progress delightful to the greatest proficiencies of age, prescribing the method of reading and pronunciation, of understanding and explication, of distinction and emendation, of judgement and discrimination; which are made by Varro, and others after him, the parts of practical Grammar, under the names of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, I say, the Chancellor producing this, as the chief strength of his Argument, makes me think of that of Tully, the great Master of Language, whom Quintilian calls ex actor asperrimus, so rigid to his Son, in keeping him to the punctualities of Grammar, and not dispensing with any omission in the exactness of it, because he best knew the ill confequences of neglects in it, Lib. 2. c. 2 Instit. Orator. which wise Grammarians are by Quintilian instructed to avoid, as that which will render their Scholars little credit, or comfort to them. Grammaticae vero perfectionem, quae ex Etymologia, Orthographia, Prosodia, & Syntaxi quasi ex quatuor fontibus profluit, non s●ecie tenus industi, & tamen Grammaticâ sufficienter eruditus es, ità ut meritò Grammaticus denomineris. These words are a representation of Grammar, as a Paradise that is encompassed with a fourfold fountain of delight and variety, as God's Eden was with four Rivers; the first whereof is Orthography, Antiqui novique Orthographica Impr. Tornaci, Anno. 1633. the art of writing aright: concerning which, Claudius Dorsquius has most ingenuously, and floridly written large Books, and mentions 57 particular Authors, who have preceded him in that Argument. That which I shall add, is, that use and custom of time and men famous in their Arts and Ages, is the Standard of Rectitude herein: Victorinus Afer. lib. De Orthographia. For in every Age and Author almost is there somewhat exempt from the common road, which yet is not accounted improper, but obtains by the users fame, and the favour of usage, an adoption into propriety, Veram Orthographiae consuet udini seruit, idcó que s●pe mutata est, lib. 1. c. 7. etc. and an enfranchisement from the bondage of censure, as Quinilian grants, and as by the perusal and comparing of Priscian and other ancient Grammarians with latter ones, frequently appears: Sylburg. Rudiment. Graec. ling. p. 13. & seq. for as fashions in clothes, and cookery of meats, and figures of building, and words of language, change with men, as their humours or the accidents of their lives, or other contingents rule them; so does Orthography alter, that being practised by one age, that is distasted by another, as * Pag. 31, 38, 41, 43. etc. Melancthon in many places of his Grammar makes good, Lips. De recta pronunciatione Ling. Lat. ad finem Vol. 1 Oper. Orthographiam, id est, formulam, rationémque seribendi à Grammaticis institutam non adeò ●ustodiit, ac videtur sequi potius opinionem, qui perinde scribendum ac loquendum existiment. Suetonius in Octau. c. 8●. and as bo●h A Gellius, Lipsius, and others make appear. Though therefore there be a rule in Orthography, which 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, be to be observed, yet where it is capable of Correction, and Improvement, the nearer writing comes to the tone of speech, the more proper and useful seems it to me to be, nor are, as I humbly conceive, the omissions of superfluous vowels, or the addition of Letters supernumerary, errors or beauties in writing. Etymologia,] As Orthography marshal's Letters into words, so Etymology presents the true Notion or Notation of Letters in their word: the Latins call it Veriloquium, Quò verborum explicatio probatur, etc. Etymology the Greeks call the Explication or the reason, why things are called so as they are: after him, Quintilian (a) 1. Academic. 46. lib. 1. c. 6. says the same, this, Aristotle calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that which carries the indication of every thing in it; Aut enim Etymologia est, aut allusio, aut allegoria, aut caetera hujusmodi. Brechaeus ad Legem 180. lib. De Verb sig. p. 387. Alciat. ad legem. 183. p. 3●2. for names being significative of Natures, and conform to somewhat Relative to that they are called by, no better a Calculate can be made of any thing, then that, which is deducible from the Notation of its name. Though Rualdus takes upon him to censure Plutarch, Varro, and other exact Grammarians upon Etymologies by them given, and concludes them vain: yet as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, import much in Critics, so doth Etymology to, which Carolus Sigonius, and Beckman, assisted by all florid Suffrages make good; for though I know that Etymologies are not always to be depended upon, but that sometimes the uncertain tye of them occasions loss of truth, Continet in se multam eruditionem, sive illa ex Graecis orta tractamus sive ex historiarum veterum notitia, nomin●m, locorum, homin●m, gentium, urbium requiramus, lib 1. De Orat. c. 6. as well as of smartness of Notion, yet for the most part whatever is discoverable either from the Greeks or latter Historians, concerning places, men, Nations, Cities, is much the effect of Etymology. This is Etymology in the general and large capacity of the word; yet in Grammar, Etymology is taken for the ratio cognoscendi casuum discrimina, having relation to all parts of speech, and so it is here to be taken as our Chancellor refers it to Grammar, and makes it a part of it. The third part of Grammar is Syntax, the Concord and Regimental Order of parts of speech, whereby they are made to coincide, and mix together in the harmony of propriety and exactness, Grantus in Gr. Ling. spiceleg. p. 13●. ●. Grammarians define it to be the fit Connexion and absolute comprehension of perfect speech; that which does afferre sermoni venustatem gratiámque, gives a grace and Majestic order and consent to speech, and indeed this is that part, that rescues speech from Barbarism, Lilius in Gram. and that which they call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 disproportion. For Syntax making a Concord of words each with other in Gender, Number, Case, manner, time, person, introduces convenience the Companion of delight, which is an harmony, Prosodia e●● quae rectam vocum pronunciationem tradit, Idem. and reaches the fourth and last part of Grammar which is Prosodia from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a musical consent, which keeps exactness in all notes of speech, whether loud or low, shrill or soft, whether those that are distinquished by labour and care, either to extend or depress the syllables, or appear in the production or correption of them, by which, time is regulated. This no less necessary to a graceful and good Orator and Poet is to be diligently observed, as the other parts are; and whosoever has any competent skill in them, will deserve the name of a well instituted Scholar, though not to the proportion of Erasmus (whom Critics allow the restorer of curious learning, and as it were their second Genius:) but to such a degree as will in a good sense merit the title of a Grammarian. Consimiliter quoque denominari legista mereberis, si legum principia, & causas, usque ad elementa discipuli more indagaveris. Still the Chancellor proceeds to animate the Prince in his pursuit of the Law by the example of success in elementary learning, for as in Grammar a man may attain enough to be termed a Grammarian, though as I said before, he be none of the first three, so in the Law a man may have credit of Proficiency, though he be none of the profound ones. Indeed to be exact a Papinian, a Pomponius, a Plowden, a Dyer requires a whole man in his best expense of time, and with the best of Divine blessings on his reading and rumination; and that no man can reasonably have ambition to attain to, or grieve in falling short off, but he that by length of time, eagerness of study, strength of memory, sharpness of conception, approaches it: but to be entered into and have a superficial knowledge of the Law by which the Student (suppose the Prince) may have (as I said before) insight in the language and common Notions of it, will give the Prince as great a title to the praise of the knowledge of the Laws of his government, as he shall need to have; and in having them will abundantly find himself accomplished; Selden notes on Fortescue, p. 20. K James speech Whitehall, 1607. p. 513. Of his works in folio. For as they are the best Laws for any place, that most suit with the disposition of the State and Manners of the people that there live, so is it the best knowledge that a Prince can acquire, to know God's mercy and indulgence to him in the Method and Prescripts of the Topique Laws of which h● is Guardian, and according to which his prudence and piety makes him conformable; the degrees of which knowledge are not necessary to the latitude of the Continent, but to such Ascents as are in order to Regal Enablement. Non enim expediet tibi propriâ sensus indagine legis Sacramenta rimare, sed relinquatur illa judicibus tuis, & advocatis qui in regno Angliae servientes ad legem appellantur, similiter & aliis peritis quos appretisios vulgus denominat. This the Chancellor expresses, to take of all doubt in the Prince, of more expected from him, then is probable for him to attain to with convenient industry: For though he press upon the Prince love to, and skill in the Law; yet 'tis not such a skill as is irksome to get, or takes up all his time to arrive at; 'tis not Sacramenta legis rimare, but 'tis to know what is common and introductional to knowledge of use, and credit of conversation. For though necessary it be to know Legis Sacramenta, the all that is to be known of the Law, the rise, reason progress, variation, policy, and interest of the Law, and what in all these Notions is couched, and how these have beneficial operations on the minds of those that know them, to enable them to every scientifique and practic purpose, yet is this not fit for Princes so far to engage them, lest it take up their thoughts too strictly, and possess them too fully to give way for other regal Offices to be thought upon and beloved by them. Ipse jus dixit assiduè; & dixit autem jus non modo summa diligentia, sed & lenitate Sueton. de Octaviano Aug c. 33. Cook 2. Instit. on c. 151. W●stmin. p. 186. To get a pregnant use of reason and to use it according to the prudence of Government tempered by Law, which rectifies all violences; this is enough for a Prince to know when young, the rest that is more perplex and burdensome, the Chancellor says, relinquetur judicibus tuis, etc. For the King being a Body-Politique, as he commands by matter of Record (for Rex praecipit, and Lex praecipit; are all one) and judgeth not propria sensus indagine, but according to the Law distributed in his Courts; so he knows in a Politic sense the Law by his judges whose judgements are so politicly the King's, that intentionally, and in the virtue of it, it is his. And hence comes the relinquatur judicibus tuis. That is, let others whose particular study and skill it is to intend it, ease you of your burden, and distribute the Laws of which you are Head and supreme Governor to your people: Nor is this late and lazy counsel, but grave and great, as old as Moses, and given him from jethro his Father in Law, Priest and Prince of Midian, as an expedient to prevent Moses his toil, and overmuch trouble of himself. For Moses having told jethro, how he behaved himself to the people, and in what capacity he was apprehended by them, Exod. xviii. 16. and jethro having wisely weighed the employment, and compared it with the condition and temper of Moses his mind and body, does not confirm him in his laborious, and not to be endured toil, but friendly, and in a way of pathetic kindness reproves him, ver. 17. The thing that thou dost is not good. Not thereby meaning the Act of Legislation to Israel, or his standing in the place of God for Israel's accommodation, was politically or morally not good: For good it was, that people should be kept in order by a good Magistrate, and the prudence of nature dictates this: But in that he says, the thing that thou dost is not good, that is mode & forma, in the way and kind of thy doing it. Thou art indeed Moses, kind and useful to the people, but cruel to thyself, and to the people too, if what thou dost beyond thy strength, shorten thy life, and leave them, without thee, miserable: so ver. 18. Thou wilt surely wear away, both thou, and this people that is with thee; for this thing is too heavy for thee, thou art not able to perform it thyself alone. This is the reason of his dehortation and argument, ab incommodo; 'tis injurious to thee first, and then reflectively to Israel, therefore cease to do what would be better undone: yet that he may not seem to loosen, what he cannot fasten again, and more usefully he annexes an affirmative direction, how to accommodate himself, and his government by a more mediocrious method, Harken now (saith he) unto my voice, I will give thee counsel, and God shall be with thee, etc. ver. 19, 20. And after all he adds, ver. 21. Moreover, thou shalt provide thee out of all the people able men, such as fear God, men of truth, hating covetousness, and place such over them, and let them judge the people at all seasons. This Scripture is the grand Record of Judges, both as to their antiquity, qualifications, and power, which is worthy to be written of, because the subjects of it are (under supreme Princes, and their great Officers of State) the most considerable in any Nation, especially in this of England; where, though they can not jus dare, make Laws, yet they can and do jus dicere, interpret the Laws made, according to the true sense thereof. And therefore no wonder, though this Scripture be the glass through which the Kings of this Land have seen the portraitures of those excellent persons, whom they have worthily in all Ages, chosen to, and placed in those Offices. judges have been ever very ancient in all the civilised World, and those chosen men, not forward to prefer themselves, not men of Absalom's spirit, that are swollen with ambition and populacy; 5. De Morib. 6.7. but men picked, and by experience found fit to be deciders of controversies, who will, as the Philosopher expresses it, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. be so just to divide differences into equal shares, and give every one his portion, as Parents do the matter of brawl between their Children, and thereby appease them. Now because men of brave spirits are set in their proper Orbs, when in places of Judicature, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Rhetor. l. 2. c. 17. Grot. in loc. and then have the opportunity to show the virtues God and Nature have endowed them with; the Holy Ghost directs men by the dictation of jethro, approved by Moses, to begin with men of virtue, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, our Translators render it, alle men, which is seconded by Grotius, who makes this ability to extend as the Rabbins lesson him; and the notation of the word will bear it to all kind of ability, of body, mind, fortune, in which sense we call usually those that excel, able men, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; so the LXXII men of courage, that will go through stitch with the work of Justice, that will not fear the face of any he, that offends, and the better to keep courage, (besides innocency and the fear of God, which makes men bold and brave,) Fortune and estate is a great muniment to a Judge, and Rabbi Selom, as Munster quotes him, makes this able men to be meant of rich men, Viri fortes sunt divites quibus non est necesse, ut adulentur, & accipiant personas. R. Selo. apud Munster, in loc. able to subsist themselves and their charges, without dependence, flattery, and the acceptation of men's persons in judgement; which truly is much (no doubt) of what the sense of jethro, and of what the Holy Ghost means in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, for though it be true, that integrity will preserve a man from desires, yea and admissions of corruption, yet it has a shrewd assailant, when need or shortness of tether beleaguereth it. For though a vicious mind will never permit a rich man to be just or good, where he is tempted to be otherwise by the vice he dotes on; yet 'tis probable the fear of censure, fine, and imprisonment, may awe him that has an estate solvable in that case, from attempting, or accepting, what on other grounds he would be more inclinable to. In Pandect. priores, p. 62. edit. Basil. And since that of Budaeus is true, Ad judicem ire, ad jus est ire, etc. The judge addressed to, is an address to the Law, since he is the living Law. It concerns Princes, whose all power within their Jurisdictions legally is, to be exact in their delegations to meet persons, men of ability in wisdom, courage, fortune. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Fearing the Lord,] This is added, as that which knits the knot of the former abilities so fast, that it will be indissolvable. Tiraquel ad lib. 5. Genial. dic●um. c. 14. p. 687, 688 Hieronimus Procarius (whom tiraquel terms a most knowing man in the Law, and expert in Government) has observed, that there are four things that subvert Justice; hatred, favour, bribery, fear; and against all these, this fear of God is a preservative; for it will put a man upon hatred of every evil way, and observation of God's eye intent on him: and his judgement impendent on his wand'ring, it will make a man watch and ward his ways, that he offend not in any defect of duty. For when the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, is put absolutely, as here it is, the Learned say it signifies Curare, Psal. xlix. 17. Be not thou afraid, when any one is made rich, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Iethroes meaning then is, choose men fearing God, that is, that are solicitous, and thoughtful to do their duty, in obedience to his declared will, and according to the notions they have of his pure nature, and provident appointment of Magistracy, to preside over men for their good. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Men of truth,] Who having knowledge, conscience, and sincerity, which King james declared requisite in Judges, Speech in Parliament. 1609. fol. 494. of his Works. dare to do nothing unworthy their places, or the Laws Prescript. For men of truth are opposed to lose & lewd men, in whom there is no thing but falsehood, and to whose words there is no heed to be given. From this censure, as too great a blemish for Innocence to bear, the Sons of jacob sought to free themselves; for when they were charged to be Spies, and joseph, in Gen. xlii. 16. appoints them to discover 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, whether truth were with them, they join issue upon his own terms, and having ver. 11. alleged, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, recti nos, and proceeded in their justification, ver. 19, 31, 33, 34. They avoid the just reward of perfidy, which those corrupt Judges in Herodotus had, Lib. 5. one of which Cambyses caused to be slead, and his skin to be set over the Judgement Seat, and the other Sandoces by name was by Darius suitably proceeded against. Lib. 7. Polymn. For since the Law of God commands neither to look upon the person of the Poor or of the Rich in judgement, but to fear the Lord and his punishment: the Laws of all Religions and Governments, look upon irrectitude in a Judge, as that which can have no penalty transcending the demerit of it, because it is an abusion of God's power, and the Sovereign's grace, while both those royal purposes direct the use of that expedient to the divine end of righting wrong, and animating virtue, Drusius in loc. it follows 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, hating covetousness: the Greeks render this by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which is a word, importing desire of having plenty above others. The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, signifies all manner of evil desire, be it by what means it will, or in what degree it can, whether the way to accomplish it be calumny, force, flattery, or which way soever, Hall & Fox, in H. 6. ad annum, 1471. that is inordinate. And because Covetousness obstructs every good sincere action, which is nor subsidiary to some advantage of the covetous person, as is eludent in many examples, but especially in Henry the seventh, who had a desire to Saint Henry the sixth, but that the Pope asked too much money for his (Canonization; which Henry) the seventh not willing to part with, omitted Henry the sixth's Canonization as loving money better than the honour of his Predecessors memory and piety; therefore God by his Prophet Habbakuk pronounces a woe to him that covets an evil covetousness that is, Chap. 2.9, vae qui congregat avaritiam malam, saith S. jerom. So Prov. xv. 27. so Exod. 18.21. this very verse of the Text is understood by the learned, to be meant of those who follow not the desires of the World nor are unlawfully acted by the love of riches or power, Qui non sequuntur mundi disederia, nec divitiarum amorem, aut dignitatem; atodio habeant, abominentarque opum congregationem nisi quatenus ad vitam sunt opera pratiam. Pagninus in ver●o. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but use them, and endeavour to possess them so far only, as they are comforts of life, and may be illustrations of virtue. And thus to limit covetousness, being to ●ate it, is to avoid the Judgements threatened against the intemperance of it, Isa. lvii. 17. jer. xxii. 17 jer. li. 13. Mic. iv. 13. In all which places, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Menand. the very same sin, by the same name, is most highly menaced, and the great severity of God in the wasting of Nations, attributed to it, as the procuring and meritorious cause of it. Judge's then being by the Prescript of God to be thus qualified, Preface to the 4. Rep. they that are such, and so endowed, aught to have high value from the people, as they have received the token of it in their trust from the King; and since this place is so precise in the requiries of a Judge, and the Kings of this Land have ever been so careful, to promote thereto persons, Caveat sibi, nè in sede judicandi, quae est quasi Thronus Dei, q●enquam loco suo substituat insipientem, & indoctum, contemptibilem, vel severum, nè pro luse ponat tenebras, & manu indoctâ modo furioso, gladio feriat innocentes, etc. Fleta c. 17. De justitiariis substituendis. not only in presumption, but in very deed so qualified. And in regard our now most Gracious Sovereign, whom God long preserve, our pattern of virtue, and our parent of peace and piety, has fitted the Benches of Law with such learned, serious, and renowned Judges, as answer the best of times, and the most renowned of their Ancestry. Not those excepted in Edw. the third's time; of whose Chief Justice (a) Sir Ed. Cook Preface to the 8. Rep. Thirning, 12. H. 4. gives so honourable testimony; which truly I write not to flatter, for I despise it, as beneath the candour of a Christian, and the honour of a Gentleman; but to give my humble attestation to their superexcellent merit: since I say so grave, so wise, so worthy men, are now the King's Judges, I thought fit to illustrate this place, which they are so genuine a Comment upon, by those few Notes which precede; beseeching God, that they that judge the people for God, and under the King, may so continue, ever to demean themselves, that when they be superseded by death, they may give up their accounts with joy, and not with grief. This considered, the Chancellor may well advise the King, for the main of the Laws knowledge, to refer himself judicibus. For as the Sea abounds in Water, the Sun in Light, the Earth with Atoms, and no vacuity is in nature; but God has completed the World to all intents of Providence, in the circumaction of his purpose, and the sustentation of his Creatures; so are the Judges, as men of years, reading, and experience, so plenarily, and critically versed in the Law, that there shall need to be no doubt, but that with our Saviour's good man, Out of the good treasures of their hearts, Cum vix possint omnes casus, qui quandoque inciderint, certâ lege, edicto, senatus consulto comprehendi, prudens judex n●gotium, quo de agetur, ex simili aequitatis regula de finiet. Fornerius ad legem 52. p. 139. De verbor. signif. Speech Star-Chamber, 1616. p. 556. they will bring forth treasure old and new, that is, be able to give Solutions to all doubts, upon old and new Laws, and that not according to men's conceits, but according to the true meaning of the Law, as Interpreters of the Law, as those that find out the reason of the Law by Books and Precedents. So true is that of King james the wife, Though the Common-Law be a Mystery and a Skill best known unto their selves (speaking to the Judges) yet if their interpretation be such, as other men which have Logic and common sense, understand not the reason, I will never trust such an Interpretation. So he. And, if in the multitude of Counselors there is safety, as the Wise-man's words are, and the Judges many in number, and learned in nature, are serviceable to the King to counsel him as their Lord and Master, and according to Law and Justice, which he in the execution of the Law solemnly has sworn them to, and to perform which, they are upon penalty of God's Curse, and the Laws impartiality, bound to observe; the graviora legis may well be left to them; for in this case, that rule is true, Quifacit per alium facit per se, and the King that thus knows the Law by them, may in a good politic sense be said to know the Law as becomes him, which is part of the sense of doctina principi co●grua, often spoken of by the Chancellor. But here no more of Judges, because I shall have more occasion to discourse of them in the 51 Chapter. Et advocatis, qui in regno Angliae servientes ad legem appellantur, similiter & alii● peritis quos Apprentisios vulgus denominat. This Advocatus, is a name of office and employment, comprehending all those personal honorary distinctions of men, which are gradual in the Law; for though every man that is called to the Bar, and has read, be an Advocate, yet every Advocate is not a Sergeant, nor an Apprentice of the Law: (for under those names are comprehended the choice veteran eldest Sons of that Science, who do propriè & quato modo advocare,) when others, Advocates in name sometimes, are nothing less in deed. Ascon. Pedianus, l●b. De Divinat. ●re●haeus ●d l● gem 52. p. 139. De verb. signif. An Advocate than is a Patron, who undertakes the cause of men in Judgement, and pleads the Cause juridiquely before the Judges that are to determine and judge of it, and he acts divers parts, that of an Orator in proper wording it, that of an Attorney, in diligently watching and observing, that no advantage be taken against the Cause; that of a Lawyer, in producing Arguments from the Text, to maintain and support it. Now, though in all Causes, one Advocate at least is necessary, no Court ordinarily allowing parties to plead their own Causes, especially in Civil Causes: nor is it for their advantage so to do, who being ignorant in the Laws, may by that pragmatiqueness injure their right in the Judgement of the Court upon it: yet in dubious Cāses, and those of more than ordinary consequence, Antiquity followed now adays, allowed two or more Advocates, Brech●eus ad Leg●● 52. p. 139. De Verb. fig. that by their joint counsel and assistance, they might the better go through what they have undertaken with solidity and success. These Advocates so useful and frequently employed, the Law allowed great Dignities and Privileges to them, Ludovicus Bologninus has counted them to be 130. Grand ones, besides the many additional, Digest lib. 3. 'tis 1. De Postulando in Gloss. D. p. 333. which is confirmed by the Gloss on the Text, which says, Esse Advocatum, honour est; and our Law capacitating them to great Offices and honours, thereby still keeps up the Rate and Honour of Advocation, yea so long as our Lord jesus is owned to be the Advocate with the Father: the calling and honour of Advocacie, as 'tis the Prestation of good Offices of Charity and beneficency to men, will be in high repute; but of this I shall speak more on the 50 Chapter. judices, & Advocati Regis, qui in regno Angliae servientes ad Legem appellantur, These Fleta terms Milites & Clericos locum Regis tenentes in Anglia: which alluded to the use of making Clergy men anciently, as well as Laymen, not only great Officers in the State, Cum igitur non sit possibile, quòd sulus [Rex] add omnia terminanda sufficeret per justitiarios, & Comites, & alios ministros viros sapientes, Deúmque timentes etc. De necessitate oportebit cum his subveniri. Fleta lib. 1. cap. 17. T 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Athenaeus. Seldens titles Honour, p. 833. M. Paris, p. 312, 393, 396. Hypodigm Neustriae, p. 118. but also Judges in the Courts of Law in which the King's Lieutenancy resides, who therefore were called Locum tenentes, because they did locum Regis in judicio tenere, the office of Judicature being originally and fontally the King's, and his Judges only by delegation, as commissionated to, and entrusted by him with that dispensatory power, so that serviens ad legem is no term of diminution or base office, but of hunour and dignity; that as in heraldry the term Esquire in Latin (serviens aswel as armiger) is given to the best and bravest of men under the degree of Baronage or Knighthood, as a token of their Portage of the Arms and Ensigns of honour, which they, or those whom they descended from, personaldly bore in War before the Princes and Peers, they in that way officiated to: so is the term Sergeant in the Law's import, the title of one who does attend the service of the King and his people in study and profession of the Law, and by carrying the Emblems of his Proficiency in his habit, supposing a judicious head and heart, uttering his acquisitions with a ready and well-languaged Tongue; and the not only common Civility of the Nation attributes dignity to him, but the King, the Fountain and Sovereign of Honour, dignifies him, as one of those Patricii, out of whom the Senators, the Judges are chosen, Preface to the 10. Rep. so says Sir Edward Cook, Ex servinentibus his ce tanquam è seminario justitia, etc. From amongst these Sergeants, as the seminary of justice, the judges are called: for none but a Sergeant at Law can be either judge of any of the Benches, or chief Baron of the Exchequer, or claim place in either of the Houses of Sergeants; because those Inns are properly the Lodges of Sergeants, not of judges. So that Oracle of the Law, which learned Mr. Selden confirms, and seconds in his Preface before the Scriptores Anglici, p. 44. Sergeant at the Law than is a Title State and Dignity of great respect, Lib. 28 E. 3. fol. 18 ● Seldens Titles, Honour. p. 832. Preface 10. Report. Quid aliud est juruconsulis domas, nisi Ora●ul●m C●vitatis. Ci●. so that it is counted next degree to a Knight; yea, there are many arguments from the Writ of his creation, which Sir Edward Cook directs me from him to collect for the honour of the Sergeant: that he is no Sponte nascens, nor self-Creatour, but arises from the Womb of the Morning honour, the King majested, à Rege de avisamento Concilii inde evocatur; and so is a fruit not only of the King's affection, but of his choice by Counsel, Secondly, 'tis non nutu capitis, nec ictu gladii, nec verbo oris, sed brevi sigillato, but by his Writ somewhat issuant from his politic Wisdom, and of kin to matter of Record, a dignity in Nature of a Patent, brevi regio, by a Writ of summons. Thirdly, the Writ is plural in the expression of the Person serjeanted, vocabulo vobis dignitatis argumento singulari, as if the King in the honour did convey and intend him some participation in the rays of Eminency with him. Fourthly, he is called ad statum & gradum, Prefa●ce to the 10. Rep. which, the statutes not of 8 H. 6. c. 10. but of 8 E. 4. c. 2, 24 H. 8. c. 13. doallow and insert them in, as if the King incorporated them into the Tyrociny of Nobility; these and such like parts of their dignity is by that worthy Author observed: nor had they these without great duties expected from, and performed by them, Populo ad actiones suas pronunciandas, & defendendas usque ad sententiae examen pro Honorario suo deservituri, Specul. justitiariorum. as Narratores and Counters, for (so they were anciently called) and they did stand as Patrons to the People throughout all their causes, to plead and defend them according to equity and right. Mirror des Justices cap. 2. sect 5. des Counters. The Mirror says also, Chescun Serjeant est chargeable, etc. Every Sergeant is bound by Oath not to defend wrong or falsehood, if he know it so to be, nor assist his Glyent any longer than he perceives his cause is just: Lib. 2. c. 37. p. 87. Edit. Seld. the same Fleta writes, with this addition, under pain of imprisoument a year and a day etc. By which wisdom of our Law, so advising the King to imitate the Athenian Areopagus, the Band of Sergeants have been the learned Brotherhood whence the brave Judges have ever since been chosen. The Kings of this Land being by their learned Chancellors, and chief Justices advised of the Worths of men, though their own Modestyes consented to their temporary obscuring of themselves. Rot. Parl. 5 H. 5 In the 5 H. 5. Martin, Babington, Pool, Westbury, june, Rolf, were called by the King into Parliament for refusing to take the state and degree of Sergeant, to which they had been by Writ called, which they persisted to refuse, as counting themselves not fit for the state and degree, but in the end with much ado, 2 Instit. p. 214. In Stat. 1. West. they took it, and divers of them (saith Sir Edward Cook) afterwards did worthily serve the King in the principal Offices of the Law. And these being Sergeants Counters, so called, because they recite and count in actions appointed by the Judges before them at the Bar, are distinguished from other Sergeants, which are of less honourable degree than these at the Law are. And though these are the prime of those periti in Legibus mentioned in our Text; yet there are others who pass under the name of Apprentices at the Law, Apprentisis. who yet are not Learners and Novices, but Antesignani Standard-Bearers of science; no Dupondii, youths entered into study, A Dupondio nummo quasi duorum assibùs aftimaerentur: Alciat. lib. 4. De Verborum signific. p. 579. of no more honour in their Art, than those we proverbially call Two penny Lads, Pupils who are under Discipline and Coverture, Freshmen; no Students of 4 years standing, which the Digest terms 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, In proemio Digest. p. 49. Gloss. D. ut legum enigmata possunt subtiliter & acutè dissolvere. Alciat. loco pracitato. (quae vox solutores significat, importing a proficiency in explicating and resolving the knots and difficulties of the Law terms;) but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, those who are complete apprehenders of the Law, and want no competent Perfection in the knowledge of it. These who have been near twenty years or above at the Inns of Court, and done all the Exercises that the House, of which they are, requires; and having read openly before the Society upon some Statute, or point of Law, as the probation of their Judgement, and acquisition in their Profession, by Lawyers are called Apprentices: and these so grave, Stat 24. H. 8. c. 15. 1 Ed. 3. fol. 17. Kitchin. Finch. De Atturnatis, & Apprentisiis, Dominas Rex injunxit, etc. 20 E. 1. rot. 5. Dors. Fleta lib. 2. c. 37. Notes on this 8. Chap. o f Fortescue, p. 2. Spelm. Gloss in verbo Apprentisii so learned, are often mentioned in year-Books, and their judgements and arguments therein much to be valued; yea when they have written any thing in the Law, they have subscribed their names as Apprentices of the Law. And though in E. 1. time anno 20. Attorneys are named before Apprentices, after which Fleta so also marshals them, yet are those Attorneys not to be named in a day with Apprentices (unless Attorneys were more than now adays they are, which I know not,) for Sir Edward Cook, terms these Apprentices Sages Gents, intended in the Statue of 28 E. 1. c. 11. and so declares them in his Preface to the tenth Report. And the learned Selden produces a notable Record out of the Tower, wherein King E. 1. directed his Judges to select a certain Number of these Apprentices to attend the King's Courts, who perhaps were hence called Apprentisii ad B arras, of which, Andrew Horn makes menion in those ridiculous verses, as Mr. Selden calls them before his Mirróur. These Apprentices then of the Law were men of note, as not only appears by the forementioned Instances, but from their wont separation from the Inns of Court, (where they spent their younger studies) and their locations in hostles proper to them. For as the Sergeants had their Inns, Hospitium i● quo Apprentisis legis habitare solebant. 23 E. 3. so had the Apprentices theirs, Tavies-Inn in Holborn was one of them (and others no doubt they had, though the memory of them is lost) yea and as is concludable from the Roll of 5 H. 4. when that thing, meaning to make good his Title, and fearing least the Lawyers in Parliament should obstruct it, directs Writs to the Sheriffs of all the Counties, 2. Par. Claus. in Dors. n. 4. regni 5 H. 4. Hinc Parliamentum illud La●coram. & indoctorum qu● & jugu. lum Ecclesiae utrocius petehae. tur. Spelinan in verlo. See Sta● 24 H. 8. c. 1●. Rastal at large. That they should not suffer any Apprentice, or other learned man in the Law, to be returned to Parliament. Hence saith the judicious Sir Hen. Spelman. This Parliament was called, The lack-learning Parliament, and that Convention which put a hard yoke upon the Church. Whereas then our Chancellor says, Quos vulgus Apprentisios denominat, He means not to disclaim the term Apprentice (as not a word of legal honour, but a nickname originated from the mistakes or malevolence of the Rabble) but he uses the phrase vulgus, to show the community of its approbation, and the willingness of the most knowing men in that Profession, to derogate from themselves, so they might arrogate the Law; and to lesson also men to put a value on Lawyers, whose travel and pains in the abstruse study of the Common-Law, is such, that when they have studied as long as their bodies will endure, or their eyes assist them; yet after all, do not arrive to be Doctors, Professors, Exprofessours; but in the most accumulate advances are but Apprentisii & servientes ad legem. Melius enim per alios, quam per teipsum judicia reddes, quòd proprio ore nullus regum Angliae judicium proferre usus est. This Clause resolves two doubts; First, why the King need not Legis Sacramenta rimare, not toil himself in the intricacies of the Law, but leave those to the Judges, because it will be better to do it by others, then by himself. Secondly, why more convenient and better, because so used to be done by the Kings of this Land, whose practice was upon weighty grounds: for melius here is not strictly and Grammatically to be taken, for than it would have a sense of diminution, and reflect on the Prince, as if any thing might be better done, than he that (quâ Prince,) is perfection itself, and cannot be out done; because he is the fountain of politic action, and Judgements cannot be presumed to be justlyer judged, then by the Prince, who is Justice itself, and by his accession to the Crown, is under no presumption of defect. But melius is to be taken for aequius; so Tully. 3. Offic. 80. Convenientius, that is, it will be more comely, in relation to their State as a King, and proportionate to the indifferent and equitable nature of their Justice, to determine matters by Judges, men unconcerned in the loss and gain of Causes, then by their selves, to whom in all Capital Causes, the forfeitures of Peccants Escheats; and in Causes between them and their Subjects, they may sometimes be Judge, who are Parties. Yea, and melius, because also their Sergeants and Judges, being more versed in the mysterious parts of the Law, are more likely to extricate the truth, perplexed in the heats and covins of contention: this I take to be somewhat of our Chancellors mind in Melius. Thus Authors expound Melius, Anima melior in Virgil; Aeucid. 5. Terent. Adel. Lib. 3. Offic. 10. Servius terms aptior mens, melior. Donatus renders bona & tolerabilis, and natura bona, by Plena, Magna, Pinguis. Melior pars diei, by Major & prima pars; and Tully coupling melius with aequius, as he does, makes the sense plain, according to the strictness of Oratory, as well as Law. Per alios, quum per te ipsun● judicium reddes] All Judgement is the Kings, though by the dispensation of the Judges; and of old, Kings and chief Magistrates did personally decide Cases, and dispensed Laws, as it is evident in the Case of the Judges, and Solomon, and all Kings, both in holy and profane Story; Philip of Macedon, Demetrius, Poliorcetes, Augustus Caesar, Claudius, Charles the Great, and Charles' the Eighth, as is confirmed by I Lipsius, Selden on cap. 8. art. 3. p. 4. Mirror cited by Sir Ed. Cook 2 Instir on the Stat. Quo Warranto, p. 498. in monitis Politicis, c. 9 p. 241. And in England, the Sons of the Kings of this Land have sat personally in the Courts of Law; as by name, E. 4. secundo Regni. And Prince Arthur road from shire to shire in Circuits, to hear and determine Causes depending between man and man. And others of them have by Charter exempted certain persons from being drawn into Judgement before any persons, Nisi coram nobis, vel capitali justitia, which seems to reserve power to themselves judicially to judge. In monitis & exemplis Politicis, c. 9 p. 240. Qu. t. Yea, though Lipsius is positive, decere, expedire, debere, that Kings ought, and may personally hear and judge Causes: yet the more agreed Rule of our Kings legal pleasure and practice, is to judge in curia by his Judges, whose Authority his personal presence in Courts (I humbly conceive) does not dissolve, though in other Cases the Rule be good, Cessat potestas minoris, in praesentia majoris. Reg. Juris. The power of the less ceases, in the presence of the greater. Now this the King has yielded to, and established in the practice of Law, that all passion and prejudice to Justice might be avoided; and that the Judges may be indemnified, they are sworn to do Justice according to Law, without consideration of any thing in obstruction of it; 18 E. 3. juramentum justitiar. L eum quem 79. ss. 1. ff. De judice. Novel. 115. c. 1. Bocerus, De Bello, c 24. 5. Speech, Star-Chamber, 1616. p. 556. of his Works in fol. though Prudence dictate to them, in arduous Cases, to consult with the Prince, qui ipsis de jure respondere solent, as the Civilians say; and in matters of State and concernment to the Crown, prius consulere quam constituere, & declarare. So did that wise Monarch King james admonish his Judges to do; Encroach not (quoth he) upon the Prerogatives of the Crown; if there fall out a question that concerns my Prerogative, or Mystery of State, deal not with it, till you consult with the King and his Council, or both; for they are transcendent matters, and must not be slubberly carried with overrash wilfulness, for so may ye wound the King through the sides of a private person. So that Oracle. And so have, and do the wise Judges always; that so the King being rightly informed of the nature of Causes, may voluntarily, as the Sovereign of our National Justice, honour Justice above himself; if those can be imagined distinct which the Law seems to me to have made one and indivisible. And this blessed effect of Majestic Condescension to humble and loyal subjection, have the Subjects of England experimentally found from their Princes almost always: not only Edward the first manifested it in the Statute, De judaismo, whereby though the Kings of England had from 50 H. 3. to 2 E. 1.420000 li. 15 s. 4 d. profit to their Chequers, when the ounce of silver was but 22 d. yet Edward the first, though he had a great need of supply by money, Sir Edw. Cook on the Stat. De judaism, 2. Instit p. 507. his expenses being great, did, for the honour of God, and ease of his Subjects, banish the jews, and all their Usury, by the Statute in the eighteenth of his Reign; and Edward the first, in the Statute of Treason of the 25. regni, c. 2. but also the late martyred King Charles the first, of blessed memory, in sundry Acts of Grace by some of his graceless Subjects abused. And above all, our now Royal and renowned Sovereign, has to a wonder, and an eternal obligation of his Subjects admiration and gratitude, made appear in that never to be forgotten Act of Oblivion and Indemnity, whereby all his Subjects not excepted therein, are remitted all penalties both for life and estate: Both which, thousands in the Nation, bad in rigour of Law forfeited to him. This shall be written, that the Generations to come may know it, and the people that are yet unborn may praise the Lord for those admirable restraints of anger and indignation in him. The consideration of which magninimity, and royal fidelity, as it entitles his Majesty to the superlative love, and resolute assistance of his Subjects, cordially as well as politicly his, and to the blessing of God, who only fortunateth all undertake: so does it censure to Hell, as ingrate and horridly inhuman, all thoughts of treachery, or malevolence to his Royal Person, Posterity, and Successors in Government: the punishments of which, if any should be so wicked and wretched to deserve, not only will be grievous in the legal terrors, but in the regrets, that Conscience will give the deserved sufferers. My prayer shall be, that God would make us fear him, and honour the King, and not meddle with them that are given to change; ever remembering that Power is best and safest, when in its proper channel and centre. And that God, whose Vicars Kings are, has given that greatness of mind to them, that as they are above mean thoughts, so will they not alloy the glory of their Thrones, by actions of narrowness to their Subjects. Lib. 7. De Monitis & exempl. Politicis, p. 232. Lipsius has quoted rare professions of piety, and love to Subjects from Emperors, Tiberius, Trajan, Vespasian, Henry Son to Frederick. To which may be added the words of that late martyred Majesty, Those victories are still miserable, that leave our sins unsubdued, Eicon. Basil. c. 19 p. 178. flushing our pride, and animating to continue injuries; nor do I desire any man should be further subject to me, than all of us may be subject to God. Tamen sua sunt omnia judicia regni, licèt per alios ipsa reddantur; sicut & judicum omnium sententias Josaphat asseruit esse judicia Dei. Here the Text not only asserts the King's propriety in the Land, people, In urbibus, aut noviter structis, aut bello acquisitis, effecit ut essent Judices 32. Qui de causis civilibus, & capitalibus non exceptis cognoscerent. Grot. in 2 Chronic. cap. nineteen. v. 6. strength, and Law of England, but confirms the judgement of the Judges appointed by the King, to be the King's judgement from a Text of Holy Writ, 2 Chron. 1.6. wherein jehosaphat, a famous King of judah, charging his Judges to be exact, calls their Judgement, the judgement of God. For as the Judgement of Iehosopat's Judges, is called the Judgement of God, because it was in execution of the design of God's Justice in the World, and by the authority of the Magistrate, the Minister of God; who being set by God to govern, makes by his Delegation, the just actions judicial of his Judges, the judgement of God, In judicando estis vicarii judicis summi, sio & Rex in regnando; & à Deo authoritas & potestas judiciaria derivatur. Ideo judices sicut & Princip●s, d●i in scriptures vocantur, Carthusianus in loc. 5 Report. De Jure Regis Eccles. p. 8. b. because judged by power derived from God: so the judgements pronounced by the King's Judges in his Courts, are the King's Judgements, because they are from those Benches that he erects, and protects to that purpose, and from those persons that he commissions so to do. For causa causae est causa causaeti. If the King empower any man to act for him, his Action is in reason and reputation, while within the Verge of his Commission, the Kings; King James' Speech, Star Chamber, 1616. fol. 550. of his Works. and the contumacy that is expressed against that Power or person, the King and the Law expounds as done against the King. Dicehatur autom curia, primò de regia seu Palatio Príncípis, inde de familia & judiciis in ●a habitis, ùt ostendit Spelman in verbo. And hereupon, as the Person and Palace of the King is to have no force expressed in it, under grievous penalties; so the Courts of Law, in which the King's Judges sit, are to have no action of violence or riot expressed in the view of them sitting. He that strikes a Judge sitting on Judgement, or that strikes any other, the Court seeing, and sitting, joseth his hand, and shall suffer fine and imprisonment at the King's pleasure. He that appears not at the Summons of the Court, is in contempt of the King, and may be outlawed, and so be out of the King's Protection. These, and infinite such like Cases, argue the Judges in the King's Courts to be Ministers of the Kings, and the Actions they legally do, Speech at White-Hall. Anno 1607, p. 517. of his Works in sol. authorized by him. And hence, in reference to the Judges, King james of blessed memory told the two Houses of Parliament their dignity, in those words; Beware to disgrace either my Proclamation, or the judges, who when the Parliament is done, have power to try your Lands and Lives; for so you may disgrace both your King, and your Laws. Quare tu, Princeps serenissime, parvo tempore, paruâ industriâ sufficienter eris in legibus Angliae eruditus, dummodo aedejus apprehensionem confer as animum tuum. This inference is very proper from the premised matter: for since the King's of England are furnished with learned Judges, Sergeants, Apprentices, and other men of learning in the Law, whose life is spent in study of the Anatomy of the Law; and since they, how well versed soever in it, or any part of it, are obliged to serve the King by their Counsel, and otherwise with such their parts, whereby the King is politicly completed in all points of his Regal Function. Since these things thus are, they do excuse the King from that pains and care to understand the legal distribution of Justice in his person; which, but for these supplements, he must have held himself obliged to: so that now, all the King is in this case to do, is, to give his mind to love and comprobate the Law, and in that delightful humour to please himself, such minutes as he can spare from action and pleasure. For though a Sergeant at Law, whose glory and grace it is, Vt serviendo discat, Selden's Notes on Forteseve, fol. 56. & discendo alios perdiscat, as men of that degree did at their Parvise; of which Chaucer speaks, A Sergeant at Law, wary and wise, That often had been at the Pervise. Though I say such men are to know whatever can be known in the Law, because it is their Profession, and they do illud agere; yet the Princes work being that of an Architect, not a Labourer, calls him accomplished, when able to oversee others due discharge of their duties. To do which, he is presumed to be knowing and intent; Munus regiu● Architectoricum esse, sic, ut non tam ipse agere, quam altis agentibus prasidere, & ad offioiu●● eos compeller● debeat. Hopperus, lib. 1. De Instit. Principis. and those will direct him so well to choose Judges, that having chosen them, he shall have no cause to repent his choice. Sufficient●r eruditus then is to be taken restrainedly, not for a sufficiency of possibility, the how much a Prince may attain to; but a sufficiency of convenience, and creditable use, such a Learning as may suit with the state, dignity, and opportunity of a Prince. Ulptanus in 1. sed & si quid ss. 1. ff. De usu fruct. Thus Ulpian expresses Sufficienter, sufficienter alere & vistire debet secundum or dinem & dignitatem mancipiorum. For as Saint Paul was a most learned Preacher of Christ, even to the conviction of Ethnique Philosophers, who had all the art of evasion and derision of his Ministry imaginable, which yet he through the grace given him overcame, though he professes, He was not sufficient for these things; Omnes qui ex omni aetate, hâc in Civitate intelligentiam jurts habuerunt, si unum in locum conferantur, cum Servio Sulpitio non sunt comparandi, Budaeus in pandect. priores, p. 9 Edit. Basil. and as many men are sufficiently learned Lawyers, that arrive not at Sulpitium his height, whom Budaeus makes the Phoenix of his profession, and more a Fountain of Low, than an Age of Lawyers put together. So sufficiently acquaint Orators, though they have not what Tully requires in an Orator, In Oraetore inquit, acumen diaelecticorum, sententia Philosophorum, verba prope Poërarum, memoria jurisconsultorum, vox Tragaedorum, gestus ●oenè summorune aertificum est requirendus 1. De Oratore. The subtlety of Logicians, the Wisdom of Philosophers, the words of Poets, the memory of Lawyers, the voice of Tragediaens, the gesture of the most excellent Persons in all Pr●fissiens. And a man may be sufficiently a man, having all the integral parts of manhood, and being able conveniently to express them, though he be not a Goliath or a Samson for strength. Besides your Education, it is necessary you delight in reading, and seeking the Knowledge of all lawful things, but with these two Restrictions: first, that ye choose idle hours for it, Basilicon Doron. ●. Book p. 175. fol not interrupting thereby the discharge of your office; and next, that ye study not for Knowledge nakedly: but that your principal end be, to make you able thereby to use your office, so was the Counsel of King james to his son. So a Prince may be sufficienter eruditus in legibus, that does give his mind to skill the language, read the lesser and more methodique Authors of the Law, and by conversation with the practice and Enactions of Courts, dispose his mind to inquire into them. In short, Doctor and Student, the sour parts of the I●stitutes and the Statutes, which are to be read, parvo tempore & paruâ industriâ, will instruct a Prince so, as to make him, in legibus sufficienter eruditus, but these Authors being written long since, our Text-Master his suficienter eruditus may be supposed relative to another Method. Reseripta Originalia, fundamenta esse & totius legis quasi Cardines; & quám rectè ab illo juris Principia appellantur, firmat casus illud quod sentit, Bractonus lib. 5. fol. 413. ubi dicit, Breve formatum esse ad fimilitudinem regula juris. In Prafat. ante 8. Rel. Cook. The jura Coronae, the Rights of the Crown, the brevia Originalia, which being grounded upon some original Law, for the violation of which, that is the way to bring the offence to trial and judgement: the Maxims of the common Law, which are most obvious, and the Statutes, these in any competent measure read and understood, will make the Prince sufficienter eruditus in legibus: for it will declare him a friend to Justice, and one that so highly promotes it, Strobaeus Sermonè nono, De Justitia, p. 105. ● that he yields himself a servant to it, and that Diogenes was wont to call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a pleasure, and as it were sufficiency or perfection of life. Not only as he does judge and distribute the Law by his Judges, who are Oracles in this learning, but if Lipsius a most learned man, may be the Judge, in all causes upon the account of these, and beneath these abilities, Da Simplicem, da Prebum, etc. Let but the Prince set himself in the sinserity of his heart, and with the utmost skill of his prudent attainments, Da simplicom, da probum, affectuum expertem, audeo dic●re, rara causa erit, in qua verum aut junta verum non videbit, immó Deus plerumque inspirat, & talibus mentem movet, etc. J. Lipsius n monitis Politicis, cap 9 p. 240. to do his judicial duty, and I dare say, (so are his words) there will rarely be any cause, wherein he will not find out the truth, or near the truth; yea, God often inspires Princes with wisdom beyond other men, when he sees their hearts are set to serve him conscionably in their office, according to that of the wise man, A Divine sentence is in the lips of the King, therefore he shall not err in judgement, thus Lipsius. Rhetoric. ad Alex. cap. 1. p. 609. The Consideration of Law and Justice as the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which the Philososopher makes the rule of every one; and which is only to be distributed by the Prince and his Commissioners, so wrought upon King james of happy memory, that though he came not to the Courts of Westminster, yet he, in a very great Presence in the Star-Chamber, did wisely and Christianly declare himself a King of parts as well as power, Anno 1616. and of piety as well as of both, or either: for there, he not only showed what he understood, his duty to his people, and what his desert of the people; but he also gave such a Charge to all his Judges, and other Ministers, concerning all the points and parts of their duty, that 'tis hard to say wherein they could possibly err, if they composed themselves only to the Conduct and Observance of those rules; Digest. lib. 1. Tit. 11. de Offic. Praf. Praet. p. 126. A Test. which makes me take notice of that Passage of Baldus, where writing of the Judge, his words are Non aliter judicaturus, etc. That the judge is for his wisdem and lustre of justice so to manifest himself to the honour of his trust, and dignity, as the Prince himself is to do●, if he were actually in the Seat of judgement; whence I think I may properly infer, that the Law supposes a King to be sufficiently wise and worthy to endeavour his accomplishment in all the Parts of his Regal Duty, that he may appear to be a Pattern as well as Precept to all his Judges. Sufficienter eruditus then, must have a soft and sober sense allowed it, for in the latitude of the Notion, no mere man, no Prince but Solomon ever had sufficient learning in the Laws of Nature and Government; for since art is long, and the well out of which truth is fetched, very deep, and the life of man, though inched out to the utmost period of David's computation, be a long time, compared to lesser portions of living; yet in order to Art, and the expatiations of Art to be inquired into in that time: nay, though the whole time should be spent in the one only study of the Laws, the Student would notwithstanding be o'ertaken, before he were an attainer to his meta ultima. For if consideration be had, how many years of life are lost in Childhood, in Youth, in mistake, which we are to rescue ourselves from and retrograde, what casualties of sickness, necessities of life, pleasure, friends, avocate and steal away time, what treacheriés, Punctam e● quod vivimus, & adhuc puncto minus. Senec. Ep. 49. unexperience in the conduct of studies and converse, betrays us to; and how various the notions of men are in the passes of them through the several ages of their life. These, and sundry other leaks to the vigour and virtue of study, and men's accomplishment by it, proclaim sufficienter eruditus in the latitude and utmost sense of attainment and possibility, not to be here meant, because that cannot be gained parvo tempore, or paruâ industriâ, as this sufficienter eruditus proposed by our Chancellor is said to be. The true notion then of it is, that which I said before, than the Prince is sufficenter eruditus in legibus, when he knows the key and language, the reason and phrase, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Epicter in Enchyrid. lit. 2: 6.14. the rule and maxim, the more useful and common Laws called the Statutes; because by this knowledge he shall be able to know his own, his Ministers, his Subjects duties; and this is sufficient learning in the Law for a Prince; nay, this is able to make him as an Angel of God to discern between good and evil. For as in Soldiery, he may be said to be sufficienter eruditus, who knows all parts of Soldiery, Horse and Foot, Field and Garrison, the Laws of Command and Obedience, the use of all Machines', the Enemy he is to fight with, the ground he is to fight upon, the forces he is to fight by; and so in other Arts and Mysteries, as I say, an Artist thus able to perform his undertaking, may be said to be sufficienter eruditus in it, though he be not an Hannibal, a Porphyry, an Aristotle, a Drake: so he may be a Prince sufficienter eruditus in legibus, who does know what he himself is, and other under him aught to do according to the Laws of his Government, of which he is the maintainer and defender. For as Budaeus says of Tully, In Pandect. priores, p. 18. Edit. Basil. Quid non explicare potuisset illa vis ingenii, etc. What cannot so rare an apprehension make plain, what so acquaint a tongue express, what so wise a heart conceive, as resides in a Prince, to whom the Laws of his Government is pleasing, and the study of them his delight. Parvo tempore, & paruâ industriâ. This is that which in another place he expounds by anno uno, a small time to so gainful a purpose: But I suppose the Chancellor either tols him on by an engagement of facility and possibility of attainment, a harmless trepanning to study of the Law, or else looks upon his Princely Wit, which the Greek call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which makes a man, as Socrates was said to be, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, dull to nothing he was set upon: but as Pythagoras is by Apuleius written of, Holstemius in notis ad vitam. Pythag. à Por. phyrio script. p. 66 in Florid. De Pythag. supra captum hominis augustior, capacious above the proportion of man, as that which will accelerate, and bring about that in a short, which ordinarily is a long time in operation and circumduction. This he concluding, may be justified in his prefixing sufficienter eruditus to parvo tempore & paruâ industriâ. For well did the Chancellor know, both what was sufficient Law-learning for a Prince, and how to perfect youth in that. For he had, as Pitsaeus tells us, instituted many young Noblemen in the Elements of Law: and therefore being himself so learned, and having instructed others in the incoate and necessary knowledge of the Law. I conclude him able to perform his promise in instructing the Prince, Apud Budaeum in Pandect. priores, p. 12. parvo tempore, paruâ industriâ; brief and curt methods being useful to Learners, when to know the Law, as ars aequi & boni, that is, to set the mind upon the Law with might and main, proprium est juris consultorum institutum, is the proper breeding of Lawyers, and that which they are to intend. The Chancellors sense than is, that intentness and addiction to any thing, will perfect that in short space, which otherwise will be more tedious in compassing. As the Fish Aphia (which gave occasion to the adage, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) is no sooner showed the fire, but it is broiled, ●rasm Adag. 12. Chil. 2. Cent. 2. p. 460. Athenxus Deip. nos. lib. 13. being naturally of so unctuous a nature, that it yields to the warmth of the fire, and takes its impression straightways: so does some men's Wits capacitate them to any thing that is imparted to them; which is the meaning of Parvo tempore, & paruâ industriâ. Though then ingenuity in the Prince, and method in the Chancellor, may make the Prince's learning in the Law, not so long in the time, nor so laborious in the toil of attainment, as otherwise it would be: yet time and industry there must be in some measure, ere ever there be attainment of learning the fruits of God's blessing on the Prince's time and industry, which two time and industry are fit to be considered. Time is the measure of life, and the opportunity to every action: Pythagoraes called it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Globe of a moving Body; Plato, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the movable Image of Eternity; Plutarehus, lib. 1. De plac. Philosoph. c. 21. Physic. lib. 4 c. 10. Eccles. 3.1. Eratosthenes, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the motion of the Sun; the Philosopher, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the motion of the Universe, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Sphere of all motion. Suidas renders it, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, all one with Aristotle. And Solomon above all says, 'tis that which is given by God, as the punct in which we are to perfect every duty, and in which the glory due to his Sovereignty is returned to him by every created Being. From which, because the time of action is that of light, which we call day; the English word, for present time, Day; To day if ye will hear his voice, is derived from the Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which is one word they express time by, which 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, they make to have the sense of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, sufficit, as accounting it that which answereth every purpose under the Sun; unto which, perhaps, our Lord alluded in those words, Math. 6. v. hast. sufficient to the day, is the sorrow thereof. The Hebrews also calls time, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which in the root signifies, to pervert; insinuating, that the prevarication of man distorts the provision of God, while he gives us time to serve him in, and we turn it to his disservice: though I know, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, has also a sense of preparation and seasoning, which the Greek ' render by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. So Eccles. iii 2. Hag. i 4. judg. xxi. 14. Eccles. ix. 12. There is also, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, in the Holy Language, for time, as it is the series & ordo, of things and actions: so Esth. two. 12. Cant. two. 12. sundry other words have they for time. Time then being either past, present, or to come, though known to God, yet is only ours in its present punct. Psal. 39 5. That which is past, is gone; that which is to come, is uncertain; the present is only ours, and that's parvum tempus. Thou hast made my age as a span long: every man therefore in his best estate is altogether vanity, saith King David. Industry that puts upon time its due burden, and improves it to its utmost fertility. This is that which provokes men to labour and motion with cheerfulness and placidity, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, says Suidas, In verbo. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; to be industrious, is to be carried to any thing with an indignation against whatever hinders and obstructs it. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Salmuth in Pancirol p 192. Stobaeus, Serm. 118. p. 374. This was that which carried Alexander above his discouragements to his Conquest. Niciaes' was famous for this; for by his intentness on his study, he grew so immemorative, that he was wont to ask his Servants, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, whether he had washed, or eaten. Many are the promises and praises of Industry: The diligent hand maketh rich; seest thou a man diligent in his business. He shall sit among Princes. Both Solomon's Aphorisms. And the Son of Syrach counsels, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Be diligent, and no Disease shall hurt thee. The Father's appropriate much to industry; Saint chrysostom advises to it, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that we fall not short of eternal good things, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. the time of labour is but short, and the reward in rest eternity: the Bee is but a small Bird, but the Parent of all sweetness, she alone brings honey. So is Industry, but a small time to be expressed in, but always to be rewarded in the fruit of it. So true is that of Democritus, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. men attain to great and good things only by industry. And therefore the Hebrew word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, coming from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, signifying, cogitare, computare, ratiocinari, implies the intention of the whole man, which Solomon calls, doing with all our might, that is, actuating our reason to design, and seconding it by the subserviency of sense, leaving no stone unturned, to effectuate our projection. This industry is made up as it were of Joints and Ligaments, of strength in order to action. Rabbi David terms it, ars supputandi, and Arithmetica Philosophia; because in it, men do bring all the refracted particles of their toil and search into a mass, to make it more conspicuous, and to be regarded as the wise Builder in Luke xiv. 8. who before he lays the foundation of his structure, sitteth down, and counteth the cost. The Hebrews knowing the consequence of this Industry, have according to the variety of its nature several words to express it by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a word of large extent, primarily denoting riches and substance, but translated by Industry, because thereby riches and substance is gotten. It also signifies Pecus, Angelus, Nuncius; because as the Eastern riches consisted in Cattle, and those nourished to increase by Industry, as was remarkable in jacob; and as an Angel is the Guardian of man, and watches over him by God's Command, to keep evil from him; so Industry is the probable means to keep the Wolf from the door, to prevent poverty and want, which ever follows Idleness, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, also is a word for industry, and that denotes such a vigilancy, as is that of a Commander, who keeps a Garrison in an Enemy's Country, he is ever on his charge, diligent to consider every useful occurrent, and to improve it, no person, no moment is out of his eye, but his thought is bufied about it, and careful to make it commodious to his purpose. This word is opposed to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which signify incogitancy, and vain levity; such as the Holy Ghost reproaches in the Ostrich, Who lays her Eggs in the Sand, and considers not the foot of the Traveller may crush them. The sense then of our Chancellor by industry, is to commend such a proportion of time, Basilic. Doron. 2. Book. p. 177. Works in fol. as the Prince can spare from the more important things of his office, to spend in the study of the Law. As for the study of all liberal Arts and Sciences, I would have you reasonably versed in them, but not pressing to be a Pass-Master in any of them, for that cannot but distract you from the points of your Calling. So wise King james; which he probably might thus intend, that he in his industry in the study of the Law should aim; first, scire linguam, to know the Language of it, that he may understand what he reads; than scire libros legis, that he may, by knowing Authors, and culling the most pithy and methodique of them, improve the most he may, the time that he spends in perusing them. Then thirdly, scire regulas legis, for they are the Tropiques upon which the Law moves. Then fourthly, scire rationes legis, for that's of the form and constitution of it, and declares the mind of the Legislators of it. Fifthly, scire fines legis, for the end of the Law, is the motive to, and the merit of the Law: so that when he does think of little time, and little toil, there must be a vigorous and thrifty expense of that little, and that will make it go a great way. For all time is lost, and all travel in study to no purpose, if there be not a close application of the mind to the thing we prosecute; and that once vigorously set a work, carries all to the desired upshot; not only lets a man into the secrets and abstrusities of knowledge, so that he knows good and evil, and employs his time and diligence in obtaining the one, and avoiding the other; but it prevails against even the morosity and untractableness of wild Beasts, as Plutarch in his excellent Book, Pag. 599. etc. edit. Paris. Acts 2. De solertia animalium, has made good. Therefore dummodo ad ejus apprehensionem tu animum conferas, is the indispensable limitation. For though by Miracle God can, as he once did, give learning imbre linguarum in a moment, without any contribution of man's, previous to the collation of it, as was plain in the case of the Apostles, on whom the spirit descended in fiery tongues: yet the ordinary way of God is by those steps and assistances of time and labour, that bring about Conquests in Arts, as stupendious as Alexander's in Arms, and that parvo tempore, and paruâ industriâ, that is, while the searchers into, and after them, are young, and their pains is in the nature of expression of a pleasure; that as extraordinary fire, aptly conveyed through meet conducts, intends more to the liquefaction, and rarefication of any thing in a day, than otherwise it would in a longer time; and apt Moulds prepared, and reflections on Fruits and Plants maturateth them in three or four Months, which in the ordinary course of season would be a much longer time in production: so in study, intentness of mind, and earnestness of labour, brings about that in a little time to great perfection, which but for it, would not be so circumacted. For here the Proverb is true, Faint heart never wins fair Lady. Time and toil will never bring to the Port of Learning, except the addition of the Students mind, proceeding from a love of Learning, accompany opportunity and endeavour: love and labour do sweeten each other, and promote their consequent success; it being pleasure, not labour, to follow our loves, though we lose our lives and wits in the chase and pursuit of them, and bury our beings in the Mine where her Oar lies even Archimedes, and Eudoxus, will both lose their lives to illustrate the Art they were enamoured of; and Aristotle not think the compiling of his History of Creatures tedious, because he loved to search and know what was to be found and known. O this application of the mind, is that which has all natural potency in it; 'tis the door to all speculation and action: This makes men excellent and general, because indefatigable in study; the praises of Miltiades, the renown of heroic acquisitions, rewarded in those that have preceded them, stirs them up to an emulation, which draws off their eyes from sleep, and keeps their hearts musing upon their darling. This is that holy charm, that Moses prays God to bestow upon his people, Psal. 90.12. So teach us to number our days, that we may apply our hearts unto wisdom, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ut adducemus cordi sapientiam, which is ad verbum, that we may bring to our heart wisdom, that wisdom and our hearts may be one and the same, the root 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, in niphal, signifies (according to Rabbi David) vaticinari, receptionem à Deo & sermonem quem jubet Deus ut loquatur, & then the sense may be, that our hearts may have wisdom, as truly and fully revealed to them, as the Prophets had Visions, and that by considering the nature of our days on Earth, we may foretell our future condition, either of weal or woe, and endeavour to make us friends of this unrighteous Mammon, that when we fail, they may receive us into everlasting habitations. So that dummodo ad earum apprehensionem tu animum confer as, imports a delight in, and an endeavour after the knowledge of the Law: for animum conferre ad aliquid, is as much as to ponder on, and steer all one's actions to a thing, to make it the mark we aim at, and the Goal we make to, and the Centre we acquiesce in. This, though the Chancellor did not in the strictness of the notion persuade the Prince to, since he had other employments, which did more immediately take him up, the intrigoes of State, and secrets of Policy, the interests of his Crown, and the conducts of Counsels. These being the more weighty matters of Regality, and requiring more of the personal intention of the Prince, were in order of concern and prudence, to be the chief and main of his study. Though I say in the severity and height of the notion, the Prince is not here pressed animum conferre ad earum apprehensionem, yet in such a competent and convenient measure, as he can, and his other affairs will permit, he is, and the more he is, (other things not being neglected) the more accomplished is he like to prove; since as Lucius Crassus, that great Lawyer said, Omnia sunt posita ante oculos. etc. Every day, and with every man there is good use to be made of the Law; which may be understood not only as in the bulk and greatness of the Author, containing the Ocean of its variety and learning, Cicero Dialog. De Oratore, dictum Livii Crasii. Budaeus in Pandect. pag. 15. edit. Basil. 1594. but as its practice in ordinary administration patefies it. To conclude this Head then, I presume our Text-Master well knew what knowledge in the Law was necessary to accomplish the Prince, and that it was acquirable in that small time, and with that pleasurable industry, that a year well and profitably spent therein, may in a good measure perform; Nil est quod pertinax opera, & diligens cara non ex pugnat. Seneca. and thereupon he says, Parvo tempore, & paruâ industriâ, Because there is nothing which constant endeavour, and diligent care will not attain and overcome. Nosco enim ingenii tui perspicacitatem. Here the Chancellor by a Courtly Concession, tempts the Prince to a rendition of himself to his suasion; Qui vel Roscinm illum histrionum decus, hypocrisi & arte mimica superare etiam possunt. In Pandect priores, p. 608. edit. Basil. 1534. and this he does not as one of those, Pseudo Catones perniciocissimi, etc. which Budaeus says, Study men's humours rather than their virtues, and pimp to the one, while they subvert the other; exceeding even Roscius, the Phoenix of Actors in their Theatrique Impostry, as Budaeus sets them out; but as a good and grave Gentleman, who considering the mercies of God to the Prince in his endowments of mind so ripe and pregnant, calls him to gratitude to God the giver, and to a good and virtuous employment of them so given. Indeed, this is the best construction Christian ingenuity can make of extraordinary mercy; not to abuse it, but to fix it upon the noblest object God, and to be satisfied in no sphere beneath, or besides his glory promoted, and charity to man auxiliated by it. It was undoubtedly a noble Proposal that Tully made to his mind, Budaeus in Pandect. loco prae●ttato, p. 17. or rather his mind to him, when he thought, juris civilis disciplinam in artis rationem formámque redigere; And that by these steps, the whole body of the Law he would refer to several common heads, then reduce every general head into members, then determine the state, use, and operation of every of them. Every brave and generous mind should do so by the memory of the mercies of God considering them in the latitude, as they are effluxions from the sovereign bounty of the Creator to his Creature and then applying them to his condition, and affecting his soul with the obligation of them, and exciting himself there from to a proportionation of every virtue, which God requires to be performed, and when performed, he promises to accept. Now this being the duty of men endowed with such rare perfections, as ripe wit and ready apprehension, which the Text calls, ingenii perspicacitatem, the good Chancellor remembers the Prince in the excellency of the blessing, to perform the requiry of the obligation; Xenophon, lib 20 De Sociat. Dict. for that he had a ready and accurate understanding, whereby he could 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. whereby he could easily learn whatever he would, and retain what so he had learned, and distribute those good parts of learning he had, to public good, is plain from what the Chancellor, who best knew him, intends hereby to publish of him; yea, and his choice of Arms for his love and study to excel in, which his condition told him was properest to aid, restore, and adorn him, unto his expected Kingly condition, does sufficiently confirm to me. For to the amazement of all his Contemporaries, he not only boldly came in the head of an Army to fight the Usurper; but when he by misfortune of War was a Prisoner, justified his fact to the teeth of his Opposite; which declares, that he had ingenii perspicacitatem, and saw that it was his interest above all things, to be in his addiction Martial; and this he accordingly being, is said to be perspicacissimi ingenii, as being a man in wisdom, while a youth in years; yea, a Prince, who had a complication of all the promising excellencies of prudence in him. And this the Chancellor thus charactering in him, informs us, that a Gentleman he was above his years: For perspicax implies Prudence. 1. Offic. 142. 2. Offic. 132. Tully writing of Palumedes, says there was in him perspicax prudentia, and the Greeks calling this by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which Suidas expresses by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and intends such an insight into things, as men have who look with not only both their own eyes, but with all the other men's eyes they can be helped to see through things by. And the Chancellor seeing in the Prince a more than ordinary Princely smartness, Such another was our Edward the sixth. (I say Princely, for God ordinarily does qualify them above others, as he designs them for greater charges than others have) the Chancellor I say, perceiving by the first appearance of the Sun in the Morn, and the early appearance of his life, calls upon him to direct his ripeness to a right object, and by right and proper means, to wit, the Law, which he may sufficiently, to credit himself to men, and to answer comfortably to God, learn knowledge in parvo tempore & paruâ industriâ; since as quick and intense fires, Patriclus Instit. Reipub. lib. 4. p. 147.148. make that warm through in a moment, which slow ones will be long in piercing; and Birds fly that ground in an hour, which feet will not carry horses and men to in three: so readings, and forward parts, will furnish aYouth plainly to perform that, which others with great labour, and long intentness on it, cannot bring about. And this is the reason of all the admirable masteries in Learning, and sagacity that some young men arrive at, and are made famous by. Not only in Arts; as Papinian and Celsus, who publicly read the Law, Salmuth in Pancirol. Tit. 10. partis secundae. p. 222. Capitolinus in vita ejus. Drusius, Centur. 1. Miscellan, p. 45. before he was 17 years ' old; Marcus Antoninus, who in the 15th year of his age did virilem togam Philosphi sumere; that son of janus Drusius, who began to learn Latin and Hebrew at five years old, and within less than two years had learned them, with the Greek, Chaldee, and Syriack: at seven he so rarely interpreted David in the Hebrew Tongue, that a Rabbie then at Leyden heard him with admiration: Franzius de modo legendi S. Bibl. p. 15, 16, 17. two years after he read Hebrew without puncts, and found out the reason of their use: like performances to this he made in the Greek and Latin Tongues, etc. dying in the 21, year of his age. Yes, in our own Nation we read, Pitsaeus ad annum, 1230. p. 307. that Glanvil began to be famous for Learning in the Law, in ipsa adolescentia; while but a young man, he was famous for his judgement in the Law. Sir Thomas Frowick, Chief-Justice to H. 7. was renowned for judgement in the Law, and a Judge of it before forty years of age dying, floridâ juventute. Add to these Grocinus Lupset, ●uller Worthies England, in Middlefox, p. 183. whom (a) Epist. add Lupset Inter opera The, Mori, Imp. 1566. Budaeus terms juvenum doctissimus, Sir Philip Sidney. These, and many others, dead and alive, not inferior to them, are Benefactors to Arts, and to a Miracle, great Proficients in them, and beyond their years. So in Matters of action, youth hath strangely been prodigious; Alexander subdued the World before he was 27 years old, Plutarch in J. Caesare. which made I. Caesar rub his head with indignation, breaking out into that Pathetic, Nos vero quid! Cnejus Pompeius in 18. and Octavius in the 19 year of their age engaged eminently in the Wars. Salmuth in Pancirol. p. 222. Lib. 2. c. 2. Severus, before he was 20 years old, rendered himself egregium militaris disciplina exemplum, saith Fulgosus, M. Manlius Capitolinus before 17 years of age, took two spoils from the Enemy, Eques omnium primus, etc. the first Knight, saith Pliny, who wore the Mural Crown. Count Guido Ranjone is by Giraldus set out as a Mirror of youth this way: And all this by the blessing of God on the pregnancy of Nature, In Epist, ante Catalogum senio. rum poetarum, hiboriam partis secunda, p. 229. which excites to, and perfects them in these projects so early. For though it be not infallible, what is conjectured in order to the futurities of youths proofs from the present lines of their faces, and lineaments of their actions; but that it may not, as well as sometimes it does, fall out according to judicious prognostications, Lib. 2, c. 6. p. 27. edit. Savil.; and judgements on them: yet mostly it is too true, that the vices as well as virtues of men, appear in their Cradles and Infancies. Malmsbury tells us, Alfred embraced his Grandchild Athelstan, looking upon, and seeing in him grounds to believe excellent things of him. And Saint Bernard seeing our H. 2. when a Child, and at Nurse in the Court of France, looking on him, said, Monkishly and mischievously, In H. 2 p. 1046. edit. Lond. De Diabolo venit, & ad diabolum ibit, saith Brompton. And all this, from that impression, which in Nature's order and method has been fixed on them in the principle of their Generation, which has for the most part so direct and vigorous an influence on them, in all the after choices and expression of their lives, that they are what is more suitable to that, and mostly abhor what is in contradiction to it, unles● by divine grace and natural prudence, they are preponderated. Hence is it, that Children and Youths of great wits and forwardnesses, are either the comforts or griefs of their Parents, the joys or terrors of their Governments. For they being rasatabula, whatever is first written in them; they retain with a vehemence assisted by their acumens. And since whatever they undertake, they perform with much pleasure, and persistency, Particius, lib. ● Instit. Reipub. p. 147, 148. De Themistocle, & De libris Xeniadis. they may be pressed upon to perform that parvo, tempore, & paruâ industriâ, which others not being so happy in a perspicacity of Wit, must without remedy be longer about it. And so this nosco ingenii perspicacitatem, was the reason why he tells him, he may be sufficienter eruditus in legibus, parvo tempore, & paruâ industriâ. Quo audacter pronuncio, quod in legibus illis licet earum peritia, qualis judicibus necessaria est, vix 20. annorum lucubrationibus acquiratur, tu doctrinam Principicos gruam in anno uno sufficienter nantisceris. This is added, to evidence the Chancellors judicious experience of his assertion, and it extends not only to noscoingenii perspicacitatem, but to the whole scope of his words precedent, that he could by God's help, and would by his submission to his Prescription, make him undoubtedly sufficiently learned as a Prince in the Laws of England, parvo tempore, & paruâ industriâ, which he limits to one year. Now though it be a small time to so great a task, yet may with method suffice to instruct the Prince in that part of the Science of the Law, which he calls Doctrina Principi congrua, that is, in the common notions of Law, and elementary rectitude, in the skill of preserving the jura Corons, and the rights of the Subjects from clashing and interfering, in the Sanctions of Parliament, which either explain and clear, or add to, or abridge the Common-Law, or remove new obstructions, which incommodate Government. These may be sufficiently read to, and riverted into a Prince, anno uno, and (I humbly conceive) are sufficient knowledge for him, according to the sense of the Chancellor. Nor does the Chancellor in this, audacter pronuncio, speak hyperbolically, but according to that gravity and truth, which the Judgements and Reasons of his, in the Year-Book of H. 6. from the 22. of his Reign onward, record of him, and the experience that on other young men whom he had in his time instructed to some such proportion, made good to him, he could to the Prince perform; yea, and if this he did do, he did nothing but what others since him may be presumed to attain to, or what is equivalent to it. Hopperus, a learned Civilian and Counsellor to Philip the second of Spain, undertakes the like in the Civil Laws. Lib. 4. De Vera Jurisprud. tit. 12. De Speciali Juris interpretatione. His words speaking of the institution of a Prince, are these, Ad quam rem plurinoum juvabit tractaius Pandectarum, & c. To which end, the reading of the Pandects, in which are the rules of the old Law, conduces much to the preparation of a Student towards his procedure, so as he begin with the institutions; then the books that expound the words and rules of the Law; and lastly the rubriques' of the Pandects, Code & Novel, which he calls the labour of the Student the first year. Thus that great Master; whom my learned and religious friend Mr. Langford, heretofore mentioned having throughly studied, and that with design upon these very words of our Chancellors, has attained to much (I believe) of that which the Chancellor and Hopper intent the work of one year in either Laws; for, having in the comparing of these two Authors on this head, made a kind of symphony between them; the nosco ingenii tui perspicacitatem in our Fortescue, with natura, ingenium, labour, diligentia in his Hopper. And our Doctrina Principi congrua, with his ars Regia; and our sufficienter eruditus with his nè quid nimis. And our in anno uno with his primi anni studiorum labour. He concludes, that the Chancellors audacter pronuncio, is no boast, but what the Chancellor himself very well knew how to effect, and what he after him, by God's help, is able to instruct youth to do: which that judicious Author of Doctor and Student promoted, Doctor. & Stud. Book 2. c. 46. p. 148. b. as to the utility of its design, and the profit of its consequence, in these words, If the Noblemen of this Realm would see their Children brought up in such manner, that they should have learning and knowledge more than they have commonly used, or have in times past, specially of the grounds and principles of the Law of the Realm, wherein they be inherit, though they had not the high cunning of the whole body of the Law, but after such manner as Mr. Fortescue in his Book that he entitled, De laudibus legum Angliae, advertiseth the Prince to have knowledge of the Laws of this Realm, I suppose it would be a great help hereafter to the ministrations of justice of this Realm, a very great surety for himself, and a right great gladness to all the people. So Doctor and Student. These things I note, to show that smaller degrees of learning in the Laws are sufficient to the accomplishments of Gentlemen and Princes, than Professors and Judges; and that the twentieth part of that Science, which is but unius anni filia, the fruit of one year will suffice for the one, when the study of twenty years will vix judicibus sufficere, scarce serve to the necessary accomplishment of a Judge: which eminently sets forth the eminency of Learning, which a Judge ought to have, who after three Apprenticeships of years, one under the Bar legendo & scribendo; the second at the Bar, audiendo & practicè observando; another, ruminando & maturè judicando: yet how well soever he improves them all, arrives but at the title of Serviens ad legem: For since the Text says, Vix viginti annorum lucubrationibus, the skill of a judge is attained, there is great reason the judgements of them so perfitted, should be in high value. For since the judges have no power to judge, according to what they think to be fit, but that which out of the Laws they know to be right, as is the resolution of all the Judges in Calvin's Case; it becomes the Judges to be men of great standing and study, as blessed be God and the King, they are, that they may distribute Justice to the glory of God, and content of the King, his people, and their own Consciences. First, than this time of study presumes great parts attained, and grave experience in the practice, as well as Theory of the Law arrived at. For the Rule being, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Phocylides apud Stobzum. Serm. 4. De Imprud. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Men judge of things as theyare in mind endowed, To Kings in art, judgement of art's allowed. And the Judge being a Representer of the King, aught to be so qualified, Ita jus reddi debet, ut authoritatem dignitatis su● ingenio suo augeat, Calistratus, lib. I. De Cognit. Digest. lib. ●. tit. 18. p. 150. that his place may from his indis●ration have no disparagement. And thus to do, will require vast knowledge, not only in Laws of all sorts, but in men and things, and in the conversation with, and operation of them, the knowledge of these must not only be, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, have a part in him, Lib. 5. De Morib. c. 7. p. 47. but be the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the whole of him. For a Judge ought to be the living Law, and the speaking justice; so says the Philosopher. And this to be to all intents, and in all Cases, calls for not only great assistance from God, but great industry and intentness on study, and all little enough to carry the weight and burden of his place, and creditably to execute it. No common Custom of the Nation, no Entry or Year-Book, no Judgement, no Writ, no Title, nothing that may make to the dilucidation of causes, must he be ignorant of: Nay, if he will rightly execute his Office, he must be seen in Arts, Histories, Mechaniques, and all occasions of Conversation, that so he may know how to unriddle the abstrusities of Cases, and know where Frauds lie, Lib. 51. ad edictum Digest. lib. 3. tit. 3. p. 403. H. Arbitratu in Gloss. and obviate them: for since that of Paulus is true, Omnis qui defenditur, boni viri arbitratu defenditur. And that the gloss renders, by boni judicis arbitratu, a Judge is to be a most accomplished man in the gifts and graces of his Intellect and Mind; and this he cannot attain easily to be, nor continue to practice, till the heats and temptations of youth are over, and the solidity and indiversions of age and maturity be arrived at, which is seldom attained under the age of forty, Jornandes, lib. b. p. 641, 642, edit. Sylburg. or above, by which time they may have a full twenty years' time to store themselves. I know there have been some young men, who have lived little in time, but long in fame; Scipio Africanus the Master of Atrick, was but a young man when he obtained that Title. Parum aetatis multum gloriae. Malmsbur lib. 2. De Gestis Anglor. c. 6. Plin. lib. 7. c. 41. Lilius Gyrald. Dialog. 8. Histor. Poetarum Vopiscus in Tac. Theatr. Vitae Humanae, p. 3142. So was Fabius Cunctator. Athelstan was such an one, whom no man before him did excel in the majesty and prudence of Government, and others heretofore I have quoted Precedents of it; but these have been but rare, as rare in men, as successions of brave men are in Families; in which, though one Family of the Curio's in Rome, produced three Successions famous Orators, and one Family of the Fabii, three chief Senators one after another; and the Annaei of Corduba, three Brethren famous for Learning, and exactness of Morals; and Tacitus Augustus continued the honour of his Family, even unto Cornelius Tacitus his time. Yet have more brave men and Families been degenerous, and abated the splendour of their Ancestry by their vicious imparities to them, as Zuinger in many examples confirms. And so, though in the Law some may be culled out, that extraordinarily profit, and are for learning, temper, grace, and integrity, fit betimes for Judges, perhaps some time within the space of twenty; yet such are but rarae aves (one Phoenix perhaps of this kind is in an Age) generally the rule is peremptorily true, that a Judge's Knowledge and Learning is hardly got in twenty years' time, if then. A Judge then therefore is so long attaining his qualifications, because not only they are many in number, and different in nature, but depend upon some masteries of self, and intuition into the mysteries of things, which are the product of great years, and much wisdom collected from them: while youth is warm, and passion keen, when the apprehension is not fixed, nor experience has corrected the volatility of fancy and humour, there is no room for unmoveableness, and a rectitude equally distant from the extremes. Non enim aut severitatis, aut clementiae gloria est affectanda, sed propenso judicio prout quequae res expostulat, est statuendum. Hopperus, De ver Jurisprud. p. 22. Tit. 15. Stobaeus, p. 547. Now such an equilibriousness being the perfect mean of virtue, and Justice directing a Judge, not to seek and affect the glory of clemency or cruelty, but to keep himself to Evidence, and to the truth of the Law, in censure and judgement of the fact: Is it probable, such and so great Masteries of Nature and Corruption will be in young men, who are all fire and tow, all tinder and quicksilver, as in those whom twenty years study have cooled and settled on the solid and serious Basis of Prudence and Piety, which only fits men to be of the Sages gents, Gods to men, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Servants to justice, not Engines of oppression and extravagance? Which considered, our Chancellor has done well in giving twenty years to the accomplishment of a Judge; not thereby outing earlyer attainments of the fruits of God's blessing on their studies, and the King's favour in Calls to the Bench, if sooner the attainers of them are thought fit; but to let the World know, that the most of learned men are in no competent measure qualified for that trust and dignity, under that standing; and dangerous it is to call men to that preferment sooner, unless for extraordinary deserts, lest they should sub gravitatis purpura nepotari. And this, as I said before on the 8th Chapter * p. 134, 135, 136. justifies the Kings of England in all times, and our now Liege Lord at this time, not to make any Judges before they have emerited, and exceeded the Chancellors limitation, which I am sure the youngest Judge now has almost twice, if not altogether over, and which is the reason that the Courts are so learnedly filled with Justices, and the people so satisfied with the justice of their Judgements. Plutarch in lib. an seni sit gerenda Resp p. 789. edit. Paris. So true is that of Plutarch, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Youth is the season of obedience, but old age best befits Rule, and best carries on Government. Ne● interim militarem disciplinam, ad quam tam ardenter anhelas, negliges, sedeâ recreation●s loco, etiam anno illo tu ad libitum perfrueris. Here the Chancellor applies himself to the Prince by a wise insinuation, adapted to the humour of youth; which being delighted with actions of pleasure and gaiety, is frequently kept from other more serious and useful accomplishments, by the prejudices it has, as if they were inconsistent with the other things of recreation, and externity of pomp; which because the Chancellor knew a dangerous anticipation of his counsel, he endeavours to remove by a calm and swaviloquious grant of Recreations, and a competency of time to Military Affairs, without any frustration of his sufficient accomplishment in knowledge of the Laws in the proportion, and within the time aforesaid. And to good purpose does he do it, for had he told him, that the recreation he had chosen, was to have been refused, that learning in the Laws alone could make him good in his person, and good to his Government, had he kept him to the rigid and austere Rule of Study, and not given him some relaxation, and allowed that best spent, in what he most delighted in, and would really find a great ornament to him, Military Discipline, he had wholly lost his ear and heart; which done, all the reason he could speak or write, would have been ineffectual, because coming from a Tongue and Pen unfavoured, and therefore suspected; but in that he does so comply with the Prince's youth, and yet follows on his intendment, argues him to be both a man of civility and sageness: For as labour is wearyness to the bones, a punishment of sin, and the waster of life; so is Recreation, and cessation from it a re-invigoration, or second enablement of Nature to bear her burden. Lib. 22 c. 23.7. Lib. 12. c. 1.2. Ad Attic. lib. ●. II. Pro Planc. 5. Verr. Thus Pliny uses recreare for instaurare, Si enim defecta long is aegritudinibus corpora recreantur. Afflictos bonorum animos recreare, So Tully. And amicorum literis recreari; conspectus vester reficit; & recreate mentem meam; afflictam & perditam provinciam erigere & recreare. By then recreationis loco, he intends that he shall not be kept that year he is proposed to set apart for instruction in it, close like a prisoner, or an Apprentice, but he shall have his play-times; and those not only as often as he profitably and ingeniously may (study also being conveniently considered) but in that specifique delight, which he does above all others choose as his Mistress and Darling. For as the eye, always intent on reading, will at last be weak, though its composition and visual Organ be never so strong, and the Bow, if always bend, will grow weak, and the Treasure always drawn from, will in time be exhausted; and as shades are made of many colours, which any one colour will not perfect: so is the mind not only pleased with, but refreshed by variety; and therefore, as wise Physicians prescribe no physic to the body, but such as it will bear, nor no oftener to repeat it, than they find morbid matter adhering, and then the strength and spirits of the Patient will permit, but prescribe intervals by which the body is restored, and the strength in some measure recuperated: so do wise Tutors gratify their Pupils with such refractions of them from their intentness on study, as may make them come to it fresher, and continue at it willinger, since by them they are made more apprehensive of their reading, and more emulous to deserve well, which they are so kindly dealt with. Though then our Chancellor did press vehemently for the Princes training up in the knowledge of the Law, and that by an intentness of mind for one year, in which he (so ingenious and docile) might be by the Chancellors method taught it; yet did he not desire all that years time to the Law, but allowed him part of it to matters of Arms and Chivalry, part to Devotion and Piety, part to Food and Necessity, and part to Friendship and Courtesy; which he I suppose did in a method, A Bencher of Grays. Inn, much like that my worthy Friend Mr. Langford has imparted to me, and he himself has profitably disciplined young Gentlemen in Grays-Inn. The natural days 24 hours he thus distributing. From 5 in the morning to 6. Ad Sacra. Begin with God by reading and prayer. From 6. to 9 Ad jura. Read the Law carefully and understandingly. From 9 to 11. Ad Arma Carry en harmless acts of Manhood, Fencing, Dancing, etc. From 11. to 12. Ad Artes, Forget not Academic learning, Logic, Rhetoric: From 12. to 2. Ad Victum, Eat seasonably, moderately, and allow time to digest. From 2. to 5. Ad amicitias, Visit civilly your friends, and repay kindness in kind. From 5. to 6. Ad Artes, Read History, Poëtry, and Romances. From 6. to 8, Ad Victum, Take food often, but not much, nor heavy. From 8. to 9 Ad Repetitionem & Sacra, Repeat your Parts, and say your Prayers. From 9 to 5. Ad Noctem & Somnum, To Bed be times, and rise betimes again. Which Proportion of the days of a year exactly kept, will not only allow every part of life its due share; but determine to the Prince's Comfort and Content that Engagement, and the possibility of performing it, which was by the Chancellor made in those preceding words, parvo tempore & parva industria. And so concludes the eighth Chapter. Chap. IX. Secundum verò Princeps, quod tu formidas, consimili nec majoxi operâ elidetur. Dubit as nempe, an Anglorum Legum, vel Civilium studio te conferas, dum Civiles supra humanas cunctas Leges alias, sama per orbem extollat gloriosa. AS the first disanimation of the Prince was taken from the perplexity of the Laws study, and the supposed impossibility of conquering it to any tolerable perfection in short time and with moderate study; so the second is, whether Law the Prince shall choose as the subject of his Study, whether the particular, Insular, Municipe Law; which no Nation knows or owns but England alone, or the civil Laws which are the Laws of the Continent, and to which almost all Nations, and the learned men of them generally subscribe. This I confess is a rational scruple, and that which in point of choice, a man of parts and single eye who unengaged seeks truth, and would bottom his actions thereupon, would be diligent to seek, and rejoice in the obtainment of. For Good being the end of man's desire and action, and it being deposited in the Laws of God and Nature, whence all active good, that of Prudence and Conduct is extracted: to choose the best Method of them is the highest Act of Concernment, next the souls affairs, man can be employed in. This the Perspicacity of the Prince diving into, conveyed such doubts into him, that he could not jurare in verba Magistri, and take his Chancellour's choice till he had concocted the Arguments he proposed to his Solution, and Satisfaction therein. And truly, if it be considered what Tully says of the civil Law, O rem praeslaram vobisque retinendam judices, Apud Budaeum in Pandect. priores p. 23. Edit. Basil. 1534. Fabianus justinianus in Indic. Universal. ad lit. Ius, etc. a p. 270. ad 272. Possevinus Bibliothec. selecta lib. 13. c. 10. & seq. ad sinem p. 150. &c O the Divinity of that Law, which ye, O judges, are to keep, as your jewels and life; such it is, as neither savour will bend, nor power break, nor money corrupt, which if removed, all right and propriety ceases, and all things fall into Confusion, thus Tully: And if what infinite other Authors, and the wisest Nations of the Continent have of honour done to this Law, be here rehearsed, it would make many Volumes, and extrude the series of my intention in this Commentary, and may well stumble a young Prince which of the Laws to choose, at least to refuse the civil Laws, which so great Governments do admit to their regulation: and this effect, I suppose by the words of the Text-Master, this debate, and irresolution of the Prince in his choice (supposing him free) had on him; for else the Chancellor would never have dehorted him from perturbation, which he calls mentis evagatio, a wander of the mind from its rational Basis, and its station of Consistence against passion, and the distorting of it. For since the Prince had long, and fruitlessly (as he thought) waited God's return, which the height of his forward youth would ripen sooner than Omnipotence pleased, since he saw another in his Father's Throne besides himself, and was greedy to contend and evict that which was supposed his right; this considered, I say, may give us shrewd suspicion, that the Grave Chancellor saw him impatient, like that ill-advised man in 2 King. vi. last verse, This evil comes from the Lord, why should I wait for the Lord any longer; and in a hurry and storm of passion meditate to be revenged of the Laws, the sacredness of which seeming to shroud his Antagonists possession, made his accession upon him more difficult. This probably the old Chancellor sadly considering, occasioned his Counsel of recollection to the Prince, not only to allay the present servor of his youthful Metal, but to convince him, that when he had bussled all he can, and fretted his mind into a tempestuous heat, hazarding all the serenity of his hopes and the comfort of God's Reverter in mercy to him, he could do nothing Princely, but what must and aught to be legal and just: and this he tells him is in the Laws Case resolved, past doubt or alteration; As a man that is married cannot use his Wise as he please, but according to the Nature of Marriage, and the right of the Privileges thereof; so the King of Eugland cannot salvo Sacramento, salvo iure, saluâ Conscientiâ, change the Laws of his Government at his pleasure, but does and holds himself obliged to do nothing regally, but what legally he may, which he not being able (salvis his) to do, the Question is answered in the Negative,, Non potest Rex Angli●. Nam non potest Rex Angliae, ad libitum suum Leges mutare regni sui. Principatu namque nedum regali, sed & politico ipse suo populo dominatur. This the Chancellor wrote not to assault or lessen the King's power, but to render it by its soft and gentle Edge not only less terrible, but more obliging to the Subjects, towards whom it expresses itself so merciful; and truly did I not humbly resolve by God's grace assisting me, to be just to truth, and modest to the great power of my dear and dread Sovereign, it would have become me rather to do by this subject, as Patroclus did by Achilles his Spear, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Plutarch, lib. De Adulat. & amici discrimine, p. 59 not meddle with this of any to comment on, because it is so easy to err about it: But as I humbly implore the wisdom of God to direct me to write the words of truth and soberness; so do I in all humble reverence to the Majesty of my Lord the King, beg his pardon and ●avour, that what I write may be esteemed to proceed from a Justice and Loyalty, which aims at nothing but the real explication of the truth herein; to which, since the Text leads me, and a truth there is much to the illustration of the excellency of the Monarchy of this Nation reported in it, I will, with all ingenuous modesty, write a few words of it. And the Clause analysis itself thus. First, there is the subject matter, or the noble thing he speaks of, that's a King, and a King of England. Secondly, there is the negative predicate, what this King, and King of England cannot do, non potest ad libitum suum leges mutare regni sui. Thirdly, here is a production of the reason, why thus he cannot do, he is Rex Anglia, that's argumentum ab officio, and then they are leges regnisui, and thence arises the Subject's interest in them. 1 Eliz. c. 3. The Kings, with the consent of the three Estates his Subjects, has accepted, and in Parliament made them; and though he could have denied his consent, and so not have made them Laws; yet having once passed them, they are not to be altered at his will, because the subject, for whose good they are, is concerned, & nihil potest Rex quam quod de jure potest. These Heads take up the sense of the Clause. Rex Angliae; 25 H. 8. c. 19.26 c. 1.28 c. 16. 24 H. 8. c. 12.25 H. 8. c. 22. 1 M. 2 Sess. c. 4. 1 Eliz. 1. 1 jac. c. 1.5. Report de jure Regis Eccles. p. 40. b. Stobaus Serm. 40. Philo lib. De Monarchia. Crockier in Thes. Aphoris. Politic. lib. 1. c. 3. Contzen. lib. 1. Politic. c. 21. Lipsius' in Politic. c. 4. p. 29. Arist. 8 Moral. c. 12. Ficinus in Platonis Politic. 8 Moral. c. 12. This is the Title of the mighty Monarch of England, whose Imperial Crown is a Monarchy independent on all but God: And as it is a Monarchy the best of Governments, because the Government of God over the World; so is it the best of Monarchies, not only in regard of temperateness, but succession: A Monarchy it is, in which the Image of God's glorious Sovereignty resembles its protoplast, being made such as it is by his mercy, and by the clemency of the Monarches of, and the Laws in it. A Government it is, not such an one as the Philosopher calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the blot and blemish of Kinglyness; but such an one as answers every end of God and Man, a Kingdom wherein 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the King is the Keeper of Order and Religion, peace and property, and the people kept by him are his faithful Liege's, to defend his Title in, and to the said Imperial Estate, Place, Crown, and Dignity, in all things thereto belonging at all times, to the uttermost of our possible powers, and therein to spend our Bodies, Lands and Goods, against all persons whatsoever, that any thing shall attempt to the contrary. They are the words of the Nation in Parliament, Stat. ay Eliz. c. 3. confirmed by I jacob. c. 1. Thus happy is the King of England, that he rules the valiantest people, the richest spot, by the renowned'st Laws, and in the religiousest method of any Monarch in the World. For it is a principle congenial to our Kings, In the true Law of free Monarchy. p. 203. Inter oper. in sol. not only to delight to rule their Subjects by the Law, but even conform themselves in their actions thereunto, always keeping that ground, that the health of the Commonwealth be their chief Law. So faith King james. Since then the King has the power of Arms, Courts, Coin, Justice, both in criminal and judicial matters; for they are all by, and under him, administered and actuated; that yet notwithstanding all this, he should keep himself within the bounds of Justice and Mercy, argues him highly blessed of God, and deservedly beloved of men. Since as a King, Ide● cod. loco. he is above the Law, as the author and giver of strength thereto: yet as a King of England, bears the limitation of Laws of his own freewill, though not bound (as others) thereto. Which considered, the Chancellour's negative predicate, is a truth, in a qualified sense, Non potest ad libitum suum, etc. For non potest does not respect the absolute and strict power of a King, for than who of his Subjects shall dare to withstand his pleasure, and impede his resolutions any more than a Whippit dare ruttle and enrage a Lion, or a Smelled contend with a Whale. As God over the World, so Kings over their Subjects, have an omnipotence not to be disputed with, but adored by them. If David will eat the shewbread, which is only the viands of the Priests, and take the Wife of Uriah, which is the proper treasure of her Husbańd, Cook 2 Instit. Notes on 29. Chapter, Magna Charta, p. 47. there is no opposing him. But the non potest is with respect to lenitive Concomitants of absolute Kingship, reverence to God, veracity to the Coronation Oath, valuation of Justice, and honour with men, Peace in the Prince's Conscience. All these come in to modify the non potest, and to put weight upon it, so as to make it as the Centre of the Earth unmovable. And this is that which the Kings of England have not only consented to themselves, and such their consent confirmed by Oath, C. 6. Upon his Majesties retlrlng from Westminster. juramentum justittariorum, 18 E. 3. I think my Oath fully discharged in that point, by my governing only by such Laws, as my People, with the House of Peers, have chosen, and myself have consented to. So the martyred King Charles; but sworn also their Judges to observe in their delegations of power to them; Ye shall swear, that well and truly, ye shall serve our Lord the King, and his People, in the Office of justice, etc. and after, and that ye deny to no man common right by the King's Letters, nor none other man's, nor for none other cause, and in case any Letters come to you contrary to the Law, that ye do nothing by such letters, but certify the King thereof, and proceed to execute the Law, notwitstanding the same letters, are the words of the Statute, 18 E. 3. and if the King cannot rationally and politicly command his Judges to judge against Law, because they are discharged by the Kings own Laws from such commands, sure he that is the fountain of Justice, can not reasonably and plausibly approve that in himself, which he condemns in his Ministers, For the King willeth that right be done, King's Answer to the Petition of Right, 3d Car. Puston's Stat. p. 432. according to the Laws and Customs of the Realm, and that the Statues be put in due execution, that his Subjects may have no cause to complain of any wrong or oppressions, contrary to their just rights and liberties; to the preservation whereof, he holds himself in Conscience as well obliged, as of his Prerogative. So that our Chancellors non potest, is but in other words thus much, since the King rules by Law, and Parliamentarily makes and repeals Laws, etc. the King cannot lawfully, ad libitum leges regnisui mutare. And the reason is twofold; First, Quia Rex Angliae, King Iame's Speech, 1609. p. 531, of his Works in sol. he is a King, not a Tyrant, and all Kings that are not Tyrants, or perjured, will be glad to bond themselves within the limits of their Laws; a lawful King, not an Usurper, King of England, a Land of freedom and riches, God's Earthly Western Canaan, Regnum Angliae regnum Dei, was an old saying, and he ruling as God does, by a Law, Cook 2 Instit. on 29 Chapter, Magna Charta, p. 47. and that a just convenient and wise Law, which answers all purposes of Government, cannot change that Law, that is, bring in another Law in room of that by his Will and Prerogative; nor shall he need to do it, or have any of the Kings of England, that I have read of, attempted to do it. The Laws of England being so fitted to the people, that the Oracle of Monarchy spoke and wrote it, That the grounds of the ComLaws of England, are the best of any Law in the World, either Civil or Municipal, and the fittest for this people, and so subsidiary to the honour and security of the King, that no Law can be more favourable and advantageous, and extendeth further his Prerogative than it doth; Speech, 1669. p. 532. and for a King of England to despise the Common-Law, is to neglect his own Crown. And thus the non potest refers to Prudence, prudenter & utiliter non potest, quia Rex Angliae, and aught to advise what is good for him and his people. Secondly, Conscienter non potest, because they are Leges Regis, in regard of emanation, fontality, and sanction; and Regni, in regard of application, appropriation, and interest: by all which, subjects are so inserted into the propriety of them, that they cannot be illegally taken from them, (and illegally they must be, if without their consent altered) without great dishonour to their Violators, and great provocation of divine vengeance upon it; which the piety of our Monarches considering, ever abhorred. For though in some times, and upon heats and cholers, there has been somewhat interpreted like a tendency that way; yet has it ever been but an embryo, and soon turned into ruin of those that advised it. For the Common and Statute Laws of England are in the mass and bulk of them unalterable, being Fundamentals of all English Order and Authority, which is the cause our Text says, non potest Rex Angliae ad libitum suum regni leges mutare. Which words are not rigidly to be taken, as if the Chancellor by them fully disseised Regality of Nomothetique and Regal Power in their legal sense; and as according thereto our brave Princes have juridically expressed themselves, for then the Majesty of the Crown would not be such and so Imperial, as the prealleadged Authorities assert and confirm it to be; Nulla leges ita seriti possunt, ut omnes casus qui quandoque inciderunt, comprehendantur. sed sufficit ea, quae plorùmque accidunt contineri; si quid extra ea accidat, de ea interpretatione aut jurisdictione certius statuitur' vel eriam novis legibus secundariis, qua ex primariis deducumur. Hopperus, lib. 4. De Vera Jurisp. Tit. 27. or as if the Chancellor thought the System of the Laws in his time, so complete, that no addition could be made to them, no explication be made of them: for to dream of that had been altogether absurd, since no wisdom of Lawmakers was ever so exact, no method of Laws so absolute, but some casus omissi have been discovered in them, to which Additions and Declarations have been in supplement, as appears not only by all Acts of Parliament, made in succession of time, but is also in words set down in the Statute 25 H. 8. c. 1. No such intent had the Chancellor in his non potest mutare leges to assert; for unreasonable it had been so to have written, since Laws, as Garments, are good and comely in some Ages, and in some temper of Affairs, which in others are ridiculous and cumbersome: yea, if this latitude were not allowed Princes politicly to do, no obviation could be of emergent mischief, no provisions be made for reward of occasional virtue. Both which power has occasion to apply, as to its judgement seems fit. And therefore the Chancellor, as a man of State, and Law knowledge, intends not his non potest mutare leges, etc. thus to be understood: no, nor does he by non potest Rex Angliae, Ad dominium non est necessarium, quod possit quis uti re cujus est dominus, in omnes usus. Ariagonius, Quast. 62. in secundam secunda St. ●hom. Tit. de domimo, p. 83. take upon him to infirm the Crown, and make it detectuous in any point of necessary and just dominion over the Subjects of it: For as in Divines disputes about God's power, though it be usual for them to say, God cannot do any thing that implies contradiction; yea, that it is impossible for God to lie, because he is truth itself, Grot. in Heb. 6.18. yet they mean the impossibility to be, ex parte rei, non ex parte Dei, not from any dif●ct of divine power; sed ab ipsa rerum, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, but from the incompatibility between truth and a lie. For God, Lege Arragon, in Sentent. Quast. 22. D Praeceptis spei, & Timotis. art. 1. p. 290. can by his essential absolute power, do what he will; and when it is said, he cannot do any thing, 'tis not ex defectu potentia ejus, sed quia repugnat sacto in quantum sactum, vel in quantum tale, as the School say. So in this case of the Kings, non potest leges regni sui mutare, our Text-Master intends not to dispute what the King in the height of Majesty and absoluteness, quâ God's Vicar, may, or may not do, for that's between God and him, and to that God only sets bounds: but that which the non potest refers to, is such a power, as he himself that is King, has in the Law admeasured out to himself, and sworn to observe inviolably, and to cause others to see observed. Concerning this, Speech to the Bill of Attainder, F. Str. May 1611. Reliquia Caroli, p. 10. glorious King Charles writes thus: I never was counselled (quoth he) by any, to alter the least of the Laws of England, much less to alter all the Laws: nay, I tell you this, I think no body durst ever be so impudent, as to move me to it; for if they had, I should have made them such an example, and put such a mark upon them, that all Posterity should know my intention was ever to govern by the Law, and no otherwise. Thus he. And therefore, as the Kings of England are Fountains of Justice and Law, and from them, with assent and consent of their Subjects in Parliament, Laws of public good, and private restraint are made, in which the King is pleased to ratify that Maxim, Nihil potest Rex in terris quam quod de jure pot●st. So I say, these things considered, the Chancellor makes bold to say, Galvin's Case, 7 Rep. p. 17. and I from him, both of us in all humility, that the King of England cannot alter any or all the Laws of England, by his own power, because there is no power but Parliamentary, can alter any one Law, much less the whole Laws (as was the design of William de la Pool, Duke of Suffolk, in our Chancellour's time; ● Instit. Chapt. Flattery, p. 208. to have done, and in room of them, to bring in the Civil Laws, which Sir Edw. Cook says was the occasion of our Chancellour's writing our Text in the commendation of the Laws of England.) Because when Laws be altered by any other Authority, then that by which they were made, Speech to the Country of Nottingham, 1642. Reliq, Carolinae, p. 29. your foundations are destroyed, said our once noble King. Now if Foundations be out of order, what shall the righteous do, is a Scripture phrase. implying good men's sad condition, then surely to keep them in order, is the way to make them happy, and that is by the good old way of making and repealing Laws by King, Cook 4. part, Instit. c. 1. p. 25. 2 Instir. p. 334 on Stat. 2. Westmin: Lords Spiritual and Temporal, and Knights, Citizens, and Burgesses in Parliament: all other new Doctrine is Apocryphal. For other foundation than this of making new Laws additional to the common and customary Laws, or repealing any of the common or customary Laws, I humbly am bold to say, I know no man can safely or learnedly lay. And therefore if the non potest be here applied to the King, it is not in diminution of his power, God forbid, (that is sacred, and not to be spoken of but with reverence;) but in declaration of his justice, condescension, and piety to his people, who in thus restraining himself, 33 H. 6.55. 13 Ed. 1. Stat. 1. doth like a kind Father for his Children Subjects good: and thus are to be understood the words of the Statute of Acton Burnel, The King by himself, and by his Council hath ordained; and the words of the Statute, Qui Warrant, wherein the gratia sua speciali, 18 E. 1. is said by Sir Edw. Cook, to bind the King in this particular of his Prerogative, Quòd nullum tempus occurrit regi. So are the words to be understood, I. Westminster 15. where the Act being penned, in the name of the King, and the King commandeth, therefore the King bindeth himself (saith Sir Edw. Cork) not to disturb any Electors to make free Elections; and so is to be understood that Speech of Sir john Markham to E. 2 Instit. p. 157. 1. That the King could not arrest any man for suspicion of Treason, or Felony, as any other of his Subjects might, because if the King did wrong, the party could not have his Action. Not by these could notes or cannots, to lessen or abate, but to magnify him that thus denies himself to do good to his people. For the King and his Subjects make one body, Quod omnes tangit, ab omnibus tractari debet, Reg juris. and the Laws concerning the whole, are to be considered of by the whole, the Head as well as the Members; and thus conjoinedly Laws, may regularly and Parliamentarily be altered; and without this Authority, to do any thing to alter Law, has not been the practice of our Kings: For since to draw the Freeholds, Sir Tho. Smith, De Rep. Anglor. lib. 2. c. 2.3. Inheritances, etc. of the Subject, ad aliud examen, and to make them judged by any Law then the Common-Law, is termed a disherison of the King and of his Crown, the disherison of all his people, and the undoing and destruction of the Common-Law at all times used as in the Statute 27 E. 3. c. I. appeareth, its safe to keep to the common warrantable use of making and adnulling Laws; Answer to the Petition of Rightad Caroli. Poulton, p. 1433. for the people's properties are hereby preserved, and that said our late martyred Master, strengthens the King's Prerogation, and the King's Prerogative is to defend the People's liberty. Principatu namque nedum Regali sed & politico, ipse populo suo dominatur. This is the reason why he cannot salvis praeconcessis, salvo jure, & saluâ conscientiâ, alter the Laws of England, other then by Parliament and National consent, because he has himself owned and established the Law, as that by which he will rule, and not otherwise; and that also, because he is a King by right of inheritance and succession, according to the Laws of his Government; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 etc. Stobaeus, Serm. 41. p. 248. and this the Text calls, though in other words, yet to the same purpose, that Solon said was the best of state of Government, where the Subjects obeyed their Prince, and the Prince the Laws: and this one of the bravest Kings that ever the World had, thought so just, that he says, A continual Parliament I thought would but keep the Commonwealth in tune, by preserving Laws in their due execution and vigour, wherein my interest lies more (says he) than any man's, Eicon Basil. c. 5. upon passing the Bill for a Triennial Parliament. since by those Laws my Rights as a King would be preserved no less than my Subjects, which is all I desired; more than the Law gives me, I would not have, and less the meanest Subject should not. So he: And truly, the consideration of this every way beneficent Government both to King and People, has so wrought upon the consideration of all of the Kings of this Land, that they have disowned all Titles of Conquest and absoluteness (as in opposition to Laws) to adhere to the mild and lasting ones of regal and politic Contexture; which though the wife of The●pompus reproached, telling her husband, he would leave to his Children a diminished Empire: yet he told her, it would by it be more stable, and lasting: for when Vitellius', whom Apollonius Tyaneus called Theban Emperors, because undurable in their Offices; when those soon were buried in the oblivion of their desamed and execrable names, Princes like ours in England, who of free would voluntarily engage themselves to rule by their Laws, and not otherwise, have not only the glory to say, and that truly, Omnia peregi meipso imperatore, as Pompey did, but also the just confidence to fly to God for custody, against Treason and Rebellion; yea, and when God is said to give salvation to Kings, may well hope to have salvations multiplied in their number, Eicon Basil. c. 5. and heightened in their nature to such gracious and serene Kings, as recede from the extremity of what they in grearness might claim, to express themselves in a gracious and qualified Sovereignty, Sovereignty like Gods of mercy as well as power. This is our Text-Master calls Principatu nedum regali, sed, & politico dominari. For though its Government has whatever is incident to Regality in the proper and just latitude of its notion, See King Charles' Message for Peace from Holmby, 1647. fol. 118. From the Isle of Wight. p. 128. and p. 170. Reliq. Carolinae. according to God's allowance; nor does, or can aim to abate any things of the sacredness of the King's unction, or his powers divinity in his person, which being instituted by God, retains ever the nature of its Institution; yet does it so mitigate, See Preamble to the Statute. I Maria, c. 1. and render Majesty informidable, that subjects love the Princes, who thus appear to them, rather than fear them, and by their loves are so affianced to them, that they count all they have as it were too little to supply their wants, to propagate their honours, to support their Governments, and really give themselves up to them, as Children to their Parents, in obedience free from all dispute. By these words then Principatu nánque nedum regali sed & politico, ipse populo suo dominatur. The Chancellor concludes the Government of England a Paternal Regality, 2 Instit. p. 454. on Wesimin. 2. as I may so say, that is, a Monarchy mixed with love and tenderness, in which absolute power is regulated by Law, and legal Order protected by regal and legal Power: so that as the King can do nothing but what is just, because he does only as just what the Law directs, which is the rule of Justice: so cannot the King suffer any injury from the Subject, but what the Law will right him in, King James' Speech 1609. p. 531, of his Works who is caput regni & legum; which considered, though there be a recession in this Contexture from what Kings in their original power might do in individuo vago; yet is there no frustration of the end of God in setting up Kings, or mutilation of them in their happy advantages, to serve God's glory, and benefit men in subjection to them, but an advantage to both; as all the temptations of passion and partiality are removed, and the clearer and readyer way advanced to public benefaction and endearment. And this I humbly conceive was the reason, that the Laws of England have carried on this mediocrity, having both Justice and Mercy, restraint and liberty; yea matter of captation and allurement both to good and bad, both to Prince and people, and leaves checks on all degrees, to correct their mistake, and to conduct them into the Channel of safety, 3 Instit. c. 87, p. 183. both in point of obedience to the King, and of protection from the King; The Law and its Prescript, 21 jacob. 2. That the King's Majesty, ' his Heirs or Successors, shall not at any time hereafter, sue question, impeach, etc. for as absolute Regality would be too much under the Line and Solstice of power, sub zona torrida, which made the Martyr King say, Let your liberties, properties, privileges, (without which I would not be your King) be secured. Speech to the Parliament at Oxford. 1643. Reliq. Caroli. p. 46. See Sir Thomas Smith, De Rep. Angl. c. 4. So mere politic Government would be too far North to have any vitality to subsist upon, because sub zana frigida, the conjunction of them both in a happy tertian, which is the mixture of them, makes the rational religious moderate durable polity of this Kingdom, in which the Sovereigns do not only, regaliter sed politice dominari, that is, are to all men, as their virtues or vices deserve they should be to them; to the pious and peaceable encouragement, protection, promotion; to the perfidious and profane terror corporal pecuniary; nay, if cause require, death: fo● that as the Law allows the King to have two Capacities, a personal and politic one, (though not in the Dispenser's and others traitorous senses,) Resolute Judges in Calvin's case, 7 Rep. yet in a sense of truth, annexing Allegiance to both the Capacities, and in no sort severing them: so does the Law allow of two several presences of power in the King of England; the one of lustre and glory, which is (as it were) not to be looked upon, this is that of the King, as he is armed with terror, and has the power of life and death; and this he hath in common with all Kings. The other of amiableness, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Jamblicus in●pist ●pist. ad Agrippam, apud Stobaeum, Serm. 44. p. 315. as it has wisely shrouded its astonishing brightness by some interpositions of condescension; this is that our Text-Master calls Politic Dominion, such an admission of regulation in rule, as sweetens men to obedience, by working upon their reason and good nature, and gives their indulger a security from the lenity of his Government over his Subjects, whom because he is good and gracious to, he is beloved and defended by them. This is capable of misinterpretation, unless the Law be the Arbiter, and that has recognised the King only under the power of God, if he violate his Oath. But the Subject is under an indispensable tye from God to the King, underwhose allegiance he is; and the reason is, because the person and fortune of the subject is under the legal dominion of his Prince, but the Prince is under the only dominion of God. The consideration of which has notwithstanding wrought great effects of restraint on Martial minds, and that (even then when they meditated the greatest inundations of restraints) not only abroad in the World, Theatr. V. Ham. Vol. 14. lib. 1. Tit. Reges Principes qui se legibus subjecere. Suetonius in Tiberio, c. 21. the instances whereof are in Zuinger collected to my hand, but also in this Realm of England, when it had a Prince in it, that promised not much better than Tiberius did, of whom the noble Emperor Augustus said, Miserum Romanum populum, qui sub tam' lentis maxillis erit. I mean the Conqueror, who though he came in fiercely, and won the Field by Battle, yet did not only suffer himself to be admonished by Aldred Archbishop of York, Ita ipsum loco patris colebat, ùt cúmille Rex cateris imperabat, ab illo Archi-Episcopo voluit aquaminiter imperari, J. Brompton, p. 962. Whom he honouring as a Father, suffered to mollify and cool him, and by him was restrained from those fiercenesses, that otherwise he would have expressed. And therefore before he was solemnly crowned, he renouncing his Martial Title, and entering as a Politic Governor, did before God, and the good Archbishop, Nobles, S. Dunelm in W. 1. p. 195. Brompton, p. 562. Stubbs, p. 1702. R. De Dicet. p. 480. edit. Lond. and the people there present, take Oath; That be would defend the Holy Church, and the Governors of it; that he would govern the people subject to him justly, and as a Prince prudently should do; that he would settle right Law, forbid Rapts, and all unjust judgement. Yea, he made up a confirmation of his love to the Laws of England, In prooemio confirm. Legum D. Edvardi, Anno Reg. 4. Spelman Gloss. p. 398. and his resolution to be swayed by them, by swearing 12. men of every shire in England, to report the truth of the Laws without concealing, adding, or in any sort varying from the truth. This, and much more Ingulphus, Abbot of Crowland, tells us; and Sir Ed. Cook from him, Pref. to the 8th Rep. W. Thorn, p. 1787. edit Lond. Dicet, p. 487. P. Brompton, p. 982. Simon Dunelm, p. 213. Knighton. p. 2344. p. 2354. and others. And though I know the Conqueror little regarded this Oath, but disseised Natives of their Estates, and gave them to his Normans, making havoc of all that was preyable, and made the English his base Vassals; so that before his death, there was scarce in England an English Nobleman left, it being a reproach to be called an Englishman, as Knighton's words are. Yet that such things he submitted, and swore to do, when in full power, argued more a conviction, that so religiously and prudently he ought to do, than any fear upon him; and that sufficiently answers my purpose, to confirm that Regal and Politic Government, joined in our Chancellors sense, makes a good legal English administration, and that when heats and humours are assuaged, all high and martial Princes fall into it of course, to save their own troubles, and their people's lives and fortunes; yea, as by the just judgement of God, men's opportunities are their discoverers, and show them bad at heart, notwithstanding all their external and flattering good appearances (so Diagoras Milesius was known to be an Atheist; for being in an Inn, and wanting sewel to dress his dinner, he took the Image of Hercules, reputed in that place for a God, and cast it into the fire saying profanely, Tertium decimum, Salmuth in Pancirol, tit. 10. partis secunda, p. 181. etc. Perform now the thirteenth labour, O God Hercules, and boil the broth of Diagoras the Atheist.) As God, I say, does by these acts discover some men's follies; so does he qualify the vices of some notable persons with great virtues, that makes them not so enormous and truculent, as but for them they would be: Hipparchus was a Tyrant, but yet a great favourer of Learning; his first work was to institute his Citizens in Letters: Zuinger Theatr' p. 89. Lib. 2. De Princ' Roman. Dicet. p. 482. Brompton. p. 961, 982. Knighton, 2354. so of Cleomenes the Spartan, and Francis the first of France, Historians write. Ignatius that tells how Phocas reduced all the Roman freedom to Persian Vassalage, yet reports one thing worthy praise in him, Romanum Pontificem principem omnium jure declaravit; so did this our Conqueror deserve some good words, and he has them: Authors tells us, he built Abbeys, Monasteries, and religious houses, ut esset expiatio quaedam effusionis tanti sanguinis Christiani; but above all, Tantae pacis author fuerat, etc. he was the author of so great safety every where, that a Maid might have carried a load of Gold all over England. Dicet. p. 488. These and such other actions of public influence are lustres in Princes, who, under favour of their Greatness, aught to improve God's preferments to his Glory; considering that life is but short in men, and the greatest actions in probability have expired even with the lives of their Actors, which often have been then running the last sand, when they thought of nothing but diuturnity and paramountship. Alexander the Great, when he had conquered the East, resolved to march into afric and subdue that with Europe, Sabellicus lib. 10. c. 13. Morbo inopinato praeventus in nihilum sunt redacta omnia, Cuspin. sed festinata mors tantas spes abrupit, Alexander dies, and his Journey is hushed. Majoranus Emperor of Ravenna would forsooth make an onset upon afric, but a Disease prevented that Enterprise. Our brave H. 5. of England, when he made Cocksure of France, died by Poison. Hen. 2. of France, when he had settled his Affairs with Spain and thought to enjoy quietness, was slain by a pass at Tilt in Paris; so Francis the 2. not long after, when he meditated fierce things against the Hugonots, was prevented executing them by an Impostume in his head, where of he died. No wonder then that wife and worthy Princes study calm Methods of rule, and look upon their Subjects as Children, and as such preserve them free, since they have an account to make to God above other men, and may as soon make it as other men; which our Kings perhaps especially considering, though they eyed Monarchy as the most excellent form of Government (nay the only, (others being but wanders from it, as it is the prime and essential Government) yet they consented to such a temperament of it, Plutarch. in lib. De Monarchia. Aristocrat. & Oligarch p. 826. Lib. De Creatione Princip. p. 725. as Philo calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. the mean between the two much, and too little of other Governments, which the King of England ruling according to, is by the Chancellor said, Principatu nedum regali, sed & politico dominani, that is, so to respect himself a King over, as to respect his Subjects as free and felicitous under his Government. Si regali tantùm ipse praesset eyes, leges regni sui matare ille possit. This rationally follows, for if absolute he were, as Nimrod, Ninus, Belus, and the Eastern Monarches to this day are, than his will were the Law and would work upon change of the Laws as they regretted him or he them, or as he observed more use might be made of other Laws than them, every absolute Ruler either dictating Laws or suffering those only to be distributed as did lackey to his absoluteness: 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Libanius in Ulyss Declam 2. p. 220. Britannia 1040. annos litera, suos Reges habuit; tandem per Julium Caesar. Cassemulano Principe, Romano Imperio facta est vectigalis, lib. 2. hist. Angl. but in that the King is said not to can a change of the Laws at his pleasure; it argues him not less absolute, but more kind and conscionable in not trying what he can to the injury of what, as a father of his Country and the people of it, he ought to be. God can do what he will, but yet he suffers Abraham to interpellate for Sodom, and Moses for Israel, and till those potent intercessors were answered, God gives us leave to think in kindness he could do, what in greatness by his power we know he could: so likewise it pleases serious and sober Princes to be told, they cannot do that as Lords, which they cannot be pleased in doing as Parents, as Husbands to their Governments: Nor does any boundary trouble a virtuous Monarch, where his generosity consents to fix it for the reward of Loyalty or an allurement to it. This politic dominion than is no effect of force on, but of love and grandeur in the Kings of this Nation to their people. For Kings we had and were free under them above a thousand years before Caesar came upon us, if Polydore Virgil misinform me not, and thus we have continued down all the Reigns of the Princes almost six hundred years, (the Common and Statute Laws of England, with the allowance of Customs local,) yea, and the supper addition of Ecclesiastical Laws not contrary to the Laws of God and the Laws of the Land, 12 H. 8. c. 26.3 & 4 E, 6. c. 11.12. Civil Law in the cases of Matrimony, Probate of wills and Maritime affairs, serving all in their respective places to the continuation, and convenient carrying on its administration, and to the prevention of any thing that might justly be suspected contrary to the same. Yea, when the happy accession of King james to this Crown, whereby in his Person, and the matchless and incomparable Descendants from him, the Crown of Scotland was united to this, when, I say, his wisdom thought upon an union of Laws as well as of Empire, and took so much pains in it, that he prevailed to have the Stat. 1 jac. c. 2. passed to empower Commissioners to consider of it; yet this endeavour, though professed by him to be far from his Royal and sincere care and affection to his Subjects of England, to alter or innovate the fundamental and ancient Laws, Privileges and good Customs of this Kingdoms, and apprehended by the Lords and Commons in Parliament to intend no more, The words of the Stat. 1 Jac. c. 2. or seek no other changes or alterations, but of such particular temporary or indifferent manner of Statutes and Customs, as may both prevent and extinguish all and every future question and unhappy accident, etc. Notwithstanding the Union had this Declaration concurrent with it; yet because the resolution of the English were to prefer their Laws and Customs above any others, and to yield to no title of Alteration in them, thereupon by the 3 jac. c. 3. the things which were to be done by force of the Stat. 1 jac. 2. were capacitated to be performed in any other Sessions of the Parliament of 3. and by the 4 jacob. 1. all Laws of hostility between Scotland and we were repealed, and the Stat of 5 R. 2. c. 2. included, and that was all that came of the desired union: for it was resolved by the Judges (Sir Edward Cook being the King's Attorney-general then, 3 Instit. e. 74. p. 346. and being then and there present, reporting their resolution) that Anglia had Laws, and Scotia had Laws, but this new erected Kingdom of Britannia should have no Law. Since then, the Assent of the Subject is necessary to change Laws, not only common and Statute ones, but local Customs and Tenors; and without it the Kings of England have given their Subjects leave juridiquely to say, they cannot by the power the Law understands them to have, at their pleasure alter them; it follows in confirmation of our Chancellors words, that the Government of England is a paternal, as well as a regal Government, and that the Laws of it cannot be altered, but by the King with Assent of his Subjects in Parliament. Tallagia quoque, & caetera onera eis imponere, ipsis inconsultis; quale dominium denotant Leges civiles, cum dicant, quod Principi placuit Legis habet vigorem. This follows avoidable from the premised matter; if the King cannot change the Laws other then by Parliament, than the Laws not allowing any charge on the Subject, other than is laid in Parliament on them, Cook on Magna Charta. p. 61. Preface to 8. Rep. as Sir Edward Cook our Law-Oracle makes good, Tallages are out of doors and illegal to be laid upon the English Subject. And therefore all our good Princes have disowned and disclaimed, as other fierce and grating ones have imposed them: An. 1404. Wals. Hypodeig. Neustriae. p. 164. In H. 4. p. 412. hence some think those granted in the Parl. of H. 4. were hard; for Walsingham says, there was Coucessa Regitaxa insolita, & incolis tricabilis, & valde gravis; and he tells us he would have described it, but that Concessores ipsi, & Auctores dicti Tallagii, in perpetuum latere posteros maluissent; yet he says, though they did what they did, they cautioned it should never be drawn into example, nor the evidences of it be in the Treasury or Exchequer, but after the Receipt of the income of it, all the memorial of it should be burned, nor any Writs or Commissions be revived or sent out to inquire the value of it, thus Walsingham: this I confess is a Matchless Precedent, but usually 'tis otherwise; for they being presumed never to grant without cause, in their so doing, the people are to submit and pay willingly; for Princes ever acknowledged pecuniary supports from their Subjects, the fruits of love; and their Subjects declared ever themselves in reason, religion, and gratitude obliged to yield them. And therefore as wise Parliaments have ever calculated Prince's affairs and supplied them with Counsel, and Money to carry them through with honour and success: so gracious Princes have been thrifty and sparing of Receipts from their Subjects, being willing rather to pinch in their personal and pleasurable Accommodations, then either spare from the public Concerns, or press their people beyond their good wills and reasonable powers; and regular Princes have had Reliefs by the pleasing ways of Subsidies, See Cook 4. Inst on c. 1. p. 34. High Court of Parliament. Disms, Quinzims, and the like, generally consented unto. And the Subject sometimes having found Privy-Seales good security, has lent money on them as men do on other securities; and when it's a voluntary act, there is no injury done, volenti non fit injuria. But Tallages or loans of compulsion, or such things not laid by Parliament more majorem, See Cook 2 Instit. on c. 29. Mag. Charta on the Statute 34 E. I. De Tallagio non concedendo p. 533, 534. where our Text is quoted by Sir Ed. Cook, so p. 584. the Subjects of England have ever regretted. And of this nature were these Tallages here spoken of, a word made Latin from the French Taille, quoth vectigal significat; this word Tallagium, is in Historians ranked with Exactiones, to show the execrable nature of them. In the Council of Lateran amongst other Complaints made by the Clergy to the Pope against the Laity, this is one that they did tam Ecclesias ipsas, Gervas'. Tilbur. in Chronic. p 1452. Edit. Lond. 1456. etc. Burden the Churches and Churchmen with Tallages and exactions. Tallage then as it was an imposition, so an Imposition on Land, called otherwise Hydage; Chronic. Thorn. p. 2006. Gloss Twysd. annex. legib. Saxonicis, p. 218. Gervas'. Tilbur. c. penult. Spelm. in Gloss p. 352. anciently it was taken by some Kings of England upon all Land, where not exempted by Grant, as the Lands of St. Augustine in Canterbury was. It was a charge on every Hyde of Land; which Hyde contained not 20 Acres of Land, as Polydore Virgil mistakes himself, but 100 which they in those times called a Plough land, that is, enough to employ a Plough; so H. 3. in Anno 1083. sent out Justices of Inquiry into all Shires, who, upon the Oaths of men were to inquire Quot jugera, etc. What quantity of Acres of Land in every Village, employed a Plough; and M. Paris adds, and how many cattle would till a Hyde of Land, and their return was an 100 Acres. So that this proportion of Land was upon all occasions the subject of this Charge; sometime many Hides of Land were jointly charged, so Etheldred in Anno 1008. to oppose the Danes, charged every 310 Hides with one ship, and of every eight a Coat of Mail and a head piece; Huntingdon lib. 6 Hist. Wigorniens. ad Annum 1084. M. Paris ad An. 1083. the Conqueror charged every Hyde with 6. s. So Rufus to enable him to hold his right in Normandy laid 4. s. on every Hyde; Henry I. towards the Marriage of his Daughter charged every Hyde with 3. s. These and the like, as Danegeld, Lestage, Stallage, are by Historians called Exactiones, Brompton p. 957. Greg. Tolossanus Syntag. lib. 8. c. 7. and never had acceptance from the people of England when they were not consented to, and charged on them by Parliament, Cives Londinenses iteratò ad quingentas marcas Talliati quasi servi ultimae conditionis ad regis arbitrium, non obstante aliqua libertate jugum subeunt servitutis, M. Paris. p. 929. but things of foreign Precedent; and therefore put upon them contrary to the Laws of their freedom, and not suitable to the calm Government of their Princes, who have delighted more to be accounted indulgent fathers, then rigorous Lords: yea that Tallages may appear odious, (as un-Parliamentaryly imposed) that Answer of the Clergy of England to Pope Innocent, Anno 1246. is remarkable; for when the Bishops were by his Command to exact of their Clergy Tallage, they were commanded by the King to resolutely and unanimously answer, That no such Tallage or Aid could be or had been accustomed to be laid without great Prejudice to the dignity of their Sacred Sovereign, M. Paris. p. 708. and the dignity of his Crown, which they would not, nor could not siffer to be disparaged or injured, as thereby it would. And when H. 3. so ruffled his Subjects, that they thought not fit to deny him in Parliament a Grant of unusual loans and Tallages; yet so unwillingly did they do what they did, and so against their minds, M. Paris. p. 581. could they have avoided it, That they made a saving of the Subject's Liberties, and inserted it into his Charter, Quòd illa exactio vel aliae praecedentes non traherentur in consequentiam. Eyes imponere, illis inconsultis. This is added, to show that the Law cannot be reasonably such as ties up lawful power from alteration of it, if it appear to be useless or inconvenient; yea, be the Law what it will, if it be such as I will not take benefit by, and in so doing am not injurious to others, the Law intends not the restraint of me by it. The Law is, the King cannot take my goods without my consent, or rate my Land, but by a legal rate: yet if I will freely pay the King out of my estate so much, and give him such of my goods, I may do it notwithstanding the Law, for that and this are consistent; that being made for my benefit, if I will accept it; this being a testimony of my love and consent, which abates the injury, and makes the acceptance a courtesy. Hereupon, though the King cannot by his own pleasure lay Tallages upon his Subjects, yet by their consents he may, and no grievance is it, no oppression in it, since volenti non fit injuria, and nothing being more free than gift: 2 Instit. on c. 29. Magna Charta. if they in Parliament consent to it, then it's a legal charge; and this the Chancellor mentions, to tell Prince and People, that extraordinary courses are not to be practised, where legal and warrantable ones may be brought about; and to tell them further, that the way to serve Princes affairs, and the just ends of Parliaments, is to compose Parliaments of religious, sober, sincere, and knowing Members, who will be diligent during the time of their service, who will be sober, that they may serve the King and satisfy the people, and who look for no result but God's blessing, the King's honour and safety, the people's good, in which their and their Posterities goods are involved. These so fitted to every proper judicial purpose (as they will lay no charge, but ex praevisa ratione, On Westminster 1. 2 Instit. p. 156. as did the Parliament of 3 E. 1. on which words of the Preamble, A son Parliament General, Sir Edw. Cook has this Note] So called, because all the Laws then made were general, and that great and honourable Assembly were not entangled with private matters, but with such only as were for the greatest good of the Commonwealth; for the end of this Parliament is, Pour le common profit de Saint Esglise & deal Realm:) so in their so doing, the people will rest satisfied and the Crown have its deuce willingly, and in good time paid and answered; otherwise it comes like drops of blood, which a generous Prince cares not to have come into his Coffers: for as God loves a cheerful giver, so do Princes love Presents offered them freely, as well as fully. And therefore the Provents of Tallages, 2 Instit. on 29 Chapter. Magna Charta, p. 46. and alia onera, such as are all preterlegal charges, not warranted by Common-Law, Custom, and Concession of Parliament, have been little addition to the real Grandeurs of their obtainers, because what they gained by them, they lost in the good will of their Subjects. Hereupon H. 1. made a Charter to his people in these words, Math. Paris. p. 55. Quia regnum oppressum erat injustis exactionibus, etc. He promises to take away all ill Customs, by which the Kingdom of England has been oppressed. For there is nothing that has sown such Cockle and Tares of trouble in this Nation, as unusual Taxes, Sir Tho. Smith, lib. 2. c. 2. De Republics. Angliae. I mean such as are not granted more majorum. For though the Commonalty may be wary whom they send to Parliament, to represent them; yet when sent they are, the charge they consent to lay, must be paid by them: nor is it violence to exact it, but right to the Law of its Constitution. And since no wise Representatives can be presumed to give more than they are in their principals able to answer, supposing the Granters wise men, and if not so, the more unwise their Choosers and Impowrers; and supposing the grants in such a proportion, as is suitable to the rational motives of them to grant it, the matter and kind of the grant must be made good, and this they are charged withal, ipsis consentientibus, and that is non invitis. Quale dominium denotant leges civiles, cum dicant, quod Principi placult, legis hab●t vigorem. Lib. 1. Instit. Digest. lib. 1 tit. 4. De Constitutionibus Principum. This Sentence cited out of the Civil Law is Ulpians, and the application of it is thought to fix the power of absolute Regality, upon whatever is of Subjects for it to take hold of, which perhaps is not the Lawyer's meaning, but with some restriction; that Kings do not make Laws upon their own Wills, but as assisted in Council by their learned and sage Counselors, who advising them what to declare Law, accompany them also in a mild interpretation and execution of it. For so the same Law qualifies the generality of this rule by that omnia sunt Principis quoad jurisdictionem & protectionem, Digest. p. 42. in gl. ad Prooem. C. non quoad proprietatem; and therefore though in absolute Regalities, where no Laws of modification are, this rule is made use of to warrant high courses; yet may this have a calmer interpretation in the nature and intendment of it. A Woman is under her husband's plenary power, he may do with her, so he destroy her not, as he please; her person is at his pleasure; her fortune subject to his dispose; her allowance and manner of living solely to the quantum & quale of his proportioning them: yet no wise man will hence conclude, that Husbands do, where good, improve this to a Tyranny over, or a vexation or diminution of their Wives; rather wise men know, and worthy wives find, that from deserving Husbands their Virtues have all the Compensations and Rewards that this Prerogative of the Husband over them can devolve upon them, and though the nature of Marriage favour the man, yet the Courtesy and nature of man retorts the fruit and kindness of such favour and prelation on the Wise, because she is willing to obey, she rules, and by resigning to her Husband, has assignation of his right to rule by him all he has and himself too: so in the case of absolute Kingship, though Kings may by the high Sovereignty of their Dignity curb their Subjects, that they dare not deny whatever they ask, or refuse what they command, because God has made their Swords of straw, against their Princes of Steel; and their hands are bound, when their Sovereigns are loosed, and only can be bound by God: yet that by virtue of this position, and the sacredness of it, they should so do, is no necessary consequence, though too often true. And truly, we in England have cause to sweeten this hard Exposition of this Rule, when we consider our Princes, as true Monarches as any, and as independent on any but God; yea, as well protected against the insolences of Subjects, as any Monarches, yet have for the most part been very calm, considerate, and ruleable by the Laws of the Land, and not laid yokes upon us, but such as either, some of them, have been ill counselled to, 2 Instit. p. 152 on Stat. W. 1. or by necessity of affairs put upon, and have remitted, with a kind promise of not so doing hereafter. And if they have obtained consent in Parliament to any thing of extraordinary advantage to them; 11 H. 7. c. 27. 2 Instit. p. 158 on W. 1. yet it implying National consent, aught to be accounted no pressure upon their people. King's may have necessities more than ordinary upon them, and they must have suitable supplies for them, which if they have by Parliamentary Levies, they have them by undoubted Legality, and the Subject repines not against the Prince for it, but owns the Law, which by his own consent has bound him from repining, and to the payment of his proportion towards it. Such a favourable interpretation then being given of this Quod Principi placuit, legis habet vigorem, it follows, that the rigidness of the general rule may be allayed by a particular instance of goodness. And therefore the Kings of England having never made Laws but in Parliament (Courts that they call not only modestiae ergo antiquam consuetudinem servare, as a Foreigner falsely writes, as if they signified no more, then to do whatever they were commanded to by the King; so that (in his words) ¶ Thesauro Politico Impress. Francofurt. Anno 1610. De Regno Britannico, p. 216. Parliamenta regiarum magis cupiditatum larvae quaedam sint, quibus in rerum dubiarum consultationibus laborem & incommodae, in periculosis autem rebus damnum subterfugiunt, quam ut per ca potestatem suam moderari veliut, as that malevolent Romanist slanderously reports. I say the truth of things being examined, and the Kings of England using such wisdom, temper, and regularity in their proceedings) though quoth Principi placuit, Quod Principi placet legis habet vigorem, eas scilicat, quas super dubiis in concilio desimendis, procerum quidem consilio & Principis authoritate accordante, vel antecedente constat esse promulgatas. Fleta in Proemio. legis habet vigorem, primitively had a sense of asserting Kingly absoluteness, his pleasure being the Law, and his Word the Warrant, without any abatement from Princely Grace and Justice; yet in as much, as in the Regal Government of England, tempered by the Politic, there is no prerogative of just Regality usurped upon, but the Crown remains Imperial, notwithstanding the politic composition with it. There seems to me reason to conclude, that quod Principi placuit, legis habet vigorem, may be interpreted of the legal and virtuous pleasure of the King, the Will of him counselled by his Sages about him, though not so (perhaps) in Ulpian's meaning, or the common intendment of Civilians by it, which is the reason why our Text-Master applies it as here he does. Sed longè aliter potest Rex politicè imperans genti suae, quia nec leges ipse sine subditorum assensu mutare poterit, nec subjectum populum renitentom onerare impositionibus peregrinis. This the Chancellor adds in the positive, as before he had in the negative asserted the indulgence of the English Government, which he was the more bold to write upon. The King of England being not a Prince of rage, Papinianus jurisconsultus ab Antonio Caracalla securi percuffus est. Caracalla enim cum interfecto fratre Geta, ei mandaret, ut in Senatu, & apud populum facinus dilueret, Papinianus respondit non tam facile parricidium excusart posse quam fieri. Irâ commotus Caracalla. Sanctissimum virum occide jussis Spartianus in Caracalla. as Caracalla was but a Father of mercy, who delights to hear his duty modestly remembered him, does not do by his Papinians, as Caracalla did, destroy them, because they will not destroy Conscience and truth, the Image of God in their souls; but cherishes and considers their counsels, and steers his course by them; which lenity, makes the Chancellor, and me by this example, humbly bold to proceed in the modest explication of the words; Legibus astringuntur rectores Politici, nec ultrà possunt procedere in prosecutione justitiae, quod de Regibus, & aliis Monarchis Principibus non convenit. Quia in ipserum pectore sunt leges reconditae prout casus occurunt, & pro lege habetur, quod Principi placet sicut jura gentium tradunt; sed de rectoribus politicis non sic reperitur, quia non audebant facere aliquam novitatem praeter legem conscriptam. Sanctus Thomas, lib. De Regimine Principum, c. 1. Sed longè aliter potest Rex, politicè imperans genti suae. In which words, our Text-Master joins political power to absolute regal, and sweetens the potest, that is solely voluntatis & placiti, by that which is politic, and secundum dictamen juris. For whereas by absoluteness of power, a King is understood to do what he pleases with the Laws, and people of his Government, as the Eastern Monarches at this day do: By this the King can do only, quod de jure potest. This King james of blessed memory sets out notably in these words: The one (says he) acknowledgeth himself ordained for his people, King James' Basilicon Doron, 2 Book, p. 155. Works in fol. having received from God a burden of Government, whereof he must be accountable; the other thinketh his people ordained for him a prey to his passions and inordinate appetites, as the fruits of his magnamity. This is a longè aliter potest, no degradation of Majesty, but an attenuation of greatness to a more placid, and less terrible representation of itself. While as God, though he can do what he will, yet is pleased to give us leave to say, he cannot do what is contrary to his nature, not often does contrary to his declared Will: so Princes, though by that men call the incircumscriptions of their boundless authority, they can do extraordinary acts of greatness; yet God so deals with them, that the Laws of their Governments are the usual methods of their administration, & contrary to, or beyond them, they do not (as goed Kings) pass; and Contzen makes it good, that it is not only advantageous to the people, but also to the Prince, or public Magistrate, to have no power to do some things of himself, without the consent of his inferiors, and he makes the first thing to be, that he put no new Charges, Tributes, and Tolls; and the second, that he make not new Laws, nor abrogate old without them. And this, had it not been for the quiet and interest of our Princes, as well as of us their people; they who knew so well the arcana imperiorum, would never have been so zealous imparters of the power, and so faithful maintainers of it in its right channel, no one King of England, that I remember, ever claiming absolute Regality separate from politic infusion. His majesty's Protestation in the head of his Army at Stafford, Septem. 1942. p. 38. Collect. Speech to the Members of both Houses at Oxford, 1643. p. 44. Collect. Contzen. Politic. lib. 1 c. 21. p. 48. (I do solemnly promise in the sight of God to maintain the just privileges and freedom of Parliament, and to govern by the known Laws of the Land, to my utmost power; and particularly, to observe inviolably the Laws consented to by Me this Parliament. Let your Liberties, Properties, Privileges, without which I would not be your King, be secured and confirmed, and there is nothing you can advise me to, I will not meet you in:) But acknowledging any think like it an error in him, through the suggestions of ill Counsel, and cautioning against its being brought in precedent for time to come. And therefore as the Law has secured, that the King should not be diminished, and made praecario regnare, sed ubi justè & secundum leges imperârit, summa illius sit potestas; making him in his great Council and Courts Judge of all, (and requiring the Allegiance of all his Liege's to his person, as the Living Law.) So has the Law obtained from the King, leave to modify things between Will and Law, and to make them both a Composition of Harmony, and kind understanding between Sovereignty and Subjection. Sir Edw. Cook on Stat. Merton, c. 9 p. 97. 2. Instit. The truth of this is collectable from the words of H. 1. surnamed Beauclerk, in his Letter to Pope Paschal, Notum habeat sanctitas vestra, etc. Your Holiness (quoth the King) knows, that by God's blessing on my life and Reign, the Prerogatives and Usages of Our Kingdom of England, has not been diminished or usurped upon: And if I (which God forbid) should consent to mine own, and the Nations Eclipse therein, my Peers and the whole People of my Realm, would by no means endure it so to be. And so in the Letters of the Nobility of England, by assent of the whole Commonalty assembled in Parliament at Lincoln, the words to the Pope are, We are bound by solemn Oath, to the observation and defence of the Liberties, Laws, and Customs of the Realm of England, which with all our power we will hoed fast, and secure with our utmost vigour; neither do we permit, or will we permit; neither will we, or ought we to pass any unwonted, undue, and prejudicial things to our King, though he would pass by them, and should favour the same. And the reason they give of this their adhesiveness is, because the premises do manifestly tend to the dishonour of the Crown and Dignity of the King of this Land, and to the subversion of the State of the said Kingdom, and to the prejudice of the Liberties, Customs, and ancient Laws of the same. Thus in that Letter; which shows, that the Kings of England have yielded their Subjects a non-assent, if they should attempt to alter Laws, or make them contrary to the legal Establishments; and this comes up to the Chancellour's words, Nec leges ipse sine subditorum assensu mutare poterit. And * Carrarius makes it plain by all authorities and acknowledgements, ¶ Lib. De literali & Mystica juris interterpret. q 4. art. 3. p. 312. that Princes are bound by the Laws of their Governments. And as it is not Kingly in them, contrary to those Laws, to take away any thing that is their Subjects, Lib. 3. c. 3. De erudition Principum. as Saint Thomas plainly proves, so especially not their Laws; nor, as I said before, has it ever been justified by any King of England so to do, but the contrary, and that in relation to the Law, which says, No Law in being, whether Common-Law, Statute-Law, or Custom, Speech of King james, 1605. p. 506. Speech of King Charles, pass. Bills in Answer to the Petition of Right. 3 Caroli. Sir Edw. Cook, on 1 Westminster, 3 E. 1. p. 15. upon which Inheritances depends, can be changed by the King alone, or by the Lords and Commons alone, or by the Lords Lay and Commons, excluding the Spirituality; but by the King, as the Head of the three Estates, the Lords Spiritual and Temporal, and the Knights, Citizens, and Burgesses, in the Commons House in Parliament. These must cooperate to the change of a Law; and without they do, no Law can be changed; 3 Instit. p. 165. 1 Instit. Sect. 97. 2 Instit. c. 30. on Magna Charta, p. 60, 61, 62. nor can any Custom, though but local, upon which Title of Land or such like interest of the Subject dependeth, be destroyed, or be legally taken away, or made null, but by Act of Parliament; which how to pass (besides the prementioned Authorities) the 11th Chapter of Doctor and Student sets forth. And hence it is, 2 Instit. on 29 Chapter, Magna Charta, p. 56. that in all Commissions of Oyer & Terminer, etc. these words are in the King's Commission to his Justices, Facturi quod ad justitiam pertinet secundum legem & consuetudinem Angliae; which shows, that the Laws are, as enacted, so commanded by the King to be executed according to Law and Justice, and this makes the Chancellour's next words true. Nec populum renitentem onerare peregrinis impositionibus. This expatiation of the former non potest, produces this Clause, as full of emphasis', as words, Populum] that's a word of capacity, more than gentem; for gens signifies a kindred and relation; Alciatus & Brechaeus ad legem, 238, p. 508. De Verb. signific. but populus imports a whole people; not only the plebs, and obscure part, but the best, noblest, and most honourable; and the intent of the Chancellor, is to show in the generality of the phrase, the extent of Impositions to all, high and low, noble and mean, Church and Laymen; all are under the term populum renitentem] as supposing, that naturally men reluct charge, and subjects usually public ones: if the people be willing to pay what is laid on them, the Text does not reach their willingness, nor debar them of it; Volenti non fit injuria. but it privileges them, unwilling to be compelled otherwise then by Law. For as no man can be compelled to serve against his will any command, extra patriam, because that is to exile him, and make him perdere patriam, which the Law so makes his, Stamf. Pl. Coron. 116, 117. Instit 2d part on 29 Chap. Magna Charta, p. 48. Poulton, p. 91. that he cannot be, other then by judgement of Law, without his consent severed from it, as was determined in Sir Richard Pembrugh's Case; so in his Country can no man be imposed upon, either in person or estate, other then as he is willing, or according to Law, Stat E. 1. c. 1. And the reason is, because that is onerare] and burdens, the Law eases, lays not on any shoulders. And for our Kings, the Law otherways provided. 1 Eliz. Dyer, 165. Cook 4 Instit. of Parliaments, p. 29. Pag. 33. Pag. 34. They had their Custuma antiqua sive magna granted to Edward the first, and their Custuma parva & nova. They had their Butlerage, Prisage, and Tonnage and Poundage, from the latter end of H. 6. to King james, to whom it was granted for life. They had Quinzims, Fifteenths, Tenths, and these were accounted truly theirs, and no burdens, because legally founded. For as whatever the Law lays on the Subject, is in our Texts sense no burden: So whatsoever is without, and against the Law laid on him, is nothing less than a burden; and that he submitting to unwillingly, and wishing no good with the obtaining of it from him, it often appears little advantage to the Princes that acquire it. Walsingham tells us a notable story of the Lack-learning Parliament, which gave so great a Wound to the Church, that when (possibly by their irritation) Sir john Cheyey, and his Military Comrades, desired of the King the Lands of the Norman Abbeys in England, Anno 1404. Temps H. 4. in recompense of their service, God gave the then Archbishop of Canterbury such a successful zeal for the prosperity of the Church, That he (Prelate-like) courageously obtested against it, Si Rex quod absit vestro satisfecisset execrando proposito, non esset opulentior uno quadrante sequenti anno. Et ceriè prius hoc caput exponam gladio, quam Ecclesia destituatur minimo jure suo, p. 415. telling them to their faces, that they did it to satisfy their covetise; and assuring the King, that if that their execrable desire were accomplished, he would not be richer one farthing the next year; and sooner will I (said he) have my head cut off, then submit to lose the Rights of the Church. And the reason was, because it was imposition, not concessio, a fruit of their importunity and ill advice, not a grant after Judgement, considering what, and why to do; and peregrina, not more majorum; and hence relucted, as dangerous and of ill precedent. For, ¶ Resolution of all the Judges, 4 jac. See 3d Instit. c. 24. of Purveyour, p. 84. the Common-Law hath so admeasured the Prerogatives of the King, that they should neither take away, nor prejudice the Inheritance of any; and these Monopolies being malum in se, and against the Common-Laws, are consequently against the Prerogative of the King; for the Prerogative of the King is given him by the Common-Law, See the Preamble to the Stat. 13. Charles 2d, for the 1200000 li. per annum. and is part of the Laws of the Realm. So that the sense of the Chancellor is, that no charge, but what for its nature is usual, and for its authority is legal, is by our Text to be laid on the Subject contrary to his consent, that is, other then by Parliament, which only can naturalise these impositiones peregrinae, Parvi dejectique animi est, de subdutis non profectum quaerere subditorum, sed quaestum proprium Sanctus Bernardus, lib. 2. De Consid. and make them passable; and without which, as lewd women of pleasure, are by Donatus termed peregrinae, and Valla opposes Peregrinus to Hospes: so do the Laws of England brand Impositions of this kind, as spurious and rejectitious, and all good Princes have abhorred to exact them, after they have been informed the ill nature and consequence of them. Quare populus ejus libere fruitur bonis suis legibus, quas cupit regulatas, nec per regem suum nec quemvis alium depilatur. This follows, to show the benefit of good Laws,. by which just Princes suffer themselves to be bound. 2 Instit. p. 534. All Tallages, Burdens, or Charges, put upon the Subject by the King, either to, or for the King; or to, or for any Subject, by the King's Letters Patents, or other Commandment or Order, is prohibited (by 25 E. 1. and 34. E. 1.) unless it be by common consent in PARLIAMENT. And hence, because the Kings of England do not claim power over their own Laws, or their own Subjects purses, but according to Law; it comes to pass, that the Laws of freedom, in both the former Cases, and all the Descendants from them, remain firm, and are not attempted to be violated; nor can by the wit of man a safer way be found out to preserve the Virgin purity of Laws in these points, other then by settling such Revenues upon the Crown, as well husbanded, will amply satisfy the necessities of it. If the King wants, King James' Speech, 1605. p. 540 of his Works. the State wants, and therefore the strengthening of the King is the preservation and the standing of the State, and woe be to him that divides the weal of the King from the weal of the Kingdom; and as that King is miserable, how rich soever he be that reigns over a poor People (for the hearts and riches of the people, are the King's greatest Treasure) so is that Kingdom not able to subsist, how rich and potent soever the people be, if their King's want means to maintain this State; for the means of your King, are the sinews of the Kingdom, both in War and Peace. For since Princes have great cares, charges and sluices of expense, and want of money is such a dishonour to a Nation, and defeat to the politic affairs of it, as nothing can be greater: It well becomes Princes in reason, as it is commendable in policy, to supple their Subjects to such settlements, and Subjects of loyalty and wisdom (to such unquestionable good ends, as preservation of peace, and interest abroad and at home) will easily consent to it, and think they do God and their Country, as well as the King, good service in so doing. And by this means do they prevent all attempts of the King by his Agents and Ministers, to supply himself extraordinarily when he has of his own, whence he shall be enabled to defray the expenses of his Crown. By the Stat. 12. and 13 Car. 2. This, I suppose, is the reason of the establishment of that constant Revenue of the Customs on our now Gracious Sovereign during his life, and the other additions, See Preamble to the Statute 1 E. 6. c. 13. to make up a constant Revenue of 1200000 li. a year. For though by the Stat. ay jac. 33. rehearsal is made of Subsidies on all goods, which H. 7. H. 8. E. 6. Queen Marry, Queen Eliz. had and enjoyed by Authority of Parliament; yet the Grant of Tonnage and Poundage, etc. for defending the Seas, was even then thought a small Revenue for so expensive a purpose, and this was but during the life of King james. After I find no perpetuation of it, but 3 Caroli, c. 7. four entire Subsidies are granted by the Temporalty, to supply the King's weighty occasions, more than his constant Revenue can supply; so are the words of the Statute. So that Tonnage and Poundage, being as some thought before our troubles, not settled by Act of Parliament, but taken away by the Statute 17 Car. 1. in Anno 1641. by which Act (more saith the King in his Speech the 22 of june 1641. was granted of his right then ever was by any of his Predecessors) the Revenue of the King was but meanly provided for till this settlement; which truly all things considered, will appear to be, though a great, yet a wise and worthy one, and as is by wisemen believed, no more than the necessary expenses of his Majesty will require. And if it do prevent the inconveniencies of neediness, (one of the most worrying mischiefs to greatness) the Subject will have great cause to pay willingly, and joy in the prudence of so convenient a settlement, as will prevent what follows, Peeling and polling of Subjects. Nec per Regem suum, aut quemvis alium depilatur. This follows, to show that though the King, quâ King, can do no wrong, yet necessity may make him so give way to the injuries of his Ministers towards his Subjects, that they may in a sense become his, Sanctus Thom. lib. 1. c. 5. De Erudit. Principum. since qui non prohibet peccare cum possit, jubet. Now though true it be, that our Kings have ever considered; first, an liceat; secondly, an expediat; thirdly, an deceat, in what, for the most part, they have done, and have never been of Aemilius Censorinus his mind, Plutarch in Parallelis, p. 315. who was so grievous to his Government, that he would reward those that invented new and unheard of punishments for his people: yet is it also true, that in some of their Reigns too much advantage has been given to discontent by Monopolies, and new courses of raising money, which (good Kings) they have made little profit in the end by. Walshingham in E. 2. p. 62. edit. Lond. Of these illegal courses, Walshingham relates in E. 2. that he did ponere maculam in gloria sua, and that his rage against Walter Langton, his Father's Treasurer, was such, that he seemed to be erectus in Tyrannidem, unde mox contraxit infamiam perseveraturam temporibus diuturnis. This the Law frowns upon, as contrary to the nature of English freedom, and thereupon by the Statute of 21 jacob. c. 3. it is declared a grievance and inconvenience to the Subject, contrary to the Laws of the Realm, etc. and remedy is given against it; yea, our Kings have taken great pleasure in releasing grievances: Malmsbur. lib. 5. in H. 1. p. 88 M. Paris, p. 55. & 56. so did Henry the first, edicto statim per Angliam misso, injustitias à fratre, & Ranulpho institutas prohiberet, aliquarum rerum moderationem revocavit in solitum. For they remembered, that a wrong it was to oppress Subjects that are bound to obey, and that God, whose to do right is, would be the helper of those in distress, Lib. 4. c. 5. De erudit Principum. and the punisher of their Distressours: so true is that rule of Saint Thomas, Multum timenda & cavenda est rapina Principi, & in se & suis collateralibus inferioribus, multum enim est Deo, & sanctis exosa, diabolo placida, homini nociva, etc. and dreadful are the effects of God's Judgement on evil Princes, as the same Saint Thomas makes out in the particulars of its misery. Boni pastoris est tondere pecus, non deglubere, dictum Tiberii apud Sueton. in Tiberio, c 32. Now depilari signifies, in our Chancellour's sense, a diminution, or taking off the good nap and rich covering that an Englishman has, and not only shearing, but shaving him to a baldness of poverty and servility. For depilatio was the dishonour of slaves, as covering the head was token of enfranchisement: and truly, to reduce the Subject of England to such a condition, as to be naked of Law and property, was too much for the stout stomach of the men of Kent to bear in the Norman William. Holingshed, p. 2. For when they were begirt by his Army, they then resolutely told him, and his Normans, That they would wage a fierce War with him, being resolved rather there to die the valiant Assertors of their Laws and Liberties, Plutarch in Orat. De Fortitud. & virtute Alexandri, p. 340 Knighton. p. 2353 Chronicon. W. 1. 910. Brompton. then to submit to the loss and antiquation of them. And sure such an Aegon, as had an Eagle greatness in his Kingly Breast, would not aim at so mean thoughts, as to dishonour his own people, by depilating them: yet fierce man as he was, he did depilari, both in France and here, and he paid dear for it on his Deathbed: And justly deserved he to be bereft of a Subterfuge in the mercies of God, who had so much of mercyless savageness to men, himself in nature, his subjects in relation, and his vassals in misery. The Chancellor than uses depilatur, to express the cruel nature of Kingless exaction, which ought to be so much the more inveighed against by a Subject to the King of England, because it has been much against his Dignity, (so no Princes ever in the World have been more merciful, less pressing on their Subjects, than the Kings of England (for the most part) have been. And therefore depilatur is brought in here, as that which is looked upon to import dishonour, since hair is an ornament to the head, the noblest part, and 'tis the emblem of the vigour of nature, which some lose upon decay of succulency; or as a punishment for some enormity. Among the jews, the Nazarites men sacrated to God, were not shaved, no Razor came on their head, and Absalom's hair so large and thick was his ornament, rendering him acceptable with all Israel. Quod poena genus ipsis fuerit coma detensio in vilspendium, & opprobrium delinquentis constituta, in ss. De pace tenenda in Usüb. Fendorum. The Lombard's thought shaving of the head the greatest and most opprobrious punishment, saith Alvarotus. Among the Saxons, to shave off the hair, and make a man balled, was the punishment of Theft; Spec. Saxonic, lib. 2. c. 13. and if a Woman were incontinent, she was shaved; so if any one pulled off another's Beard, he was punishable, and Baldus gives the reason, Quia barba est membrum in homine; and he that considers, that julius Caesar took it for a favour from the Senate, that he had a Crown granted him to wear, by which he covered his baldness; and Carolus Calvus was named so, not only for distinction, but in a sort of reproach; and the Mother of the Sons of Clodoveus, the first Christian King of France, chose rather to have their heads cut off, than their hairs polled. He that considers this, will easily grant that baldness, this depilati● here, intends such a peeling and polling, as amounts to not only poverty, but dishonour; thus the jews took baldness. As this is collectable from that scoff of the Children to the Prophet, 2 King 2. 23. Come up you Baldpate. The Hebrews therefore rendered this by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a word that signifies to pull by the roots, radicitus evellere, and it implies not only enmity in the doers, but pain in the sufferer, Isa. 50. 6. I gave my back to the smiters, and my cheeks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, to them that pulled off the hairs, that is, to violence and cruelty in the high actings of it. Thus this Text is applied to Christ as Prophetical of his sufferings, and fulfilled in them: so that the Chancellor by his depilatur, means such an impoverishing of the Subject, as renders him naked of all plenty and beauty, and exposes him to be in the nature of a Villain, Cowel in verbo Theme. under the lash and pleasure of his Lord, as horses in a Team are. For so Cowel interprets the word Theme, Regale privilegium est, quo qui fruitur, habet villanorum, id est, servorum & mancipiorum intra feudum sun●● propaginem & potestatem de illis, ut de caeteris suis seu liberis seu bonis mobilibus vel immobilibus, pro libito disponendi: so he. And this I am sure has been so unlike the Royal mind of our Princes to endeavour, that they rather have desired to add to our freedom and riches, then detract or impair them. Consimiliter plandit populus sub rege regaliter tantum principante, dummodo ipse in Tyrannidem non labatur. Here the Chancellor shows, that where Regalities own no National Laws; yet if they restrain their power and wills, to prise Justice, and gratify not their passions above general good, and so tyrannize over their Subjects, making their lives grievous them, there also people cannot choose but be happy. This the grave Historian Xenophon notably confirms, Lib. De Memora bilib. Socratis. To 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. That Government which is over men, willing and readily submitting to the same, and wherein the Laws are the measure of Rule, is called a Kingdom; but where men are ruled by no Law, but by the will of their Ruler, against their own wills, this is a Tyranny. For there being no Governor, or Government, but acquiesces in those common notions of Order and Justice, which interfere not with power, but cooperate with it; it must needs follow, that Subjects under such a Government, though never so tart and severe, yet if it be just, shall not (while they continue wary and worthy) find any grievance of the power, but find a blessing in, and from it. For it is not greatness of power, that betrays men to abuse of it, but their own corruption, which thence takes occasion to vexatiously exercise it. And this is the Rise of all Tyranny, when men obtain power to eliminate virtue, and that once discarded, to become Monsters and Tigers in man's flesh, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Plutarch ad ingentem ducem apud Stoboeum, Serm. 44. p. ●19. etc. For Reason and Wisdom residing in a Prince, and being (as it were) the keeper of his soul, whatever in his power is dangerous, it sweetens and allays and leaves only the kind and useful parts of it for him to express. Against which abuse of God's bounty in Prince's prelation, there is no more expedite a Cordial and defensative, then to consider God the Lord of all, as a resister of the proud, and a giver of grace to the humble, and take a resolution to practise such a dominion over ones own mind, Apud S●obae●m firm. 44. p. 3. 5. as may reduce it under the Empire of reason and justice (which Bias expressed, when he wept upon condemnation of a man to death, and one asked him why he wept for what he had occasioned, his answer was, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. because 'twas necessary that the affections of nature should give way to the directions and Commands of the Law) so to do to others, as they would have others do to them, and then to propound such Precedents of equanimity or rather Magnanimity, as are famous in their kind in men of great place and opportunity. 'Twas a rare demeanour of Aelius Pertinax which we read of, when the Roman Senate besought him that he would call his Queen Augusta and his son Caesar, his reply was, sufficere, inquit, debet quod ego ipse invitus regn●vi quum non mererer, nimis aequissimus, omniúmque communis; yea if so great ingenuity be in the soul of power, Jornandes lib. 1. De Aelio Pertinac. it will not express itself to any height, but what is consistent with general content and common advantage. I do not read that Solomon's Reign had any thing but plenty and blessing of the King, Logibus namque regni & consuetudinibus de ratione introductis & di● obtentis, & quod laudabilius est talium virorum (licet subditorum) rex noster non dedignatur consilio, Quos morum gravitare, peritia juris, & regni consuetudinibus, sua sapientia & eloquen●ia praerogat●và aliis novit práecellere, etc. Glanvil in Prologue. ant Tractat. De Legib. & Consuer. Angliae. yet Solomon's power was in a sense absolute; nor that Constantine, Marcus, Antoninus, or Trajan's Reigns were branded with aught oppressive to their Subjects, though they had all the absoluteness, that just Kings could have. So long as there is a noble heart and a vice-less mind, which to gratify greatness descends not beneath itself, there is no danger: nay so long as Laws of mitigation, gagged by Religion, have only the force of remembrances to Princes; Subjects are more to pray for good Princes then good Laws. For there may be good Laws in a Nation, ‛ O 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Stobaeus serm. 9 de Justitia. p. 101. where under a bad Prince the Subject may be miserable, but under a good Prince bad Laws seldom do hurt; for his goodness prevented their ill influence, and wholly annihilated them by superinducing laws of remedy and relaxation. And hereupon Conscience being under the awe of religion, and the Law of God binding Subjects from capitulation and violence, to prayers and tears; if the Laws be good and the Prince so too, all is sure to be well; but if otherwise, and they must be parted, better a good Magistrate over bad Laws, then good Laws under a bad Magistrate: for so it follows. De quali Rege dicit Philosophus tertio Politicorum, quod melius est civitatem regi viro optimo quam Lege optimâ. This Maxim of the Philosopher, is, I suppose to be accounted, true upon Consideration of two things. First, That good men were more ancient than good Laws; for good Laws were invented by good men, instituted by God in Providence to the declension of men from rectitude, as conversation and discovery of the world occasioned their warp: for in Patriarchal times, & in the Innocency of the golden Age, Nations and Continents submitted to one or few in whom they saw most Divinity and Heroiqueness, and from those did they willingly receive the rule of life and all the Prescripts of their public and private Concern; and when to such Rulers and Lawgivers there was no Law but their own wills, no question of their Commands but presently they were obeyed; yet even then did the virtue of these Chiefs and Patrons keep them from Tyranny, and affectation to themselves with injury to the public. But when once Vice had boiled off the grain Colour of virtue, and there was adoration given by men to the Idols of Pomp, Power and Magnificence; then there was a necessity to limit Encroachments, and to impede Advantages against popular Credulity by politic Sanctions, and to make those accessable to rule, who were most demonstratively just, and had the most generous and open latitude of epidemique Justice in them, which policy made all men of Emulation Candidates to Government, and those only sure to have it by public suffrage, who had the most pure and public Spirits in them. Secondly, Better good Kings and Rulers then good Laws, because good Laws are nothing without good Kings and Rulers that execute them; Alas; the Law is but a dead Letter, 'tis the Minister of it that quickens it, without him the best Laws are but like Medicaments in the Apothecary's shop, unavailable to the sick man, who dies notwithstanding them. Indeed as Demosthenes said, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Laws are the soul of Governments; but what are souls without bodies in which they move: Israel had good Laws in Ahab's, Rheheboam's and other ill King's times, but the Nation was never the better but the worse for them, because God was more provoked by them, as they were not improved aright under evil Kings, and thereupon all people are to pray earnestly for good Governors, That under them they may live peaceable lives in all Godliness and Honesty. For as it is not fire in the hearth that makes warm; nor air in the sky that carries to the Port; nor light in the Candle that enables to read; nor money in the purse, that feeds man, unless they be adapted to us; and we within the sphere of these, whereby they may properly effect their end upon us: So is it not good Laws that felicifies a Nation, unless they be made happy by a good Guardian and Defender of them. Isocrates calls Evagor as such an one, for his Empire was so moderate and just, Isocrat. in Evagora apud Stobaeum serm. 46. p. 329. that all his life time in it he led 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. without injury to anyone, honouring the good, ruling over the bad, and punishing evil men only according to the Laws; for such an one will not only execute good Laws in being, and suspend the rigour of ill ones, till they can be repealed; but festinate the substitution of good Laws in room of ill ones, and remove the snare in which Subjects may be harmfully caught; and hence good Kings are called Fathers of their Countries, because as they do ignoscere delicta, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Arist. lib. 5. De Rep. c. 10. Excellentia rei est in actu non in habitu, Scholastici Stobaeus serm. 4●. p. 247. so do they agnoscere debita; and if iheir Children ask them bread, they will not give them stones: if fishes, not scorpions: and this the Philosopher said was the end of Kingdoms, which were to preserve virtue from the rapine and prey of multitudes,. the Extravagance of which ends in Tyranny. For if all things followed the suffrages of popularities, there would be more jews in vote to crucify truth and depose its regency in the mind, than criers out for it; because the whole world lies in wickedness. And hereupon though good Luwes are rare blessings in themselves, yet compared with good Kings, they are less blessings; because Kings are the Executioners that make them what they are in their exercitial goodness, and upon this ground I suppose that of Pythagor as is notable, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, &c, that was the best of Cities, which had most good men in it. It is then a truth, That good Rulers are better than good Laws, because they make good Laws, and execute good Laws when made, and that with such moderation as argues them wise and worthy Masters of their own minds, and thereby not tempted to injustice; which Dioclesian eminently made good, for though he were no friend to Christianity but a vehement impugner of it, yet he was successful and great in esteem with his Soldiers, Subjects and Confederates, and the first of all the Roman Emperors that resigned the Empire to lead a private life; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Eutropius in breviario, lib. 9 ad finem. and the Historian says, he had a suitable honour done him for his temperance, Of all private Persons of his time he only was deified. For surely, he that could leave so great a Command contentedly, without doubt used remarkable justice in it; for had he delighted in making his will the law of his Government, he could not have willed his diminution, and proposed alone when none other did or durst, his own discharge from that Royalty into the degradation of a privacy: but God dealing with the haughty nature of man, does by his distillations of restorement, and through the liquefactions of virtuous candour, so incline great minds, that they can deny themselves contentedly, to benefit others certainly. Thus did a matchless Monarch, whose words were but the report of his deeds, Eicon. Basil. c. 27. To the them Pr. of Wales, now our dread Sovereign. I studied to preserve the rights of the Church, the power of the Laws, the Honour of my Crown, the Privilege of Parliament, the Liberties of my People and my own Conscience, which, I thank God, is dearer to me then a thousand Kingdoms. And this is the cause of the Philosopher's position, That better it is to be ruled by good Men then by good Laws. Sed quia non semper contingit Praesidentem populo hujusmodi esse virum, Sanctus Thomas in libro quem Regi Cypri scripsit de regimine Principum, optare censetur, regnum sic institui, ut Rex non liberè valeat populum Tyrannide gubernare, quod solum fit, dum potest as Regia Lege politicâ cohibetur. This Book of Saint Thomas, is amongst his Opuscula, and 'tis a most nervous and pious tract of policy, which he, or as some think, Aegidius Romanus, wrote to the then King of Cyprus, Lege argumentum operis. to manifest his love to him, in a right conduct of him through all the passages of Government, and the duties, that as a Governor he was to express to his people: and the sense of this passage, here by the Chancellor quoted, is out of the second Book, the eighth and ninth Chapters; and it is according to the suffrage of reason: for because the will of men in power was found to degenerate, by the temptations they in their prosperity had; & the impatience of men under rule, made them fly out into furies against their Governors, by reason of his severity towards, and absoluteness over them: therefore Nations did treat with their Governors, not always as a precontract to their acceptance of them, Lege lib. 3. c. 11. De Regimine Principum inter St. Aquinat. Opuscula. but often as a favour from them to their people; that they obeying them so and so, should be free from such and such expressions of their power. And this mutual understanding, being form into a Law, makes the politic alloy to the absolute regal Sovereignty, which he here (as considering it inconsistent with Laws) opposes to it. And truly, if there be any probable means to preserve Majesty and Mercy, 'tis surely by Laws; which, though they do not oblige under humane penalties, Princes, as they do private persons; yet do remember them of a Justice and Veracity, which they are ever to prefer, before their passion and bare pleasure; and that not only in order to God, who requires truth in the inward man, but also in order to reputation, which Princes are to value above other men. For, as far as a King is in honour erected above any of his Subjects, King James' Speech in Parliament, Anno 1603. fol. 497. of his Works. so far should he strive in sincerity to be above them all, and that his tongue should ever be the true messenger of his heart; and this sort of Eloquence, may you assuredly look for at my hands. For the word of a King is the sacrum quiddam, which ought to be held inviolate: since a King that governs not by his Law, can neither be countable to God for his administration, nor have a happy and established Reign: In the Law of Free Monarchies. p. 203. of his Works. so said King james. And hereupon if Kings that do own Laws, do violate them, and not rule according to them; they do somewhat unlike the lenity and grandeur of their Office; for in that they imitate God, who is just and good, and in this they contradict the Attributes, which illustrate and besplendour their Crowns: for set aside the good that results to Governments by Kings ad. ministering them, and their power will be terrible, and more feared then rejoiced in; which that it may not be, 2 Instit. c. 1. on Magna Charta. p 4. the exercise of it by, and according to Laws, is by them admitted, and the King's power and goodness exercised in his Courts of Justice, which are called libertates (saith Sir Edw. Cook) because in them the Laws of the Realm, quae liberos faciunt, are administered: And in the practice of it, there is no easy degeneration into extravagancies, since Laws are made by public Spirits to public purposes of virtue, justice, and freedom; but Tyranny is the exaltation of a private peculiar humour, and will, in contradiction to, and destruction of the good of all others besides him, which Eutropius says Trajan so much abhorred, Eutropius, lib. 8. edit. Sylburg. p. 113. Aelian. lib. 2 c. 2, Variatum Histor. Omnibus fere natura animique dotibus vacuus, ut monstro similior, quam homini videretur, Guicciardinus, lib. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. He overcame his Military Renown by his Civil Administration, and made his Government as a Prince, excel his dread as a Soldier. So just and true did he approve of Antigonus his monition to his Son; An ignoras fili regnum nostrum gloriosam esse servitutem, & qui aliter sentit neque regius nec civilis homo, sed Tyrannus judicabitur. And therefore, though success, may carry Princes aloft, and by them they may be happily accounted of, though they little deserve it, as did Charles the eighth of France, deserve the same he had by his successes in the Kingdom of Naples. I say, though these may sometimes befriend Princes; yet the durablest, and most lovely stability they have, is the love of Subjects, made theirs by their goodness, kindness, Conscience, to govern by their Laws. The old Emperor Marcus is highly for this, mentioned in Stories. For so beloved by the people was he for his virtues, Herodian, lib. 1. p. 467. edit Syl. burgii. that they called him not only the Poor man's King, but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. a bountiful Father, and a brave King; a fortunate Captain, a moderate Governor; and added, that all this he was from integrity, demeaning himself so, that his death was a common sorrow to all Mankind. And such another was St. Ericus, King of Sweden, about the year 1150. who made such just and good Laws; Vt non à rege in cives, Jo Magnus. 419. etc. That one would think they were not made by a King to his Subjects, but by an indulgent Father for his most dear Sons: which they may with Reason and Religion punish the violation of, in the treason and enormity of their Subjects, when they themselves do not transgress the Law, but keep close to the Directs of it, which a gracious Monarch so thinks upon, that as he desires to govern by the known Laws of the Land, Protestation at the Head of his Army, betwixt Stafford and Wellington, Septemb. 19 1642. Collect. p. 38. and that the liberty and property of the Subject may be by them preserved, with the same care as his own just Rights, so when he willingly fails in these particulars, his integrity says he will expect no aid or relief from any man, or protection from Heaven: so was the protection of glorious King Charles the first. Which considered in the Kings of England, as parties voluntarily consenting to their own obligement, with reverence I write it, to their eternal honour, the subject is bound to return them a most faithful and just subjection and loyalty in all things, according to the duty of subjection by the Laws of God and men. And he that is perfidious and disloyal to his Sovereign, who thus lets him be free under a just and merciful Law, the free execution whereof he impedes not, Aquinas, lib. 1. c. 10. De Regimine Principum inter Op●scula. but defends to that end, yea submits to in all things wherein the Law concerns itself. I say, he that is other then loyal, loving, and cordial to such a Prince, is a Varlet ingrate, unnatural, a sinner of a Cham-like unnaturalness, and thence the more abominable, 3 part Instit. c. 2. petit Treason ad finom, p 36. because such without all provocation. And it is a very sage Oracle of the Laws observation, Peruse over all Books, Records, and Histories (says he) and you shall find a principle in Law, a rule in Reason, and a trial in Experience, that Treason doth ever produce fatal and final destruction to the offender, and never attaineth to the desired end, (two Incidents inseparable thereto) and therefore let all men abandon it, as the most poisonous bait of the Devil of Hell, and follow the Precept in Holy Scripture; Fear God, honour the King, and have no company with the seditious: so he. Gaude igitur Princeps optime, talem esse legem regni in quo tu successurus es, quia & tibi & populo ipsa securitatem praest abunt non minimam & solatium. This is well subjoined, to excite the Prince to a just return to God for his favour, in giving him the reputed Title to so fair a Crown, and so flourishing a Law as it was held by. Indeed, every mercy should oblige a man to gratitude, and he is not worthy the Air he breathes in, the Earth he treads on, the meanest indulgence he enter commons with the Creation in, that does not express his gratulation to the fountain of his enjoyment: but Princes that have Crowns put upon their heads, and are to rule by just and wise Laws, have myriads of thanks to return God for their prelation, and aught to be paramount to others, in returns of service suitable to their predignification. And this is the sense of the Texts Gaude; not to kindle in the Prince a joviality, arguing levity, and youthful froliqueness; but to raise him to a comfortable demeanour under so great an indulgence: so to be affected with the mercy, as to think of King David's quid retribuam; for it is a mercy to have a Law; and gracious Princes think it so, that they may testify, that they fear: if their Wills were the Law, the Law of God and Justice would not command their Wills: 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 etc. Archytas Pythagor. apud Stobaeum, Serm. 41. p. 268, 269. But to have such a Law as England has, that has the marrow and best of all Governments in it, and that establishes Prerogative and Privilege in a consistency each with other, that asserts the King a free Prince and his Subjects free People; that bounds the Crown not to swallow up property and privilege; nor property or privilege to justle with, or oppose themselves to the Crown. This, this is matter of joy to a Prince, probable to succeed his Father to it; and that because where all parties concerned, are agreed in their respective stations, to promote the noble ends of this politic Harmony, both peace will be to the Prince in soul and body, and comfort to the subjects in their enjoyment of their good things in peace; which thing, in other words, was notably declared, to the satisfaction of all sides. For the then King Charles the first declared this to his Parliament, That those things which have been done, whereby men had some cause to suspect the Liberties of the Subject to be trenched upon, 3 Caroli, Pulton Stat. p. 1433. shall not hereafter be drawn into example of our prejudice; and in time to come, in the word of a King you shall not have the least cause to complain. And this he calls severitatis & solaminis praestatio, both as it begets a right understanding between Prince and People, and makes a Gordian knot of their mutual confidence in, and corroboration each of other; and also as it strengthens them against all the counterblasts and discomposures, which are occasioned by emergent evils; the sense of which is unpleasing and insupportable, where guilt and envy is predominant; which since the Laws ruled by, and subjected to, do anticipate; the Chancellor, had good reason to write, as here he did, Quo & tibi, & populo ipsae non minimam prastabuxt securitatem & solatium. For as fortunate courage gets dominion, so politic circumspection settles it and secures it against its retrogradations; which Severus made provision against, by that wall which he built in Britain, Eutiopius, lib 8. p. 118. To. ●. 〈◊〉 Sylb. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. that he might preserve his Conquests, and be secure against their relapse. For nothing in prosperity is desirable, but grace to use it well, and a perpetuation of it; whence only arises the comfort and content of it. And therefore as security falsely grounded, is the road to ruin, because it is exoculate and lulls men asleep in confidences of fallacy, till they be irreversibly ruined; which is the reason that prudence detects it, and ranks it amongst those defects that argue fatuity and incircumspection; whereas in the Chancellour's notion it is the fruit of diligence forethought, and the upshot and compensation of all right conduct, and of all real wise design; which the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, in the Holy Language represents, when it, in the conjunction of its import, signifies boldness and confidence, past all fear, Prov. 10.9. Prov. 1.23. Quod confidentam sequatur securitas, Pagn. in verbo. and is opposed to fear, because 'tis that boldness which is rationally and prudentially so, upon the ground of all the lines of virtuous endeavour conducting to, united in it. This is that which the Wiseman calls, The wisdom of the Prudent is to understand his way; Prov. 14.8. Prov. 13.10. Prov. 24.3. With the well-advised is wisdom; through wisdom is a house builded: by all which are employed the delight of security, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, saith Suidas. And therefore as all men endeavour to secure what is dear to them, their Wives from force, their houses from robbery, their lands from waste, their evidences from purloining, their children from seduction, their reputation from suffering, their lives from treachery: so ought Princes to secure all they have, and are by good Laws and a right and reasonable execution of them; which when they do, their subjects are sure to be quiet, and their power established; yea, their persons so contributive to public serenity and order, modestly deified; for as no man can choose but think that Prince worthy pity, who with Censorinus has the Character to be falix ad omnia, infaelicissi●us imperator: so no man can choose but account him an object of veneration, 3 Instit. c. 99 p. 208. who makes himself a numen of preservation to Mankind. And happy is that Prince who turns his ears from Parasites, such as were Hubert de Burgh, Pierce Gaveston, the Spencers, Tresilian, William de la Pool, Lord Hastings, Sir John Catesby, Empson, Dudley, Woolsey, who all injured their Princes by their praeter-legal counsels; and happy is that Prince that hearkens to the Laws and to such brave Spirits, as with Charles' Brandon, the valiant Duke of Suffolk, do good to all, and harm to none. Oh! such Counselors, will make a King beloved and adored, if he will hearken to them. Tali lege, ut dicit idem Sanctus, regulatum fuisse totum genus humanum, si inparadiso Doi mand●tum non praeteriisset. This Clause I do not, in terminis, find in St. Thomas; but the sense of it I do, in these words; Lib. 2. ●. ●. wherein he does prefer Politic Government with Regal, to only Regal Government, and that he does, 1. Si referamus dominium ad statum integrum humanae naturae, Quamvis in statu innocentia nulla esset mise ria nulláque ignoran●ia, non tamen essent futuri omnes homines aquales in sapientia & virtute & in altis dotibus anima, tam naturalibus quam supernaturalibus; & ideo. qui inter eos sapientia & virtuto praestarent dowinarentur aliis absque aliqua tamen molestia. Arragonius q. 66. in secunda D. Thom. p. 89. qui status inno●entia appellatur in quo non fuisset regale regimen, sed politicum: for God having so ordered man in that state of innocence, that he might not have sinned: had he continued upright, there would have been no distinction of states and degrees of men, which are the effect of man's fall and sin, nor would any have usurped over each other: but though there would (perhaps) have been degrees amongst men, yet there would have been a sweet harmony and condescension each to other, according to the congruity of their common and sinless condition. This I suppose, Si homo non peocasset nulla fuisset agrorum divisio, sed omnia communia Bonavent. Ser●. 18 To● 1. p. 55. and humbly conceive, is the sense of St. Thomas, which the Chancellor takes from him, and applies to the Laws of England, to display in the Oratory of his Conception, the grandeur of his love to the Laws. For no man can imagine, that these words are less than hyperbolique, though they have in their pathos a neruosity of truth, pointing out to the Laws Medicinality, in that it rectifies all ill humours in the mass of the Policies constitution, and preserves the head in its vital pre-eminence, and the members in their loyal subserviency, in which two necessary offices of distributive efficacy, it makes a correspondency to God's Institution, and carries on his order in a regularity of method: and this I take to be the all that is deducible hence. For as no man knows what form of Law God would have prescribed Man, had he continued upright, because than he had needed no Law, Nomen & conditioned servitutis culpa genuit, non natura; & prima hujus subjectionis caput, est peccatum. Sanctus August. lib. De Vera Innocentia, c. 164. but that on his heart. For in the formality of it, Law was added, because of transgression: So to say what Law would have been, or not have been, is besides the meaning (I suppose) here. The only use of the instance is, to show that Regal Power, mixed with Politic, as in the temperament of England's Polity, is the best Government to make both King and People secure of God's mercy, and their mutual aid and affection each to other in order to their joint and several capacities and conditions, happyable thereby: Nor is there any Government in the World so true a Paradise to its Enjoyers, as this of the Municipal Laws of England, accompanied with such supplements of the Civil Law, as are legitimated with us, yea surely, if Paradise must be in an Island, as Lindschotten will have it, this Island of Britain must be the Seylon where it is, In his account of the Island of Zeylan. c. 14 Voyages to the West-Indies. and the Laws of England must be the Paradise in it; for from them doth flow that quaternion of streams, Piety, Order, Riches, Renown, which render us the admiration of all our Neighbours. And hereupon methinks, I may say of our Chancellor, as Quintilian does of Iulius Caesar's Commentaries, Tanta in illo vis est, Hottoman in Praesat ante Commentar. Julii Caesaris. tantum acumen, ea concinnatio, ut illum codem animo dixisse, quo bellavit, apparuit. So much doth my Text-Master say in few words, that I know not what to add to him, in commendation of the Laws. For as he likens them to those of Paradise the best state; so to those of the Lives under the Judges the next: For it follows, Tali etiam lege regebatur Synagoga, dum sub solo Deo Rege, qui oam in regnum peculiare adoptabat, illa militabat. Hac autem politia codem modo temperata videtur, qua dicitur Lacedemonum illa perfectisuma ita, ut Moses regiam quodammodo potestatem habuerit, sub Dei tamen veri tunc & unici Israelitarum regis auspicris. Corn. Bertrum, De Politia Judaica, c. 6. Exod. 12.9. Prov. 29.1. This relates to the times, from Moses to the end of judges; a government of about 400. years; and in all which, God used the ministration of men to rule under him, keeping the Monarchy over them to himself, and entituling no man to it; and in all this dispensation of God's goodness to Israel, the people of his love and delight, whom he carried upon Eagles Wings, and made the head, and not the tail of Nations; not absolute Sovereignty, but a politic dispensation of himself by Laws of moral equity, and prudential convenience, did God carry Israel in the Wilderness, and into Canaan, with a mighty hand, to the consternation of all their Enemies: yea, and so did he qualify all men in deputation under him, during that tract of time, and those tedious variations, that they did not affect any usurpation upon God's indulgence to the people, but bore with them, and prevailed against the roughness and choler of their nature (for they were people 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, of a stiff-neck, not bettered by reproof) by their ingenuous mansuetude, knowing well that God would have it so, whose the people were, and under whom they had the conduct of them. This Oeconomy of God's, our Text-Master proposes, as the pattern of ours in England, and ours he likens to it, similitudine vestigii, Cunaus, De Reipub. Hebraeorum, lib. 1. c. 1. though not imaginis; for though every thing answers not, yet in the main integral parts, in the composure of the smartness of absolute Regal, with the bluntness of politic Government; there is that aimed at which makes somewhat near the lovely figure of God's Government, while he ruled Israel as their King, and besides him they had no visible humane King. And this speaks more than all Arguments for politic Government with Regal: for in that God allowed, nay established it as his choice, it appears to have all those integrals of perfect Government, aiming at righteous ends by righteous means, and to be equally adverse to all extremes, either of defect or nimiety. Sed denoun● ejus petitione, Rege homine sibi constituto, sub lege tantum regali ipsa deinceps humiliata est. This our Text-Master brings in, to show how God's establishment had its Supersede as not by force; for he was a King neither to be deprived by power, or deceived by falsehood, or overreached by subtlety, or flattered by oratory: no such artillery could impeach his Regality, no nor could the Moth of time or periodique fatality, which determins Governments and transfers them from one to another, work on his Government, that was from everlasting in the root, and would have been to everlasting, not only in a sense of divine Perennity and essential Indeterminateness over the whole world, as Lord of the Universe, but as to such a proportion as the sense of his temporal exercise over the Jews was applicable to, over them: but by condescension to their desire, and in punishment to their murmur and machination, which rather aimed to gratify their curiosity in being like other Nations, then to acquiesce in a grateful submission to God, and a willing subjection to his Deputies set over them. And the Chancellor not only sets down their sin in desiring man rather their King, than God, but the Instrument of their Prevalence, and the Engine they employ, which is Prayer to have their Government passed over to a King of flesh and blood, bone and bulk as themselves, yea and the effect of their desire they begged inordinately, and God gave them their hearts desire to their after-terrour. This does the clause set forth, not to depreciate their desire of a King, but to blemish their inordinate Principle in desiring a King in opposition to and declension of God their King; and therefore God, though he gave them their desires upon their requests, yet he so imbittered his gift, that it should ever carry the memorial of their sin with it. And this shows us both the corruption of nature, which delights in change, and the danger of change by reason of such corruption. Not only, Man being in honour abode not, but in his prevarication became se ipso humilior, beneath the beast that perisheth; so that not only the Principles of which Nature consists being changeable, incline to change, but even the tendency of man in the lubricity of his will inclines to it, and that by a Judgement of God on his understanding, that takes evil for good, and is restive in loving and improving it to his ruin and annihilation. Nor is it ever seen that changes in this Militant State, without great grace from God, are for the better, but most an end for the worse; of all the changes of Israel 'tis said, They changed their glory for shame: their freedom for bondage, first, to the Egyptians; then to the Babylonians; then to the Romans, and now to the Turks; and of all personal changes, little can better be said then was in that, That of all the Caesars, Solus Vespasianus mutatur in melius, yea when people are fond on change, what products do such incests bring, but tyranny and confusion, unless God be in the change by a gracious influence on it, as he was in David's change from a Shepherd to a King; in Ioseph's from a neglected younger Brother to a Father to Pharaoh and all Egypt, in Saul's change from a Persecutor to an Apostle; in Time's change of julian's for Constantine's. I say, unless God be the effectual mover of changes, and fortunates them to their blessed and lawful issue, Changes quà such are dangerous, and when they are gratifications and holocausts to popular levity, become plagues and torments to their promoters; who because they are Children in discretion and are led by hurry and eddy are to be resisted in such Attempts, and the rods of severity are by Laws made for such fools backs. Thus than it came to pass with Israel, God was their King, and another they would have as the Nations had; the Contumacy of Israël under God's gentle Empire had provoked him to conclude a punishment for them, and now their corruption gives the occasion to its operation upon them; God gives them their heart's desire, but not to their end but his own, To be his Punisher of their Perverness; and thus that which they intended the Display of their Triumphal Banner, and a Trophy of their National Grandeur, becomes their breaking a pieces; so that no Grain of their pertness and mettle remained unpounded; broken they were under the Iron Mall of their own designation: and just it was with God, that since Liberty caused Insolence, Oppression should compel Duty, and the Law of God dictating to Duties, moral and religious, being contemned, the will of man contrary to these, even when it commands contrary to these, as a Curse on people, be in place of a Law, and cheerful obedience to a lawful Government being stomached at; if not denied, a lawless smart and severe one should be introduced, for the justice of God punishes sin in the kind it is committed; because People are voluntarily rebellious against good Princes, God makes them necessarily subject to bad, who trample them and thei●s under foot. Sub qua tamen, dum optimi reges sibi praefuerunt, ipsa plausit, & cum dyscoli ei praeessebant, ipsa inconsolabiter lugebat, ùt Regum liber haec distinctius manifestavit. Here our Chancellor uses a double Dichotomy of Persons and Things. Of Persons, Reges optimi, and dyscoli Of Things, ipsa plausit, ipsa inconsolabiliter lugebat. It is concluded that good Kings are better than good Laws from this; that while good Kings were over Israël, the severity of regal power was not injuriously felt by the Jewish people, though transferred from a mild to a sharp Government; for the Text says, Plaudere 〈◊〉 manibus pulsare & strepit●● facere, quod vel latitia vel derisionis causa steri solet quoties alicui pro re benè ge sta congratulamur, laetitiámqu● oftendimus. Cu. ad Q. Fratr. lib. 1, 2, 9 Priorum autem sanè regum merita, in libris Regum non parvalaudantur, in Israel autem reges, alios magis, alios minùs, omnes ta men reprobos legimus. Lib. 17. De Civit. Dei. c. 2. sub ipsa plausit Synagoga, now plausus is opposed to planctus, and as by the one the heart's sinking into the heel (as proverbially) is deciphered, so in the other the Capreols and vaulting of the heart, the plaudite's and Echoes of exaltation and approbation are intended. When then the Chancellor says, ipsa plausit; 'tis as much as Pliny expresses by sibi blandiri & placere, seu nimium amare, Ep. 91. and declares the People to be highly satisfied with their Enjoyment, and hug themselves as happy in their acquisition of a Governor that is good, and to them the best, because their own. For there are two fold Kings mentioned in the Clause, 1. Regesoptimi; who are those? not any had Israel properly so; for if there is none good but God, than no Kings, at lest none the best but God, who has no equal but is super-superlative; the answer is, they were the best Kings who were better than the worst, who were most good compared to others less good; and those the book of the King's mention to be David, Solomon, Asa, Ahaz, Hizechia, josiah, these the holy Ghost records To do that which was right in the sight of the Lord; and these, when ruled by the Law of God with his sacred Priests, though absolute in power, yet were so conscionable in the use of it, that the people were happy under them to their hearts wish. They ruled as Octavian is said to rule, Though long in time, yet little in account of people, Ex maxima parte Deo similis est putatus, neque antem facile ullus, aut in bello eo felicior fuit, aut in pace moderatior, nullo tempore ante eum Res Romana magis sloruit. Eutropius lib. 7. who were so happy under him, that they thought the time run away too fast, and his Government would too soon end: for all the fifty and six years he reigned seemed but as one day, because his virtues made him so beloved and desired. O when Princes are like Vespasian, Builders, Beautifiers, Restorers of ancient paths to walk in; His Romam deformem incendiis & ruinis, permissa. si Domini deessent, volentibus adisicandi copia, Capitolium, aedem pacis, Claudii Monumenta reparavit, Autelius Victor. in Vespas. then, as Vespasian, they deserve eternal Memorials: yea, they will never die in the Records of stories, and on the tongues of Subjects blessed by them, nor will any power be begrudged them to have, who know how moderately to use it, and mercifully to manage it; for under this plausit illa, people that are so happy, need not care for Laws and Courts of appeal; Virtue, Rectitude, Magnanimity have set up their Thrones in the breast of these Princes, and they are thence propitious to all men; and their Subjects are so grateful to, and tender of them, that they cry out, Quòdillum, & Senatus, & populus ante Imperium, & in Imperio, & post Imperium sic dilenit; ut neque Tra janum, nec Antoninum, nec quemquam alium Principem sic amatum. Trebellius Pollio ad sinem. Speech in Parl. 1603. p. 495. Of his Works. as they did to Claudius, Habeas virtutibus tuis, devotioni tua Claudi statuam, etc. O Claudius mayest thou ever have as thou hast deserved a Statue to thy Memory, may thy virtues be ever alive in that. He that loves the Common Wealth will love thee, and applaud thee as we do; Happy art thou Claudius by thy virtues, happy thou in the Senate's Suffrage, yea happy thou both before, and in, and after thy Government and life, as no Trajan, no Antonine, or other Prince ever was, so he; while then they are such, they may well be accounted Optimi, and their people may well see plaudere under them. Hear the incomparable Humility and Condescension of wise King james, As the head is ordained for the body and not the body for the head, so must a righteous King know himself ordained for his people and not his people for him; for although a King and people be relata, yet can he be no King if he want people and subjects; but there be many people in the world that lack a head; wherefore I shall never be ashamed to confess it my principal Honour to be the Great Servant of the Commonwealth, and ever think the Prosperity thereof to be my greatest Felicity. And that's the first part of the Dichotomy, Optimi Reges, ipsa plausit. The second is dyscoli. and under them they are said inconsolabiliter lugere, by this dyscoli he means the wicked Kings of Israel, such as were Saul, Rhehoboam, jeroboam, Ahab, I●horam, Manasses, jehu, and the rest; who involved the people in Wars, and by bringing the Curse of God on them, made the Government under them grievous; and these he calls dyscoli, because lawless in their wills, and not reasonably to be pleased, since their humours were their Rudder, and their sensuality their Compass, and this has so inordinate a swinge, that it is not restrained or regulated by God's Laws, which only sweeten the temper, De vitiosa Monarchiae forma, quae Tyrannis dicitur, lege Contzenium, Politic. lib. 1. c. 16. and plain down the rudenesses of Princes, under which subjects do inconsolabiliter lugere, and though this often be but a slow remedy, yet is all, the Laws of God and men indulge grieved Subjects to relieve themselves by; which the Scripture calling, possessing our souls in patience, refers us by prayer to God to turn the Prince's heart, or else to endue us with patience to endure what is God's pleasure, because he often punishes popular wantonness, and seditious murmurs against good Princes, with real burdens, and yokes of torment from evil ones; and by this affliction on them works their preparation for, and engagement in national repentance. Tamin quia de ist a materia in opusculo, quod tui contemplatione de natura legis naturae exaravi, sufficienter puto me disceptâsse, plus inde loqui jam desisto. In this Clause, the Prince is referred for further satisfaction, and the Chancellor excused from further procedure on this Argument, in relation to a Tract which he has designedly wrote about it, which our Chancellor the Author calls Opusculum, because a short and not bulky tract, and then shows his impulse to the writing of it, tui contemplatione, that is, for the Prince's institution and satisfaction; and then the matter of it, 'twas de ista materia, that is, the nature of absolute regal with legal and politic Government. This Tract (I confess) I never saw, but am informed 'tis in Sir Robert Cotton's Library, which his noble and learned Son Sir john Cotton promised to accommodate me with when he could find it; which he not yet having done, as I have not seen it, so neither can I give any account of it. I hear also it is in Oxford too, as also in other hands, In vita ejus. and I conceive it goes under the name of De Politica administratione, which Pits mentions to be one of his Works, and he here remembers: so much was the Prince, and the age, yea our age, beholding to this sage Chancellor, that he refused no travail of mind, to clear the doubts that might arise in active minds concerning Government and subjection. Jus tum civile tum municipial● publice docuit, habuitque auditores nobil●ssimos juvenes quamplurimos, Pitsaeus in vito ejus. Nota bene. In both which cases he was as well able to give solution, as any his Contemporary; for besides that he was a profound Lawyer, as his Judgements in the Year-Books of Henry the sixth, his several judicious Tracts on serious Subjects, and the opinion of that time of him confirmed, he was also a most just man, who in all his actions went (as he supposed) according to an enlightened and rightly informed judgement and Conscience; and Record gives this testimony of him, that in hoc summo officio (of his Chancellourship) tam pie, prud●nterque se gessit, ut omnem illam quam consequi poterat authoritatem, ad Reipublica referret utilitatem: yet, good man, he had the hard fortune, or rather the honour in an ill time to be banished, or rather to banish himself, that he might keep himself loyal, and be near the young Prince to do good Offices to him. And though he was born, bred, and long lived honourably in England, yet died he abroad, as many brave men have done before him, and was ill treated of his Countrymen as they also were: it being not only the fate of Scipio to have an ingrate Country, the grief of which made him lay his bones abroad; and of Tensira, whom Giraldus pourtrays as the noblest man of his time, yet repudiated by his Citizens, and thereupon dying privately; Dialog. secundo, De Poetis, p. 403. partis secundae. but also of infinite others, whose not only lives have been chequered with party colour of both good and bad fortune, but have been led one where, and expired another where, Nasoentem Aeneans vidit Simois in Asia, raptum absorbuit Numicius in Italia, which though Aventine crosses, in the example of Lodowick, the first Count Palatine of Rhine, Anno 1294. who was born, and died in one and the same Chamber at Heidelburgh; yet is confirmed in more that die otherways. Dido was born at Phenicia, but died at Carthage; Pythagoras born at Samos, died at Metapontus, Alexander first appeared at Pella, extinguished at Babylon; the Decii all born at Rome, Zuinger Theatre. Vitae Hum. Volum. 17. lib. ●. p. 2677. but all died abroad; Cato had his first breath at Rome, but drew his last at Utica; Mantua saw first Virgil rising, but Brundisium entombed him; yea, the famous Earl of Warwick, Beanchamp, whose Character is parem sibi in armorum strenuitate & regis regnique fidslitate superstitem minimè derelinquens, though born in England, died at Calais, 43 E. 3. and this our Chancellor died in Berry, and there desisted from his labours; as I shall now from the Commentary on this● ninth Chapter of him, which here ends. CHAP. X. Tun● Princeps illicò sic ait. Vnde hoc Cancellarie, quòd Rex unus plebem suam regaliter tantùm regere valeat, & Regi alteri potestas hujusmodi denegatur, equalis fastigii cum sint Reges ambo. Cur in potestate s●nt ipsi dispares, nequeo non admirari. THis Chapter is spent in maintenance of the Dialogical Continuity, and it has that spirit of reason in it, which keeps the Chancellor in preparation for an answer of what's therein interrogated; the common Rule is, ubi cadem ratio idem jus, and why the politic, mixed with regal Government, since it is a real Kingship, should not have so much Privilege as its brother Kingship nomore divine, nor no truelier instituted of God than it is? Is the scruple now to be resolved. For since Regality in both is of, God, the Condescension of it in the one and not in the other is no alteration of the Essential dignity, but an adumbration of it for ends of good; which since God does seem for our sakes often to do, when yet he retains his absolute Sovereignty; why the King so doing should seem less than otherwise he would be, is the question to which the Chancellor frames an answer in the next Chapter. CHAP. XI. Cancellarius. Non minoris esse potestatis Regem politicè Imperantem, quam qui ùt vult regalitèr, regit populum suum, in supradicto opusculo sufficienter est ostensum. Diversatamen Authoritatis eos esse in subditos suos ibidem, aut jam, nu●atenùs denegavi, cujus diversitatis causam ùt potero, tibi pandam. THis Chapter is the pithy breviary of the Chancellour's Response to the former Chapters Proposals, and it is by way of Concession, that the power of both Kings is the same as his arguments and reasons in the formentioned tract purposely thereupon written, do make good: all that is of diversity in the powers is not fundamenti sed exercitii, not in the nature of the power; for that being God's in the trust of King's quâ such, is equally God's, and equally in the Dignity and Majesty of it. Theirs; but the emanation or rather modification of it, is divers upon divers reasons, which in the twelfth Chapter be enlarges upon. For as there is no general rule but admits of some Exceptions, and the same Sun melts wax that hardens Clay, so the same power and prerogative variously expresses itself in the one and in the other, according to the subjects it is conversant about and the juncture of affairs it has to cope with, which, because the Chancellor has discoursed upon before, and now remembers, frustrà fit per plura, quod fieri potest per pauciora, he in that part refers to what he had formerly resolved in it, and for what is undiscoursed of, promises additional Information, and that he makes good, not by a bold braving, but a modest veracity, cujus diversitatis causam, ùt potero, tibi pandam. CHAP. XII. Homines quondam potentia praepollentes, avidi dignitatis & gloria, vicinas saepe gentes sibi viribus subjungarunt. THis Chapter explicates the Origen and Rise of absolute and lawless Monarchy, as men in nature and Gods in power obtained first, and since have in their successional lines held them. Now though he says the greatest Monarches were but men in nature, yet by the stimulations they had to great actions, and the successes they had by them, they appear to be more than men, because stirred up by desire of glory and honour to contemn danger and hazard, which in contest with, and conquest over men their fellows in nature and station, they must resolve to cope with. Now this so patiently works in the nature of great minds, that it makes them set upon Nations to Master and Lord it over them, and our Text-Master calls it the rise of great Empires. And if all the Heroiques of the world were asleep, and the memory of them perished; the truth of this would be confirmed from the actions of one only Alexander, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Plutarch in lib. an Seni sit gerenda Resp. in Notis ad lib. 3. polit. cor. c. 3. p. 145. who was not only the world's Master before he was thirty years of age, which he did by Counsel, Eloquence, and the art of Rule and conduct, but envied any Commander of his own that was successful: yea Lipsius is my Author for it, That he was more wrath with his fortunate and well-deserving Commanders, who did things with merit of glory resulting there from, then with those that executed his Commands, infeli●iter & ignauè, unprosperously and with dishonour, which perhaps is the reason that ambitious Princes disfavour great Merits, lest they themselves by them should be lessened, and have Rivals and Competitors in that power, which they would have solely theirs, and which they can attain to by no readier an Artifice, than reputation of bold and fortunate, which as it was a serviceable Harbinger to designs of rule and Sovereignty, so made Subjects admire the obtainers of it beyond reason, and arrogate to them a participation of Divinity; so that men no sooner heard but feared, and no sooner saw but submitted to them, as thinking every frown a thunderbolt, In Notis ad c. 6. lib. 3. Politic. and every angry word a Hell-fire for their torment and terror. Learned Lipsius professes, that he often laughed (as well he might) to read the follies of men in their random admirations of those in power. For when the Mexicans swoar their King, E Lopezo & Gomara. they exhibited to him these things in his Oath, That justise he would do, oppress none of his Subjects, be valiant in war, hitherto well; but at last comes, That he would cause the Sun to shine and not let it be interrupted in its course, Et ritu veteri potestate deposita removetur, si sub co fortuna titubaveri● belli, vel segetum coptam negaveri● terra lib. 27. in Valentin. & Valente p 479. Edit Franc. Wochelii. that the Clouds should rain, the Rivers run, and the earth bring forth. And Ammianus Marcellinus tells us, the old Burgundians who were wont to call their Kings Hendini, did depose them if either they were unfortunate in war, or the earth failed its fruit. These and such like folly's men are sometimes irrationally guilty of, as Preparatory to their shackles and the setters of their bold and daring Coverers Conquest of them. And thus comes it to pass that Nimrod, julius Caesar, and the mighty Chieftains of the world have subdued Countries, wasted Continents, prostrated stately Edifices, rend asunder goodly Libraries, dissipated well compacted Combinations; yea in sort uncreatured the world by the Prodigality of their furies, and the tragical effects of it; which though God has often turned to good, and most of the good Laws and good Magistrates that the world and every part of it has seen, be the issue of this original Grandsire Cruelty; yet was the Commencement of it altogether roystrous and savage, and in this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was there no aim at any thing at first, but to Master, and to have all at the conquerors pleasure, which was the Government mentioned Daniel v. 19 where 'tis said of Nabuchadnezzar. That all people, Nations, and Languages trembled before him, whom he would he slew, and whom ●e would he kept alive, and whom he would he set up, and whom be would he plucked down; and which the Turks and Muscovite practices to this day, Contzen. Polltic. lib. 1 c. 16. and which was the Government of Inga in Brasil, where no man had any thing of his own but every man at the pleasure of Inga and no longer, nor did any thing go to any man's Heirs: which is so hard a Tenure, that it may well be accounted Conquest, and the Subjects under it slaves beneath slavery. This the Giantlike Monsters of Ambition and Pride did not only to get them a name, as did the Babel-builders, who built potius ad pompam quam adusum, for they built even as high as Heaven, and in the eighth story which Saint Jerome makes about 4000 paces, and the jews make 27000 paces, if any truth be in their fictitious Talcuth; but also to intimidate and lurch men into a dread, that, by the dispiriting of them, should betray them into submission to whatever they please; which the Chancellor words as followeth. Ipsis servire, obtemperare quoque jussionibus suis compuler●nt, quas jussiones extunc leges hominibus illis sancierunt. Indeed therefore many men have endeavoured to get names of fear and reverence, that thence the dread of them falling upon men, they may be obeyed in whatever they design and prosecute. These the Holy Story called Giants in the Earth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, men of name or renown. Some would have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to come from the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifying d●s●lare, or stupefacere, hinting thereby how renown or a name is gained by the fear and terror men are possessed with, when they hear it. Thus God is said to get himself a glorious name, Isa. 63.12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a name of glory: By what? By dividing the waters before Israel, and leading them through the Deep, which was an act of divine and unimitable power. Now this, men of ambitions and prowess knowing available to their ends of puissance, In illa oppressio multitudinis, essu s●o sanguinis, ordinis confusio, legum violatio, rerum omnium perturbatio. Casus de Tyrannide, lib. 4. c. 2. Sphae●a Civit. endeavour as much as in them lies, to make their Actions as dreadful and cogent to those they had designs upon, as possible they can; and when once they are dunned and cowed, than they will submit lowly, and obey universally, than they will take their curbs into the mouth willingly, and ride at what rate under them they will have them. For dominion is obtained over no people, but by either wisdom admired, or power feared prepossessing them; either or both of those are the sure, if any be the forerunners of power. These will make people not only servire, become their subduers slaves, Sed mihi sexoper obtemperaevit tanquam Filius Patri Cic. Ammianus Marcell lib. 22. p. 406. edit. Francof. & lib. 25. p. 438. but obtemperare, as a Son does his Father, whom he will obey and be faithful to, because he loves and esteem his desires as Laws; yea, and not dare to do other than the reverence of Laws to them. This opinion the World had of julian, which made him so successful every where; and of julius Caesar; and all that have been Victors, who have become absolute, by the awe their virtues either Togal or Martial have prevailed by. And this in time has been the Ancestor to all after calmness; for when the stomaches of men have come down, and both the Ruler & ruled have had enough of force and fight; to prevent it for the future, both of them have consented to terms of civil order and quiet, which in time has antiquated and eliminated all fierceness, and brought in credit, mutual kindness and politic conscientious respect and fidelity each to other: for so the Chancellor proceeds, Quarum perpetione divina subjectus sic populus, dum per subjicientes à caterorum injuriis defendebatur, in subjicientum dominium consenserunt. Here the Chancellor shows, that though Conquest possessed the great Monarches of the World of their Commands; yet consent of the people conquered, recognised and ascertained them peaceful to them, and hereditary to their Heirs and Successors; and that not only upon fear and necessity, because otherwise they could not help themselves, but upon choice, and as we say in Law, a valuable consideration, the Conqueror was to protect them from injuries, and to warrant (with his utmost hazard) their security, against all persons that would annoy them, and they were obliged to be loyal to him, and to live subject-like under him. So that there is hence a reciprocation of advantage; the Governor is secure from treachery and mutiny, the governed from rapine and cruelty: for there is a double rule of the Law that makes to this purpose, subjectio trahit protectionem, R●●. juris. & protectio subjectionem, and quibus modis aliquid acquiritur, iisdem & conservatur. In both which respects, the joint concord to so noble and beneficial ends, appears to be wise and worthy, since security from danger is one of the great blessings of life, and that is not to be purchased but by submission to power, which is able to compel, but is willing to comply, and by adhering to that power, to those profitable issues of peace and order. This is the Golden Chain of power, by the Links of which 'tis made conspicuous, durable and communicative; and this composition being so athletique and virile, so rational and effective of good to all parties indifferently, makes it so beautiful, and so lasting. For as it commenced through the wise project of both sides, conspiring to make each other happy in a respective conjunct fatiation; so it cannot be dissolved, but with the dissolution of all that is lovely and desirable. For as it follows, Opportunius esse arbitrantes se unius subdi imperio, quam omnium eos infestare volentium oppressicnibus exponi. Indeed here is the marrow and motive of all subjection, 'tis ration● boni inde proveni●ntis. For as God the Proto-Monarch is not made happy by the World's obedience to him, but the World made happy by his defence and preservation of them, whom as a King he protects; as a Lawgiver he directs; as a Father he feeds; as a Husband he tenders; and as a Benefactor he will reward: so Kings (just and worthy) are not more happy in the subjection of their Subjects, than their subjects are in the watchful eye, powerful hand, subtle head, affectionate heart, and every way expressive largeness he discovers towards them: Nor is there any so compendious a way of peace, as for the Subjects readily and freely to submit to their Prince for Conscience sake; yea, and for the goods sake that thence results to them. For when one takes the duty, and expects the subjection, he puts an end therein to all those pretenders, whose injurious spirits flatter them into a right of doing wrong; & whether it be not better to obey one then many; and a King noble by birth, blood, and endowments, than fellow subjects, let not only men in the experience of all Ages be Judge, but even God, who in the universal inclination of all Nations to Monarchy, Tolossanus Syntagm Juris, lib. 47. c. 15. tit. 6. has sufficiently determined the dignity of it, as a Ray from his Oriency, who is King of Kings. But of this I have written heretofore, and shall refer here my Readers to that nervous and ingenious Discourse of Monarchy asserted, Mr. Matthew Wren. by a most polite and accomplished Gentleman; who truly (I think) has said as much on that noble Argument, as well in so few words can be said, and more than (I dare say) can be answered by any Contrarient whatsoever. Sîcque regna quaedaem inch●ata sunt, & subjicientes ilti dum subjectum populum sic rexerunt, à reg●ndo sibi nomen regis usurparunt, eorum quoque dominatus tantum regalis dictus est. This the Chancellor, like a wise Masterbuilder, lays down to a breadth proportionable to the intent of his intended superstructure: for being to convince the Prince, that some of the kinds of Governments that were in the World, were according to the compacts of Princes and People in ancient times; and that the first subduers of Nations sound their tenors by the Sword troublesome, without the consent, and contrary to the mind of the people under the power of it, Valdesius, J. C. De dignitate Hispaniae, c. 18 p. 367. Monarchiae nomine administratio illa contmetur, quae ununstantum habet dominum, qui superiorem non agnoscit. Tolossa●us Syntagm. Juris, lib. 18. c. 2. tit 6. he lanches out into the discourse of the Titles of those that so acquired and exercised power, which he lays down to be that of Kingship; and though latter times have seemed to give the prelation to Emperor, as couching Kingship under it: an Emperor, in the strict sense of late Lawyers, being the Sovereign of Kings, and having a King his Subject; yet our Law accounting its King an Imperiael Monarch, according to the Stat. of 25 H. 8. c. 22.28 H. 8. c. 7.35 H. 8. c. 1.1 Eliz. c. 3.1 jac. 1. before mentioned reduces the word King to the pristine honour which Antiquity gave it. For King being the Title of God, who governs and preserves the World, and who deserves the service and love of all his Creatures, honours sufficiently in that Title all that by delegation of his power, are Governors and preservers of men in civil concord, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Diotogenes Pythag. Apud Stobaeum, Serm. 46. p. 328. and religious agreement. And that Kings may become their Kingdoms as God doth his, it becomes them to be just as he is; and that they only are, when they are such as the Laws of their Government prescribe them to be. Indeed, in absolute Governments, such as a e founded upon Conquest, and the pleasure of the Victor, here Laws have no force: But Justice ever ought to rule the wills of such prevailers, if they will be worthy and beloved. What Cotys the Thracian King told one that censured his sharp Government to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉: to whom he replied, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 etc. This severity (quoth he) which you censure, though it be sharp Physic, yet it makes healthy bodies, and renders my Subjects wary not to offend that they may be safe from punishment. I say what he replied is very much a truth, but not so much to the lustre of Governors, as the practice of Evagoraes' in his Government, which I mentioned before out of Isocrates, Isocrates in Evagora. who testifies it to be such, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. That his Subjects were more happy in him, than he in the government of them, for he gratified no passion of his own; he studied no greatness, ¶ Principatum dol● partum magna virtute poste● administravit, rexit ille summa cum laude, & pietatis studiosissimus. Egnatius, lib. 2. Rom. Princip. but the good he preferred and honoured, and the evil he punished according to Law. And therefore, though Rule may at first be acquired by ill means, depredation, violence, and injury; yet after, may this stinging and deadly Serpent become a Brazen one, not only durable, but sanative and beneficial. So the Historian says the Emperor justine did, who though he got the Empire by no good means; yet when he was in it, ruled exemplarily, making virtue and every thing worthy praise his design, and according to the project every way doing. By which art, what Oblivions have been of fury and injury, and what sodring to future stability, stories and experiences do abundantly furnish the precedents of. For if the black Achievements of the quondam Hector's, who founded governments, should not be shrouded with the Lawn and Tiffany of Candour, and be sweetened by the forgivenesses of those rudenesses: 'twere impossible to make Panegyrics to their Successors memories, and to pay the duty of subjection so contentedly as Subjects, by this courtesy of time burying the staunch of it, and the goodness of Kings deserving it, do yield it. Sic Nimbroth primus regnum sibi comparavit. Here he descends to particulars, in proof of his assertion, concerning the truculent rise of the old absolute Regal Governments: And the first example he produces is of the Assyrian Monarchy, Rivet Exercit. 65. in Gen. 10. the first that ever was, and that in the person of Nimrod, who not following the precedent of Noah and his Sons before him, who all were moderate and gentle Governors, tendering their people, as Fathers do their Children, broke out into rage and resolution, Bertram. De Politia Judaica, c. 3 to make himself terrible, and upon the awe and dread of his force, for which he is called a Giant (ratione sevitiae, non staturae) he founded his Tyranny. And so Bodin confirms, Morcarus, in Gen. 10. c. all the Asian Empires did after him; yea, and the Roman too, which makes Glareanus, writing on the lives of the Caesars, to extravagate, Quid si dicam 12. Lib. 1. De Republics c. 6. Glareaws, Orat. in Suetonium. p. 718. August. Scriptorum. Latronum, Mentiarne, in Nerone, Tiberio, Caligula, 12. Monstrorum, etc. I am (saith he) to write on the lives of the twelve Caesars; what if I say the twelve Thiefs, the twelve Monsters. Oh! but good words, Glareanus, they are Deities, divine honours are given them. His Reply will be, What did they do to be de●f●●d; if Cruelty, Covetousness, Tyranny, Murder, Madness, Pride, Luxury, L●st, Envy, Rapes; if these can make them divine, they are divine; for such only are their virtues: so he. But though the first Monarchies and Kingdoms long ago might have this foundation, as to the persons of men first fixing them; yet is this no Argument against the divinity of power, and the duty of men, as such, to obey them. For though the Anabaptists and fanatics do hence make a doubt of obeying Governments that had so ill a foundation; yet this principle of rottenness is easily prostrated, when consideration is had, that Power in itself is instituted of God, though in the Subject using it, it may not always be just and lawful, Saepe res ipsa à Deo instituitur ad quam nonnulls aspirant & aliquando perveniunt, per eos modos & rationes, quae Deo minimè probantur, saith learned Rivet. Marriage is instituted of God, and lawful it is for a man to endeavour gaining of the woman he loves, Exercit. 65. in Gen. 10. to be his wife; but yet God does not legitimate the sinister means that some men corruptly improve to obtain Marriage by, as Force, Fraud, Theft of Children from their Parents; though when the Marriage is completed, the fruits of it may be good and excellent: So is it in Empire, though it might at first be gained by ill Artifices; yet had, it may produce excellent issues, and become in time and by common approbation, just. So that the sic here is a black note only on the first demeriter of his fellows, on Nimrod, whose name says Philo signifies, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, transfuge, or running away, because he deserted his Brethren and went to their Enemies, Lib. De Gygantibus, p. 293. and with them tock Arms against them and overcame them; and so had Babylon his Royal Seat, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which signifies transposition and being besides his place. Thus Philo. And in this Nimrod did but do like himself to be sole, not social in the Earth. And therefore he was called Nimrod, a name from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which signifies, to oppose, oppress, and rebel; and this name this person had by special appointment of God, who foreseeing him to be a man of violence, terms him by that he most delighted in. This word (in this man) is near of kind to the Chald●e, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, signifying a Tiger, for such he was incarnate, no bounds would keep him within them; he would over all that God and Men made sacred. A proud and elate mind he had, and all others, he looked upon as vild and contemptible; and being in confidence & courage above others, he broke the yoke, and despised the common kindness, which Nature had settled in her Family, and upon that violence he erects a Kingdom. What this Origen was, the Holy Story tells us, he was the Son of Chush, Son of Chaens, the cursed Son of Noah: some will have him to be Ninus; of this mind is Eusebius, but that is generally disclaimed: But that this Nimrod did first exercise Tyranny over Mankind, Rivetus Exercit. 65. in Gen. 10. Turrecrem. Summ● Eccles. lib. 1. c. 27. is the assertion of the Holy Text, and all Authors according to it; which the Holy Ghost willing to stigmatize as the first Luciferianism and insolent instance after the flood, permitted the Character of him to b proverbial. That as we call cruel Tyrants Nero's, and desolate Monsters Sardanapalus'; so men of prowess and irresistible ferocity should be called Nimrods': for though he was but born and bred as other men, yet as Florus said of Andriscus though a Slave, Regiam formam, Regium nomen, Regio animo implevit; and by this daringness did he set up the earlyest and greatest Government of the world. Lib. 2. c. 14. Some have thought this to be the He that the Poets called Hercules, a name of valour and puissance, which the great Hector's of the world so doted on, that Alexander of Macedon, Commodus, Maximinian, Heraclius, called themselves by his name and built Cities after this name. Lilius Gyraldus in Hercule. They called him, as is thought also, Bacchus the God of wine, because as wine makes men forget danger and despise it, so his valour made him contemn the discòuragements to rule; for he being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, By nature warlike and studious of renown, did make his way to his desire by his sword, and by this did primus sibi regnum comparare. Tamen non Rex ipse. This is added to show that men's humours and mettles will carry them often beyond their births and probable obtainments. A man of a great courage he was, and his body bore not patiently others less vigorous than he, to be Compartners in degree with him; and therefore as he was active and potent, so does he manage such his Excellencies beyond others, and becomes a terror to men as well as to beasts, thereupon whatever he originally was, the Holy Ghost affixes this on him, that he had obtained to be accounted robustus Venator coram Domino. Robustus Venator] This sets forth both his activity of body and mind: of mind, which chose hunting of beasts to discipline him to hunt men: of body, which was athletique and Masculine able to follow the course, Erat fortis & corpore & animo, qui auderet feras invadere. Vatablus in loc. and to weary out the nimblest foot, and pull down the sturdiest body. Aben Ezra will have him called a mighty hunter, and successful in his endeavour, quia partem praedae Deo dabat; but Mercer reproaches this in him, and says, only Aben Ezra of all Interpreters magnifies this Varlet. A man of courage no doubt then Nimrod was, and of violence too, for hunting and hunters in Scripture signify so much, Mercerus in 10. Genes. thus Esau, Gen. xxvii. is said to be a cunning hunter, a man of the field: and the malice and vehemence that wicked men have against the godly, is expressed by terms of hunting, Lament. iv. 18. They hunt our steps that we cannot go in the Street; which Saint Hierom renders Lubricaverunt vestigia nostra in Itinere platearum, so Lament. two. 52. Mine enemies chasten me sore; the Vulgar reads it, Venatione caeperunt me inimici mei, so Psal. clx. 11. where 'tis penally said, Evil shall hunt the violent man to overtake him; R. David adds, Ve●abitur illum ad impulsiones, adeò ùt impelletur à malo ad malum, so Prov. vi. 26. Ezech. xiii. 20. and in other Scriptúres' violence is expressed by hunting. Now this hunting of Beasts, the Giants of old did not use for recreation, as our Gallants now adays do, beasts of prey and Venery; but to accustom their Natures to cruelty and irrelentingness, and to enter them thereby into a making nothing of violence and life, which they found they should the better execute in earnest, when in jest (as it were) they were trained up to it; that as Gamesters begin with pinns and farthings, and Lechers with obscene words, and blasphemers with random and broad speeches, and drunkards with sipping great quantities of small liquor, and thiefs with robbing Orchards and steeling Deer, till at last they act all wickedness in the height and improvement of it: so did the heroic Bravadoes of the world, who meant to waste Countries and subdue Governments to their wills, discipline themselves to ruffle and butcher men by doing the like first to beasts. Cyropaed. lib. 1. Geogr. Sacr. lib 4. c. 12. Thus Xenophon tells us that the Persian Kings instituted their sons to hunting, and Bochartus from him produces Theseus, Castor, Pollux, Ulysses, Diomedes, Aeneas, Achilles, all which were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, trained up to hunting, Chirone illos venandi artem summâ curâ edocente tanquam ad bellicam disciplinam non parùm profuturam; Lib. 2. De Nat. Deorum. Tully seconds it, Immanes fer●s bell●● as nanciscimur venando, & exercemur in venando ad similitudinem bellicae disciplinae; In Panegyr. yea, Pliny is in the same tone, His artibus futuri duces imbuebantur certare cum fugacibus feris cursu, cum audacibus robore, cum callidis astu; these and sundry other authorities, Flavius Vopise. in Procl. Herodian. lib. 1. p. 484. Edit. Sylburg. Aelius Spartianus in Adriano. Lib. 24. p. 417. as of the Emperor Proclus, given to feats of theft; Commodus so cunning to snap beasts, that where he would he could have them; Adrian the Emperor bred to hunting, all which, with many other Examples do show, that activity in contemptible things may in time grow to great success. Ammianus Marcellinus tells us the Parthian Kingdom grew from these small rudiments to great things, and (a) Lib. 6. c. 40. Fulgosus remembers us that Spartacus the Thracian headed an Army of men that put the Romans in fear, and made them send out Licinius Crassus the most potent man of Rome against them, and all little enough to repress that whiffling Thracian, who originally was but a sordid person, yet active and bold. And he that considers what Viriatus the Lusitanian did, ●ulgosus lib. 3. c. 4. who was initio venator, & post à laetro-factus, and yet did such a fourteen years' service against the whole power of the Romans, must yield that great things in issue depend upon small and unthought of beginnings; yea, the most warlike people of India, the Caeffares or black people of Mosambique, become so terrible and active as they are, by living upon what they get by hunting, the prey of which they feed upon, and thereby are not only able and bold to grapple with Elephants, but even with all men that come in their way as Linschotten informs me. Cap. 41. Of his Voyages to the India's. This suffices to make appear that Nimrod took a good Method to his purpose, in making hunting of beasts inductive to his hunting of men. In which regard he is termed by the holy Text, A great Hunter. And that as it follows. Coram Domino, before the Lord. This is added 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the more vividly to set out his Monstrosity; Coram Domino fi●ri dicuntur, aut quae Deo pergrata sunt, aut qua ei displicent. Grot. in loc. Rivet. in loc. dissert. 65. for it has an import of somewhat emphatique, not only in Grotius his sense, which makes the phrase to extend to things which are both pleasing and displeasing to God, but also and chiefly in that which Rivet understands the Holy Ghosts meaning, coram Domino vel contemptiuè, vel simulatè; for Nimrod being a self-admirer, and having found his spirit bold, and his boldness successful, may well be conjectured to resolve what he was to do, with an intent of despite of God, and in opposition to him, as valuing no eye seeing, no tongue censuring his actions; so audacious was he, that he, in the effrontery of his attempts, seemed to pick a quarrel with God, and to challenge his purity and justice to clash with his lust and violence; or else coram Domino implies his subdolous Hypocrisy, which he conceited so much to prevail against God's omniscience, that he could intend violence and yet pretend only order, and to make men more devout to him. One of these probably was the cursed Artifice of this Tyrant, whom therefore the Holy Ghost dissects by the Phrase before the Lord, to teach the world, that whatever the hidden Hypocrisies, or open Blasphemies of Men are, God sees and censures them as before his eye and under his power, and will make their Babylon's of strength, by which they think to eternize their greatness, Bochartus Geog. Sacr. lib. 1. c. 11. & lib. 4. c. 14, 15. nothing. Thus did he by Nimrod, who though a mighty hunter and a subtle provider against an evil day; for strong Babylon he built as the non-such of the world, which should perennate his Empire, and him the first founder of it: yet God in a short time brought him into the dust. And so we leave this mighty Hunter before the Lord humbled and reduced to lesser terms then an Empire, all amort in the glory and terror of his wont activity. Quia ùt venator, feras libertate fruentes; ipse homines sibi compes●uit obedire. This is explanatory of the precedent words, and the Chancellor by it shows how he exercised his strength and activity, to wit, in chase beasts as a preface to his Tyranny over men. Wild beasts are the subjects of the hunter's pursuit, because they being ferae naturae, and nullius in bonis, and God creating nothing in vain, made them not only as tokens of his power and omniform wisdom, but as exercises of man's industry and sageness, and as helps to his lustre and accommodation of life; and should not man by hunting and slaying wild creatures lessen the increase of them, not only would the world be overlaid with them; but man himself the Lord of all creatures, of whom naturally the dread and fear is in all Creatures, be overborne by the number of his rude and ravenous Subjects, and be less able to master them then comported with the order and absoluteness of his Empire. Therefore God has implanted in man a spirit thus active and daring, that the Creatures void of reason might (though in bulk and strength excelling man) be by the reason of man brought into subjection to him; and this being the secret implant of God in order to man's Dominion over the Creatures, the corruption of man extends further than God originally intended, though not beyond the bounds he has successfully permitted, and in a sort, ex parte pòst, blessed. For though he loves not Tyranny as 'tis the lustful and insolent rule of one over many; yet as one good Governor may by his rule over many bad, meliorate them, so he is not a disapprover of it: order and subjection he wills, though the irrectitude of the means, and the truculency of the Subject, who transacts this, he approves not. That which then was reprovable in Nimrod, was, that he did violently and savagely hunt men, and suffer them to be quiet no where, till they had taken his yoke and would answer his spur and lash; which our Chancellor expresses by compescuit obedire. Because, as Beasts of prey that use to be at liberty and not fettered, are not got into 'Gins and Snares, but in order to their destruction, either for the skin, horn, flesh, feathers, or some other parts sake about them; so men are not compelled to submit and obey, but sore against their wills: Herodot. in Ca●liope. for though all men dare not do so much for freedom as Hegesistratus Elaeus did, who taken by the Lacedæmonians and put in Iron Chains, cut off half his foot to be at liberty, and after that leapt over the Wall and escaped his Imprisonment; yet all love freedom as well as he, Xiphilinus Epitome. Dio●is, p. 194. in Augusto Caesare. and are loath to obey basely, till they cannot shift it. In that therefore our Chancellor says, homines sibi compescuit obedire, he intends to declare that obedience is the Child of power, either that which is obtained over Subjects by love the Engine of mild Princes, or by force and anger the Method of angry and savage ones. And such were the following men he writes of. Sic Belus Assyrios, & Ninus, quam magnam Asiae partem ditioni suae subegerunt. This Belus is diversely thought of among the Learned. Servius says this name did not ratione career: Lilius Gyraldus Syntag. 2. De Natur. deorum, p. 108, 109. Bochartus Geogr. Sac. partis secundae, lib. 1. c. 18, p 478 it is thought by some that this was the jupiter of the Poets, whom the Nations worshipped as a God, because he commanded whom, and what he pleased. Others say 'twas Bacchus, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and Hercules, and I know not who: probablyest he was the same whom the Sidonians, and Phaenicians called Baal, so often spoken of in Scripture, who was not only a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as the Father of Tyranny, but as he did tyrannize over the souls of men, in making them give him divine honour; for so ¶ Geograph ●. 10. p 471. edit Causab. Strabo tells us, that to Bacchus, which was Baal, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. All Asia was consecrated to Bacchus; and how much he daily devoured to satisfy his Luxury, Bochartus has to my hand set down. Now this power of Belus is here set down to be over the Assyrians, that is, over that tract of ground near and about Babylon, as appears not only from the 51 of jer. 44. where God says he will punish 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Bell in Babylon; Lib 16. Geograp. ad initium Bochart. Geogr. S lib. 2. c. 6. Herodotus in Clio. lib. 1. p. 78. but also from the agreement of Interpreters, Historians, and Geographers, Strabo, Herodotus, Pliny, who all make Assyria to be that very place now called Syria, having on the East of it India; on the West, the River Tigris; on the South, Media; on the North, Caucasus; which to distinguish the better, men divide it into Syria, Assyria, Leucosyria, Caelosyria: others into Syria of Palestine, and Syria of Antioch. This was the plain and pleasant Country, in which this Tyranny under Belus was acted, Rivet. Exercit. 65. Gen. 10. called Assur, not from Assur a man's name, as some will have it, but from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, blessed, because it was a Land commodious for life, as the Scripture testifies, A Land of Corn and Wine, a Land of Bread and Vineyards, a Land of Oil Olive, and of Honey, 2 King. 18.32. This was Assyriae, which was and is so noted to abound in delicates, that every thing of rarity was termed Assyrian; the Citron, a rare fruit called Malum Assyrium; the Rose of jerusalem Amomum, named Gramen Assyrium; the Drugs of which, choice Perfumes are composed, termed Assyrii Odores; the Garments of State, which Emperors and Princes wore of Purple and Scarlet, V●stes Assyriae; yea, the Learning of the then World, was limited to Assyria. And hence we read in Pliny of literae Assyriae tanquam ibi primum repertae; and high noted Orators that traded in pompous words were called Asiatici Oratores: Geogr. lib. 1. c. 19 part● primae, p. 273. yea, many have made Eden the Garden of God, to be in Assyria: so the Chaldee Paraphrase, on 27 Ezech. 23. as Bochartus well observes. Et Ninus, quam magnam Asiae partem. This Ninus was the Son of Belus, A●ùp 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Suidas in verbo. and Husband to Semiramis: Nimrod built Babylon, and Belus expatiated his Empire over all Syria: but Ninus was the notable Monarch of Asia; for his Empire was the first of the fifth Heathen periods of time; Ninus his Empire, Ogyges his flood, the Trojan War, Olympiads, Vrbs Condita; Lilius Gyraldus, lib. De Annis, & mensitus ad mitium, De emendat. temporum. these were the five. I know there are other Periods and Aeras in Sealiger and Gassendus; but the Ethnique Accounts was from these: and this establishment of Ninus', as it was a great one for Power and Territory according to Diodorus, so was it a durable one; Ninus primus omnium, veterem & quasi avitum gentium morem nova imperii cupiditate mutavit, primus bella finitimis intulit, ad Libyae terminos usque perdo●uit, domitis proxximis, cum accessione virium, fortior ad alios transiret, & proxima quaeque victoria, instrumentum sequentis erat, totius orientis populos subegit. Diod. Sic. lib. 2. Biblioth. è Cnidio. for the Assyrians commanded the upper Asia near 520 years, so fortunate was his small beginning, that after he had entered a League with Ariaeus King of the Arabs, in 17 years he subdued all Asia, which is the third part of the World, as big as Europe and Africa, and contains in it Mysia, Phrygia, Caria, Lysia and Lycaonia, the pleasantest and richest part of the World. This was the subject of Ninus his Empire; and of this, Babylon was the chief, Trogus, lib. 1. and Ninus the second City. Yet Ninus, as great a Conqueror as he was: was conquered by his cruel and false Wife Semiramis; to whom, he able to deny her nothing, granted an one days only Empire, which he intended only to honour her; but she treacherously misusing, caused her husband to be slain, and so usurped his Empire, and was not only vild and vain in it, Lilius Gyraldus, Hist. Deorum Syntagm. 17. but when she was to die, caused her effigies to be cut in stone near the Mountain Bagisthenes in Media, and appointed an hundred men as Priests, daily to wait upon it, and present it with gifts and offerings. Sic & Romani Orbis Imperium usurparunt. As the Eastern Monarchies, so the Latin was founded upon force. Man had made a Babel of his soul by confusion of that divine order and integrity that was in it, and God made all the designs of his ambition and Earthly eternity, indurable. The Monarchies of Nimrod, of Belus and of Ninus, were great and lasted long; but yet they had many vicissitudes and several Masters, and at last their greatness was eclipsed by the Western Monarchy under the Romans (which Plutarch says, Lib. De Fortuna Roman, p. 319. edit. Paris. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Came upon the stage of fortune, and appeared gloriously in the Wain of the Assyrian and Persian Empires; for so great and brave a Government it was, that (saith my Author) it may well be called the Sister of justice, and Daughter of Providence. Vrbs oritur, quis hinc hot ulli credere possit, Victorem terris impositura pedem. When Rome from small beginnings rose to give Laws to the World, who could it then believe. To write of Rome at large, has filled already the World with great Stories, Dionysius Halicarnass. Plutarch, Pliny, Tacitus, Livy, Suetonius, and all the Scriptores Romani, together with the exserpta out of them, Brissonius, Dempster, Lazius, and above all Lipsius have so largely and tightly done it, that to aim at any thing besides them, were a monstrous folly. As therefore I do decline all prolixity, and refer my Reader to the ingenuity of those originals; so I judge it fit for me shortly to write here of the Romans Empired, Lib. De Magnitudine Romana. to bring them into a proportion with the other instances of our Text-Master; Rome therefore of old, the Seat of the Roman Empire, was founded, according to Authors, by Romulus the first King of it; a man infamous for his birth, being spurious, the product of Mars and Ilia the Vestal Nun, Daughter of Numitor King of Albany, who left him (as Stories say) to the Nursery of a Wolf, which educated him in a bestial freity; the infamy of his birth and nurtriture, he willing to be relieved from, meditated some heroic work, in the merit of which, he might by common consent of men make some addition to himself; and confederating with his Brother Remus, Sigonius de fastis & triumphis Romanorum. annal Armachani è Fabio Pictore. Imaginem urbis magis quam urb●mfecerat. Florus, lib. 1. Messala Corvinus. Lib. De Augusti Progeny. built Rome, calling it after his own name. This was (I suppose) done a little before the eighth Olympiad, and according to computation about the year of the World, 3256, before Christ 748 years, Sigonius places it about the first year of the seventh Olympiad: when it was certainly built, I am not Chronologer good enough to state; hut that it was built, and that by Romulus, as aforesaid, I question not for the joint Authority it has to that purpose. When he had laid the Platform of it, and beautified it with all necessaries to the presence of a Regality. Primò co●stitutis sacris legum jura sanxit, fecit & seregiis insignibus augustiorem, circa se lictores instituit, asylum aperuit complendae urbis gratiâ Centum Senatores creavit Reipub. consilium; equestri Neptuno ludos finitimis gentibus indicavit. Thus Messala Corvinus tells us he began, which new model the neighbouring Nations gazing upon and becoming Spectators of the Recreations there instituted, gave occasion to the Roman Planters, to seize violently the Sabine Virgins, and them to wive, and on them to get a succession to their after-greatnesse. These Rapes dictated by necessity of State, brought Enemies upon the Romans, and the enraged Sabins, thus spoiled of their Daughters, resolved to give Romulus and his Subjects sour sauce to their sweet meat: Romulus defends himself and his acquisitions bravely; and Fortune (to speak in Roman language) so favoured new founded Rome, In juvenem eractus & virum e● o●ni plaga, quam Orbis am●it imme●sus, reportavi● laureae triumpbos; & in senium verge's & nomine solo aliquoties vincens, ad tranquilliora vitae deces●it. Ammianus Marcel. lib. 14. that all things answered the Grandeur of its Founders stupendious Project. And as the Infancy of Rome was venust, so was its Manhood notably strenuous. To it all people of Prowess and art resorted; in it they stayed; to its glory they contributed their attainments, and so it ampliated its renown, that all the world grew Rome, and Rome almost had no bounds beneath the Universe; this was the orient Giant, that run his Race into all Quarters, and the Helen that bewitched all Loves, the Lap into which all the lots of Conspicuity were concentred. There and there only was the City of Kings, the Paradise of learning, the office of honour, the Campus Martius of Manlyness; nothing was there wanting that could advance life to an Envy and endanger its Luxury: yea though it were nothing but a pile of violence, inhabited by the Desperadoes and Debauchers of all Nations, Florus lib. 3. c. 18. Sigonius lib. 2. De Nominitus Romanorum. Latins, Tuscans, Phrygians, Arcadians, which Florus says made one compact Roman Corporation: yet did they, upon the interest of common Concern, so cement and cooperate, that they fortified themselves against all incursions, subversions, or earthquakes, which the Magnetiqueness of their external success and increase might reasonably occasion them, and prevailed against all mankind to their Mancipation under them, which made the Writers of them not only call them, The People only worthy of the World's Empire, and of all the admiration of all both Gods and men, O Populum dignum Orbis Imperio, dignúmque omnium & admiratione hominum ac Deorum, Jornandes lib. De Regnorum & Temporum successi● but aggravate them with all imaginable Eulogick Hyperboles, The Treasury of all Lands, the common Castle of the earth, the head of Dominion and of the world, Salmuth in Pancirol. lib. 2. p. 5. the Centre and Academy of arts, the Sanctuary of justice, the Orb of eloquence; these were the Tributes the flatteries of men paid to rising Rome. Rome thus replete with a Miscellany of Nations and diversities of Constitutions, Vives in lib. 1. De Civitate Dei, c. 4. Alciat. ad legem 9●. lib. De verb. signific. p. 225. producing a ferocity of manners and conversation; Numa the second King appears, and as he to the ten Months instituted by Romulus, began from the Month of March, added january and February, which make our now twelve, so did he add to the glory of the Government and structure of the City and its appurtenances; and so did after him Ancus Marius: but prosperity made the people luxurious and prodigal, and there was a necessity of breathing out these peccancyes, lest for want of it, the Constitution kindles and flame to its exinanition. Corvinus Messala in Augusti progeny. Therefore in Tullus Hostilius his time to action they must, and did, first against the Albanians, than the Latins; and after once they were fledged, and had drawn their Neighbour's blood, their singers itched to be in arms, and since they could find none, resolved they were to make an enemy with whom to quarrel, which because Servius Tullius their King saw to be their temper, and necessary to his subsistence; he form his Subjects into Methods of War, and acquainted them with the dexterity of right encamping: yet as exact as he was in the skill of Soldiery, he lost his Government to Tarquin, and Tarquin, proud with his Prevalence, brought Regality not only out of date in Rome, but thence banished, where it first was most conspicuous. After him the Romans proved fortunate under every Government, and in the Parthian War had so much of divine benedictive Providence concurring them, Florus lib. 3. c. 10 that when the victory was ten to one upon the Parthians side, the Romans rallying afresh and refighting made it theirs, which caused one of their dying Enemies to cry out, Ite & bene valete Romani, God speed you, and much good may the Mastery of the world do ye O Romans, whose valour is such and victory so great, that ye can resist and beat down the Darts of the Parthians, Breviatii. lib. 1. so that Enemy. So true is that of Eutropius: that the memory and eloquence of man will hardly serve to commemorate and set forth the flourishing State of Rome, Condita est Roma velut altera Babylon, & velut prioris silia Babylonis, per quam p●ac●●t orbem debellare terrarum & in unam sociotatem Reipub, legumque perductum, longè lateque pacare. Sanctus Augustin, lib. 18. De Civit Dei, c. 22. Aelius Spattianus, in vita ejus, p. 118. edit. Sylburg. what vast Conquests they made, how renowned Laws they established, what a terrible name they transmitted far off, how rare Examples of Veracity, Fortitude, and generosity they were, Histories abound in. Hence was it, that as to be a Citizen of Rome, was to be noble; so to be a Senator, was supra quod now, which Adrian the Emperor insinuated in that his Speech upon the senatorizing of Titius, nihil se jam amplius habere, quod in se conferri possit. But Rome, as a piece of Elementary mutableness, Quae enim res alia furores civiles peperit quam nimia faelicitas. Florus, lib. 3. c. 12. stood not always thus fixed, and really enviable for her virtue and happiness. For as her Pride made her invade Neighbours; so her Conquests over them, made their vices and pleasures Victors over her quondam virtues; Syria and Asia they got, but by them they were effeminated, and the manners of the Age being inquinated with foreign vices, made Rome a Sink of Lubricity, not a Theatre of Masculine Puissance, and Heroic Bravery: for which the Poet, not untruly, reproached it. Flaccus, Ep. lib. 2. Seditione, dolis, scelere atque libidine & ira, Illiacoes intrà muros peccatur & extra. Sedition, Fraud, Lust, Wickedness, and Rage, Have Rome devoured, made it the Villains Cage. So Juvenal, satire. 13. Quae tam festa dies, ut cesset prodere furem, Perfidiam, frauds atque omni ex crimine lucrum Quaesitum est, partos gladio vel pyxide nummos. What day so sacred is, which cannot discover Theft, Perfidy, with Fraud, 'bout Rome to hover, In thee Gold is the Goddess men admire; They it by hook or crook resolve t' acquire, Thus is the Roman virtue duned i'th' mire. Yea so just occasion there was for this declamation against Rome's Apostasy, that the grave Philosophised Emperor Antoninus upbraids it, Is this (quoth he) Rome, in which in elder time, Hanccine esse Romam credis illam ● by priseiss temporibus & in aureo illo saeculo senes erant honestissimi, Juvenes optimè morati, exercitus disciplinae observantissime, & censores senatoresque justissimi? non est haec Roma, nullum habet Romae vestigium, nullum decus, nullam similitudinem. Epist. ad Pollionem. and in the Golden Age, there was upright old men, civilised Youth, valiant and well disciplined Soldiers, most just and wise Censors and Senators? Sure this that is now Rome, is but the Picture of that real Rome; for now ¶ Paterculus, lib. 2. the Citizens are from watchful, slothful; from men of agility, become vicious; from industrious, become a City of idle and inoccupyed men. And now the Roman name cripples and declines; all the East defects from them, and of the West they hold but a small part; their Wealth refunds itself into those quarters whence it effluxed, and every ambitious and popular party rends and tears a limb from her symmetrious body, and that figure which was the glory of all its Architects and Statuaries, becomes now disfigured by the Triumph of time, and the tyranny of change in her ruining voracity. So that as Nimred, Ninus, Belus, Tyrants all, had but a Temporal Consistency; no more had Rome in the grandeur of that position, wherein, as Queen of Nations, she gave Laws to the Continent. Quare dum filii Israel regem postulabant sicut tunc habuerunt gentes omnes; dominus inde offensus legem Regalem eis per Prophetam explanari mandavit, quae non aliud fuit quam placitum Regis eye prae-essentis, ut in primo Regum libro plenius edoceretur. 1 Sam. 8.11. This instance the Chancellor produces, to show that the Customs of the Nations had infected the people of God to symbolise with them, in desiring the government of a King, rather than that that God guided them by, when he says, He was their King, whom in their choice of a King, as the Nations had, they declined, and for which, the severity of their Kings should be a punishment; not that God disapproved Kingly Government, for that is his own Government over the World, and that which his Son our Lord Jesus is expressed by, Eusdem ego sicopinor atque id asserere non dubito, Deum immortalem non charttate, atque Reipubcura imperium Sauli dedisse, sed quoniam arrogantiam saevitramque ejus introspexerat comparatione deterrima gloriam Samueli quaesivisse, ut tali successore desideratior ille quandoque foret. Cunaeus, De Rep. Hebr. lib 1. c. 14, I have set my King upon my Holy Mountain; but because he knowing the hearts of Israel, set on it with a depreciation of him, made it therefore terrible to them, as a punishment of their disesteem of him. In these words therefore the Holy Ghost does exemplify their condition in the fruition of their desire. And though Lorinus, and other learned men largely discourse of the particulars of this their temper of affairs, as penal from God; yet a better and shorter account of it, can no where be produced, then from the Pen of ¶ The true Law of the Monarchies, p. 193 of his Works upon the 1 Sam. 8.15. King james of happy memory, who in his Discourse of the Law of Free Monarchy, treating on it, has comprised all that the words import, in this Breviary, The best and noblest of your blood, shall be compelled in slavish and servile Offices to serve him, and not content of his own Patrimony, will make up a Rent to his own use of your best Lands, Vineyards, Orchards, and store of Cattle; so as inverting the Law of Nature, and Office of a King, your persons, and the Persons of your posterity, together with your Lands, and all that ye possess, shall serve his private use and inordinate appetite: thus he. And th●s makes good our Texts Description of it to be placitum Regis eis prae●essentis. Habes nunc (ni fallòr) Princeps clarissime, formam exordii regnorum regaliter possessorum, quare quomodo regnum peliticè regulatum primum erupit, etiam jam propalare cenabor, ut cognitis amborum regnorum initiis causam diversitatis quam tu quaeris, inde elicere tibi sacillimum sit. This Epilogique Sentence has much of comprehensive smartness, and oratorious brevity in it: the Prince is gravely, and with due obeisance told what the Chancellor aimed at, and accordingly has performed in the preceding words, Habes nune Princepsclarissime formam exordii regnorum reg●liter possessorum; as if he had said, Great Sir, I have not boasted, of what I could not perform to your satisfaction; you have it (ni fal●or) as far I hope as satisfies you, or is discoverable by man, the original of high mettalled domination. Secondly, the Chancellor rationally promises solution as well as he can, how politic Government came in use, and the effects of it, and this as a piece of right to justice, that the Sentence may not be passed upon either, but after Audience and consideration of both, Quare quomodo regnum politicè regulatum, etc. as if the Chancellor had proceeded to say, Your Grace knows, that the fore-described absolute regality, was a fruit of popular fervour, which delighted in change and assimilation to the most received custom of men; and Sir, you are also to understand, that politic regal government, such as England's is, did not come into approbation by chance, as a byblow, with all the disparagements of ingloriousness upon it, but it did erumpere, as that which was expedient and necessary, to prevent both the Rulers disturbance, and occasion the ruled's peace: 'twas such a mixedness of temper for common good, as was equally in the issue of it compensative to King and People: for such a sense I conjecture our Chancellor to have, when he says of it erupit, which is as much as cum impetu exiit; erumpo being a word that argues and implies vehemence and importunity, not to be almost denied, like the breaking out of a Spring, which importunes passage, and where it finds, continueth it. And I suppose our quondam Kings, under whom it first appeared like indulgent Fathers, seeing their Subjects as dutiful Children, prostrate before them to beg the blessing of kindness and freedom from them, did in paternal commiseration and regal condescension, vouchsafe their desires: and thus they did erumpere gaudio propter concessum regimen politicum. For the Chancellor does not novum dogma propalare, not make the freedom and relaxation of our government to be a fruit of War, or (as it were) a trophy from the spoil of Princes, but he makes it an acquisition of favour, a reward of duty, a stimulation to obediential perseverance. And then lastly, he shows the reason why he does thus produce the governments in their respective nature and fruits, to wit, that his Reason might be satisfied, that Antiquity was herein found in the way of righteousness, and therefore to be honoured, and that as well King as People consented so to rule, and so to obey; and this takes off all the acrimony of People against their Prince, and all rage and severity of the Prince against his People; which a Commodus would never have consented to, for he laid aside the gravity of a Roman Senator, and appeared like a Fencer, using no companions, but such lewd Roisters; and the reason was, his design was, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. The grave men and all his Father's friends he meant to slay, that they might not see the wickedness he was to act, nor reproach him for such villainy, as became rather a Butcher then a Prince; but our Princes have abhorred such courses, and consented so to govern, Est in Monarchia Rex, aut consilio admissus, aut successione designatus; est verò in Tyran●ide Truculeietus Leo; in Monarchia proponitur virtus, in Tyrannide triumphat scelus; loges in Monarchia aperte loquun●t, at in Tyrannide oracula civitatis silent; in regno communi bono 〈◊〉, ac ist Tyrannide populus opprimitur. Casus Sphaer. Civit lib. 4. ●. 2. p. 217. and so to be obeyed, as the Law mentions and prescribes, declining all excesses, as equally dangerous. This their moderation therefore our Chancellor persuading him to follow, introduces the Discourse of Politic Government in the next Chapter, in those words. CHAP. XIII. Sanctus Augustinus in lib. 19 De Civitate Dei, c. 23. dicit quod populus est catus hominum, juris consensu & utilitatis communione sociatus. In Epist. ad Ta pam Clement. Octau. ante Tom. 4 Annal. SAint Augustine is one of the four Latin Fathers, whom Baronius calls occidentalis Ecclesiaeculmina, etc. The Spires of the Western Church, the Pillars of the Catholic Faith, the great Lights and Miracles of the World; a Bishop about the fourth Century of the Church, and one so learned and famous, that though he had be dirted his life and name with Immoralities, Heresies, and other Turpitudes, which not only he in his own Confessions laments and detests; but also Possidonius, Baronius, Erasmus, Vives, In vita ejus. and other Authors, do not spare him for: yet did the grace of God so effectually rescue him at last, that he grew the great Bulwark of Faith against the Goths, Donatists, Manichees, Pelagians, and all other Heretics, and deserved that testimony that Erasmus, that witty and oracularly learned man gives of him, Quid enim habet orbis Christianus hoc Scriptore, Episiola dedicat Oper. edit. Frobenii, ad Card. Fonsecam. vel magis aureum, vel augustius, etc. What (saith he) hath the whole World more valuable and magnificent than this Father, who wrote, and spoke not by rote, but as it were divinely inspired, aptly, and in a not to be confuted dialect, who had the excellency of all the Fathers concentred in him, as if the ample gifts of the Holy Spirit were in him above humane proportion, and as if his Soul were the Table on whom the grace of God would exemplify itself in the lively picture of an Evangelique Bishop every way complete: thus he. And not without reason, for God had given him great Wit, solid Judgement, experience of Converse, prospect of the vanity of the World; and having directed these by Conversion, to their right object, and by a preponderation of grace, made his accomplishments Gods, in the intent and devotion of his soul; so to use them, God brought him forth to a Masculine purpose, and placed him in the forefront of the battle of danger and opposition. Lib. 3. ●. ' I. contra Petilianum. In vita ejus. As a Champion of the Church he stood vigorously and successfully, writing so much, that Possidonius strains the truth to commend him, Scripsit plura quam quisquam legerit; but one wittily observes, Is decipi cum opinione credidit, qui omnia quae Augustinus scripsit, arbitratur se legisse. True it is, His tanta authoritas, ut nullius Scriptis post Evangelicam Historiam Tarsensis que Pauli, major hominum consensus accesserit. Sa bellic. lit. 1. c. 7. that much he wrote, and to excellent purpose, for so great a name gained he by his excellent Learning, Life, and Devotion, that his Writings, next to Holy Scripture, were reverenced and owned. And on this ground did the Church Saint him, not by Popish Canonization, for I think that was not in use then, but by a publication, and recognition of his sacred endowments, and the service he as an Instrument of God's glory in the Church, did. Now as the Author was an excellent person, so is the Book here quoted by our Chancellor a rare Book, both for the occasion, argument, and zeal of the Author, In Argumento Sancti Augustini ante lib. De Civit. Dei. in the composing and publishing of it; Roma Gothorum irruptione sub Alarico Gotho paganiblasphemare Deum caeperunt, etc. When Rome (saith he) was incommodated by the Goths under Alaric their King, and I saw and heard their blasphemies against God, and the magnification they uttered of Ethnique Fopperies; the zeal of God against them, In Vives Prafat. ante Commenta rios, made me vindicate the truth against them, and hereupon I wrote the Books of the City of God: they are his own words. On these Books, learned Vives, by the help of incomparable Erasmus, commentaried, but with as much discouragement as a painful Commentator could have from an ingrate age; but notwithstanding all that, he perfected his Work, & dedicated it to our H. 8. Out of these Books of the Father, to wit, l. 19 c. 23. our Chan, quot. is also c. 24. Populus est caetus multitudinis rationalis, reram quas d ligit concordi communione sociatus, which is almost in terminis our Texts here, Populus est caetus hominum juris consensu & utilitatis conjunctione sociatus; which sentence sets forth the subject, the rule, the end of Government and Order in all Societies. So then Societies are made up of men not beasts, for though number may be of beasts, Est quidem Respub. ordinata hominum multudo, Hoppotus ver. Jurisp. lib. 1. tit. 12. birds; and fishes; yet Society, arguing amicitialness, presupposes reason, which only men and Angels have. And as they are called caetus for the number, Civitatem appellandam esse censeo collectam hominum multitudinem ad jur● vivendum. Patricius lib. 1. tit. ●. De Instit. Reipublic. so hominum for the nature. This catus is a word of a large extent; for it not only imports ten in Company, as the Code has it: but any great number. The Common Law makes three unlawfully met together a Riot, or a Multitude punishable, and though Sir Edward Cook says, ● Instit. p. 257. sect. 431. that upon the Statute of 5 R. 2. 6. 7. the word Multitude must be ten or more, yet he adds, I could never read it restrained by the Common-Law to any certain number, and therefore since the Statutes 17 R. 2. c. 8. 13 H. 4. c. 7.2 H. 5. c. 8. 19 H. 7. c. 13. do none of them specify the number that shall positively make an unlawful multitude or assembly but leaves them to the exposition of time and practice, which interprets three or more a number within those Statutes, that Exposition is the Law of a multitudes consistency. By Caetus then is understood a number united having some capacity for action. And though Caetus in Authors has some times an ill acceptation as Suetonius uses it, Caetu extraneorum prohibuit silias. In August. c. 64: Quid enim necesse est tanquam meretricem in matronarum catum, sic valuptatem in virtutuus consilium adducere, Cic. lib. 2. De Finib. Qui caetum fecerit capitale sit, and Augustus forbade his Daughters to be in the Company of Strangers; yet it having a good sense also not only in Tully, but in our Text there is good use to be made of it, as it is directive to the Conjunction of Societies, who by meeting personally together, become one in affection and solder into an oneness of all common Conditions; hence the Greeks by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 express any Society either sacred, civil, martial, corporal, job. xuj. 7. job complains to God of his misery in these words, Thou hast made desolate ●all 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Congregationem meam; as if he had said, Thou O Lord hast withdrawn thy merciful indulgence from me, and dissolved the Polity and Contexture of my Nerves, Sinews, and Arteries, which carried vigorously about the motions and operations of nature, and now I am the subject of reproach and abhorrence, I am as it were nothing, all the venust figures of thy Impression on me are defaced and desolated, so might job be thought to say. Our Chancellor then out of St. Aug. understands Caetus in a good sense for a Company of men met together, not vagely to do mischief, but prudently to preserve themselves in a justifiable way, juris consensu, juris consensu, Certa ratione asque ordine Rempub. cons●itui. Hopperus de ver. Jurisp. lib. I. Tit. 62. Lib. 2. c, 6. De Jur. bell. & pac. not casually and by accident as birds and beasts do, but upon moral and durable Principles, by common agreement and Concord; and this either, cum totus coîit populus: or when part representing the whole accord and consent, and then facimus quod per alium facimus, says Grotius. And this consent of a Law for Regulation, and such a Law, as according to the common Principles of honesty and prudence, takes off the combination of men from all injurious intendments, because it supposes them so to love and practise charity and justice, that they will not as Enemies to mankind be praedatorious, but make the Law their Judge, and of their actions the Arbiter; Lib. 4. De Legib. which Plato declares the end of Law, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. To us the Law has this import, that under it the Citizens may be most happy and most friends one to another: Lib. De Sanctitat. apud Stobaeum serm. 41. so Dictogenes the Pythagorean, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, &c, The Law is the Precedent and Author of all things that tend to civil concord and virtue of conversation. For God has so riveted Principles of justice into man's mind, that as he knows to practise it is his duty, so to understand it is his delight, where corruption by a prevalency has not besotted him. And hence is the general suffrage of men for a Law, and zealous they are for the reverence and observation of it. Stobaeus serm. 41. Archytas the Pythagorean says, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, It ought to be that that Law and Government be accounted the best, that is the Marrow of all Forms and regulates every action by just Laws. Et utilitatis communione sociatus, this is the noble end of all society, love arising from the common fortune they resolve to partake in. Sin alas made a very great gap, between not only God and man, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Arist. lib. 4. De Repub. c. 11. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 etc. but between man and man, letting in such a Sea of vice and torrent of ataxicall Principles, and all those in depravation of the Image of God and the candour of humane nature; that did not virtue, ordinated by God to be the balm of cure to it, interpose, and express itself in civil offices and kind inclinations to mankind, and thence conquer the depraved rudeness, no reconciliation would possibly be, but that coming in as a Reconciler and good Angel, closes the breach and makes men agree to rule and obey to ends of common convenience. For as in the body-natural, the one head rules all the members, because the noble faculties of Regency are there seated, and the lower and less noble parts willingly submit to its guidance and Dominion; so in the state-body the noblest and best are fittest to rule and probablest to rule well, and one is the best to rule, because after the Model of God and the manner of mankind; Corporis hujus certum debere esse caput, & quidem divinum; quoniam homo natura sua non sui generis animantibus paret. (Nam non Oves ab Ovibus, sed à praestantiori natura Homme nempa reguniur) said 'em Principi Deo, cujus Vicarii, & quas● viva imago sunt. ●qui inter homines regnum obtinent, Nopperus lib. 1 De vera Jurisprudenti●. Tis. 12. and though I know many have carried on and kept up Government worthily among the Greeks and elsewhere; yea, and that under their Aristocracy common good has been promoted: yet all Experience tells us, that the least inconveniencies to common good arises from just and well-composed Monarchies, wherein Princes rule for God as God, justly and mercifully, and consider their Subjects as under them to order, not to destroy; to discipline in virtue not to precedent to evil. And who so considers the Inconstancies of people in the Roman's state, who after they rejected their Kings fell to Consuls, thence to Decem-virs, th●● to Consuls again, Tholoss. Syntag juris Civilis lib. 43. c. 34. p. 1010. after that to Tribunes of the people, those sometimes annual, then changed into Dictatours, from thence to short-lived Emperors; till at last they came to perpetual Emperors. Whosoever I say considers the versatility of the People in their influence on] Government, will have cause to bless God for God's Laws to rule them and good Princes to execute them. Nec tamen populus hujusmodi dum Acephalus, id est, sine capite, corpus vocari meretur. Quia ut in naturalibus, capite detruncato, residuum non corpus, sed truncum appellamus: sic & in politicis sine capite communitas, nullatenus corporatur. Here the Chancellor shows, that no Societies of men but have Superiority and Inferiority by common consent amongst them, and that from Precedent of God and Nature in the Constitution of the body of man, the little world after the Model and Polity of which the greater is made and to it conformed: now his argument is as a body, nothing can be said such to be, that wants a head on it, for than it is monstrous and deformed, ●●sus in Sphae●a Civitatis p. 8. l. 1. c. 1. ydead and invivid, a Block and Carcase not a perfect figure of life and lustre; so in Societies of men where some do not rule above others, and the others obey them, there can be no reasonable appellation of a Society, no expectation of joint and several advantage and peace resulting from the glory and guidance of the head. For as that rescinded from the body ceases its soulary influence and actuation, so the Societies of men not subservient to their head are full of confusion, and in no sort regular nor durably successful in any their actions, but as soon may a wise man hope to see a Post stir without help of Lifters, as these politicly transact without an head. The head is the seat of life, and the region of the spirits, and nature of man; indeed the heart first lives, Hist. Animal. lib. 2. c. 10. but when life is in the heart, than it distributes its energy to the whole mass of Nature gradually, for the Cistern of the spirits, into which they all flow, and where they concentre, Lib. 2. c. 6. is the head: so that though the people be first in order of time, yet the Ruler is in order of Dignity, the chiefest and best part of all Societies; for he is the living Law, and makes them he rules either happy or miserable, as his virtues or vices are: And therefore, as, a Ruler cannot be without his People, so not a People without a Ruler, they are relatas each to other, and do necessarily imply each other, and are but nuda nomina in their separation. For as in the consideration of the World, there is God the Creator, Man his Creature, the World his Work; so in the Commonwealth, there is (saith Hopper) quoth praest caput, Lib. De ver. Jurisprud. c. 1●. the head that rules, the foot that obeys; and that which is a partaker of both Rule and Subjection, the community and society of the People: So that as the end of life is not obtained, but by the heads being upon the body; so not the end of Government, but by the safety and proper fixation of the Prince in his Prerogative and Seat of Rule. Which all wise people, in their respective Governments, have ever in such a degree promoted, as was approved necessary to their subsistence and peace: and the people of God so far propagated, that they told David plainly, that his security was so important to them, that hazard his Royal Person against rude Philistims (who would bend the heat of the battle against him as King of Israel) he should not; and they give the reason, Thou art worth ten thousand of us, that is, thou puts a spirit into all of us, Nam nunc tu potes roborare si●ut nos decem milia Chald. Paraphr. who without thee should signify nothing: and whatever betid us, thy courage, wisdom, and influence, will either bring us off when in danger, by sending a convenient and timely rescue, or revenge our deaths and losses, by a brave return of resolution in revenge of injuries. Oh! but why so? one worth ten thousand: Yes, thou art the light of Israel, and one Sun is more available, then millions of little farthing lights: Thou, O King, art a good of communicativeness, all our darkness is brightened, our dulness sharpened, our disorder regulated, our diffusions recollected and united in thee: therefore we are bound in love to ourselves, to secure thee as the fountain of all our good, and the life of all our peace. For though it is agreed on all hands, that People were before Princes, and Families before Kingdoms, (for Government was in Families from the Creation to the Flood) and from Families to Divisions and Neighbourhoods, Lipsius, 2 Politic. c. 1. Monit. ●. p 207. Casus Sphaera Civitat. lib. 1. c. 1. p 8. King James' true Law of Free Monarchies, p. 207. thence to towns, thence to Cities, and thence many Towns and Cities being united made Commonwealths; yet Princes, the most excellent of them, being set over them, and recognised by Act of State, no reassumption of the Primitive Power, and liberty of People lies, any more, than it lies in the power of a Woman once married, to dissolve the Marriage Bond; for though it were at her choice, to consent, or not, while she was sui juris; yet having once consented to the act of Marriage, she becomes her Husbands, and he has power of her, and all her single liberty is determined. This then considered, the Chancellor has done wisely to consider Bodies Politic by Bodies Natural, as God in the Fabrication of man made him the Epitome and little Model of the World, so our Chancellor makes the head in the body of man the thing by which he sets forth the state of Kingdoms, and their bodies governments. In the body though there be two feet, two hands, two arms, two ears, two eyes, two sides, yet is there but one head: So in the Commonwealth, though there be many ruled, yet but one alone rules; which one is called emphatically a Head, because the Head is sacred, Sacrum caput (saith Varro) à capiendo, quia inde capiunt originem sensus omnes, etc. all the senses internal, external, are there lodged, as in the noblest part of the body. Hence is it, that not only Christ is called in Scripture, Head of the Church; and the man the head of the woman: Phavorinus, Lib. De excellencia hominis, partis primae, c. 7 p. ●9, etc. Omne quod est perfectum, vocari caput. J. C. but every thing of perfection and excellency is set forth by the head. Gergitius, whom Pha●orinus calls no mean Author, says, that Rome was of old called Cephaleon, betokening her Empire to be over all the World, and the chief place in her was called the Capitol; ye●, all safety was expressed by the heads safety, if that were out of danger, the body could not be unhappy; which was one reason, why the Egyptians venerated the Head; and Paulus, the famous Civilian, has published for the honour of the head, Locus ille in quo humanum inhumatur caput, religiosus efficitur, etiam absque aliis corporis partibus. Blemmyis traduntur ca●ita abesse, ore & oculis pectori assi●●s. Plin. Na. Hist. lib. 5. c. 8. Although therefore Monsters in Africa may have their mouths and eyes in their breasts, yet most of the World knows no place for them but the head, and that on the shoulders of the people, who with gladness bear it up, and are made happy by their support of it: for Princes are to States, as Heads are to Bodies, Beauty, Life, Regulation, which three make that one Divine Harmony, which the Scripture calls, under the name of charity, the Bond of Perfection. First, In unaqua ●ue fancy similir●do magnifi●eti●, a 〈◊〉, pro●itatis, 〈◊〉 ignav●ae 〈◊〉 ac vitiorum omnium extat. Plin. Senior. lib. 11. Beauty, that's conveyed to the body by the head, in which the face, the eyes, the nose, the seat of all the senses, both soulary and bodily, are. Hence is it, that Philosophers say, vultus animi Index; for all the resemblances of virtues and vice are hereby made known: nor is it often seen that men are better or worse; but mostly that (to wise men) they seem to be; which Socrates justified Zopyrus the Phisiognomer in, when he censured him for a bad person, and was derided by them that stood by and knew Socrates his worth. Oh, says Socrates, he rightly judged, for such as he described me, I had been, had not Philosophy reform me. So may all men say; such we are as we seem, unless we are other by miracle, which none can tell but the author of them: when therefore the head is separated from the body, all the beauty ceases, all the prerogative of man above other Creatures expires; a Carcase he is, and no more like what he was, Lib. ●. De pa●●● Animal. c. 10. p. 1014. than a Truncheon is to a Sceptre (though Aristotle tells us of jupiter Hoplosms Priest, that spoke after his head was cut off) yet a rude inform contemptible thing it is, passive under every insolency, attractive of no respect, hardly worthy of civil Ceremonies. So is it in the State, if the head be from the body, there is nothing but deformity and tyrannous monstrosity, the feet and hands will rule, who are Masters of misrule, and good for nothing, but aut humiliter servire, aut superbe dominari. And woe be to that Land where the Government is headless. The Holy Ghost records it for an ill time in Israel, when every man did that which was right in his own eyes. Hoc dicit Scriptura quasi super hoc ingemiscit, Fet. Martyr, in 17 judic. c. 6. 18 v. 1. ●. 10 v. 1. c. 21 v. last. saith Reverend Bishop Andrews; and Peter Martyr is positive, that nothing is more pernicious to humane society, than lawlessness, when the itch of popular levity, and the scurvy of their insolent success, makes them trample down Laws, and rebel against the Lawmaker. God sets it down so often, There was no King in Israel, then did every man that which was right in his own eyes, as the great aggravation of the people's penal infelicity. God had removed their Governors, Cum ●●bitis mutationem Reipublicae, Deus non ●lect●●ur; nam Rex semel inauguratus vi●●tur esse loco Dei, immo appellatur Christus Domini. P. Martyr. in 1 Sam. ●. 18. and now they by their sins, being without the staff of beauty, God for their sins broke the staff of bands; for a Magistrate is the band that holds all together. God gave them Magistrates, and those they murmured under, and God took away their Governors, and with them the lustre of their government. So fares it often with brave Aurelians, though for their good ruling, Aurel. Victor Epitome. Hist. August, Sanctus Thomas, Lib. De Regim. Principum, c. ●. R●tilius Benzonius in. Psal. 16. Quast. 4. Prop. 2. p. 200. they deserve inter divos referri; yet they feel, as he did, the force of treachery and treason in their deaths: So that Kings are as Heads, beauties to their Politic Bodies, and 'tis as comely that one should rule, and the rest obey in the body politic, as that the head in the body natural should preside over the rest of the members, and they observe its rule, and submit to it. So the Text is out of Aristotle, 1 Politic. Quandocunque ex plurimis constituitur unum, inter illa unum trit regens, & alia erunt recta. For as Music is made up of deep Bases, shrill Trebles, and grave Means; so is beauty in government composed of those symmetrious correspondencies that are between Power and Obedience. Secondly, the head in the natural body is regimen, the directive part; for though it be lesser than the trunk, Hist. Animal. lib. 1. c. 15. p. 773. edit, Paris. or lower parts; yet 'tis in figure and nature correspondent to the sublime part of the World, the Heavens; Because man is made to be Lord of the World, God has given him senses suitable to his dignity, and lodged them in a repertory sublime and secure. In the head is the soul with all her faculties, if materially any where, or rather circumscriptively, which I do not say; but I mean there; if any where the soul and her faculties be, 'tis in the brain lodged in the head; there are the senses, which subserve the reason, and all the distributions of it. And hence, because the Court of all the noble Constellations is there, it rules, for that government becomes it best: so in the body politic, the Prince, as the caput regni & legum, does the offices of the head to the community, Probi mors satis perdidit; omnia pro●e passa est, quae patitur in un● homine mortalitas. Flau. Vopisc. in Caro Numeriano, p. 299. he directs what's to be executed, and what not; how, in what proportion, when; he prospects what's good and evil, and is the Author of both, according as his example inclines to either; which Plutarcg apprehending aright, admonished Trajan of, notably; and that not only as he loved him, but also as his own credit was concerned in the goodness and prudent demeanour of his Pupil; Tuae itaque virtuti congratulor, etc. I congratulate thy virtue, its good fortune and mine too, if thou showest thyself worthy the Institution I have given thee; otherwise, sure thou wilt be the subject of detraction, Rualdus in vita Plutarchi cap. 15. and involve me in the censure with thyself; for as Rome will not applaud a slothful Prince, so will not they forbear reproaching me as thy remiss Master, who did not timelyly pluck up the roots of vices, whence such weeds now spring; but by sparing them in thee, am accessary to the ill effects of them. Thus wife Plutarch, other words, but in analogy of sense to those of our Lord to his Disciples, Ye are the salt of the World, have salt in yourselves, that ye may season others; for if salt has lost its savour, it is good for nothing: ye are the light of the World, let your light so shine before me●, that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in Heaven. Lights are not to be put under a bushel, but upon a hill, that all may see by them: so are Princes to be examples of good, and directors of others to be good; heads are parts of government, instruction, and conduct, as well as beauty; so is the Text, Quare populum se in regnum aliunde corpus politicum erigere volentem semper oportet ●num praficere tetius corporis illius regitivum, quem Regem nominare solitam est. Thirdly, as the Head in the Body Natural is the life of it; and separate that from the Trunk, and it becomes a Log, terra inutile pondus; so is it in the Body Politic, the King is head, all the life and lustre of the Commonwealth is in him and from him. Hence the Hebrews called Kings by names indicative of the good Offices they do to people; they called him by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, so the King of Tyre is called Exech. xxviii. 14. Thou art the anointed Cherub that covereth, Quod in morem Cherub alas suas extendat longè & ditionem proferat, saith a Gloss on it. And by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a word denoting a King lawfully reigning and not a Tyrant, Prov. xxiv. 21. 2 Kings xi. 12, and thus God declares Christ is set by him Psal. two. 6. yea as the greeks called those that ruled well 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Gyrald De Diis Gent. Syntagm. 11. Hopperus lib 7. De vera Jurisp. Tit. 9 Zuinger Theatr. Volum. 14. lib. 2. p. 2065., 2067. & seq. Bonfinius lib. 3. c. 4. and the Latins Deos tutelares, so did they give almost divine Honours to them. And the Persians to show the benefit Kings brought to their Governments by the peace and order of their Reigns, made a Law, that upon the death of every King there should be five days inter-regnum, by the disorders of which they saw their debt to their Prince, who brought a redress of those Mischiefs, which sadly thought upon, makes all wise men of Michael Orsagh the Palatine of Hungary's mind, who, when the Peers of Hungary would depose Mathias, opposed them with this ever in his mouth from his loyal heart, Quemcunque sacra corona coronari videris, etiamsi bos sit, adorato, & pro sacrosancto Rege dicito & observato. To separate those then whom God has joined together, Prince and People, is therefore treasonous; because tending to the Destruction of both. For though the people are the Embryo whence God enlivens and makes powerful the King, yet they are not any thing but cyphers and Embrio's, dead lumps, without the soulary influence of him, Ex populo erumpit regnum, Benzonius in Psal. 86. Q●oest. 6. p. 315. 316. & seq. quod corpus extat mysticum uno homine ut capite gubernatum. And that Monarchy is the most ancient and just, the most peaceful and durable, Lipsius' 2. Politic. c. 1. p. 207. & deinceps. the most safe and communicative Government, all Politicians agree; so true is that of King james, The proper office of a King towards his Subjects agrees very well with the office of the head towards the body and all Members thereof. Johannes Casus in Sphaera Civit. Lib. 3. c. 7. p. 180, 181. For from the head, The true Law of free Monarches, p. 204. Of his Works in fol. being the Seat of judgement, proceedeth the care and foresight of guiding and preventing all evil that may come to the body or any part thereof. The head cares for the body, so doth the King for his people; as the discourse and direction flows from the head, and the execution accordingly thereunto belongs to the rest of the Members, every one according to their Office, etc. Even so is it betwixt the Prince and his People; and as there is ever hope of curing any deceased Member by the direction of the head as long as it is whole; but by the contrary if it be troubled, all the Members are partakers of that pain, so is it between the Prince and his People: So that King. Et sicut in naturali corpore, ùt dicit Philosophus, cor est primym vivens, habens in se sanguinem, quem emittit in omnia ejus membra, unde illa vegetantur & vivunt: sic in corpore politico, intentio populi primum vividum est, habens in se sanguinem, videlicet provisionem politicam utilitatis populi illius, quam in caput & in omnia membra ejusdem corporis, ipsa transmittit, quo corpus illud alitur & vegetatur. Still the Chancellor follows the Parallel according to the position of Aristotle, making the head, Lib. 4. Physie. De Gener. Animal. p. 276. Tom. 2. De Excellentia hominis, Partis prima, c. 12. p. 48. Lib. 2. c. 6. De Gener. Animal. lib. De Respir. c. 3. Lib. 3. c. 4. De part. Animal. though the first in place and dignity; yet, not so in the order of nature. For notwithstanding that Gassendus tells us of some that held the head was first generated; Phavorinus is for the Liver first, the heart next, and the brain after, Gassendus resolves nothing peremptorily, that it is, he knows, but the order he is not positive in; but the Philosopher is thorough paced, that the heart is the first and last of life in man, and his reason is, because the life of every thing is in the blood, and the blood in the veins, and the heart being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Principle of the veins; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and the Lord of the senses. The heart from which the activity of life flows, must according to him be the first and last: but the dispute of this will be needless, all that is alleged by it, is, that the life and vigour of the head is by the assistance of the heart. As in the body-naturall, so politic, head and heart must go together to make regular and noble life in both, and as the head will be dull and inactive without the heart; so the heart faint and overwhelmed without the distribution of its self by the head into other Members: so, that though the similitude may in most things hold true, Regia potestas caterorumque Principum civiles authoritas non hominum est inventum; sed ab ipso Deo per Legem naturalem, qua sua semp●ernae Legis participatio est, sanctissima fuit ordenatio Covarruvias practic. quaestio. lib. 1. c 1. Conclus. 6 p 420. yet is there somewhat of prudence to be used in the condiment of what's truth in it. For though this that our Text-Master calls Intentio populi, may ex natura sua be the external Rise of power; yet ex jure naturae, multitudes may transferr it, Benzonius in Psal. 86. quaest. 4. Propos. 2. p. 199. and having transferred it according to the Law of nature for the improvement of order and civil convenience, it becomes by humane Laws and Customs recognized and irrevocably fixed, and as the power is of God, so the exercise of it is by and under God only; and Kings that use it are not accountable to (Popes as Benzonius will have the Ceremony of an Emperors receving the sword from the Altar to import, * Ad significandum illo debere uti ad nutum Pontificis qui altaris est Dominus Quaest 3. p. 24●. That he should use it at the pleasure of the Pope, ¶ Si Principes exinutu sulditorum & adhue singularium quorumcunque penderent potestate; ●ertè non Reges, sid insaeli●issima esse●e mancip●a, nec Monarchia sed Democratia ofset, pejor regno Spartarum. Tholossanus. sin tag. jurls' univers. lib. 6. c. 20. p. 140 Tit. 15. Lord of the Altar, under the punishment of deprivation: no nor to people in the greatest representative and most august sense of them;) for still ●hey being but Subjects are not Judges of their betters, nor can make the Law but must be subject to it, as legally impressed by the King to be the rule of all actions. For though true it may be allowed to be, that the particular forms of Government were of old, and in the first times by God indulged men to order as they saw most convenient, yet did God in the Law of nature (his mind made known to mankind) promulge Government to be safest in the best men who were appointed thereto, and who from being in person and mind excellent, Philo lib. De Creatione Principis p. 713. and of great deserts from the Community they governed, had the Government by general Suffrage settled upon them and their descendants, the credulity of the people probably persuading them to believe their issue in a line of successive endowments, would rule suitable to those their excellent Sires, which collation of power by the act and deed of the temporary Possessors of it in the name of themselves and their Successors recognized by the acts of succeeding generations, makes the head absolute, and the intention of the people but precary to the head's ratification. For the head once placed, and furnished with perquisites to its proportion; the intention of the people is no efficient cause of liberty, Sacramentum five intention ministri non conficitur, Bellarminus lib. 3. c 8. De Justific. p. 264. as the Church of Rome makes the intention of the Priest of the Essence of the Sacrament; but declares them to have had thoughts of public good in their consent of settlement of Government on one, to prevent many Competitors, and in a line of descent to anticipate uncertainty; yea and may be well thought to produce kind intercourses of friendlyness between King and people, the King being civilly (with reverence I write it) obliged to let them be free from the edge and sanguinary sharpness of his power, who had both presented him the sword of his rule and sharpened it by an edge put on it by themselves; and by which they are outed of all claim to reassumption, power of repulsing, or judgement of maladministration. This then, that is here called politica provisio, is not referrable to any terms or compact antecedaneous as some may suppose; but the security which Kings do give to God and their people by their Coronation Oath, which having respect to the national Laws as extracts from the Law of Nature and Nations, requires that Princes exalt justice as the reason of their Institution and dignification; that as the Subjects must obey in and for the Lord, so the King should command according to and in the Lord, that is, things just and lawful; of which though he be the only Judge on earth, that is, by matter of Record and in his judicial Courts: yet is the Judgement of God superior to it, which always is according to truth. Lib. De Creatione Principis, p. 725. The Consideration of which has softened Princes as I said before, to take 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. as Philo's words are, The kingly middle way between both extremes; and to reason and resolve with themselves as Moses brings in the King he instructs in the Law to this purpose, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. When other Kings use their Sceptres for terror making their Wills the Law, this Directory from the Law shall be my Will; in this Diadem I will rejoice, this shall make me victorious and virtuous, a follower of the great justicer of Heaven; By this I shall learn the Rule of equality by which I shall keep myself from pride and insolence, which God resists, and by this shall I procure the love, prayers, and fidelities of my people, and by this shall I show myself a Conformist to the divine Law, which enjoines the mean as that which is equally distant from both extremes, thus Philo. For as Philo says, Though there be a Principality in every thing; Pag. 728 the Lord in the Village, the Master in the House, the Physician among his Patients, the Commander among his Soldiers, the Master of the Ship among his Mariners:: yet none of these do act so to the rigour, but that their underlings are happy for the most part under them, God restraining the nature of men in power, and giving some qualities to Persons under power to be come gracious with power, and so to mollify and incline it to goodness: so it is in Princes, though they can do by the height of their power what they please, yet they considering themselves Parents and Husbands to their People, treat them with all kindness and conscience, as parts and Members of their mystical body; and so the power and 〈◊〉 that they have by the Law to which their people's assent is given, enables them to be what Princes ought to be, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Aristot. Hist. Animal, lib. 2. c. 17. just and merciful. And therefore what the Philosopher observes concerning the position of the heart in man's body, wherein only it inclines to the left side, whereas in all other Creatures it is placed in the middle, that I apply to Kings, the hearts as well as head of Commonwealths; because the living Laws, as they are to have justice on the right side so mercy the affections of tender-heartedness on the left-side, that they may as well know how to indulge their people's freedom, as to heighten their own Prerogative; and then there will be a pleasing and orderly Circulation, no part of the body will consume by the aggrandization of the other, but all motions will be orderly, and a just distribution be to all parts; and this the Text-Master calls artlyly, by alitur & vegetatur. Lexvero sub qua caetus hominum populus efficitur nervorum, corporis physici tenet rationem. As he had resembled the King to the Head, and the intention of the People to the Heart: so now he does the Laws to the Nerves, which are a part of the Body near allied to the Heart, as partaking of the strength that it enables it with to all purposes of activity and motion; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Hist. Animal. l. 3. c. 5. L●b. 2. Gener. Animal. c. 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Lib. De Spiritu, c. 5. ¶ Metereolog. lib. 2. c. 8. and generally 'tis held to be commaterial with the bones, and arising from the same origin therewith. For though Nerves receive no spirits as Arteries do, yet are they extendable, which Arteries are not: therefore because the motion of the spirits, is according to the convulsion and distension of the Nerves, it makes good, that the nerves are of great consequence to the vigour and manly performance of any action of life; yea. the later Anatomists, that make the nerves to arise from the brain, do not thereby lessen the vigour and consequence of the nerves. Hence is it, that in Authors the nerves are counted the compago corporis, that keeps and girds all together. So Quintilian tells us of Astringi ussa suis nervis debent; In Prooemio, lib. 1. 18. 2 De Nat. deorum, 8. 4. Pro lege Manilia Philip. 5. and Tully in those words, Nervis & os sibus dii non continentur, intends to attribute to the nerves much of strength, as well as to the bones. Yea, as sine nervis esse is a phrase for debility; so to be nervous, is taken to be valid and strong: so Soldiers, Navies, and Tributes to support them, are called Nervi Reipub. by Tully, and Frangere nervos ●● ment●s & corporis, is by Quintilian expressed to undo a man's self. By which and such like instances it appears, that the nerves are of the strength of the body, and so are Laws the strength of Polities. Take them away, and multitudes of men are numerus, non populus; for 'tis the Law that brings the plebs and rabble-rout into order, and entitles them to the honour of being a people. For Lex à ligando, because as the Iron Band, which the Ancient called a Nerve, kept the prisoner to the punishment he was adjudged to; so the Law binds every man to the peace and to consist in his station: it's that which directs, protects, compensateth, ascertains every man and thing. And therefore, though it may be extended and made to serve every ingenuous and politic purpose; yet take heed men must of abusing the Law, Reg. jur. Caterum in omni corpore civili, quemadmodum in humano, & caput & membra sunt. & quaedam alic quibus illa colliguntur, veluti nervi, quibus membra singula, moventar, & m●nus proprium exequantur, & quemadmadum illi â cerebro, & capite manantes per iotum corpus diffanduntur, sic etiam in corpore●ivili à bene disposito capite robur in societatem subjectam permeat, & status ejus fit legitimus, qui nervus disciplina dicitur. Tholoss. Syntag. Juris, lib. 3. c. 2. art. 2. lest it be a swift witness against them, Et meritò juris beneficium amittit, qui contra jus aliquid volenter & violenter facit. And therefore the Chancellor has aptly compared the Law to Nerves; for as Nerves are of the strength of the natural body, so are Laws of the politic body; as nerves are connected with the heart or brain, so are Laws the fruits of the love, and wisdom of Princes and their wise Counsel; as nerves are adjuments to corporal activity, so are Laws the hinges on which politic bodies act and move, to what they wisely & worthily incline to; yea all the progress and augmentation that virtue hath, is from the Laws: so saith the Text, Sicut per nervos compago corporis solidatur, etc. Et ut non potest caput corporis physici, nervos suos commutare, neque membris suis proprias vires & propria sanguinis alimenta denegare, nec Rex qui caput corporis politici est, mutare potest leges corporis illius, nec ejusdem populi substantias proprias subtrahere, reclamantibus eis aut invitis. Here the Chancellor proceeds to assimilate the King to the head of man, as before in what the head could; so now in what it cannot, quâ such, do: For as in the Apologue of Menenius Agrippa, wherein the members of the body conspired against the belly, till at last they were all by the bellies emptiness debilitated, Zonar. Annal. Tom. 1. p. 22. and not able to do their proper offices; so in the practice of experienced things it is seen, that where the Subjects rebelliously rise against their Sovereign, all is going to ruin. To prevent which, the safest way is to keep within the line and tether of the Law, which is the wise Arbiter under God of all things that come under question: God has placed the head over the body, but it is to act according to the Law of its nature, for the good of the body. The head, while found, will part with no member willingly, command no member contrary to the Law, and order of its position. Hitherto shalt thou go, and no further, is said to the Head as well as to the Waves; and so is it in the Body mystical, the Prince is the Head, solo deo minor; he can do nothing, but what he justly and legally may do, because he is a Father of compassion, Haec est voluntas Regis, viz. per just●ciarios suos & per legem. 2 R 3. ●ol. 11. Statute 9 R. 2. c. 1. Sir Cook● Instit. p. 146. and a husband of dearness, as well as a Head of Sovereignty; and all these importing interest and tenderness, fix the non potest (against all contradictions to these) beyond remove. See the Notes on the 9th Chapter, concerning what's pertinent to this purpose. Habes ex hoc jam Princeps, instituti omnis politici Regni formam, ex qua metiri poteris, potestatem quam Rex ejus in leges ipsius, aut subditos valeat exercere. In this our Chancellor makes a conclusion from the precedent matter, to wit, that politic Governments, were by prudence contrived to respect public good, ●nd general convenience; and that as people intended to reverence, obey, and secure their Princes, as Defender of the Government, and Laws of his Government; so Princes intended and looked upon themselves bound those to defend and against them in any ordinary case not to rule. For that the King has power of his Laws, and of his Subjects, is most true; but the line and proportion of his so exercising this power on either, is laid out by the Law of his Government, Viri boni & sapientis est parere ra tioni, & ad eam se accommodare, haud aliter atque prudens nauta ad maris ac venti tempestates se accommodas. Hopperus, De ver. Jurisp. lib. 4. Tit. 5. Delegum mutatione. to the observation whereof he is Religiously sworn. And therefore when in (a) Instit. p. 559. 34 H. 6. the King did make another Sheriff in Lincolnshire, than he that was chosen according to Statute, our Chancellor, and his Brother Chief-I●stice, in the name of the judges, said, that the King did an error. For since every rational action tends to some end, and is so concerned to act, as tends to the scope of its intention; the desires of people consented to by Princes in favour to Laws, as the method of administering power, are of the very being of the people's felicity and comfort: for in the Statute of 25 H. 8. c. 21. these words are, That this your Grace's Realm recognising no Superior under God, but only your Grace, hath been, and is free from subjection to any man's Laws, but only to such as have been devised, made, and ordained within this Realm for the wealth of the same, or to such other as by sufferance of your Grace, and your Progenitors, the People of this your Realm have taken at their free liberty, by their own consent, to be used amongst them, and have bound themselves by long use and custom to the observance of the same. Which Princes considering, do not endeavour by any means to anticipate, defeat, or impair, by either using their Power and Prerogative, as Anarcharsis said the Greeks did their money, Plutarch, lib. De profect. virtutis, p. 78. edit. Paris. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, only to count it, and make themselves great by it; but to show themselves willing and able to promote their Subjects goods, and to protect them in their honest and just endeavours; which Severus dying, asserted himself to have done worthily; In turbatam Rempubls. ubique accepi, etc. I did (quoth he) enter on my Government, when it was disturbed and in confusion, Spartianus in Severo. and I now leave it settled at home and quiet, even in Britain, though I am old and lame, incapable of action; yet the same of what I have done, shall preserve my Empire firm to my Successors, if they be good; but if they be dissolute and negligent, than they will find it not lasting to them: for they who found the benefit of my care and circumspect Government, will, when they see my Successors not such, be desirous to change, in hope to find such a Governor as I was, who made it wholly my design to have while I lived, and leave when I departed, a happy People. Which never can be done, unless Laws be considered, as Tully delivers them; Not only as the Decrees of Princes; Non populorum jussis, non principum decretis nec sententiis judicum constitui, sed naturae norma. Hanc video sapientissimorum suisse sententiam, legem neque hominum ingeniis excogitatam. nec scitum aliquid esse populorum, sed aternum quiddam, quod universum mundum Regeret, imperandi prohibe●dique sapientia, lib. 1. De Legibus. not as the Injunctions of People; not as the judgements of the judges; but also as part of the Law of Nature, and the wisdom of God conveyed to them by the experience of wise men in all times and places, who stirred by an extraordinary spirit, framed them to the purpose of order and civility. And if thus Laws be venerated, and Lawmakers provide, that Laws be not so many in number, as good in nature; not dark and mysterious, but plain and perspicuous; nor sharp and vexatious, Hoppetus, De ver. Jurisp. lib. 4. tit. 3. but just and prudent; then will they deserve to be the measure of power, and no Prince will desire to rule other then by them, Praetor quoque jus reddere dicitur, etiam cum imque decernit, relatione scilicet facta, non ad id quod ita Praetor fecit, sed ad illud quod Praetorem facere convenit. Digest. lib. 1. tit. 1. De Orig. Juris. p. 61. è Paulo, lib. 14. ad Sabinum. who will deserve the name of good and wise. And other than such, no Prince as such duly considered, aught to be thought, because he being God's Vicar, is presumed to be just as his principal is, and as the mortal Representative of the Immortal God he ought to appear accomplished. Adtutelam namque legis subditorum, ac eorum corporum & honorum, Rex hujusmodi erectus est; & adhanc, potestatem à populo effluxam ipse habet. This passage has primarily regard to the first Ages, and to the contextures of politic Governments in them; in the language whereof, as our Text-Master, so his humble Commentator sometimes phrases things, the better to set forth the lustre and scope of this Argument; Cic. pro Dejotaro Ad Attic. lib. ●. Livius, lib. 2. ●●●rbe 276. which here considers, 1. The person of the Magistrate by his name Rex, by his dignity and conspicuity erectus, which is a term of magnification, joined in Tully with Celsus, Liber, Magnus, which surely was typified in Saul, who is said to be higher by the head and shoulders than all the people, not only corporally, but officially. 2. Tutela, jus & potestas in capite libero constituta, ad tuendum cum qut per aetatem sua sponte se defendere nequit. Paulus, lib. 1. De Tutolis. By the end of his title and advancement, that's said to be ad tutelam, Kings are not only honours and ornaments, but Fathers and Defenders, in (a) Lib. 1. De Rustic. c. 14. Varro's words, Tutelae & septa, and the people do as Tully expresses it, latere in tutela ac praesidio regis. 3. By what is the subject matter of this their beneficence to the public; tutela cor ū corpor un honor un legis subditoun, not only of the Law as the rule, and of the subjects, as the persons to be ruled by it, which is a truth; but legis subditorum, so conjoined, and so specified, pointing to them as the antique origin of the forms of power, and as they are the persons that do assist the King in the carrying on the effectuality of power, whereupon the Text says, Vt enim tutela, sic procuratio Reipubls. ad eorum utilitatem, qui commisii sunt non ad eorum, qui●us commissa est, gerenda est. 2. O●● fie. 121. Interest Reipubls. ut pax in regno conservetur, & quaecunque paci adversentur, provide dealinentur maxima juris, 2 Instit. p. 158.32 H. ●. c. 9 à populo effluxam habet; and then lastly the modus in quo, this tuition of the Law & Subjects appears, 'tis in keeping the peace, and punishing the breach of it in the harm of their persons & goods, the felony of which is contra coronam & dignitatem domini regis. These things are considerable in the Text; but because I have treated of the severalties of them heretofore, I shall only vindicate our Chancellor from any intendment here to approve popular Governments or the insolences of them, Plutarch in Laconic. Apothegmat. p. 227. which God wot he knew the ill effects of, in the carriage of the people to Lycurgus, and others; but to do right to the truth of Antiquity, and to make the wise composition of Politic with Regal Government, not favour of arrogance, or encroach upon the due Majesty and august Sovereignty of God in the trust of his Deputies Kings. For though the Laws should be granted to be league s subditorum; yet is it not in any sense as if they were makers of them, or might dispute them with their Prince, other then in his Courts; or by a supplicate celsitudini on their knees. No such authority gives the Laws of God or men. No such mistake is in the Chancellor, or would I after him be for all the World guilty of (for so they are only the Kings, (the power of enaction of them being his, as he gives sovereignly Royal life to them) but legis subditorum, as they are the persons, who by their Delegates in Parliament assent to the fitness and justness of them, and so are obliged by them; yea, and so interested in the privilege and security they have by them, that they are called by a Master-Lawyer, The Birthright, and the most ancient and best Inheritance that the Subjects of this Realm have; Sir Ed. Cook Preface to ● Rep. 1 part. for by them he enjoyeth not only his inheritance and goods, in peace and quietness, but his life and most dear Country in safety. So he. And so are the Laws called legis regis, not only because he is the Head of them, and the Parent and Protector of them for the public interest, in which his Paramount interest is couched; but also because the Subjects and he are not to be divided, being mystically united: 21 E 4.39. b. cited in Calvin's Case, 7 Rep. p. 10. and as King james wisely once spoke to the Parliament of 1603. ¶ Pag. 488. of his Works in sol. 8 Report. What God hath conjoined, let no man separate; I am the Husband, and all the whole Isle is my lawful wife; I am the Head, and it is my Body; I am the Shepherd, and it is my Flock, etc. Answerable hereunto also is the Resolution of the Judges in the Prince's Case, Chescun subject ad interest en le Roy, & m●ldes Subjects q' ●st d▪ ●ins ses leyes sont divide de l●y esteant son teste & Sovereign. And therefore the Chancellor here by these and the like phrases of potestatem à populo ●ffluxam ipse habet, is not to be understood, as applying these words in their strictness to the Government of England, which is an imperial Crown, and is not alloyed by the politic admissions into it, but that it, 11 H. 7. p. 12. 3 Instit. 234 Ingrams Case. as to the integrals and essentials of Regality, retains its independency: but as before I noted, where such expressions, as do qualify the terror and fervour of Regality are used, they are with relation to the first Ages of the World, and no otherwise applicable to this Crown, then to testify its consent to such provisions, as are for the quiet, honour, and renown of it. And therefore the Law of England being form to take in the good of all Governments, to carry on the Dignity of the Head over, and the security of the Members under the Head, must needs hence be evinced a most excellent wise and worthy Government, both in order to King and People. Quare ut postulationi tuae, qua certiorari cupis unde hoc provenit, quod potestates regum tam diver simode variantur, succinctiu● satisfaciam. Farm conjector, quod diversitates institutionum dignitatum illarum quas propalavi, praedicta● dis●repantiam solummodo operantur, prout ex rationis discursu tu ex pramissis p●teris exha●rire. This the Chancellor adds, to show whence, and whereupon he entered the discourse of the Originals of Government. 'Twas first p●stulationi Principis satisfacere, the Chancellor knew that every good man is bound to serve his Prince, ultimis viribus, in body and mind, 3 Instit. c. 69. p. 149. with his best accoutrements of both, and that according to themture of his own condition and the legal necessities of his Prince. Now the Prince being young and unfixed, ready to evaporate his resolution with the next humour of instability, that took this Youth not yet radicated and well principled, his Chancellor runs out into this Discourse of Governments, that he might upon the good foundation of universals introduced, make this particular instance a more advantageous Superstructure. For as he will make an ill Seaman, that understands only one part of the Compass, or how only to use the Compass to one Port, from whence, it by distress of Wether he be diverted steerage, he's lost, because out of his knowledge. So will he be but an ill adviser, who does not understand how to distinguish of things and men, and from them to deduce his inference. The premises considered, our Text-Master next makes a concession, that as Democracies, so Regalities do vary in some less consequent appurtenances to them, and such variations he asserts not only as contingent, and so the act of time and emergence not fore-seen by the first Designers, for of such nature some of those differences in them are; but as diversitates instituti●num dignitatum illarum. No doubt but the Monarchies of France and Spain were in the first Founders absolute, Imperatorem quae vocas in quem populus omne jus & authoritatem suam legé regia contulit ●●de & dominus ●erra●. & Lex as those of Asia now are, after they admitted regulation, especially the Kingdom of France, (the three Estates and Parliament, wherein were instituted, to sweeten the rigour of the Monarch, and to preserve a serenity of refrigeration against the Solstice, under the direct piercing line of absolute power.) No doubt, I say, but so it institutionally (in a good sense) was though now it proves otherwise. But England was ever a Monarchy so temperate, maris dicitur pene● quem nen solum tam tutius Re●pub. quam 〈◊〉 & pacis est arburu●m. Hopperus, lib. 7. De ver Jurisp. Tit. ●. that the Monarches in it have ever gloryed in the non-positivity of their wills, where not according to, and in affirmance of the Law. So much have they (the more blessed Princes they) abhorred the pernicious and atheistical precedent, and profaneness of the Emperor Frederick, ¶ Shute Hist. Venice. p 108. Solum vitium crudelitatis excusans. Spartianus, De Severo. p 275 Flavius Vopise▪ p 292. edit Sylb. Who being displeased with the Venetians, told them, that to prosecute them, he was resolved to o●erthrow all divine and humane Laws; and the rigidnesses of Severus', who though he would do many excellent things, yet excused cruelty, because his practice: that they were rather of Probus his temper, whom Vopiscus calls, Dignus fortis & justus, etc. A good Leader to War, a good Governor in Peace, an Example of Order and admiration in both. So that not Aurelians, not Alexander's, not Antonines, not Trajan's, not Claudius 's, are to be wished for, because all excellencies of them several, have been united in many of o●r Princes, who have been every way furnished with virtues to admiration; Which is the prescript that Seneca gives Princes, as the means to deserve the love of their people, Debent prosecto Principes sive Reges praeter justitiam, etiam puta●i impr●mis studere, ut Tutores status public● nominari mereantur, liB. 1. De Clem. c 4. Tales & dicemus reges qui à bene regendo nomen La●ent. Tholossan. Syntagm. Ju●, lib. 13. c. 2. Tit. 6. Basilicon Doron, 2 Book, p. 175. of his Works in ●olic. and to obtain the same of most heroic Mortals. For though in the Convulsions and Apoplexies of time, when Allegiance is prevailed against by the ill habits and vicious defilements of Faction and Disloyalty, Princes are necessitated and warranted by Prudence and Religion, to use severity, where lenity is despised, and the Laws of love are wholly undervalved: yet gracious Kings do rather choose methods of calmness, than those that are rigid and funest; and because rigid Government has been sometimes as churlish physic, necessary, and good Princes have delighted rather to be loved then feared; such sweet Princes have those, rather to resign their Governments then be truculent and secure, as in such junctures of affairs they must have been. Timol●on and Sylla did, and Augustus would have done it, if he could. Which our Chancellor endeavouring to commend the example, and persuasion of a just temper to the Prince, proceeds to present the illustration of the following examples, in words full of modesty: yet having an affirmative vehemence, firm conjector, says he, as not positively affirming what is not in palpable proof (as all things of so remote antiquity are not) but fairly proposing them as probable, and offering what sober reason may be averred for them, and leaving the belief of men at liberty, to take or leave as they see cause. Sic námque Regnum Angliae quod ex Bruti comitiva Trojanorum, quam ex Italiae & Graecorum finibus perduxit, in dominium politicum & regale prorupit. Here he particularizes the institution of Politic mixed with Regal, as he had before of Regal Government alone; and the first he sets upon, is this of England, which he makes to be Kingdomed by Brute, Basilicon Doron, ● Book, p. 173. as King james since him has done. Bu●hanan, a learned, though violent Scot, has mordaciously taunted this tradition, making Gyrald●● Cambrensis the Author of it, a doter, delyrant, and I know not what; Quanta illa est stultitia, existimare magnificum vel illustre, quod à magno setiere vel flagitio est, Lib. 2. Hi●t Scotic. p. 15.16. Cambden in Britannia, I. clandus in Indice annex. Assert, Arthurii, ad vocem Britannia. yea, accusing all men of folly that believe Brute, other than a fiction: but Cambden and Leland (both incomparable Antiquaries) as they do not cry up a story of that Antiquity for infallible, so do they not disparage it as mendacious, but leave it to be believed or not, as men please, though they themselves are satisfied of the probability of it, Hist. ●tat. tertiae. p. 14. so does Math. Westminster; yea surely, E. 1. would not have owned the story as matter of truth, as he does in his Letter to Pope Boniface, Knighton, p 2482. edit Lond. which Knighton, Canon of Leicester, at large mentions, had not it been a received story, and not to be reproached for fabulous. I shall then take the story of Brute for more than a bare bruit, notwithstanding Buchanan's invective: nor shall I hold it any more a dishonour to our Nation, Fu●●●n & alit (praeter Herculem) complieve● ex adulterio gemti, ●t ex veteri constat Historia, quorum virtus dome militiaeque eximit clar●it inter nos. & noster Arthurus Bri●an●iae ornamentum maximum & sut saeculi miraculum umcum essloruit. Lelan●us in Assert. Arthurii. to have Brute the first King of this Isle, whom they say to be of no legitimate Origin, then if he were otherwise, since Brute was not the first nor only Famoso of that Race, whose Military bravery has enfranchised and redeemed all their alloys into gems and ornaments; yea, so long as the Norman William is remembered, there will be some abatement to the dislustre of them even from him the once puissant Lord of this Nation in that predicament. Brute then I take to be a Trojan by the surer side, living after the destruction of Troy, about the time of Ely and Samuel, who when his Father had trained up in Hunting and therein made him expert, did unfortunately, mistaking his Father for a Beast he aimed at, slay him: which Parricide, so contrary to the Laws of Nature, the people of Italy resenting, expulsed him thence. He thus exposed to his shifts, casts about with himself what best and most advisedly he was to do; necessity tempted him to action, and resolution despising the danger of any attempt, made him in his own mind a Victor before an Undertaker. In his wander, (straits being the Womb and Sire of all desperate Achievements; which though at first improbable, yet many times have glorious events (as in the case of the Turkish Empire, Egnatius, De Origine Turcanum, D'Avila. Hist, Et. p. 5. and the Fraconians coming into France) having no direct aim, but taking the best Road he thought proper for a booty, to Greece he comes, and there meets with some trusty Trojans, miserable and discontented like himself. Them in servitude to Pandrasus he commiserates; and as their concerned Countryman, whose blood boiled with disdain to see Trojans of stoutness reduced to Vassalage, promises either their redemption, or his own mancipation: yet he wisely concealed his regret, and served his masculine intendment by such silence, as gave no mistrust to Pandrasus, or in any degree defeated the feasibility of his intendment. Finding therefore, that Prowess and Martial Activity was the Darling of Pandrasus and his Peers, he presents himself the Challenger of all comers to those manly Engagements; wherein he deserved to be, and justly was accounted the first of all the Youngsters. Being thus fortunated to a Military Grandear, he looks upon Envy as a Foe probable enough to advance her fatal Standard against him; and knowing that the invisible, though for midable power of that Tyrant, as to others she had, so to him might be, the ruin and mar of all his possibilities, immures himself as wise and subtly as he might, against her. As he taught his Companions valour by his example, and order by his Discipline; so did he gratify their merits by the spoil of his Achievements, endearing himself by that munificence to them, that they were but echoes to his voice, and vassals to his commands. His first Rendezvouz was in Greece, whither all the roving Trojans and disbanded Debauche's, resort to him. (Asaracus of the Race of the Trojans, living in Greece, giving entertainment to them on Brutus' account) when in a Body they were, they compliment Pandrasus for leave to march through his Country; but with resolution to force, what they could not be granted. And though their pretence was to return to Troy, and to recover their Native Land; yet their design was to seize on whatever their power could master, and their Lust and Avarice be satiated by. Pandrasus looking upon armed entreaties, but as modest Treasons and silent Threats, answers them with an Army well appointed, and martially com●ilionated, doubling also Guards upon the prisoners, whom he thought confederate with armed Brute and his Trojan Hectors. But alas Pandrasus the King being in possession of plenty, was becalmed with Luxury; and Brute being indigent and watchful, soon found an advantage to let him and his Army into their hopes, suddenly surprises the King and his Army, and seizeth on the Town, and for himself fortifies it, losing his imprisoned Companions from the servitude they were in, and enlarging them to be Compartizans in his prosperity. The released Trojans, who had smarted under Pandrasus his severity, call upon Brute for Justice against the King; but Brute knew the meaning of those clamours, and unwilling to violate the sacred person of Kings or to pull down vengeance on him by so sacrilegious a fact, thought of some expedient diversive of their clamour, and propitious to his original design of acquisition and perpetuation. Thereupon he proposes in his Council of War, what course they would advise him to steer, that their co-operation being in the Council, the consequence, if evil, should not be only attributed to his precipitance and ill conduct, but to that public spirit that was the genius to it, and to that Fate, which (as regent) commands (under God) the issue of adventures. Amongst all the Sages of that Senate, none in this exigent, gave so oracular counsel, none so obstetricated the birth of the expedient to answer both Brute and his Trojans advantage, and King Pandrasus his freedom and restoration to his Crown (thus fraudulently and hostilely evicted from him) but old Memprisius; who being of great experience and grave courage, gave Brute and his Companions the swasive, not to violently come near the intemerate person of the King, whom the Gods, tutelars of their Vicars, do propitiously tender, and whose injuries they return in violent and tragic Vengeances on their insolent Annoyers; but in as much as the vigour of his youth and the glory of his mind suscitated by those hopes that are seconds to brave and victorious undertake, receive no content beneath their either obtainments, or the same of miscarrying in attempting those difficultyes. His counsel is that Pandrasus be treated with for the Marriage of his Daughter to Brute, and that in lien of her (and supplies to Brute and his Trojans transportation) Pandrasus be released and restored to his Kingdom, and Brute with his Lady and armed Company, left to try and take their fortunes, and to disburden Greece both of their force and fears: this as wise and seasonable, neither beneath the spirit of Victors, nor insolent beyond the proportion of those that were under Mortal mutability, and might be shortly where King Pandrasus was, had the universal Concurrence. And according to it King Pandrasus was appointed to be treated with. Pandrasus no sooner hears of it; but as one that blessed the Gods who had given him a Daughter, not only able to redeem her Genitor and Nation, but worthy to be Wise to the rising Son of valour, Brute; accepts the offer, closes with the motion, promises supply of shipping and victuals for their common support, and gives his Daughter Wi●e to Brute. No sooner was the Marriage over but Brute importunes dismission, and Greece as eagerly hearkens to it. To Sea the Trojans set, and resolved they were to stay where ever they set their foot; as Exigence brought them out and Fortune put them in, so only force should compel them from their chance where ever it was, Brute, that had a mind congenius (as it were) with jupiter, is said to dream that an Island he should ere long discover worthy his inhabitation, and fitted for trial of his Manhood; his undaunted courage wished for nothing more than to see the place, and find the Inhabitants that durst oppose his Landing. Now all the powers of his Soul are become desire and resolution, and as one agog to be nibbling at the Prey, he bids his Oars cheer up and pluck vigorously, that the sooner they may discover their freedom and enjoyment, In Closs, ad n●m●n B●uti. and bring their floats to the foreseen fortunate Island, which is the vision he had, was thus represented as Leland records it. Brute sub occasu Solis trans Gallica regna Insula in Oceano est, undique clausa mari, etc. Brute on the West, not far from France is placed, An I stand by the Sea on all sides faced; Which Giants did inhabit heretofore, Now have abandoned to receive thy store; Make to it, for 'tis thine, and doomed to be The Royal Throne of thy Posterity. Though Old Troy ruined is, yet here 'tis new The World with it will subject be to you. Upon this Brute and his accomplices were more then ordinarily animated and using all endeavour to accelerate their recovery of this Island at last effected it, and finding none in Possession of it, obtained it without blood and quietly founded a Monarchy in it; which the Chancellor calls politic: because though probably there were no Laws precedaneous to Brute, since no people in it when he came to it; yet by his consent to reward the valour and fidelity of his Companions by whose co-operation with him he acquired it: 'tis probable Laws were made both touching his Regal Prerogative, and their civil Security in life, member, goods and Laws, and thus according to this account, Dominium politicum & regale prorupit. Sic & Scotia qu●● ei quondam ùt ducatus obedivit, in regnum crevit politicum & regale, Scot enim illud dicitur, quod ex diversis rebus in unum acerumm congregatur M. West. p. 102. ad Ann. Christi, 78. Scotland is that part of Great-Brittain which hath Ireland and England on one part, and the Sea on the rest of it. M. Westminster will have it called Scotland because it was a Land compounded of Scots, Picts and Irish; though this Tract of Land had much people and many Governors in it, Hist. Scot lib. 4. p. 33. B. Insulanorum duces cum penè pari dignitate ess●●t, are Buchanan's own words, all in Hubbub one against another; yet had it no complete formal King before Fergus; Lib. 4. p. 34. which Buchanan conjectures was about the time of Alexander's Conquest of Babylon about 330. years before Christ. From this Fergus the Kings of Scotland have derived themselves, King James' Sp. White-Hall An. 1607. p 521. King James Law of free Monarchies p. 20●. Oper. and he coming in wi●h the aid of the Irish, made himself King and Lord as well of the whole Land as of the while Inhabitants within the same, So Scot●and has continued a warlike and puissant Nation, Goads in our s●des and thorns in our eyes, between whom and us much blood hath been shed and hostility acted; as in Hoveden, Matthew Paris, Walsingham, and latter Histories appear, and till they were reduced to be Homagers to this Crown, which perhaps is the meaning of our Text's ùt ducatus obedivit, we could not be quiet, no not then neither, Lib. 6. & 8. Hist. Scot for out they flew upon all occasions, but still we reduced them to terms: which though Buchanan deny against the evident Records of the truth of it, which the most learned ●. r. (a) See his Notes, on c. 13. of our Text, p. 5. Selden on this Text has to my hand produced, yet sure it is, that Scotland was for many years and many Kings Reigns held of this Crown, and the Kings of it then Homagers for it; so tes●●●ies besides the prealleged Authorityes, (b) Knighton lib. 3. De Eventib. Angl. c. 4. p. 2483. Edit. London. Brompton. p. 1026. E. the ●▪ in his Epistle to Pope Boniface. And though true it be that Scotland never had an utter ●●lip●● of its ancient Crown, ● Instit. Iurisd. Courts c. 75. p. 345. but that it enjoyed its own Laws; which Laws Sir Edward Cook makes much alike to our Laws both in the kinds and parts of them: Common-Lawes, Acts of Parliament and Customs, in the books of Law, in the descent of the Crown, in the High Court of Parliament, in the degrees of the Nobility, in the State great Officers, in the Ministers of Justice, in the like Customs, Writs, Laws accordant with M. Charta, in Wardships with Charta de Forresta, c. 11. the Proclamation of the laws of the Sheriff, Sheriffdoms in Fee there as of old here, Merum Imperium publici judicii principali●er vindicat sibi tantùm corporales panas; est enim merum Imperium habere jus gladii Bocerus lib. 1. De bello, c. 14 in the same vocables of art, in all which that Reverend Sage is punctual, therefore to him I refer therein my Reader. Whereby it appears Laws they have a long time had, and exercised them within itself, which was enough to declare it ever a Royal Kingdom; yet the Chancellour's words, ● Instit. p. 343. c. 74 ùt ducatus obedivit, are most true, if respect be had to those services that some of the Kings of Scotland did to this Crown as its Tenurers, as did the Kingdoms of Navarr and Portugal to the King of Castille, Proximum à Diis immortalibus honorem memoria ducum-praestitit, qui Imperium Populi Romani ex minimo maximum reddisiet, Su●●on. in Octaviano Augusto, c. 31. of Granada and Leon's to Arragon, of Lombardy, Sicil, Naples, and Bohema to the Empire, the old Kingdom of Burgundy to the King of the Fre●●●▪ ●en: which is according to the practice of Subjects who have Military Charges as Dutchies now are, Seldens Titles Honour, p. 292, 299. which though in time they may e●franchise themselves, yet originally were dependencies. And this is that which the Chancellor intends by ùt ducatus obedivit. In Regnum crevit politicum & Regale. This has relation to the Laws by which Scotland has been time out of mind governed. Laws not antecedent, to but subsequent to Kings, and therefore by their power enacted; For the King being by the eldest fundamental Laws, Dominus omnium honorum, & Dominus directus totius Dominii, the whole Subjects being but his Vaessals, and from him holding all their Land as their over-Lord, who according to good Services done unto him, changeth their holdings from Tack to Few, True Law of free Monarchies p. 202 Works in fol. from Ward to Blanch, etc. they are King james his own words. That they notwithstanding this, have the freedom of Laws arises from the King's Permission, that so the Law shall be, and that so he swears to observe and protect it to be; and this is to make the Government crescere in regnum politicum & regale. Because God's grace working on his kingly nature inclines him not only to regard his own greatness but his people's happiness, not how to continue himself a powerful Lord over them, Dictaturam quam pertinariter populus ei de ferebat, tam ●●●stauter repulit. Sigonius in Comment. De sast, & triuraphis Rom. p. 328. Edit. Syl. but to make them rich, thriving, and contented Liege's under him. So did Augustus carry himself, That when he might have been more than a Dictator, he declined so to be, refusing the people's importunity to crowd the highest honours upon him, with a pertinacy equal to that of their courtesy. Yea if ever Scotland had cause to bless God for an increase, it was that Union which was made with England in the Person and Accession of the wise King james, Grandfather to our now beloved Sovereign; in whom not only England remembered the Union of the white and red Rose in the person of H. 7. from whom he was lineally descended: but the Union of these two ancient and famous Kingdoms of England and Scotland, which God having so mercifully again made happy in the Person of our gracious Sovereign, who now blessed be God thoroughly commands them both. May they, I beseech God, never be disturbed or severed while Shiloh comes, but let O Lord the throne of thine anointed be established for ever and his seed and succession prosper in thy sight. Aliae quoque plurima regna nedum regaliter, sed & politicè regulari, tali origine jus sortita sunt. Unde Diodorus Siculus in secundo libro Historiarum priscarum de Aegyptiis sic scribit. Suam primum Aegyptii Reges vitam, non aliorum regnantium quibus volunt as pro Lege est, traducebant licentia, sed vel●ti privati, tenebantur legibus, neque i● agrè ferebant, existimantes parendo legibus, se beatos fore. Nam ab his, qui suis indulgerent cupiditatibus, multa censebant fieri, quibus damna periculaq●e subirent, & c. Our Chancellor brings in here a Quotation in Confirmation of his position from the Egyptians the eldest of mortals, as they both call themselves and are by others believed to be. Pompon. Mela lib. I. A people seated in the first part of Asia divided into the lower Egypt, and that upper about Nilus extending to Aethipia South towards Sienc, generally very superstitious and addicted to their Gods, Kings and Laws. Now because he would press home this argument from Antiquity, Demens Aegyptus ob vanas superstitiones & Deorum portenta ab ipsis excogitatae, Juvenal. satire, 15. and Precedent even of those that were readiest to supererogate in their venerations to their forementioned Trinity; he singles out the carriage of the Kings of that people, as the instance of the power and prevalence law and use had with them, and by the efficacy of which their power continued less terrible than otherwise it would have been, and the Author he makes use of is Diodorus Siculus, a Greek by birth and an Historiographer by excellency; Suidas says he lived in Augustus' time or afore, Suidas in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lilius Giraldus Dialog. 8. De Poet. Histor. p. 309. Sape ejusmodi rixis oculorum & vitae periculum adut, Sueton, in Ne●one. which gives credit to Gyraldus his account of him in Iulius Caesar's time, when ever, a man of sore travail and pains he was; for his Bibliotheca cost him thirty years' journey of his life, for though he wrote other facetious discourses, yet this History was the marrow of his brain, and that wherein he yet chiefly lives. Out of the second book of this History our Text-Master collects many Instances of the Continence and Moderation of the ancient Kings of Egypt, who were not only not Nero's, debauched, till they endangered their own lives and prostituted the glory of their Governments; but even Tiberius' beyond the proportion of man in greatness, humble, not only to every particular as he was to Haterius, whom he cried pardon from, for dissenting but in Vote from him, but also to the Senate in general; Et nunc, & saepe alias P.C. bonum & salutarem Principem, quem vos tanta & tam libera potestate instruxistis, Sueton in Tiberio. c. 29. Senatui servire debere, & universis Civibus, saepe & plerumque etiam singulis, neque id dixisse me poenitet, & bonos & aequos & faventes vos habui Dominos & adhuc habeo, and not only so selfdenying, though 'tis so far a degradation of Majesty, that I am not willing to believe it aught above a Compliment, but much beyond it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Diodot Sicul. Bibl. p. 63. Edit. Rhodani Imp●. Hanoviae, 1604. etc. Their first Kings did not form themselves as exempt from Law and reducing all to their absolute pleasures, but in all things and for all actions were accountable to the Laws; but what was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, more remarkable they could do nothing either of mercy or severity but just in the Method of the Law, p. 41, 45 & c● yea he proceeds to tell us, That the ancient tradition was, that Egypt was governed 800, or 1000 years by Gods and Heroiques; and when those ceased, the best and most public spirit of the Nation was chosen King; Kingdoms being erected saith he, as rewards of those that were most usefully qualified: yea he tells us of one Sabaco an Egyptian King, Pa●●● ●● who being told by the Theban's God, that he should not keep his Government long and sure to him and his, unless he put all the Priests to death, marching through their dead bodies with his Troops; chose rather to quit his Government 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. then either to offend the Gods by a nefarious fact, or to make himself great and stable, or defile Egypt with their innocent and sacred blood. This was the pious temper of pristine Kings as Fathers and Shepherds to tender their people and not to raise themselves on the ruins and oppressions of them; which stories lest any virulent spirit should think fabulous, let him consider the Author Diodorus, whom Pliny sets forth, as he that brought the Greeks in credit for truth and solidness; Apud Graecos nugari desiit. Plin. De Diodoro Siculo. and (a) Cap. 13. In vita Plutarchi, p. 2●. c. 19 p. 39 Rualdus, the learned Commentator on Plutarch, terms Celeberrimus Historiarum conditor; of whose Bibliotheque, though many Books are perished, as are sundry other most excellent Works there specially named: yet this our quotation is still in being, by the benefit whereof these Stories came here to be instanced in, wherein there is confirmation given, that the true end of Government is likeness to God, in beneficence to Mankind, in propagation of virtue, and suppression of what is immoral, which is to do, as Philo says Kings, that consider themselves God's Deputies, and accountable to him, should and do, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 etc. Let who will laugh (saith he) I will not be ashamed to say, he only can every way be a complete King, Lib. De Vita Mosis, p. 612. who hath gained the Pastoral Skill, and by demeanour of himself in those lesser charges, learns himself what to do in the other greater. And who in the method of this observes the Laws of his Government, not those sensual ones of his corrupted will, which carries him on to all riot and truculency, but those of Justice, Reason, and common approbation, with the people he is set over, is both a worthy man, and a wise and noble King. For 'tis a dangerous thing to give way to any start from the precise Rule of Law and Justice: no man knows where his heart will stay, who permits it in the least from Equity and Justice to wander, jovian was a brave Emperor, Armatae rei scientissimus, etc. a rare Soldier, a notable civil Governor, knowing how to keep distance to prevent popular insolence, and the contempt of familiarity; more grave in mind and manners, than years; of a long ear to reach grievances, and as long a hand to redress them, severe in manners, a despiser of riches, liberal to a miracle, an excellent Lawmaker. Ammianus Marcellinus, lib. 25. in Joviano, p. 439. edit. Sylb. Oh! but Ammianus records it of him, that he was an enemy to Christianity, and testified it in that severe Edict, that he would not suffer the Christian Rhetoricians and Grammarians to teach openly, and the reason was, left they should withdraw Youth, à numinum cultu, from the Ethnique Idolatry. So dangerous a thing it is for Princes to give way to their unlimited Wills, and not to be ruled by the just Laws, which are staunch and inflexible, that it endangers the defamation of all their good deeds. Therefore King james the wise spoke the mind of himself and all good Kings his Successors; Speech at White-Hall, 1609. p. 540. of his Works in folio. A King that will rule and govern justly, must have regard to Conscience, Honour, and judgement, in all his great Actions; and therefore you may assure yourselves (saith he to the Houses of Parliament) that I ever limit all my great actions within that compass. And thus to do, will not only procure the blessing of God on him and his, but prevent those damna and pericula, those oppressions that make wise men mad; those Treasons and Rebellions that are the issues of popular poverty and discontent; and those are worthy wise Princes, to defend themselves, and their loyal and peaceable Subjects against: and that not only by the force that subdues them, but the justice and equitable administrations of Government, which shames and reproaches their opposition to, and detraction from the merit and justifiableness of them. Though therefore it be impossible to give satisfaction to ill-will and resitive prejudice; and Princes are not to hope to do that, but still they shall be by refractory spirits clamoured against; yet to endeavour all ingratiation with their Subjects, is their ease, advantage, and security; and that done, a watchful eye over Dissenters, and implacable Contrarients: will satisfy the Prince's Conscience, that he does not neglect his duty. And let obstinate Disturbers abide the peril of their Contumacy both to God and their Prince; for so long as the Law is the Arbiter, and the Judges are Interpreters of it, there is no danger to the Subjects while loyal and orderly. Et in quarto libro sic seribit. Assumptus in Regem Aethiopum, vitam ducit statutam legibus, omniáque agit juxta patrios mores, nique pramio neque pena afficiens quemquam, prater per traditam à superioribus legem. Consimiliter loquitar de Rege Saba in felici Arabia, & aliis quibusdam regibus, qui priscis temporibus faliciter regnabant. This is added, to make the instances confirmatory of politic Government more plural; for as the Egyptian the eldest and religiousest (in the sense, superstition is taken for Religion) of men; Plin. Lib. 6. c. 30. so the Ethiopian Magistracy was of this kind. Now Ethiopia is that part of Aphrick under the Torrid Zone, between Arabia and Egypt, called first Aetheria, then Atlantia, and after Ethiopia, from Ethiopes the Son of Vulcan. This Country also, as Egypt, is divided into the part of it on the East, and that about the Sea in Mauritania, near the Red-Sea, therefore by Lactantius the Inhabitants are called Rubendtes Aethiopes. Geograph. Lib. I. p. 3. edit. Casaub. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Strabo Geog. lib. I. p. 39 Lib. 16. p. 769. Lib. 17. p. 823. The chief employment of these poor Heathens (as black in vice as in face, and as far North from virtue, as they are from the World in situation, being as Strabo says, the utmost men to the North Pole, and beyond whom there is nothing but Sea and Sky) is hunting of Elephants, the Teeth of which are their chief Merchandise; though they live rudely, yet have they a great veneration of order, and a willingness to be subject to their King, the first of whom was a Conqueror, Sesostris by name: after the people fell into a milder way of Regiment, and chose their King by common suffrage; and while that continued, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 etc. they chose him King, who either excelled in beauty and goodlyness of body, or skill in Cattle, or strength or wealth, but some superexcellent their King was. Their Priests of old had power over their Kings, and would be so rigid and superb towards them, that they left nothing of Majesty uninsolenced: But one of their Kings dissolved that humour by force, and recovered Supremacy to the Sovereign Power. Which had, to consolidate him in his acquisition, he and the people consented to Laws, as their security, and his boundary; the particulars of which Laws, though the Chancellor sets not down, yet he specifies some special parts of them. First, concerning the King's manner of life, that was to be according to the Canon of Law, vitam ducit statutam legibus, that is, he was to live regularly, according to that notion of regularity the people of Ethiopia in their Laws have established: Which though it may be as unlike virtue and justice with us, as their faces are unlike ours; yet is the rule of it, as to them, takable from the Law of that place and people over which they are set. Which Law, because it is not always, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Menand. apud Stobaeum, Serm. 9 De Justitia. p. 100 Morum legumque regimen recepit aque perpiinum. Sueton, in Octau. Augusto c. 29. if at all written, those Barbarians being ignorant of Letters; yet inasmuch, as it consists in use, custom, and practice, which are patrii mores, he is said further to be directed to do, secundum patrios mores, Secondly, concerning his Civil and Judicial Administration, that is also to be according to the direction, and not against the Prescript of that; neither in reward, nor in punishment can he go beyond or beside the Law, which was à superioribus tradita. Which is to be noted, because the Scripture seems to affirm much to the honour of Antiquity in that expression, To strive earnestly for the Faith once delivered to the Saints, as intimating, that the spirit of ingenuity and sincerity dwelled in pristine men and times, when divine and heroic men were Legislators, who stirred up by God to rule, had no design of their own separate from public good: but did all they did with eye to the lustre and ampliation of the people they ruled in and over. For Tyranny and self-aggrandization came in with the loose and dissolute manners of gross Ethnicism, and Apostate Christianity, hodg-podged, and made up into a body of rough pride and self-magnification, which prostrates all Laws and dissolves all Justice before which men's minds were so sincere, Ex Orphei hymnis justitiae, Stobaeus, Serm. 9 p. 101. that with Orpheus they attributed to Justice all imaginable praises, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. O most just Goddess to Mortals, blessed, desirable, which always dost by they equity rejoice men, etc. and when vice began to shoulder in, than 'twas necessary to restrain by Laws, what otherwise would be without them dangerous in the liberty of using; which was also the wisdom of the Country of Saba in Arabia the happy: in which, as in the other, precited Princes ruled moderately in old times. And thus the Chancellor, as having said enough, and no more (I conceive) then was true concerning the old Kings and times, ends this 13th Chapter; and so end also my Notes on it. CHAP. XIV. Cui Princeps. Effugâfti cancellary, declarationis tuae lumine tenebras, quibus obducta erat acies mentis meae. HEre the Prince is brought in compendiously abridging what the Chancellor hath in the preceding Chapter discoursed of, which account he prefaces to by a candid and Princely Concession to the Chancellor, whose arguments, oratoriously pressed, had made a plenary Conquest of his reason. And that the Prince may appear a true Son of mild H. 6. his Father, and an Inheritor of all those bountiful ingenuities and heroic Grandnesses that do adorn and belustre the minds and discourses of Princes; Sabinum consularem virum ad quem libros Ulpranus scripsit, quod in urbe remansisset, jussit occidi; removit & Ulpianum jurisconsultum, ut bonum virum, & Sabinum rhetorem quem Magistrum Caesaris secerat, Lampridius De Heliogabalo p. 202. Edit. Sylb. he does not only not vilipend and not injure his Chancellor for his good counsel as Heliogabalus did Sabinus the Consul, whom because he was a brave man and not avoiding Rome, that Monster Emperor caused to be put to death; or remove him from him, as the same Emperor did Ulpian the famous Lawyer, and Silenus the famous Rhetorician, who were both good men and must not be endured: no such treatment has our good Chancellor from his young Prince; Tacitus. for the Chancellor was no Togonius Gallus called: Os ferreum & cor plumbeum, Suetonius in Nerone. c. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, because he was nothing but words; nor a Cneius Domitius, of whom Licinius Crassus said, He had an iron mouth and a leaden heart, but a man of deep reason and learned judgement, the Dulcimer of whose eloquence did so ravish his noble ear and heart, that he professes himself not only satisfied but surprised. Effugâsti, etc. A word not at all oratorious, for I find it in the verbin no good Author; but a word which our Text-Master his Authority has brought into propriety to signify a plenary Conquest, which appears in a routing all opposition and making it quit the field, having no root nor branch, fiber or string of hopes and retreat left, untaken off; the Prince is brought in, telling him the darkness and ignorance of his soul was such, that many prepossessions and false Principles he had imbibed and was destructively seasoned with, which rendered him prejudiced against the truth of the Law's Excellency, and the influence it ought to have on him. But now the Chancellor having considered and soberly answered his doubts and dissolved his agregated mistakes; he gives the Chancellor the honour of his Atchieument, Genus eloqùendi secutus est elegans & temperatum, vitatus sentemiarum meptiis alque inconcinnitate & in conditorum vorbo rum fatorilus Sueron. de Octavian. Aug. c. 86. Effugâsti, etc. And well he might, for the Chancellor was one of a Genius elegant and temperate, free from the levitieses of language and the wander of reasoning, no lax persuasions did his prudence engine by, all the ascents that he made to the judgement of the Prince, were upon the advantages experience gave him. And being so arrayed with power of words to chase away opponents (Sciences, falsely so called, the pre-engagements to aversation) and with strength of matter to confirm him in the real solidity and ground of his transmutation from darkness of mind to light of, not only discovery, but apparent satisfaction, which he is brought, in expressing, no wonder though, in the following words he professes as he does. Quo clarissime jam conspicio, quod non alio pacto gens aliqua proprio arbitrio unquam se in regnum corporavit, nisi ùt per hoc, se & sua quorum dispendia formidabant, tutius quam anteà possiderent. This is added as Induction to the subsequent matter, and it has many notable particulars insinuated in it. First, The subject matter, as I may so say, of great Governments in their Rise and Ascent, E Gente aliqua. Gens is more than a Family, for it contains agnatos & cognatos; for whereas Familia refers to the C●gnomen or superadded name; Alciatus, Forner. & Brechaeus in legem 53. ib. De verb. signific. p. 141, 142. Gens takes in the surname or original name as it refers to the common Ancestry, Inter Gentem & familiam illud interest quod gens ad nomen, familia ad cognomen refertur. Sigonius Do nominibus Romanis, p. 352. whence all the particulars of the family issued; so Festus defines it, Gentem esse quae ex mul●is famil●is conficitur. Gens then, though it be largely taken for a Nation, yet primarily it signifies a kindred in nature: Sueton. in Nerone. In Jul. Caes. p. 5. so Suctonius mentions ex Gente Domitia duae familiae claruerunt; thence is it that all things belonging to Families are called Gentiliita, the badges of their honour Insignia gentilitia, the Memorials of their Ancestors riches Gentilitae haraeditates, the Solemnities kept by families Gentile sacrum and Familiae solemn, to go habited after the manner of a family was to be Gestu gentili, and to be near of a name is termed Gentilitas nominis. This notion is involved in Gens, which is that of which politic Bodies consist. Then secondly, this Clause sets forth by way of predicate what these Kindred's did do, that was, corporare in regnum; nature taught them that united force was preferable to single, that the weakness and dislustre of the single parts of the body was provided for in the union of their situation in the body, where in their conjunction they were both fair and comely, and this lessened them to seek the comforts and conveniences of life in Combinations and forms of living together in civil Society: Qui sinul habitant, unum corpus faciunt civil, & universitati & corporal dies dicuntur, qui in communione aliqua conscripti vel admissi sunt. Tholossan Syntagm. Juris lib. 3. c. 1. & lit. 1. c. 8. Tit. 1. and when these Rendezvouzes are the Lodges of peace, order, arts, piety, and do not harbour treason and faction against Government, they are in policy and as staples of trade, riches, and learning to be encouraged and ampliated. Plurimae factiones titulo Novi Collegit ad nullius non sacinoris societatem coibant. Sueton. in Octau. c. 32. It's true Octavius Augustus is mentioned by Suetonius to dissolve some Corporations and that justly, because they were factions and they made a party on purpose to disturb Government; but even then, he did not meddle with the Collegia antiqua & legitima; those that were settled by time and Law were kept up in their beauty, Tholossan Syntagm. Juris lib. 1. c. 8. Tit. ●. because they had a care to give no just suspicion to their Governors, but showed themselves forward in fidelity, and thereby secured themselves from Eclipse, which otherwise they could not have done. For Governors are to use prudence both in order to their own establishment and their people's peace, which Corporations are least of all to endanger because they have the most to lose by trouble and turmoil. Choppinus De Domanio Franc. lib. 3. p. 593. Corpora omnium constitusit, Lampridius in Severo. p. 215. Edit. Sylburg. Cities and Towns then being governed under Princes by prudent Magistrates, to whom they legally approve themselves loyal and dutiful, are no doubt the strength, glory, and riches of any Monarch; which Numa first apprehending, put, as did Severus after him, all the Arts-men of Rome into Companies, Vintners, Victuallers, Cooks, etc. setting Wardens over them and appointing them their Sphere and Motion: and whether from this Roman Example, or from the same spirit in British Magistracy, C. 9 Magna Ch. 8 Rep City of London's Case. this way of Incorporation first began in England, I know not; but sure that it has been and is continued with great advantage we see and know: and from them, have in all times come many of the great Estates and Families of Honour in the Nation, But this is the Honey that Jonathan must not taste of. And therefore I will proceed to the Text's Corporavit in regnum, which is the noblest Corporation, because the bringing of all the pettite and distinct Corporations into a joint Stock or public Mass which is called a Kingdom; The Government of one over, all, independent on any but God, to whom only personally he is to give account. And this is so noble and necessary a Corporation, as I have heretofore made good in the Instances of the Dignity of Monarchy, that nothing I can add more, but to remember men that in this Corporation there are all the ends that reason can aim at for the comfort of conversation, Nota benè. concentered. 1. To live. 2. To live pleasantly. 3. To live safely. 4. To live profitably. 5. To live peaceably. 6. To live blessedly. These are all the fruits of this corporare in regnum, Casus, Sphaera Civit. lib. 3. c. 4. p. 155. but our Text refers only to the third safety, which it makes the cause of this corporavit in regnum. Thirdly, This Clause discovers how this corporavit in regnum came about not vi cogente, sed ratione eligente & dirigente, proprio arbitrio says the Chancellor; for though I know, as before I have touched upon, some Nations being victored, have been forced to take the Impressions the power over them would force upon them: yet many of the elder Governments were the effects proprii arbitrii, or at lest actu postliminio they confirmed such popularibus arbitriis. Now that which the Text calls proprium arbitrium was not the vage giddy humour of the people as they were in face actuated by faction, humour and lawless Impetuosity; but it was their judicious, sober, and religious consent according to the Dictates of prudence for self preservation and public advancement. For if in the latitude of its corrupted sense the people's consent and will should be regent; as probably they would choose a bramble-Government rather than sit contented under their Vine; so their actions would be so far from Order and Religion, that their proprium arbitrium would be Blood shed, Confusion, Anarchy; yea, were not Kings and Magistrates better to Popularities, than they do often wish, or they would in some humours have them, had they the power to hinder them, there would ere long be no Corporation in the World. Such Tigers and Monsters are men become, through the mistakes of Religion, that 'tis rare to find order in Communities, nor more civility than is the effect of fear and force. Hence the Text subjoins the end, why Nations did incorporate, Vt per hoc se & sua quorum dispendia formidabant, tutius quam antea possiderent. When man by sin had broken his peace with God, than not only the Creatures were let loose to great degrees of insolence against him; but the powers of man's soul that before were orderly and restrained, then rioted one against another, and all against him that rebelled against his Maker. And then the security that men had each with other, while they were at truce with God, gave up its Charter and Privilege. Now every man grows a Cormorant to his fellow, the weak the prey of the strong, and the fewer the spoil of the more in number. This keeping men in terrors, lessoned them recollection of their dispersion. And therefore of old they did gather together, and make a common pact to defend each other; and to method their common defence, Covarruvias, practic. Qu. lib. 1. p. 419. appoint a Head by whom they would be led and ruled. For Nature teaching self-conservation as a primitive lesson, found out no better or other method, then that of Government; nor any Government so peculiarly safe and contributive to peace and security as that of one. For besides, as I said before, Monarchy is of God, and generally approved the perfectest of Governments; it has been found, that more often and fatal disturbances have fallen out in Aristocracies; or Democracies, then in or under Monarchy. Antoninus Pius was so happy and wise a Prince, Vt per annos tres & viginti nullum sub eo bellum fuit, amor enim & timor gentium in eo concertarunt bellum movere timentibus his adversus principem, quem ut numen aliquod venerarentur. that Egnatius writes, That for 23 years under him there was no War, because love and fear strove for mastery in his time; and as the one permitted not his friends: so the other affrightned his enemies from attempting any thing against him, whom the Gods so favoured, Nisi enim hic pracfuisset. Majestas Rom. Imperii facile hinc concidisset. Egnatius in vitis corum, p. 564. edit. Sylb. and they ought as a God to venerate. And the same Author tells us, that if Antoninus Philosophus had not been in the Empire, when he was; then the Roman Empire had undoubtedly fell. Whereas it is rare to find such security and peace under other forms, though I confess the Venetians are a noble State, and prudently successful: yet in many Duke's times they have been shrewdly threatened subversion, partly by their homebred Emulations, and partly by their foreign Assaults. When men grow great and popular, they prove often Earthquakes to Nations and places; for do but discontent them, and all is in a flame. Thus Rome felt Caesar and Pompey, Catiline, Mark Anthony, Sylla, and who not, that had a name and would thereupon be sure of an Antagonist. So in Italy, between the State of Venice and Genoa upon point of Rivalry; so great were the animosities between those two States for 100 years together, that they never met one another but with the mettle of Furies and the spite of Devils: Hist. Venice, 1 Book. p. 163. yea, though they had the Trevisian sports to dandle them into a calmness; yet even there, their Jest became a fatal earnest; and so much did their stomaches disdain Captivity each to other, though upon merely the contingence of War (which ebbs and flows Victory, by an unsteady and blind event to men) that Andrea Dandulo, one of the Venetian Generals, being taken in a fight, and carried to the Genoesse's Galleys a Captive, Pag. 165. rather chose furiously to beat out his own brains against the side of the Galleys, then be a prisoner of War to his country's Enemies: and amongst the Venetians themselves, Pag. 166. what Plots have the Governments of many Dukes been endangered by? witness that of Marino Baconio, who plotted to kill Pietro Gradonico, the Duke, Pag. 168. and such of the Senate, as pleased him not; and that more fatal one of Bajamonti Tepulo, who assaulted the Duke and Senate in the Palace; That of the Rabble in Giovanni Dandalo's time. Pag. 160. These and such like do show, that as all Governments are upon prudencies tending to conservation, so are those probablest best effected, when the Multitude are anticipated their mad fits, which ordinarily they are, more in Regalities then other forms. But however in all forms, the intent is to live peaceably from spoil, assault, depredation, and oppression; which in singularities or lesser numbers, not being either so probable or possible, Incorporations into Kingdoms were thought upon and effected. For Kings for the most part have so much of divine Magnanimity in them, that as they were in the first time of the first ages chosen Governors, and since are justly become Lords of their Countries to do good offices, as Fathers, Shepherds, husbands, See Law of Free monarchs, King james, p. 201. of his Works. Gothos censuit prius aggrediendos, quod ●● Reipublicae hosts, Tyranni principis essent. Egnatius in vita ejus, p. 568. Pilots, Numen to them: so do they delight (some particulars only excepted generally to express grandeur of mind, in order to this design of their dignity, which Claudius, no very good man, but a brave Prince, showed himself clearly and generously in. For when it was debated in the Senate, whether he should first resist the Goths or the Tyrants, both which threatened him and his Empire, gave counsel, that first the Goths should be encountered with, because they were Enemies to the Government and Roman Commonwealth, whereas the Tyrants were only Enemies to him, as Prince and Head of the Empire. Quali proposito gens hujusmodi frauderetur, si exinde facultates eorum eripere possit Rex suus, quod antea facere ulli hominum non licebat. This is the Argument that the Chancellor brings as inferential from the precedent reason; for posito, that Governments were of old by consent of the people, and that such their consent was to better their condition, to defend them from the rapes and violences of men of fierce spirits, who came upon them with sword, and overpowering them, took away their goods, forced their Wives and Daughters, and sometimes took away their lives, to prevent the clamour of their fact. These things yielded, it will (says the Chancellor) rationally follow, that if the Governor they put themselves spontaneously under, do with their bodies, goods, and souls, what he pleases, they do not avoid the inconvenience against which they intended their subjection a muniment, but are under the same misery under another name, and so are little less than miserable, through the incorrespondence of the actions, with the intent of the Designers of them. For though true it be, that casualties may alter cases, and sweeten demeanours, which but for them would be tragical and barbarous. Which the Historian offers in Vespasian's defence; Avaritiam ne culpes in eo, & temporum calomitas & laudabilis ejus usus facit. Egnatius in Vespas. p. 562. In whom Avarice was either no vice, or not so great an one, if either the Calamities of his Reign, or the good use● he put his exactions to, be considered. Yet truly it is below Princes to be unmindful of God's mercy, Providente ipso Domino Rege ad Regni sui Angliae meliorationem, & exhibitionem justitiae (prout regalis officii exposcit utilitas) pleniorem, etc. Provisum est & Statutum. Prologo Statuti De Marlbridge, Anno Dom. 1267. 52 H. 3. Instit. 2 part p. 101 and the Laws lesson to them: and seldom are they happy, that resolutely and through design forget either; nor can they by the strictest Edicts, or the subtlest blinds, hinder people from observing, when so they do: but yet if some Princes may, others recompense their omissions by supererogations. Observe well this Law, 2 Instit. p. 161. on Westmin. 1. c. ●. Good King Edward the first spoke what the mind of all his good Successors have said, and done, En primes voet le Roy & command, que le peace de Saint Eglise & de la terre soint bien guard, etc. First the King wills and commands, that the peace of Holy Church and of the Kingdom, be inviolably kept and maintained in all things, and that justice be done to all, as well poor as rich, without respect of persons. Nor are the actions of Princes so eccentrique, when they are driven by the greatest and most enraged impetuosities, but that even than they have many sparks of Justice in them, at least are much better to be interpreted, then popular insults or the Lordings of fellow-subjects; yea, one time with another, there have been more Heroicisms acted for public good by Princely spirits, than other men, and less real mischiefs by them, then by men of meaner origin have been introduced. What may we call the action in Giovanni Soranza the 51 Duke of Venice his time, but a miracle of love to Venice: for whereas the City and Territory of Venice had been a long time, Shute's History, Venice, p. 173. and then was under the Pope's interdiction, which caused unspeakable loss to them, and crossed their Affairs in all parts of their correspondence. And Pope Clement took the business of Ferrara so heinously, that he would hearken to no relaxation, though often and earnestly solicited thereto, but obstructed any further audience of them. Which Francisco Dandalo, a Nobleman of great honour seeing, came into the Pope's presence, and lay prostrate on the ground before the Pope's Table, with an Iron Chain about his neck like a Dog, until his wrath being appeased, he took away that note of infamy from his Country. I say, what can this be called less than a notable instance of great love to ones Country, which only could come from a Princely spirit: which action had its reward, for not long after he came to be Duke and procured a Constitution, That his Country should never be excommunicated by the Pope, for such like action, or any other action whatsoever. It follows. Et adhuc multò graviùs populus talis laderetur, si deinde peregrinis legibus, etiam ipsis forsan exosis, regerentur. Inconveniencies seldom come single: when Princes are other then they ought to be, Laws will signify little to mind or manage them; and ever it is seen, that as virtuous and pious Prince's reverence Laws, and will do nothing knowingly and designedly to the affront and denigration of the credit of them, but let the Law have a free passage, and countenance the modest and legal averrment of it: so the contrary Princes take pleasure in nothing more than in despising the Laws and making them truckle under their Contempts and Violations; this the Chancellor calls laesio populi: Sit vox legis terror, sit legis paena fulmen; Draco non sum Atheniensis ille, neque leges sanguine conscriptas volo, sed hoc velim, ut voce panaque legis deterreantur omnes, Casus in Sphaera Civitatis, lib. 4. cap. 8. p. 246. and that because the Laws are the asylum and refuge that Subjects have, and if that be no shelter to them, they count themselves miserable; for some Law must be, and if the native Country Laws do not rule, foreign exotique Law must; and that, the Prince is brought in acknowledging too heavy for their stomaches to bear. Nor have any Princes well advised ever endeavoured so to tempt the people to wince and kick, Haud sanè improbandum Principem numina terris dederunt, si quantam literis & militari disciplina vacabat a● venationib●s, tantam curam ad Rempublicam cognoscendam impendisset, Egnatius De Gratiano, p. 572. Edit. Sylburg. as they ever have done, against Laws introduced in rivalry with, or supersedal of their Country Laws: and Princes are never so accomplished for their Governments, as when they make the knowledge and skill of right conducting their public affairs, the that of their Excellency. Which that brave King Edward the first, than whom no man was more sad in Counsel, free in utterrnce, secure amidst dangers, cautious in prosperity, constant in adversity, this Prince I say, whose Justice made his Laws renowned, and yet continue for the most part to this day; He was a great Admirer of the Laws and directed them to the good of the Kingdom, 1 Westm. 2 Instit. p. 158. as he expresses in the Act 3. Regni, Que nostr● Signior le Roy ad graund volunt et desire del Estate de son Realm redresser, etc. For thereby shall they understand at the first hand what the people love and hate, wish and fear, are pleased with and grumble under; and by this shall they make the Law their Guide, and not listen to foreign Guises and Customs, which are often more dangerous than advantageous to them; yea, saving that mutual Correspondence that Nations have each with other, and saving that necessary pass and repass that men have to and from every part of the world, wisdom of Government has exterminated foreign things as much as civilly could, especially in Laws Preferments and Fashions. Not but that there may be good use made of some foreign and unwonted things when urgent occasions require them, but to prefer them in love and esteem, because foreign, has been ever avoided by wise Princes; yea, and that because they are execrable in Natives eyes, who generally love their Country usages, Customs, Laws and Fashions, with a zeal that speaks a kind of scorn of what is unlike or contrary thereto, that look as the Athenians were so zealous, Fornerius in leg. 139. ss. p. 514. De verb. signif. that they enjoined a severe punishment to any, who being a stranger took benefit of their Law, by an Actio peregrinitatis, which brought the Offender first into Bands, than caused him after proof thereof to be sold, and that at so high a Rate, Sigonius lib. De Fastis & trump. Rom. p. 274. Choppinus lib. 1. De Domanio Franciae Tit. 2. De bonis advenarum. p. 99 that this Buyer should use him cruelly to have, as we say, his Pennyworths out of him; and Lege Papia Foreiners were to quit Rome; so in France, Spain and all Countries, Strangers and their Influences are disfavoured by their Laws, as Choppinus has collected to my hand the Instances thereof; and all Nations looked upon strangers (other then upon travail and business) with no good eye, but made them uncapable of public offices, and with us the Chronicles tell us the complaints against them and the Domination of them in H. 3. time, in E. 3. time, in H. 8. time, in which they have been ever forward by their Counsels and Assistances to further unusual and illegal courses, and for it have been Exosi. Not that our Nation is naturally uncivil, but because hath found the experience of it; and therefore the Text joins to peregrinis Legibus exosis: * Holingshed. p. 216, ●65, 840, 893. since even all unusual and not beloved things have been accounted countd foreign, and thence in our Chancellors words Exosi, that is, perfectly hated; Psal. 139. 21.22 Pagnin. in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. hated as David did the haters of God with a hatred 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of compleatness and universality, at all times in all degrees; Rabbi David expounds it by magnoodio, imò maximo odio odi illos, so is the sense of Exosi among the Latins, the Preposition ex adding vehemence to the notation of the word, to which prefixed. Thus in the very word Tholossanus uses it, Syntagm. juris lib. 18. c. 2. Tit. 10. Adversar. lib. 22. c. 40. Nota in sueronium p. 657. Edit. Sylburg. Nomen Regis Romanis summoperè esset exosum, and in the like words other Authors, so Turnebus notes Pliny to use exalbidus; and Pulman on that passage of Suetonius where Caligula is said to be pallido colore, translates it expallido, adding ex enim prapositio, vim & potestatem verbi amplificat, thus exanimo is rendered by perterrere, exardere by valde inflammatum esse, exarescere by sole & vento penitùs siccari, exaturare by that we call a glutting a man's self, exaudire by perfectè audire; and so our Text when it said eísque exosis, means such a hatred of grievous and illegal burdens, as makes Subjects complain to God night and day in their prayers for relief from them, yea and so perfectly hate the ill Counselors of them, that they seldom or never have better ends than Gaveston had, or then Michael de la Pool and Cardinal Woolsey had, whose high and illegal actings were by the Lords and Judges articled against as high and notable grievances, 3 Institutes c. 8. Title Court of Chancery p. 89. art. 19, 21, 26. and offences; misusing, altering and subverting the order of your Grace's Laws,) and otherwise contrary to your high Honour, Prerogative, Crown, Estate and Royal Dignity, to the instimable great hindrance, diminution and decay of the universal Wealth of these your Grace's Realms, they are the very words of the Preamble to them, Et maximè si Legibus illis eorum minoraretur substantia, pro cujus vitanda jactura ùt pro suorum tut la corporum, ipsi se Regis Imperio, arbitrio proprio submiserunt. This is added to show, that as nothing discourages people more than not to be answered in the end of their loyal confidence, so nothing is more to be admired in and valued by Princes, than the practice of doing what they are by office and conscience bound to do; that is, ruling by Law to the prosperity of themselves and their Subjects. For as the King is then said to command, 2 Instit. p 186. on Westm. 1. c. 15. Resolution of the judges loco precitato, p. ●87. when he wills by the Law any thing to be done; and the King cannot do it by any Commandment, but by Writ or by Order or Rule of some of his Courts of justice, as Sir Cook's words are; according to which the Statute Marlbridge c. 1. says, Dominus Rex de aliquo contemptu sibi illato alium judicem in regno quam curia sua habere non debet; so the King is then said to act like himself not only to his Subjects, but even to his own souls health and happiness, when he does what he does precisely according to rule and prudently according to seasons: for this is that which will best comfort him in his sickness and death, That he has walked uprightly before God, and done that which was right in his sight, yea if a King should put the day of death, as a day of evil, far from him, and fancy (as I may so say) a temporal Eternity, generous and patronique actions to Subjects are the only way to accomplish it. Augustus' made his Subjects happy and rich by governing them, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, according to Law and prudence; looking upon them as reasonable Creatures and treating them with no more rigour, nor no less goodness than the paternal Charity and Magisttatique care he was to express towards them required, Xiphilinus Epitome. Dion. p. 192. in Augu●●c. and this so abated the sourness of the Romans against Sovereignty, which before they were prejudiced against, that they by decree of Senate thought fit to trust him to do even what he pleased 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Idem p. 197. etc. That he should be absolved from the Band of Law, and that he might do and not do what he would. For since the end of Society is preservation, and of the best Society, politic Monarchy is to render the Subjects of it happy and secure, which our Text makes to consist in that by which non minoratur substantia, Terrae certè Itala sub Gallorum principatu adeo floruit ut vetera Romanorum Princpum tempora non desiderarent. Egnatius in vita Arnulphi p. 596. Edit. Sylburg and in that which furthers corporum tutelam, there is good cause for Princes, as ours (blessed be God and them) mostly have done to regard the effecting of this common and commodious intent. For the nature of Subjects is, let them but be free in their persons from slavery, and enjoy their fortunes according to God's blessing upon their industry, and the Law's fixation of them in it, and they will not only loyally observe and cry up their Prince as the most deserving Darling of their hearts, but will bear up his person on their shoulders, and his dominion and regal title on their swords points; yea, they will make him terrible to his Foes, who is thus a Father to his Friend, and a Saviour to his Liege's. Non potuit revera potestas hujusmodi ab ipsis erupisse, & tamen si non ab ipsis, Rex hujusmodi, super ipsos nullam obtineret potestatem. This Clause relateth to the Laws of Nature, and the Institution of Government according to it, and that giving no one man a superiority over another (unless by the consent of men, who do in themselves give the general Law a restraint; which is (as I conceive) lawful, Est quidem servitus libertati contraria, ita constitutio quadam de jure gentrum, quâ quis domino alieno contra naturam subjicitur. Fleta, lib. 2. p. 1. and has been the Mother of all Constitutions.) The Chancellour's deduction will be rational, that supposing in the first Ages and first Constitutions the forms of people politicly living together, Civilis eteni●● potestas, naturae & Dei ordinatio est, ad humanum convictum & humani generis conservationem necessaria omnino; nam enamsi Respubls. & populi, jus habuerint naturali notione creandi principes & reges, quia tamen haec focerint divinitus erudita, publica haec & civilis potestas, Dei ordinatio dicitur. Cova ruvias Practic. Quaest c. 1. p. 420. to be in the people, either they must act to their own injury, or else design such a Government as much preserve them and theirs: which politic government joined with regal doing, it follows, that such a Kinglyness as was not originally violent, but entered upon by the will of the Subjects, and continued and carried on with suitable goodness in the successions of it, must be that which originated from God by them, who by submitting to one, proposed to themselves security to themselves, according to the Laws and Agreements of their politizing, which Cunaeus says was the cause Moses did command from God the people to choose a Prince over them of their own people, (not only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. to signify, Lib. De Creatione Principis, p. 723. that there ought to be a free choice of the people, and after a confirmation by God's Lot, as Philo's note is) but even that Government might be the more firm, Quo firmior Respubls. foret. ita sanuit edixitque, omnia uti ex legibus fierent, etc. De Republics. Hebraeorum, lib. 1. c. 1. and apparently beneficial, he appointed that all things should be done by Law, and nothing besides, or against it. And therefore as it cannot be supposed, that all Communities of men were hostilely conquered; Law of Free Monarchies, p. 201. but though some were, others were compaginated and grew into Kingdoms by consent. So can it not be thought but those that so did, Lex quae Magistratibus imponitur, est ut legum cusiodes & al●i non ipsi modo rem bene. gerant. sed & alios qui idem faciunt post se relinquant, non aliud ob oculos habentes, quam justitiam, & parati potius mortem obire, quam ut hae● patria adimatur. Hopperus, 1. 2. De ver. Jurisprid. tit. 11. p. 49. did in their so doing, design as a dignity to their chief in consideration of the erection we had, and the good offices he did in the just and wise management of himself in it; so a benefit to themselves and their Successors in subjection, which they do no otherwise find, then as their Laws, persons, and goods, are kept free and secured, according to such their constituted Laws. And therefore it was a most savoury and christianly wise counsel of the once Phoenix King; Regenti imperium omniae nimia velut praerupti scopuli sunt devitanda. Ammian. Marcellinus, lib. 30. p. 500 ¶ Eicon Basilic. c. 27. To the then Prince of Wales, our now gracious Sovereign, whom God long preserve. Never (saith he to his Son) charge your Head with such a Crown, as shall by its heaviness oppress the whole Body, the Weakness of whose parts cannot return any thing of strength, honour, or safety to the Head, but a necessary debilitation and ruin: your Prerogative is best showed and exercised, in remitting, rather than exalting the rigour of the Laws, there being nothing worse than Legal Tyranny: thus he. But it follows, E Regione aliter esse concipio de regno, quod regis sol 'em authoritate & potentia incorporatum est, quia non alio pacto gens talis ei subjecta est, nisi ut ejus legibus, quae sunt illius placita, gens ipsa a quae eodem placito regnum ejus effecta est, obtemperaret & regeretur. Here our Chancellor asserts the Law in absolute Monarchies of Conquest-Foundation, to be other than the former, and that upon no less valid grounds. For supposing the Victor to be a Vassal to Justice, which restrains from violence and irrectitude, even when there is the greatest advantage and provocation thereto. I say, allowing this the wills of Victors over them, whom they have manlyly overcome, aught to be as effectually binding to obedience and contentedness under the Providence of God in the pleasure of such Princes, as in the former case; for as here people provided Laws of regulation and preservation of them, in what they had against the abreption of it from them: so in this, they wholly are at their Prince's pleasure for their regulation and preservation, because they have nothing of their own, but what is his, ex opere operato of his Conquest. Nor did Nimrod, Ninus, Belus, of old; or do the Leviathan Monarches of the East at this day, make any bones of swallowing all their Subjects have to satiate their pleasures; nor do they think they do injury thereby, because their Dominion is absolute, and all their Subjects have is theirs, in what sense he pleases to interpret it, who is the Lex loquens, even when the Laws he utters are illius placita; not inventa deorum, but retenta pravorum principiorum. And if this be the liberty of those Monarches, 2 Instit. on c. 29. Magna Charta. p. 56. how much is the Subject of England to bless God, and magnify his Prince, who permits, and what's more, protects the Law, to warrant the Subjects while loyal and dutiful, the free use and benefit of the Law; yea, and who does not hold himself free from the directive and conscientious obligation of the Law, wherein it has a tongue to utter its sense to those purposes. Yea, that the words of a King may make us Englishmen, either very grateful, King Charles' the Martyr. Eicon. Basil. c. 23. or the contrary, hear them from the Prince I delight to quote wisdom and goodness from, No condition, saith he, can make a King miserable, which carries not with it, his Souls, his Peoples, and Posterities thraldom. Neque Cancellarie, à mea hucusque memoria elapsum est, quas alias in tractatu de naturalegis naturae, horum duorum regum equalem esse potentiam doctis rationibus ostendisti; dum potestas qua eorum alter perperam agere liber est, libertate hujusmodi non augetur, ut posse languescere moriuè, potentia non est, sed propter privationem in adjecto, impotentia potius denominandum. This the Prince is introduced to mention, not only to insinuate to great men, that their duty it is, gratefully to remember fidelity and love of counsel to them; but in Preface to the memory of an excellent Treatise of the Chancellors, in which the fuller debate of the matter in Argument is handled. The Title of the Book is here mentioned to be De vigore legis natura, a Book no doubt of worth and weight, not only because the work of the Author, who in all things was a very great Master, but also of the consequence of the matter, and the testimony it has to be backed by learned Reason. Pitsaeus' mentions it, Ad Ann. 1460. p. 650. as no doubt there is but it was common in his time: but most of his Works, besides our Text, are lost, at least in such private hands, that they are as good as lost, which I ingenuously profess, I should be loath, if I could help it, any line of our Text-Masters should be: but it fares with Books as with Pictures, that pass from their first to after and other owners, till at last they are unknown almost whose they are, Tametsi quid libris commune cum pictura: pascit illa tantum oculos, hic animum mentemque instruunt; illa mutam, nanem, & plaerumque falsam descriptionem continet, libri, viventem praeceptionem, atque exactam spondent; Tabulas ctiam imperiti pingunt, literarum monumenta non nisi ductisumi consiciunt. Baptist. Egnatius in Epist. ad Minutium ante Caesar. or kept to the solitary use of their Proprietors by purchase from those, who would admire the lineaments of them as much as their Impropriators. That then there was such a book is certain, and that he is only honourably remembered by this our Text, is as certain. For that herein he has a Monument far more durable than any of Marble or Adamant; nay, when his body interred I know not where, and inscribed with I know not what Epitaph, is a secret to most of the Nation; this that he hath done to the honour of the English Laws, and the consolidation of a wavering Prince, is public to his name and glories, perpetuation and augmentation. That while Herostratus was remembered for his villainy, in burning the Ephesian Temple the World's Wonder, Philostratus in vitis Sophistarum p. 493. in Phavorino. and Phavorinus for three strange things which he acquired; That being a Frenchman he learned Greek; that being an Eunuch he was thought guilty of Adultery; that being an opposite to the Emperor Adrian, he yet lived and evaded his fury: and the Roman Emperors are monumented by Suetonius, and others for their deeds of Prowess, Liberality, Lubricity; and the like things our Worthy is mentioned in the Pyramid of his Wit, and has his own hand both the Pen and Epitaph to him; which I the rather note, because many not only ignorant, but lazy, morose and capricious learned men, transported with a fret against the high Tide of Learning that is at this day by the over float of the Nilus of divine blessing on industry and ingenuity, (which they would tether to themselves and straiten as to its diffusion) are so virulent against writing more Books, that they cannot but censure with mordacity the labours of Writers, and contemn them as far as they civilly dare therefore, which I dare call so great a weakness and vanity in them, as deflowrs the merit of all their other excellencies. Nor do I believe there is any true art in any man that envies the good eye of God on others, in making them instruments of addition to men and ages Science. Yea, I know there can no inglorious principle raise men that write to deny themselves the pleasure of life, as they must therefore necessarily do, if they were not excited to, and kept in the resolution of it, by that inclination that virtue works to beneficence, and that testimony they would give to men and times, that they did not live unprofitably, Q. Hatetius familia Senatoria Eloquentia, quo ad vi x●●, celebrata, monumenta ingenii ejus baud peninde retinentur, scilicet ●●pot is magis, quam cura vigebat; utoque aliorum meditum & labour in posicrum valesc●t, Sic Haterii Canorum illud & prosluens ingemum cum ipso simul extenblum est, 〈◊〉. lib 4. as all they do, that die in person, and bear their Learning out of the World with them. And for my part, I think Tacitus his commendation of Haterius, to be as much a reproach as eulogy to him. Haterius (said he) was a Senator by family and wisdom, noted for eloquence in speech, but died intestate as to any Records of it. What the age he lived in accounted him, was more Nature's bounty then his care; for he did all on the sudden, as inconsidering aftertimes, so becomes his immortal wit mortal, and the main of his Eloquence inaudible to us. Thus fell it out with Haterius, and thus will it fall out with those negligent and incontributive souls, which treasure up (Miser-like) for no purpose, but to be said to be learned; Not considering, that there is no wisdom nor counsel in the Grave whither they go; and that it is a kind of self-felony to abbreviate the life of God's gifts in them; which they do, that make themselves, though learned, die and be forgotten, who by their Works of Learning would live as long perhaps as Homer, or Virgil, or any Authors, which do outlast Lands and Conquests, Families and issues. This premised, I return to our Chancellor, concerning whose learned Work the Prince is produced in testimony. And that to which he speaks is to this assertion, that the Power of both absolute Kings, and Kings by politic constitution, are equal; not as they are in actu exercito, for so they do evidently differ, but as they are in actu primo, that is, as they are proper exercises of power. For power as descending from God, and a Ray of his lustre accompanied with Justice, are in Comfort with Equity, which environs and circumvallates it. And as God can do nothing but what is just, because every thing that is in God is God, and every thing that proceeds from God is as God, good and holy and just in its cause and foundation: so every proper act of Power supposing an ordinateness to a good end, Derivativa potetesias est ejusdem jurisdictionis cum primitiva. Reg. Juris, 2 Instit. p. 71. and by right and suitable means thereto, cannot exceed the bounds of such restraint, without a forfeiture of its nature and denomination; which makes, that vice and excesses are no proper expressions of power, but rather privations of power, sin having defaced the Image of God in Man, and rendered him naked of that ability and exercise of a right understanding, and a conformed will to the rule of rectitude, and standard of power. For the abusion of power in its conversion of itself to one man's accommodation, with the injury and vexation of millions of others, as well the Image of God, as that one, is not the true tendency of power; nor does dare formam to power, quâ such; but is rather the absence of power, in which Lust and lawlessness, as Master of Misrule, rants and rages to an excerebration, which is the reason that Laws of modification are taken in, to qualify the distemper of surprised power. For if the soul of man were emancipated by virtue, it would not need any regulation or monition, besides that of its inward Tribunal, which because sin does usurp upon, has some relief from those extern adjuments. Otherwise, suppose a Prince so tender conscienced as David was, when himself, that he durst not cut off the lap of Saul's garments. Suppose his heart so soft and flexible, that with josiah he melts before God, and dare not abide the hearing of the Law, which so represents his own sins to him, that he is ashamed to make his returns so unsuitable to God's indulgencies to him. Suppose a Prince so chaste, as was restrained Abimelech, and upright Samuel, in whom there was no immorality visible. Here the great indulged power to such a Prince, would be no other than what expressed itself in just, holy, and good actions, because the power of them is in being and full oriency in the soul: but when the inundations of justice, kindness, and equity breaks out, Nobis ergo qui de jure disputamus qua sit in principe potestas, non licet nec licebit unquam in principe, constituere potestatem, qua ejus libidine & liberae voluntate absque recta rationis limitibus ducatur. Covarruvias, lib. 3; Va●resolut. c. 6. p. 261. then is not the height of power to be accused, but want of power by a prevalence of weakness against it. Moses was as mighty a Monarch as ever was; his Will was the Law with Israel: yet do we not read, that ever he did that to Israel that they complained of (excepting only in their petulant and frenzy fits) and the reason was, he proposed to himself no by-end; no self-aggrandization to lackey whereto he was to express lubricity and weakness. This is evident not only in Scripture, Ad prudentiam semina prastari sanguine, quare molles carnes aptires ad disciplinam, sane spiritus subtiliores agiliores lucidiores& ut ita dicam 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Caesar Scaliger in lib. 1. c. 1. Aristot. De Hist. Animal. p. 37. in the example of joseph, who had opportunity, and probably personal power enough, to have unlawfully enjoyed his Mistress; but because God brought into the presence of his mind, tampered with by her fond solicitations, the power of integral nature, telling him it was an immorality, which he as a man was not to hearken to, and a turpitude; which as a Saint he was to defy, his Mistress rested untouched by him, notwithstanding all her resignation to him. For though true it be, that God's restraint on men be the superadded Curb to exorbitancy; yet true also it is, that there are laid from Nature, though lapsed according to the good Constitutions and habits of some men, or the particular extemporary or premeditated Resolutions of others, such restraints visible and emanant, as make the opportunities they have to the contrary, frustrate to all ends but those of virtue and power, as in contradiction to turpitude. Thus though Tarquin's weakness may force Lucrece; * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Dictum Alexandri apud Stobaeum, Ser●●. 5. p. 65. Plutatchus in Alexandro, p. 6●0. yet, Alexander his power over his passion may preserve Darius his Wife, and Mother, and Brother, though under his Martial power. And though Attila may come with fire and sword, and salvadge-like devour Countries; yet an Antoninus may preserve his Conquests, and do the conquered no harm but good. While a Belteshazzar may riotously drink in the bowls of the Sanctuary, a Cyrus may preserve God's interest intemerate: Aristot. Lib. De virturib●s apud Stobaeum. Serm. 106. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. ' 'tis (saith the Philosopher) a main evidence of Magnanimity, not only to bear all conditions, but not to admire delights, applauses, power, nor victorious successes, but to look upon ones self as concerned to do more noble acts, by how much the greater opportunities we have to effect them. For the mastery of Nature in her unjust postulations, is the true specimen and evidence of power; Vices and esseminacies are but privations in adjecto, the absences of impedients, Privatio quantum ad illud quod significatur per nomen, est non ens, & praesupponit sabjectum & habilitatem subjecti ad formam cujus est privatio. Sanctus Thom. prima parte qu. 17. and the presence only of what is a member of the conspiracy. And this is the reason why absolute power is so formidable, because it has the temptations of almost impossible refusal, unless there be a resolution of dethroning self in the irregularity of its absoluteness. Nor will any man in power be good in his office, except he resolve not to make the King of France revenge the quarrels of the Duke of Orleans. Caesar Borgia that could not command his revenge, but act it must against his nearest relations. And Herod that had no power to abstain from Herodias, nor to deny her, though she sensually by her Daughter asked the head of the second bravest man of the World john Baptist. Alphonso that King of Naples, who never made men fair weather and good cheer but betrayed them, Fitz-Herbert's Religion and Policy, p. 203. murdered Ambassadors against the Laws of Nations, sparing none whom to ruin was his advantage, forcing Subjects to sell their commodities, and buy them again of him at his own rates; fell Church-Patrimonies to jews, and count Religion a thing of nothing. Men and Princes that do thus are no Princes of power, but vessels of weakness. For let their Titles be never so absolute, yet powerless Princes they will evidence themselves, that thus are vassals to Lusts, and impotencies of soul, privationes in adjecto, such privations of true power, as no privation besides it, is. Agesilaus, King of the Lacedæmonians, being asked what were the chief and most requisite qualities of a King, Plutarch in lib. an Sevi administr. sit respub. replied, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, &c Courage against Enemies, Kindness to Subjects, and Reason in Counsel to improve opportunities aright, and not to go against the intent of Providence in them. And therefore the Chancellour's assertion, that both the Regal and Politic King are equal, amounts to a truth; not only as both of them are equally from one Fountain, GOD, and to one end, IUUSTICE; but also as the power of the absolutest is but such, while it keeps within just bounds; nor is the expressions of the Regal Politic King, though never so restrained less than power, because it acts in conformity to the Law of its institution, which is to the preservation of the Prince's own Conscience from violation, and his Subjects bodies and goods from oppression and injury, which the Chancellor commends in all Princes, to love and value, considering the end of power, which is as it follows. Quia, ùt dicit Boëtius, Potentia non est nisi ad bonum, This Sentence out of Manlius Severinus Boëtius is much to be regarded as well for the truth of it as the authority of the Author who was a most noble Roman Senator, for learning and art the glory of his age and time, which was under the Empire of Zeno; Theodorick the triumphant Goth had so great a value of him, that he knew not how (as he thought) to write enough of him, Quascunque disciplinas vel artes foecunda Graecia per singulos viros edidit, Cassiodor. variar. lib. 1. Epist. 45. Te uno Auctore, patrio serm●nt Roma susc●pit, are the least of his words to him: yet even this incomparable Patrician, whom any man but a Goth would have valued as a none-such (agnoscant per te exterae Gentes, tales nos habere nobiles, quales leguntur Authores, are the Goths very words;) even this man was with Symmachus his Father-in-law a Patrician too, In Prolegom. ad vitam Boetii p. 898. oper. Quod in libertatem populum Romanum viderentur velle vindica re. Lilius Gyraldus dialog 5 De Poet. Historic. p. 219 Impress. Basiliae Ann. 1570. and many others of right virtuous parts and noble Extract banished Rome, and after Put to death, upon bare suspicion of inclining to Rome's Enfranchisement; or as Murmelius has added to it, Because he was bold against Arianism, with which the Emperor was infected and Plaque-sick of; which quarrel purposely picked, and offence unjustly taken at his learning, eloquence and integrity, endowments too manly to pimp to base and illiberal Projects, robbed the world of his excellent life, and that Orb of the lustre of his transcendencies, whom julius Martianus Rota in his Prefatory Epistle to his works doth more at large set forth, and Murmelius also in his Prolegomena, this was the Author. The sentence here out of him quoted is no less ennobled by its alliance to truth, then to him the utterer of, 'tis no doubt out of his Books De Consolation Philosophiae, which he wrote when in Banishment at Ticinum, five they are in Number, according to Tully's five Books De Finibus bonorum & malorum, and though all his large Volume, on Parts of which Murmelius, Impress. Basillae Ann. 1570. Henricpeter. Agricola and Porretas have commented, are Manifesto's of his transcendent learning and most Christian Accomplishment; yet his Books De Consolation Philosophiae are the flower and dainty of them all; and though he was put to death about the year Ann. 524. after Christ, yet do they survive to render him remembered even to this day. Prosae secunda lib. 5● I confess, yet I have not found the very words here quoted in him, but I have found what confirms them, Extrema verò est servitus, cum vitiis dedit à rationis propriae possessione ceciderint. For he finding that power originally God's and part of his Essence is not exercised by him but to the good purposes of Creation, Conservation and Glorification, and knowing that the trusts of power, his peculiar, which he grace's men with, is in ordine ad bonum, and is only such while it is so, and when it is not, ceases to be power and is the privation only of it, and as it were a non ens, no creature of God's, no derivative from him but an usurpation of man's upon the permission of God, as I may so write. He I say, knowing this and that by the sad experience of his own suffering under the undeserved rage and implacable fury of Theodorick, who was only powerful in the multitude of vices concentring in his soul, and rendering the faculties of it weak and opposite to good, gives this Monition to him and to all men in condition like him, that there is no power but ordained for good: And therefore that either great men must be good and use their greatness to promote goodness, and discountenance the contrary, or else they have no power in them; for that is only to good, which vice and truculency is opposite to. And hence he infers, that to be able to do wickedness is only the power of sensuality, which being proper to beasts is unproper to men, whose power is ordinated only to good. Quo posse malè agere, àt potest Rex regaliter regnans, liberiùs quam Rex politicè dominans populo suo, potius ejus potestatem minuit, quam augmentat. This sentence supposes, that the more Princes are left to their wills, the more temptation have they to inordinancy; and the more invitation they have to it the more probability have they of surprise by it; and the more surprised they are, the less will they boggle at the sin and folly of the lust that victors them; which danger so really perilous to the interest of God in us, he lays down more probable to seduce and prevail upon absolute Princes then politic ones. ●rimus homo nibil omnino brutalitatis habuit, hoc est, nihil omnino brutalis desipientia aut temeritatis sive praecipitationis habuit, sed rationalis & modestus erat in statu illo & erectus ad bona spiritualia, & aversus ab infimis suis. Gulielin Parisiensis, De universo partis primae, c. 59 p. ●52. And then next he concludes, that the prevalence of such temptation is so far from declaring the effects of it, the creature of power and expatiating the fame of him for it, that it is on the contrary an argument not to be refuted, of Impotency in the soul, wherein Vice alone has the Command, and man being under the Tyranny of the Beast, Malus autem s● regnet se●uus est, ne'er unius bo●inis, sid quod est gravius, tot dominorum guot v●t●o●um. lib. 4. De Civii Dei. c. 3. the body is made a non ●ns as it were to all impeding of this abusion of power. And hence it is, that I am so far from fearing men for their Fortunes, Armies, Titles, Favours in the World, when they are vicious, that I cannot but despise their fury as weaknesses, their favour as danger, their gi●s as poison to integrity; and conclude them in the Hell of misery, while in the height of their jollity, and amidst the pomps and gaities of their Attendants. It was a brave Character Eutr●pius give Anteninus Pi●s, Eutropius, lib. 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. A most honest man he, while a private man was; but more, if possible, than an honest man he was when in the Empire: then he was as good as all the opportunities to goodness co●ld make him, and no more evil th●n the presence and predominance of virtue would permit him. Oh there is no virtue more Kingly, Spo●swood. p. 31. p. 342. then generous greatness of mind, and Royalty of Humour. Malcolm the third of Scotland, was famous for this; so was King james in the Case of Bothwel: Eico●. Basilic. c. 27 to he then Prince of Wales, our now Sovereign. and so was the late King Charles, whose words were; For those that repent of any defects in their duty towards me, as I freely forgive them in the word of a Christian King; so I believe you will find them truly zealous to repay with interest that loyalty and love to you, which was due to me. So again, I have offered Acts of Indemnity and Oblivion to so great a latitude, as may include a● that can but suspect themselves to be any ways obnoxious to the Law, and which might serve to ex●l●de all future jealousies and insecurities: I would have you always (meaning our now Sovereign) propense to the same way: when ever it shall be desired and accepted, let it be granted: and so blessed be God and the King it has been, c. 17. not only as an Act of State-policy, but of Christian Charity and choice. Thus that brave Prince made good his power, in Boëtius his sense, Non caret regia potestate qui corpori suo noverit rationabili●er imperare, vere enim dominator▪ est terrae, qui carnem suam regit legibus disciplinae. Sanctus A●gustin. De Offic. Magi. stratus, c. 1. contra Epist. Manichaei. Potentia n●n est nisi ad bonum. And that the greatest Monarch in the World is not great in his actions of lawless cruelty, and rigorous severity, but in his virtuous, kind, and conscionable expressions of the power God has given him, which he so far benefits himself and others by, as he makes them good and happy, by his example and exercise of it: Nor needs such a Prince to be limited by Law to do, who voluntarily limits himself by that Law which he allows in his Government, as the common direction and rule to all person's; and to the observation of which, he holds himself obliged in Justice and Prudence. And hence is it, that all the happiness that lawless and injurious Power promises itself, is but in Parisiensis his words, Somnialis faelicitas, the power of fancy and opinion; Somnialis faelicitas, ex necessitate maxima mi● seria est, quia qui magis amat luxuriav●, magis captus est in ea, & magis servus ●●sius magisque impo●ens ad a●●a ●ona acqui●endae. Cap: 10 De legibus, p. 52. Consuetudinales habitus affuefactione operum acquiruntur, & quodam modo generantur, partis secundae De Vniverso. parte prima, c. 149. p. 940. 'tis no real power, because it is power which leads to misery; since by the love of it as irregular, a man is made more and more unable to good, assuescency in evil making it natural to him, and impossible for him, without extraordinary power from God to be recovered from it. And hereupon it is, that all the mis-employments of God's favours to men; (and such they are, when by them disservice is done to the giver, and as far as in the receiver is, a real design against him managed) are not only sins in God's account, but real weaknesses in their own nature, Omnes virtutes erunt in acts in gloria, Parif Lib. De Retribu●ionibus Sanctorum c. 1. p. 306. because arrived to be what they are by the inactivity of the true presence and power of virtue in them. For as that of the school man is true, that all virtues in glory will be in act: so is it in a sense true here, that all power of virtue will be active in a virtuous mind, Potentia non conjuncta actui est imperfecta. Durandus, Quaest 1. lib. 1. Distinct. 42. p. 2●3. while virtuous it is, and deserves the glory of being, and being accounted such; and where the contrary is, there how great soever the ex●ern power is, there the actions will declare no power but weakness, because separate from virtue, and disposed to a contradiction thereto. Nam sancti Spiritus jam confirmati in gloria, qui peccare nequeunt, potentiores nobis sunt qui ad omne facinus liberis gaudemus habenis. This is brought in to prove the Argument, Potentia illa est m●●●●●●era, er q●●● ha●emus principa●tus do numb Du●●●●●, lib 2 D●sunct. 24, q 3. p. 387. that the least power to do good, is greater than the greatest to do evil; because power exercised in well doing, a●●s properly according to the institution of power, which is to a virtuous activity: but power expended upon evil, is not power but weakness. The privation of power, which ●he Chancellor makes good, from comparing the glorious Angels with us men, which sin by reason of the converse we have with, Status gloriae nihil habet imperfectionis aut carentiae, seu desiderii cujuscunque rei non habitae Parisiensis, secundae partis De Universo, part. 1. c 6. p. 769. and the addiction in us to irregularity, and a latitude of choice and love (which the glorious Angels confirmed against and undesirous of, being in plenary glory and under no carency or desire of what they have not) are said to be and that most truly potentiores nobis. This Clause than is thus to be considered. 1. The subjects of it are Spirits and holy Spirits, dignified from their state-Glory, from their stability in that state, confirmed, from their purity and impeccancy as a fruit of their Confirmation, peccare nequeunt, from their endowment or privilege thence resulting; because they cannot sin, therefore they are more happy and valuable than we who can do nothing but sin, Aequalis erit gloria Sanctorum Spirituum & Angelorum. Guiliel. Paris. part. 1. De Universo. c. 43. p. 609. potentiores n●bis sunt, qui ad omne facinus liberis gaudemus habenis. Sancti Spiritus.] These are the Angels not excluding the Spirits of just men made perfect, for they are both admitted to one and the same glory; These are the Peers of the upper house of glory, who continually behold the face of God and are ministering Spirits for the good of God's Elect; these in their nature state and condition are abyssalis latitudinis & profunditatis, Partis secundae De Universo, part. 1. c. 153. p. 946. Quia conjunctio vel applicatio animarum hu●nanarum ad Deum altissimum, Deificatio ea. rum est, quod tibi dubium esse non debet. Idem c. 152 p. 944. Parisiens. c. 153. p. 946. Tom. 1. as Parisiensis his words are, and therefore I shall not engage in those Inquiries which the Schools have curiously about them, which some of them do aggravate almost to a blasphemy. That which is pertinent here is to to consider them as the glorious Instances of divine goodness and power, that though they are creatures, and as spirits laps●ble, as appeared by the fall of some of them, Lucifer and his Apostate confederates; yet those that stand are to be admired for the illumination of their Intellects, the purgation of them from corruption, the perfection of them in their state, by the help of all which they are made fit for the Service of God, for the performance of his Commands, and for the expression of benevolence and charity to the Militant Heirs of glory, according to that sevenfold good office which Parisiensis says the Angels and Saints in glory do to us here. Secundae partis de Universo part. 1. c. 149. p. 940. Spirits than they are by nature, holy by donation and Charter of Royal Endowment, which our Text calls Confirmatio in gloria; Glory as that is a state of perfection and incarency, visio maris, the fruition of what ever the height, breadth, length and depth of mercy has to give, yet is it advanced by the impossibility of abbreviation, decay or dissolution of it. And this depends upon the security the Saints and Angels have for their indetermination, which is in the word ●●●firmati, whereby they have not only all joys for the kind but the ultimityes and quintessentialities of them according to the true and furthest notion of glory; not barely passed, as I may so say, the Sovereign's grant, but ratified irreversably, God has set to the Seal of his truth, invariable, inviolate, that the glory they have, they shall hold so long as he himself lasts, and this is that act of goodness and power which the Sovereign and Bishop of all creatures both in heaven and earth, has fixed on his Vessels of glory for their Seal of certitude and continuation, which they cannot either by their own defect, Durandus. lib. 3. dist. 3. p. 492. b. lose, or their desertion of their state deserve to have taken from them, since not only ex adjutori● sibi co-assistente but ex dono inherente, they cannot sin peccato commissionis aut ●missionis, as the Schools speak, but they being once confirmed in glory are for ever tenable of it and in no sort separable from it; their Confirmation being not viae sed patriae, Angeli ob permanentem in natura stabilitatem nomine columnarum in Scriptures appellantur. Benzon. in Psal. 86. c. 3. p. 2. In Cap. 3. Sapientiae Tom. 1. p. 352. not in order to completion but the very completion, of their glory in the present possession of it: and because of this saith Be●zonius is it, that the Saints and Angels are set out in their state of stability by a pillar in Scripture, Revel. iii 12. To him that overcometh will I make a Pillar in the h●use of my God. And hence Bonaventure pleases himself and me much in advancing glory by these three steps of Meditation. 1. Cogitatio veritatis, the soul shall not only not harbour error but meditate on truth the subject of all its delight. 2. Inhaesio bonitatis, there shall be in the glorified Saint an universality of goodness, which shall so overshadow it and adhere to it, that it shall not be separable from it, for God who is all good shall be the object of its love and admiration. 3. Perfectio Comprehensionis, it shall fully comprehend what God is, and what the glory in which it is, is. And all this by its confirmation in glory, which considered, the Chancellour's consequence is most direct, peccare ●equeunt; Sin is the desertion of God and adhesion to his Creature, a Lapse from his Constitution into somewhat of contrariety to him; but this the Saints and Angels being passed possibility of, because they are in glory where no temptation to sin, no nature serviceable to sin is, they are well said, non posse peccare; not as Creatures, for so they are peccable: but as confirmed against degeneration and lapse; from whence, as God's powerful indulgence to them, arises their impossibility to sin, as also their prepotency to us: for in that they are sinless, their created power is in its pristine vigour and oriency, immaculate without spot, regular without any inordinateness, Omnis virtus generaliter, & omnis potestas e●●peditior & ●otentior & efficacior ad id, quod potesi per se●etipsam, quam ad id quod non potesi nisi per aliud; similiter omnis virtus, & ' omnis potent●apotens per se, hoc est, essentian● suam, vel per id quod est, apud cam & in essentia sua, quam quaevis alia, quae non potest nisi per id quod extra ipsam esi. Guiliel. Parisiens● secundae partis, parte secunda, c. 152. p. 544. De Universo. plenary without any abatement; so that as they have glorious states, so proportionable natures, delights, activities, and operations, and transcend us as well in what they can do, as in what they are. For where as we men can do nothing, but by assistance of things, without ourselves, and to such proportions as are suitable to finite beings, and under such restraints as may interpose, and if they do, will defeat us. The glorious Angels, as Spirits of power, activity, and purity of essence, can from the energy of their essence, Angelus perficte cognoscat perfectè omnes causas naturales necessa●tas, & contingent●s, ac per hoc sciat, quae causa aliam impedict vel non. Durandus, qu. 7. lib. 2. Dist. 3. p. 315. as it is indulged by God, and privileged to purposes of ministration to his glory, and his Saints good, effect stupendious things, and by hidden and secret methods, which the wit and enquiry of man by not discerning is so far from ability to prevent, that he cannot penetrate the intent and purpose of them, till they discover themselves in their effects. Sanctus Hieronim. lib. 2. in c. 3. ad Galat. Tom 19 Hereupon our Lord Jesus is set forth in the Old Testament, under the name of the Angel, Exod. 14. 19 and much of the expressions of Divine Power over the World, either for tuition or destruction, is from God manifested by Angels: As his Angels are ministering Spirits, and gather his Elect from the four corners of the Earth; so are they the Dissipaters' and Ruiners of all pernicious persons and practices, which are antipodique to God, and enervative of his Glories progress and augmentation. Gen. 19 'Twas an Angel that d●● stroyed Sodom and Gomorrah. 'Twas an Angel that destroyed Senacherib.'s Ho● in on enight; Gen. 31.11. 'Twas an Angel that comforted jacob; and an Angel that went before Israel; Exod. 14.19. And an Angel that was to destroy jerusalem, 2 Samuel xxiv. 16. And thus they are potentiores nobis; they are indeed more excellent than we, as they cannot sin corporally, because they are spirits, as they cannot sin voluntarily, because they are sancti spiritus, and their Will is wholly conform to Gods, in the purity of it, as well as in the glory they partake of by it; Angelus non potesi demereri, quia peccatum seu demeritum non potes● esse in voluntate nisi praecedente aliquo defectu in cognition. Durandus qu. 2. lib 3. dist. 1●. p. 546. and then by sin they cannot demerit of God, and so be deprived of the glory they are invested with, because they are confirmed never to be other than they are; and because they are inflexible to sin, and defy that which we call desire and delight, being wholly taken up with the Vision of God, and disengaged from this World's Enthusiasms, and the captivations of sense, they are well said to be potentiores nobis. Indeed the power of man is little but vanity and vacuity; as this life, the time of power, is but a span in length, so but a flower in duration; and all the sphere wherein mortal power acts, is but this vain and vild World, and no further is it capable of Regency, then by, and under God, and according to the Commissions of his permission. And when in the exercise of it we consider it, there is more cause to weep then rejoice, that so fair a beauty should be courtezaned to pleasure sin, and by it to work iniquity with greediness, which is that the Chancellor means by liberis gaudere habenis, a phrase purposely used, to express the licentiality and excess of men's use of power. Adam used the power of his freewill, to disobey God in eating the fruit he was forbidden; and Cain, Gen. 4.8. ● 9 v. 21. the natural power of an advantage credulously given him to murder Abel; Noah had a power of sense, and he abused it by the intoxicating delight of the grape; David had a masculineness, which he deturpated, by impregnating Vriah's Bathsheba; Herod had a power of tongue, even to the stupefaction of his Auditors, and he listened too much to vainglory, and thereby abused his power; Nimrod had a power in his Arm, and art of cajouling men into his politic Net, but he abused it by cruelty. These, and thousand of examples of the incircumscription of power, and the vanity of its excess and eccentricity, every Story, every Age, every Man almost confirms: And all this proceeds from this of our Text, liberis gaudere habenis. We would all be Originals and Independent, loath we are to be under the yoke of restraint, though it be lined with the velvet and shag of Ease and Innocence. We would Phaetonize, till we hurried GOD out of the Throne of Rule, and brought Heaven and Earth into a Gallemaufre; and this comes from our Pride and Presumption: our Tongues are our own, they said it, who told no truth with them; and to bind the hands of men to the peace, makes them stark mad of revenge. The sturdy Stallion does not more ●re● when he is curbed up, nor more riot, to the danger of his Rider, when let loose, and the rain given him: In 12. Aeneid. 101 then men do rise in spirit till they have power, and rage with madness when they have it. Therefore the Chancellor understanding Habena, as Servius does, Pro potestate & facultate, intends, that men by being glad of a free reign, hold themselves privileged and at liberty to do what they list, which the Scripture calls, to work iniquity with greediness, and to do what is right in their own eyes, which is impotency in the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and non ultrality of it. For then all fear of God and Man being rejected, the brutality of sense evicting the ingenuity and sovereignty of Reason, man becomes beneath the Beast that perisheth; Lib. De R●tribut. Sanctorum, p. 310. that like as that Fornax & caminus charitatis, as Parisiensis phrases it, That love of good men to God, swallows and drowns all self: so that nothing is now Competitor with it, but it acts in ultimo fortitudinis. So in the error and misplace of love on ourselves and on the practices we are in our opinion aggrandized by; the swallow and gulf of the whole man is to gratify his sensual project and libidinous apprehension; and this is libere gaudere habenis. Solum igitur mihi jam superest à te sciscitandum, si lex Angliae ad cujus disciplinatum me provocas, bona & efficax est ad regimen regni illius; ut lex civilis, qua sacrum regulatur imperium, sufficiens arbitratur, ad or bis regimen universi. Si m● in hoc demonstrationibus congruis indubium reddideris, ad studium legis illius i●i●● me c●nferam, nec te postulationibus m●is s●per his, am●lius fatigabo. This conclusion of the Chapter presents the Prince both rational and tractable; and in the one an acknowledger of the Chancellour's learned assistance: so in the other an expecter of his further satisfaction, in what he yet rests uninformed in: having therefore from the prealleadged Arguments found relief, he subjoins an insinuation o● a restant scruple, which his oracular Head is to salve, Solum igitur mihi superest. This solum igitur mihi jam superest] tells us the Prince's ingenuity, that though he was of perspicacious wit, and knew all that his years and education could advantage him to; Singulariter vero notandum est non infrequens esse, ut heroum & principum liberi, etiamnum adolescentuli, ardua & consulta negotia faeli●●ter exptevis●e leguntur, sunt quippe occulta quadam virtutum semina regibus ingenita quae si aaolescere sinantur, repent fructam ferunt industriae & gloriae supra aliorum mortalium facultatem, & ante tempus naturae legibus praestitutum, quasi praecoci fr●ge. In Panci●ol. 'tis 43. partis prim● p. 154. yet he is free and noble to confess, that something is wanting, which he requests his Chancellor to supply to him. For notwithstanding it cannot be denied, but that God does give often those that are born to greatness, wits and minds suitable thereto, and paramounting the ordinary indulgency to other men, as far as their hopes and fortunes are beyond them, as Salmuth makes good in many notable examples: yet are the highest accomplishments in them but rude and dangerous, if not polished, pruned, and regulated by grave and virtuous tuition: nor is all the knowledge Youth has, any true ornament, if it reduce not the mind under the Empire of virtue, and settle it not on the appetition of useful knowledge; for as the body may be without delicate food, and thrive well, yet will have no grand strength without bread, which is the staff of life: so the mind may be variously adorned with studds, and embroideries of art; and yet being void of true applicative Wisdom, need its Habeas Corpus to remove it from imprisonment of error and ignorance, to have benefit of the solum superest, that necessary, proper, and prudent knowledge, which it is losingly wanting in. And this is that, which because the Prince is in his own opinion without, he endeavours from his learned Chancellor to be supplied with, à ●e sciscitandi●. A te sciscitandum] The supplement of this knowledge he'll have, à digno, not from any that obtrudes himself upon him, The Chancellour's Character. nor from any that on other accounts come not before welcome to him; but à te scisvitandum, as the properest and pregnant'st Resolve● of them, and one who having faithfully attended the misfortunes of my Father and myself, and throughly digested the Providences of God, the provisions of the Law, and the intrigoes of Government, art able to reconcile my prejudice to their prescript, and settle my wavering by their stability. From thee, O good man, and grave Chancellor. do I alone desire direction and resolution of my doubtings. This is the sense of à te scis●● tandum; which being the voice of a great mind, lessons us to conclude the fixation of brave and Princely Spirits, who as they never settle but upon premeditation, so alter and remove not their favours, but upon great and apparent provocation; and that not only for fear of the detection of their secrets, which being under the covert of their Confidents, may by the spleen and choler of their discontents, take air and be vented to their Principals dishonour; but also because levity and futility thence chargeable on greatness, indisposes it for the future, to be relied on by those Ministers of State, who are unquestionably necessary to carry on public and sovereign Designs; which the Prince considering and judging, to avoid the suspicion of such Princeless versatility, points to our Chancellor as the very very person of whom he only would inquire, and from whom alone expect an account of what he was in suspense and doubt of. this for what in the clause is presational, the singularity of the thing, and the person whom he singles out to be enquired of in those words, Solum igitur mihi jam superest à te sis●itandum. Now for the matter and substance of the Quaere, that's Lex Angliae, no trite or vulgar subject, but a Princely and noble one; a Law, the fruit of justice collected from the Divine and Natural Law, and digested into useful forms and methods, fit for this Nation, the Queen of Islands, and the lustre of Europe, Lex Angliae.] Then, why this Law is so searched into, that's by reason of the Chancellour's solicitation of the Prince to love, embrace, and study it, [ad cu●us disciplinatum me invitas,] saith he; since Sir Chancellor, your gravity directs me to it, as the subject of my minds love and engagement; that mind of mine requires me rationally to search, whether the choice be worthy it, before I own myself a Disciple to, and put myself under the Discipline of it. For as I would not refuse your provocation with rudeness, so neither would I embrace it without satisfaction, that fit it is I should. This makes me inquire for satisfaction, that having found it, I may submit myself to the learning of it. Then thirdly, what of the Law of England it is, that the Prince would know, that's contained in those words, bona & efficax est ad regimen regni illius, a shrewd question worthy the Prince to ask, and the Chancellor to answer. For England being a Kingdom of consequence, and governed by a Law, 'tis fit it should be a good Law, respectu justitiae, and an effectual Law; respectu prudentiae, every way commensurate to the superstructure that should be laid upon the foundation of Law. For bona here is not only taken for propitia, as Servius takes it; Adsit laetitiae Bacchus dator & bona Juno; but pro existimata & virtute praedita, and efficax is that which add aliquid agendam maximè conducit, efficax adversus serpents, 1 Aeneid. Plin. lib. 245. efficacissima auxilia, used by Pliny, Tully, and others, to express energy and fitness, throughly to perform any thing. By which two words as referring to the Law, the Prince intends the interrogation of his Chancellor, whether the Law was such for the justice and wisdom of it, as would answer the end of Government over the people, and make the people happy and contented with it: Whether the Concerns of the Crown and Subject in Peace and War, in Civil and Ecclesiastical Matters, was duly provided for by it: this is the sum of bona & efficax, that not only the Plaster should be broad enough for the Sore, but the matter of it be well composed, to the end of its application, to assuage tumors, and congregation of ill humours, and to keep the parts of the politic body hail and thriving. HE 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. L●● ad●●gustum ●●gustum, apud Xihil in Epitome. Dionis, p. 212. edit. Sylburg. For as undoubtedly, that is the best diet that enables the body to be vigorous, and keeps the colour from decaying; so is that the best Law that is proper to keep Government in a prudent medioc●ty, because it takes away all the occasions of misunderstanding and disaffection. And this the Prince would know, whether the Common-Law does or no; Why? Because he is now in debate, whether Law to adhere to and study, and resolved he is to choose the best, that is the most proper and suitable to the people of England: that ever being the best Law to rule by, that is most adapted to the nature of the Subjects it is to rule: which because the Law of England is to the people of England, is to be therefore allowed the best Law for England: so the Law thinks, and has published of itself, and its testimony all wise men are to believe and take, according to the Maxim of Law, N●minem oportet legibus lapientiorem. The like may be said of the Roman Civil Law; Dr. Wiseman in his Book. Lex legum. printed 1657. which I account with that very learned Civilian and prudent Gentleman, Lex Legum, above all humane Laws whatsoever. (For the sacred Empire, allowing it the particular Salvoes from the common rule of it, which all Nations allow with the use of it,) it being not only for the most part the Law of it, but that which is suitable in its capacity and concern, to the vast requiries of the Empire and Continent; and that by the Justice and Wisdom whereof, no doubt but great expa●ation and lustre has been given to it. For since the Roman Civil Laws were the quintessences of the Greek Laws, and improvements of those of the twelve Tables, which a learned man says thus of, Fremant omnes licet, di●am quod sentio; Bibii●thecas me bercuie omnium Philosophorum, unu● mihi videtur duodecim ta●ularum libellus, si quis legum fontes & capita videru, & authoritatis pondere, & utilitatis ubertate supe●are. P ● ri●us Senens. lib. 1. Instit. Reipub. 'tis quinto, p. 21. b. Let men rave and rage as they list, the Book of the Laws of the twelve Tables, are in my opinion not only as the Fountain Laws, and heads of inchoat order, to be preferred before all the Libraries of Philosophers; but also for the weight of authority, and abundance of profit, to the Wisdom of life that thence resulteth. And daily supplies have been made to them as emergencies require, and the prudence of experience has solicited, and accordingly has effected. Even our Chancellor, though he were by profession a Common-Lawyer, and by choice a Champion of it against the introduction of the Civil-Law, in competition with, (or what he thought rather) in subversion of the Municipe Law; which time beyond Record, and success beyond parallel, has radicated here; yet is even in this designed remora to that projection, a Confessor by the mouth of the Prince, that the Civil-Law (with the reserves of particular Customs, which in every Country is used, besides the Texts of the Law,) is the Law that governs the Roman Empire, Lib. 1. Instit. Reipubls. tit. 5 p. 22. and is sufficient to distribute Justice by it to the Continent. So true is that of Patricius Senensis, Ex ill is namque dignitas omnis expetitur, etc. For from them every Dignity is derived, since all industry and honest labour is by rewards, splendour, and glory herein encouraged, and all the vices and frauds of men punished with fines, disgraces, bonds, stripes, banishments; yea, even death. Thus he. And this does not only merit for it the honour of good words, Observe well this. from men of learning civility and gratitude, who must and ever will (passions and private concerns laid aside) express it to her, as the Mistress and Magazine of Learning, Wisdom, and Order, suitable to the Universal Nations she is oracular in, and accordingly furnished for; but also apologise for, and obtain from this Nation of England, a high respect to her learned ●ons the Civilians, whom I shall delight to see encouraged according to their merits, and that modesty, which their Prudence will dispose them (I know) to express to the Muni●ipe Laws of this Nation, which in the allowance of the Civil Law, in the Cases usual and as wont before the late distractions, will so I trust satisfy the Professors of that Law, that as thereby they shall see a fair field for their display, & a plenteous harvest for their encouragement, so they will in no sort hold themselves neglected. And this will (I think) content the wise men on both sides; the learned Civilians being restored to what they were forcibly put from, and the learned Common-Lawyers confirmed in the enjoyment of what they now and ever had. For that both Laws are necessary in their respective allowed spheres and proportions here in England, no man of learning can deny, no more can any man of worth deny to the Civilians of this Nation the praise of their great Learning, and deservedly to be encouraged usefulness. Which considered, the Prince here is personated as resolving a conformity to his Chancellors Prescript, which he judges will be closely rational, such as shall satisfy his perspicacity and Princely judgement, and take him off from all uncertainty and doubt of distraction. This he intends by (si me in hoc demonstrationibus congruis indubium reddideris.) And to this he assu es an hoped for reward, in a resignation of his Princely self to that study, which has the most of rational suasion, and aught most to lead him; and this he tells the Chancellor he will (ilico) instantly do, all delays and further debates laid aside, and all further troubles by his enquiry and irresolution being abandoned. CHAP. XV. Cancellarius. Memoriae tuae Princeps optime commendasti, quae huc usque suggessi, quare & quae jam interrogas, meritus es ut pandam. HEre the Chancellor gives the Prince the just acknowledgement of his pupillike ingenuity: to remember what Youth is told, and to observe the Precepts of communicated Wisdom, is a virtue amiable in all; but in Princes prodigiously commendable and obliging. And this the Chancellor finding the Prince profitably to do; not only by the Commemoration of it, encourages the Prince: but by the Civility and good consequence of it whets himself to add all the helps his experience and love can to his improvement, not thinking any thing too much to bestow upon a just Valuer and a grateful Acknowledger. For since the high conceits of men of Dinon Tarentinus his mind, carries them to ascribe more to their single selves, then to all o● her besides them. Adag. 28. Chil. 1. Cent. 6. And they cry out, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that their opinion is more weighty than thousands of other men's; and with Francis the first King of France, make nothing of their words but content themselves with je suis Roy, Herbert. Hen. 8. p. 192, 194. let Charles the fifth say what he can of a violated promise; the gentleness and gratitude of those that are more modest and memorative of their duty, carrying them to the virtue of acknowledgement to those they are obliged to; cannot but be kindly expounded a merit, as the oblivion of it would be branded, a disobligement. And therefore the Prince so frankly reciting the Chancellour's impartment, is well said to by our Chancellor, Meritus es ut pandam. Scire te igitur volo, quòd omniae jura humana, aut sunt Lex naturae, consuctudines, vel statuta, quae & constitutiones appellantur. Here the Text describes the kinds of humane Laws to be three, such as are effects of God's Implantation on all men and things. This Law of Nature is the Law of all places, all persons, all times, altering not, but is one and the same Inscription of God's power and goodness, Ius naturale esse, quod natura omnia animalia docuit; atquo jus istud non humani genetis esse proprium, sed omnism animalium quae in terra, qua in mari nascuntur, autum quoque commune esse. Seldenus De Iurs Naturae & Gentium, lib. 1. c. 4. wherein he makes manifest, himself to be the fountain of being and to preserve his Creatures in the Law and rule of it. This Law I have in some kind treated on in the Notes on the first Chapter; that which I shall here add is but only to show the obligation of it. Calvin's Case 7 Rep. For though Moses the most ancient of Writers and Lawgivers doth not write of it, Doctor & Student. c. 5. yet undoubtedly it was the Directory of Mankind and Nature in all the Forms of Creatures long time before him, and was contained in the seven Precepts of the Sons of Noah; and the learned say, Vis illarum tam latè ad omnes pertinuit. ut qus nescirent ea, interficere in bello atque ex hominum communione tollere jussi sunt Israelitae, Cunaeus De Rep. Hebraeorum lib. 1. c. 1. God commanded the Israelites to kill all those they overcame in Battle, that were ignorant of them. This Tully suffragates to; for having said much of the obligation and extent of it, he concludes, Cui qui non parebit, ipse se fugiet, etc. To which Law whoever obeys not, Lib. 3. De Republ. avoids himself and becomes not man, but as a Runaway from his Station deserves utmost punishment. Fornetius ad legem 42. p. 122. De Verb. signify. Hence is it that all Laws of men are deduced from this, and so far only are just, Obligatio juris vinculum est quo necessitate astringimur. Instit. D. ti●. De obligationibus l. 3. etc. as they are conform to this, and in what they contradict it, are no Laws of justice; and hence as the Law of Nature is the Law of God, so an obligation lies on the Creature to observe it. Concerning these Laws of Nature, our most learned late deceased Countryman Mr. Selden has most incomparably treated; so has * Decretal. Dist. 1. 5. & 8. Gratian; and Carraria who says, juris naturae violator est, qui Legem justum non observat; Lib. de literali & mystic Juris Interpret. quaest. 4. art. 3. p. 311. the sum of all, grave Hopper expresses pithily, Prima vera Lex ab uno Deo, à quo deinde ad mundum profluit, & post deinceps ad hominem, ubi Lex humana à Lege divina & naturali deducta; and this suffices for the first sort of humane Laws, those of Nature, Catholic for both time and Persons. The next are Consuetudines, Dr. ● Student. c. 7. These have been (saith Doctor and Student) of old time used throughout all the Realm, which have been accepted and approved by our Sovereign Lord the King and his Progenitors and all his Subjects, because the said Customs be neither against the Laws of God, nor the Law of reason, and have been always taken to be good and necessary for the Commonwealth of all the Realm. Hence these are (secondly and in a kind) sovereign Laws; 1 Instit. p. 113. p. 110, 11, 52. 69, 140. for they do rule men and things: Consuetudo praescripta & legitima vincit Legem, saith the Rule of Law; and not only in the Laws common, Customs are the Laws of places and things, as in Manors and Tenors, in which there is no Law without them, lies; but in the civil Laws, Mores recepti sunt Legum nervi, Tholoss. Syntagm. Juris. lib. 26. c. 25.2. p. 532. lib. 47. c. 25. ss. 20. lib. 4. c. 21. ss. 6. Pandecta jur. Civil. and consuetudo dat jurisdictionem, etiamsi agatur de causis meri Imperii, and consuetudo observata Legis instar est; In Antiquitatis causa, & praescriptiones, longúsque usus & consuctudo considerantur: Sive lex jubeat sive consuetudo dum vetustissima, & post hominum memoriam sit, ca enim prjvilegii jus habet & qualis nunc est, presi●mitur semper retro fuisse. Alciat. ad legem 214. lib. De significatione Verborum, p 465. these and such like Rules are in the civil-Law, Texts: yea Tertullian averrs the prevalence of Custom, making it a Law upon rational and religious Grounds, which Saint Augustin confirms in his Epistle to januarius; of which I shall have occasion to write in its due place. All that I shall add is, that Custom so prevalent, aught to be reasonable or else it cannot be good, Consuetudo antem, etiam in civilibus rebus pro lege s●scipitur cum deficit lex, nee dissert S●●tura an ratione consisut quando & legem: atio commendat. c. 4. lib. De Corona ●ili●is. the Rule of Law being, Consuctudo contra rationem potius usurpatio quam consuctudo appellari deb●t. Let this be enough here for the second kind of humane Laws, Customs. Reg. juris. Choppinus ●●. 2. De Domanio Franciae, ●●● The last is Constitutiones, the same in the civil Law that Acts of Parliament under the name of Chartae Regis, 9 H. 3. Ordinationes 27 E. 1. & 31 E. 1. 33 E. 1. 17 E. 1. 34 E. 1. articuli, 9 E. 2. 35 E. 3. these under what Titles they of old variously went, yet being made in Parliament according to the Constitution of our Government, 〈◊〉. 47. c. 27. ●●. 1. are that which is here called Constitutions, because being made by the King, not as in France, where Tholossanus says, Princeps noster Monarcha solus, ●●lius addictus Principis vel Legum Imperio, jura subditis, & Magistratus ipsos praeseribit, jurisdictionisque cujusque modum ex sententia distribuit; but with the assent of the Lords and Commons, they are to be obeyed as wise and worthy Acts of Government: for in that the King corroborated with the counsel of so many brave Lords Spiritual and Lay, and Commoners as a Parliament of England affords, makes Laws, they must needs being so pondered upon and passed, carry the presumption of convenient and suitable to the nature of affairs. And Tholossanus so far approves of this, that like a wise man as he was, Syntagmat. Juris universi. lib. 47. c, 29. p. 1016. he, after he has discoursed of the French Kings absoluteness in making Laws, concludes, Meliùs tamen non diffiteor Rempublicam se habituram, etc. I do not doubt to say, 'Twould be better for the Commonwealth, if our most Christian King would take the Counsel of his Senate in making Laws, by which means they would be more mature and advised, then by the Counsel of few they can be hoped to be, for men of parts and loyalty to the stability of his Throne, would sooner quit their places and preferments under him, than sin against God and him by Counsels of flattery. Thus he. Sed consuetudines, & legis naturae sententiae, post quam in Scripturam redactae & sufficienti auctoritate Principis promulgatae fuerint ac custodiri jub●antur, in constitutionum five statutorum naturam mutantur. Here our Text-Master shows how the ternary of Laws prementioned, become regularly and effectually Statutes, which all persons are to take notice of, as that which has an obligation on them, & they are to express a duty to: For though Customs do bind, & the Laws of Nature do bind men, in foro Dei, and in foro civilitatis & decoris, as they evidence men intelligent of their duty, Ius naturale per positivum quandoque specificatur, quandoque determinatur Carraria de literali & mystic. Jur. Interpret. partis secundae Reg. 2. art. 1. .48. and obsequious to that which has upon so just grounds a regency over them; yet they seem not in the sense of our Chancellor (as I concceive) in foro poena externae, and by an intitling of the Civil Magistrate to punish the nonobservance of them, become obliging, till they are transferred into a positive Law. For as where there is no Law, there is no transgression; so where the transgression is not breach of a published Law, there ought to be no punishment; for punishment is the effect of a sin committed, and by a known Law violated, the Magistrate provoked and despised; which in this Case not always being, since there are many offences against these Laws, which men may not know. Our Text says, that whatever the offence of not observing Customs, and the Laws of nature, be in themselves; yet as Humane Laws, they are not in Magistratique Construction, till magistratically they be made such; and that they can only be made, by being formed into the method of Statutes, and passed as such by the Royal Assent, which chiefly gives the life and noble energy to them. And this the Chancellor sets down pithily and orderly; Antiquitus leges Solonis axibus ligneus inscriptae & Romanorum in are 12 Tabul. Tholoss. Syntag. lib. 48. c 10. art. 3. they must be in Scripturam redactae, that they may be not only durable, but also certain, and entered on the Parliament Re●; for the Law being the Extract of Justice, leaves nothing to discretion and uncertainty, because it knows danger and inconvenience may come in at that door; but as it requires that Laws be had in honour when made, so does it deserve such honour from men, by being no snare, but a security to them, leaving nothing arbitrary, or under the exposition of any man's will or pleasure, Cook 4 Instit. c. 1. p. 41. & p. 26. but as declaring the penalty, so appointing of old, before Printing came in dace, and men might have the Laws of them printed) that they should be proclaimed by the Sheriff in his County, and the Acts were often enroled in other the King's Courts, that the Judges might take knowledge of them, accordingly to administer Justice to the people: all which argue the care of the Law. ● or when Laws are once, Doct. & Student. c. 8. in Scripturam redactae, than they are by the Rule of Reason, and by the Judge's men of reason and conscience, to be interpreted; and this is no small privilege that Laws which reach all men, are reduced to writing, that all may read and consider them, and plead them for their defence and indemnity. And surely the writing of Laws the Holy Ghost mentions as a blessing in this regard, when he commanded Moses to write the Law, and the Kings of Israel to write the Law; yea, when God wrote the Law (which omnipotently and primarily he had written on the Tables of man's heart) in Tables of Stone, to be a Monument of the perpetuity of its obligation, and the inexcusibleness of his breach, who knowing the will of God, and Law of his duty, yet does it not, but is rebellious against it; He exemplified to man the greatness of the blessing, to have not only a Law, according to which he was to live, but a Law written; the sanction and imperation of which he might certainly know, by having it penned under his eye, and within the reach and capacity of his reason. And therefore, though as I have before noted, Laws there were probably before Moses; yet none of those Laws ' were published in the form of them to the people, that were to live by, Ante Mosis tempestatem Scripta jura non agnovit orbis. ●tsi enim amca profecto haud sane sine legibus gens hominum aguaverat, tamen neque publicis tabulis cae, neque ullis monumentis erant consecratae. Cunaeus, De Repub. Hebraeorum, lib. 1. c. 1. and be judged according to Law by way of writing. From the mouths of the Dictator's of them, did Nations of old receive their Laws. In allusion whereunto 'tis said in Scripture, That the Priests lips shall preserve knowledge, and the Law be enquired at his mouth. From Moses his lenity and tenderness only, was the first reduction of Laws to writing. And being so, they must further before they can be Laws, be sufficienti authoritate principis promulgata. For as no Laws can be such in the sacredness of them without Authority, so no Authority can make them Laws, but that which is sufficient to that end; and because none is so sufficient to that end but that of the Prince, the Text says, sufficienti authoritate principis promulgatae; for Legislation being the act of Majesty, excludes all exercise of it besides, or without it, and so not only says the Civil Laws, as Tholossanus quotes Authorities for it; Sicuti & leges quidem ra●one jurisdictictionis in s●o territorio Parliamentum facere potest, & de quibus constitutio regia diversum non inhibet, at sine consensu Principis leges statuero non potest. Tholoss. Syntag. Juris, lia. 47. c. 17.21. but also the Common and Statute Laws, as I have abundantly heretofore proved: contrary to which there is no one good Authority rightly understood in all the Law-Books that I have met with; yea, because the first Statute of 15 E. 3. was made without the King's consent, the Statute of the same year did repeal it, and the Title of it says, Poulton's Stat p. 141. The last mentioned Statute was repealed, because it was made without the King's consent. For though Subjects in Parliament may prepare and humbly offer to the King their requests, and assent as much as in them lies to the passing of Laws; yet he gives by his pleasure of passing them, the quickening word to them; and therefore they are said to be a sufficienti authoritate principis promulgatae. Ac custodiri jubeantur, in constitutionum sive Statutorum naturam mutantur, & deinde panalius quam antea sub ditos principis ad earum custodiam constringunt, severitate mandati illius. This our Chancellor adds, to show that Laws (like Physic) must have some potent ingredient, to carry them to a right working on the part affected; and this he calls, Fear and dread of displeased greatness; and the consequence of it, Fine, Imprisonment, and as the cause may be, Death: For as God himself is not known, but by the Judgements he executeth; nor feared, but for the command he hath over the bodies and goods of men, which he can blast and ruin in a moment, and for the Hell that he has in the other life, to cast the body and soul of implacable and impenitent men into: So Kings are not observed in the Laws of their declared Authority, further than they do jubere custodiri leges, and that paenalius quam antea subditos constringunt. For in England I suppose every Law, either common or Statute, has a certain duty and penalty, and as the duty is rewarded with the favour of protection, for so signifies the words of King Ed. 1. in the Stat. 15. regni Stat. 2. where speaking of the Laws and Customs of the Realm of England, See Sir Ed. Cook, c. 86 of penal Laws, 3 Instit. and his Prerogatives and Rights Royal, he adds, We considering how that by the bond of our Oath, we be tied to the observance and defence of such Laws, Customs, Rights and Prerogatives:) So is the violation of it with the proper penalties, therein expressed, accustomed to follow such transgressions, and no other, the Law of Engl. leaving little to discretion or pleasure, especially in the penalty of Statutes, wherein nothing being expressed penal, the Subject that will be refractory thinks himself more safe. For the Laws of England, by the Kings in their Parliaments made, were ever intended to be mercifully medicinal, Physic of evacuation, not excoriation. Hence tart Laws have been observed ever short-lived, as was that of boiling men to death for Treason, 32 H. 8. c. 9 which was repealed by ● E 6. c. 12. (which Statute of repeal says, Nothing being more godly, more sure, more to be wished and desired betwixt a Prince the supreme Head and Ruler, and the Subjects whose Governor and Head he is, then on the Prince's part great clemency and indulgency, and rather too much forgiveness and remission of his Royal Power and just punishment, then exact Severity and justice to be showed; and on the Subjects behalf, that they should obey rather for love, and for the necessity and love of a King and Prince, then for fear of his strait and severe Laws. Every good and loyal Subject will hold himself obliged to conform to his Prince's pleasure in things not mala per se, and not fear a penalty more rather than love a duty; but where the contrary is, Princes are furnished with power to order Contumacy, and their Proclamations commanding the observance of Laws, are very strong to not only invite good, but terrifieevil Subjects to Conformity; and this the forementioned Statute also hints in these words, Yet such times at some time come in the Commonwealth, that it is necessary and expedient for the representing of the insolency and unrulyness of men, and for these foreseeing and providing of Remedies against Rebellion, Insurrection, and such Mischiefs, that sharper Laws as a harder bridle should be made to stay those men and facts, that might else be occasion, cause, and Authors of further Inconvenience,) so he: and that of 37 E. 2. c. 5, & 6. which was repealed by 38 E. 3. c. 2. the very next year; these and others might be instanced in, which confirm what is the all, I conceive, our Text intends in these words. It follows. Qualis est Legum Civilium pars non modica, quae à Romanorum Principibus in magnis voluminibus redigitur, & corum auctoritate observari mandatur. Vnde Legis Civilis, út caetera Imperatorum statuta, jam pars illa nomen sortita est. Lib. 1. Tit. 4. De Constitutionibus Principum. This is made good from the Digest, which is authenticated in all parts of it by the Emperors, who set it out as the body of Laws Civil; Ex Ulpiano Instit. 1. p. 84.85. and in that Ulpian is quoted, thus saying, Quodcunque igitur Imperator per Epistolam & subseristionem statuit, Cum Principis Interlocutio redacta est in corpore juris. Gloss. p. 85. interlocutus est. etc. Whatsoever the Emperor by his Letter or Subscription appoints, or knowing decrees, or advisedly and Thronally utters, or commands by his Proclamation, that aught to be a Law. That these Constitutions of the Emperors of Rome in their successive Ages, and the sayings of famous Lawyers booked into the bodies of Civil Laws, make up as really the Civil Laws as the Original Laws do, is as plain to all knowing men, as that the Statutes are part of the Laws of England, and so ought to be accounted, Omne jus aut consensus fe●u aut ●e ●es●●a constituit, aut consuetudo fir me●. Monestin li●● regularum Digest lib. 1. Tit. 3 p 84 Lib 2 Excusationum. as well as the Customs and Records of Courts, and the Entryes of Law-Judgements in the year-Books. For since all Laws are gradually made, being by one and the same power, they are owned with equal Reverence as well the later as the elder; yea, Modestinus considering that all Law is either such as Consent made, or Necessity introduced, or Custom has settled, says plainly, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 etc. later Constitutions are more prevalent than former. Si igitur in his tribus quasi omnis juris fontibus, Legis Angliae praestantiam probaverim praefulgere, Legem illam bonam esse & efficacem ad regni illius regimen etiam comprobavi. Deinde si eam ad ejusdem Regni utilitatem, ut Leges Civiles ad Imperii bonum, accommodatam esse lucidè ostenderim, nedum tunc Legem illam praestantem, sed & ut Leges Civiles electam (ùt tu optas) etiam patifeci. This is the Method which the Chancellor proposes to the Prince's Solution, he being in suspense; whether of the Laws he should study, as in the forementioned part of the Comment on this Chapter I have further signified. And the Chancellor being, as an Englishman, zealous for the Law of his freedom; and as a Master in that Science, concerned to promote the honour of his study and delight, finding of●xeter's ●xeter's Daughter, the Rack; Rot. Parliamenti 28. H. ● Num 30.2 〈…〉 Peter Trea●●. p. 35 brought into the Tower john Holland then newly created Duke of Exeter, being made Constable of it, and intending it as a Preface to that Law which allows the use of it, which the Common Law does not. I say, the Chancellor advertised of this, applies himself to the Prince to prevent any rival Law; showing, that not only the Rachel of England was beautiful and well-shaped, but fruitful of all that amounts to Order and Ornament; and that as the civil Laws are very fit for the Empire, and every way correspondent to the Magnitude of that vast and Giantlike body; so are the Laws Common and Munic●pe such, as set out livelyly and preserve healthfully the beauteous and lovely Constitution of this British Empire: which though the truth of it be evicted by the Judgement of the Law in all Ages, 3 Instit. p. 121, 122. and the experience of the order and renown of the Nation by reason of it, the violation whereof, in the Law's undervaluation, has ever been the Nations hatred and vehement Prosecution; yet the good Chancellor not contented to pack upon the Prince heaps of Precedents and infinities of Quotations, (which are most Historique, that such the temper of the Nation has been, then rational that so it judiciously aught to have been) here proceeds to satisfy him argumentatively; that there is no favour showed therein to the Laws, but that which her deserts have made the Subjects her Debtors by, and that the Sun is no more useful in the firmament for the invigoration of vegetables, than the Commonlaw, as it was in his time used, is for the well-being of this Nation to which it is every way helpful, both as food, exercise, and physic. And so concludes the fiteenth Chapter. CHAP. XVI. Leges Angliae in his quae ipsae sanciunt Legis Naturae ratione, non meliores pejoresve sunt in judiciis suis, quam in consimilibus sunt omnes Leges caeterarum Nationum, etc. THis whole Chapter is but a Transition to what he had preasserted as his Proof in behalf of the English Laws, as flowing from that Trinal Fountain of Law, Nature, Customs, Constitutions, the first whereof being the Law of Nature, and the same with all Laws, he passes over without any stay upon it, as conceiving no necessity to enforce that by argument, which already is in grant; and so do I, after the example of my Text-Master, In Stat. Merton● c. 9 p. 98. 2 Instit. pass over it with a Testimony of Sir Cook's pertinent hereto. Our Common Laws (saith he) are properly and aptly called the Laws of England, because they are appropriated to this Kingdom of England; as most apt and fit for the Government thereof, and have no dependence upon any foreign Law whatsoever, no, not on the Civil or Canon Law, other then in Cases allowed by the Laws of England; and therefore the Poet spoke truly hereof, Et penitùs toto divisos orbe Br●tannos: So, as the Law of England is proprium quarto to the Kingdom of England, therefore foreign Precedents are not to be objected against us, because we are not Subjects to foreign Laws, thus that Sage: And with his Justification of our Laws as good and effectual to the Government of England, I end my Notes on this Chapter. CHAP. XVII, Regnum Angliae primo per Britones inhabitatum est. HEre our Chancellor enters on the second head of his Argument on behalf of the Laws of England, Customs, and those he not only proves to be most ancient, but used and accepted as good by five several Nations, all which ruled successively in Britain. The first whereof were the Britons, a people whose name and origin many have diversely descanted upon. Mr. Gambden knows not what to say, but concludes, that in these cases 'tis an easier matter to impeach the false, Britannia, p 5. Britanniam circumstuam Oceano, Abo ●g●n● tenuere Pomponius Le●●us. p. 526. edu. Sylb. p. 10. then to teach and maintain a truth. Many count them Aborigines: Mr. Cambden thinks Gomers' Posterity to be the Cimbri which might come to this Island, as the uttermost Quarters of the World; Gomer signifying utmost bordering. But this, as all other such like opinion, I take with respect to his great name, to be but conjecture. Time having lost us so irrecovably in the dark of its not to be regained discovery, that to be positive in any thing is not only fond, but a phansiful madness. That Britain's were very ancient Inhabitants here, and primo, Pag. 14.15. Holingshed's Description of Britain, p. 4, 5, 6, etc. as our Text has it, that we can read of, Stories confirm, and that their Druids and Priests were the great men of Learning and Law, is also known of old. Of these many Authors are quoted by the learned forecited Author, which I will not enlarge upon: these Britain's were also the same with the Gauls of old, and had one Language and Custom, which the W●lch, the remaining Britain's, hold to this day, as they do their Christianity; for to their eternal honour 'tis recorded, that from the time of their first Conversion, which is said to be 1500 years ago, in Anno 162. after Christ, they never after wholly defected from Christianity, 5 Book Hist. Britain, Holingshed, p. 126. but as they held their little spot of Land, (if their own Authors do not deceive me) from Brute to Cadwalladar, which they compute about 1820 years under 102 Kings; so do they continue also very resolute in retention of their Language and Customs. And as British Language they at this day speak; so do they please to be called by the name of Britain's, which name of old was the general name of the people of all these Islands, wherein as the King of it was ●●iled, Insularum Britannicarum Monarcha, and did in right of his Imperial Crown, Quatuor maria sibi vendicare: so the Laws of it were called the British Laws. But about the year 600. the Angles, a people of Germany came upon us; and about Anno 827. Egbert being crowned King of all Britain at Winchester, made an Edict, that all Saxons should be called Englishmen, Vide Chronic. August. Cantuariensis, pag. ●●33 Qui prius vocati sunt reges West laudanum, abhinc vocandi sunt reges Anglorum. Dicet, p. 449. and Britain, England; and Dicet confirms it, that about the year 829. that those that were heretofore called Kings of the Westsaxons, were for the future to be called Kings of Englishmen. So famous ever since has England been accounted of, ●ornalensis p. 909. edit. Lond. that not only Pope Gregory called its Monarches, Domini liberorum, Lords of free Subjects; but the Kingdom itself, Regnum Dei, the Kingdom of God. But concerning England's Kingdom, I have in part written heretofore, and shall hereafter in another place: therefore that which I shall add, shall be an accusation of my own Nation, as at this day, so of old, as ingrate to God for his mercies; not only in a good Land every way a Canaan of plenty, and to all intents of Peace and War accommodated; but in the discovery of his glorious Gospel to us, in the power & purity of it, though the fruits whereof is little seen in our lives For as it was in the days of old, they were eating and drinking, and taking and giving in Marriage till the Flood came, and swept those secure merry madmen away; Pag. 909. and as before the Norman Conquest, there was a man of God (they are jernalensis his words) foretell that God would send a scourge on the English for their beastly and cruel vices; not only Murder and Treason, but Drunkenness, and despite of the house and service of God; but also for their antique fashions, which showed the instabil● of their minds. Note this. I say as these Omens were then on the Nation; so truly 'tis to be feared, that some heavy misery impends us, who have not learned obedience by the things that we have suffered, who abound in secret hatred, each to other; who are proud beyond our fortunes, prodigal above our proportions slothful beneath ingenuity, envious to great merits, censurers of grave manners, contemners of Native Customs, Affectors of vicious pleasures, intolerably peevish, mercylessly savage, brutshly voluptuous, Sunt enim infirm & tepidi amatore; justitiae quibus aus vigour, aut servor deest, aut fortassis uterque; cum uterque sit, summopere necessarius. Sanct. Bernardus in Declamat. in verb. dixit Simon Pe● tius ad jesum, zealously profane, and frigidly religious, amongst whom, the Son of man when he comes on the earth, will not find so much faith as a grain of Mustard seed in bulk, nor as a bubble of air in solidity, all compliment, all boast, no truth in word or deed. Sed auferat oblivio, avertat Deus malum Omen, Let peace and truth, O Lord, be in our Hezechiah's days; for he hath by his Proclamations forbidden p. ophanenels: and whatever befall us, let us say, The Lord is just, and we have reaped but the fruit of our own Deservings. For never was there a Nation more beloved of God, and saved from the hands of our Enemies then we have been; and never was there more turning of the grace of God into wantonness, then has been amongst us, who yet do not know the things that belong to our peace. Deinde per Romanos regulatum. This is added not only to show the succession of Conquests, but the accidental Benefit of them; for the Romans being a people of universal Empire and Civility with their power, brought learning and manners hither, which is part of the notion of regulatum. Under whom the Romans came (for without a head and order they did nothing) is evident in Story; Aggressors est & Britannos ignotos anteà. superatisque pecunias & obsides imperavit. In Jul. Caesare, c 22. p. 5. Suctonis tells us julius Caesar did visit Britain to their cost, the pearls, as some say here, indrawing him hither, and the money here given him appeasing him, and keeping Natives in the possession of their Estates and Laws: Augustus would no Voyage to Britain, thinking the Empire would be neglected at home, when it had such affairs to do afar off; but Clauàtus was of another opinion, and therefore be sent Plautius hither, Cambden. p. 62. Aelius Spartianus in Adriano p 129. in Severo 175. Jul. Capitol. in Antonino, p. 138▪ who did many great matters tending to the Romans advantage; which Domitian seconding, settled to the Romans a great part of this Land, placing Garrisons in the most proper and tenable places, and by them awing the subdued Natives: Adrian built a Wall to keep the Roman Conquest from inroads, so did Severus and M. Antoninus make high Walls, and Ways, together with other laborious Monuments of order, not purposing ever that the Roman power should ravall off in Britain. But as low and victored as the Natives seem to be, their stomaches were not lessened, nor did they so much submit to, as repine under the insolence of their Roman Rifllers; as design made them watchful, so resolution bold, to take the first occasion they saw to their own restitution, and the interition of their Usurpers: In Severus his time, they flew into Arms and so incensed him, that he ordered Execution of the Britain's they took Rebels; but Death determined his tragic Edict, and his Successors vice made the hopes of a better time more probable and near. In this juncture Constantine, a Britain by the Mother, becomes Emperor; then Britain had ease, but his Reign expiring, with Valentinian his Successor new troubles arose; till the Natives, resolving the last and most desperate thoughts in Theodosius his time, acted them and were emancipated by them; which though than they little knew how to manage moderately, yet happened to be the abolition of the Roman power after a 476. years' Continuance in a great and heavy measure here. Yet as bad as the Romans were, they never afflicted the Nation like the Northern Cormorants, which followed them, nam finis unius mali, gradus est futuri. So it follows. Iterumque per Britoneses & saxons. The Romans being disseised of the most of their power here, the Britons think themselves in a good degree possible to become free; but alas, the Romans strongly planted and Garrisoned, having Wives, Children, and improvements in the Nation, would not easily quit them, nor be driven out from them: yea, so did they adhere to their acquisitions, that for forty years after the Resurrection of the Natives, these domineered, and held their own making excursions and inroads; yea, endangering a rally again of their dispersion, and that to the Britain's re-Eclipse if not extirpation. In this strait, the Natives call in Auxiliaries, and those the Saxons, a poor, hardy and Pyratique people, who were modest at first, and came in such numbers only, as the Natives suspected not, but after drew by degrees more and more out of their Country, till at last they tyrannised ten thousand times worse than the Romans did; the particular whereof, Britannia, p. 110. & seq. and the misery of the Nation under it, our Cambden has most fully set forth. These subdued the Britain's and made themselves Lords of this Land; the Angles, a people between juitland and Holsatia joining with them, and being powerful amongst them, by reason of which the Nation was termed England, quasi Angles-land; according to which venerable Bede styles his Saxon History, Historia Gentis Anglorum: during all whose times, in a Heptarchy of Government, which lasted for a long time, Britannia, p 138. there was nothing but civil War and bloodshed; till Egbert, King of the Westsaxons, prevailed over the other Kings of the Saxons, and so had for a time the whole Government to himself. But not long was it before the Danes, who many years by Piracy had infested the Coast, now enter the last by force of Arms. So it follows. Et tunc per Danos idem Regnum parumper dominatum est, & iterum per saxons. About the year, 800. Britannia, p. 142. This is the fourth variation of the Lords of this Nation, as it was conquered by the Dane a pitiful deboist Nation, bordering upon the Baltique-Sea, wholly living on Piracy, and by reason of lust and promiscuous use of women, multiplied so numerously, that their own Country not being able to contain them, they were forced to seek abroad for habitations where they could find them out, and force themselves into them. Hither they came, and here they made such hurly burlyes, that it surpasses the Penalmost of all Historians to aptly express them; so that one that considers them well, would conclude them to have been of the Race of those Devils, that entered into the Saxon swine, and run headlong into the Sea, and were overwhelmed and drowned in Lubricity and Effeminateness: Alfred and his Son overcame them, and restored the Nation to a fifty years' freedom from their Tyranny; till Sweno the Dane, taking advantage of Ethelred's softness and invigilancy, entered England with a mighty Army, and over threw the English, but they re-enforcing their right, carried it and lodged happily in Edward the Confessor, who was the Son of Ethelred by his second Wife: thus was the Crown again in the Saxon Race, till the Confessor died issueless, which being by the wise disposition of God, made way for the Norman Conquest, which was the last and durable one. As it follows in our Text. Sed finaliter per Normannos, quorum propago, Regnum illud obtinet in presenti. This was a Conquest with a witness, not only of plenary prevalence, but also of duration and successional Continuance; for it was not over a part, the rest unsubacted, nor yet for the life of the Conqueror, or the same and terror of him continued in his Son, Brompton in Will. 1. p. 960. Vix aliquu Princeps de Anglorum progeny esset. p. 980, 981. or to the proportion of that Vision, which is reported to be seen by the Conqueror, telling him, That his Posterity should enjoy his obtainments 150 years but it was such a thorough one, that it rooted out all the English Nobility and Gentry; yea it carried all so torrent-like before it into the black Sea of dismallness, that all kind and show of justice, was for a time perverted. Concerning therefore this, as amply and ingeniously discoursed upon, Britannia p. 141. & seq. I refer the Reader to that particular discourse, which Mr. Cambden has written of it, whereby it appears that the Saxon Empire, which had continued about 600 years, determined; which though some take upon them to say, Pag. 152. was for a judgement of God on the base avarice of the Magistrates, and superstitions lazyness of the Prelates, as Mr. Cambden's words are; yet was not only for the past and then present sin of the whole people: but to induce the purpose of God in the after felicity of our Nation, which we have long enjoyed, upon the account of what follows in the Text. Quorum propago, regnum illud huc usque obtinet. This our Chancellor annexes, to show the secret pleasure of God; who though he be altogether goodness, yet for a punishment of Nations sins, suffers evils to come on them; and when his glory is thereby righted, converts the ill designs of men to the good of those, to whom the Actors therein lest intended it. The Norman Conqueror he came into England fiercely, and changed the British Government, and in a great measure their Laws, extruded the English out of their Possessions, and placed Normans in them yet in few years his Successors restored much again, Law of Free Monarchies. p. 202. the English revived, and his Successors, saith King james, have with great happiness enjoyed the Crown to this day. So that Quorum relates not to the Britain's, Romans, Saxons, or Danes, but to the Normans only, because their Issue only had the Crown, and so were the Quorum propago within the words. Quorum propago] Not quorum filii, or Successores: but propago a word adapted to the intent of continuance, dicta quod porro pangatur, id est, longè figatur; and the Chancellor intends the Conqueror to be a Vine, which planted in this fruitful Soil, would shoot out many branches of regality to not only an illustrious, but a durable purpose; and as they should influence (regnum illud) this English Kingdom; so should they do it huc usque, not only historic, from the first prevailing to the time of the Text, but Prophetical, of a longer continuance, even to the times, when time shall be no more: which later huc usque reaches only to in the exposition of goodwill, the Text chiefly limited the huc usque to its own time, which was about 356 years thus calculated; William the Conqueror came in about the year 1066. from thence to Henry the sixth coming to the Crown, which was in Anno 1422. in the succession of 13 Kings, See vet. M. Charta, p. 143. sub titulo, nomina Regum, there was 356 years; and if we add thereto 30 years at least, that he reigned, before perhaps our Text was published, it makes the huc usque to be 386 years, which was a long time. For thus it pleased God to fortunate not only the first attempt, but to continue the Majesty and memory of it, even to so many Successions, notwithstanding the sundry intercurring varieties. So true is that of the Wiseman, No man knows good or evil by what he sees under the Sun. For though Hannibal lost the day, and was overthrown at home by a Roman, a young man inferior to him in reputation, experience, and forces; and that when he and his affairs were most important, and he endeavoured most to show himself a Carthaginian veterane: yet Charles the eighth of France, though a young man, destitute of money and counsel, came to invade Naples, strongly guarded, and amply furnished, yet obtained all his desires with ease, and became Master of them, Fitz-Herbert, Religion and Policy, p. 204. Prov. 16.33. which made Pope Alexander say, The Frenchmen came as Harbingers into Italy with chalk in their hands, to make and take up their Lodgings where they listed, not having occasion so much as to put on their Armour in all their Voyage. So true is that of the Wiseman, The Lot is cast into the Lap, but the disposition thereof is of the Lord. Et in omnibus nationum harum & regum eorum temporibus, regnum illud eisdem, quibus jam regitur, consuetudinibus continuè regulatum est. Here our Chancellor uses a pleonasm; and to show his love to the Law, and his constancy in asserting the credit of it, tells us, that whatever the alterations of the Masters of it Kings, and their people of several Nations, were, yet the Customs of England stood firm under them; by reason where of those words, consuetudines, and continuè regulatum est, are to be qualifiedly understood. For if consuetudines be taken complexly, either for the Laws, or for all those usages that were topique, then undoubtedly there will not be (as I humbly conceive) a precise historic truth in consuetudines, no more then in continuè regulatum. Ad caput 17 p. 7. For as the learned Selden observes on these words, The Saxons made a mixture of the British Customs with their own; the Danes with the old British, the Saxon and their own, and the Normans the like, the old Laws of the Saxons mention the Danish Law (Danelage) the Mercian Law (Mercenlage) and the West-Saxon Law (Westsaxonlage) of which also some Country's were governed by one, some by another. Yea, the Common-Law, which is the general custom of the Nation, when it is attributed to Saint Edward as the Compiler of it, yet is so to be understood, as by his command it was framed out of the three prementioned Laws. Brompton, p. 956. 957. So says Brompton positively; Furthermore, when the Romans had their Colonies here, they governed them by the Civil Laws, as well as they governed other parts by British Laws, dispensed by Romans, and when the Normans prevailed; In Praefat. ad leges W. 1. ●dit. Twisd. p. 138. though the Conqueror is said to call Anglos nobiles, sapientes, & in sua lege eruditos, etc. The noble, wise, and learned English Lawyers, that of them he might have an account of the Laws and Customs of England, according to which there were chosen twelve men out of every County, who were sworn before the Conqueror, that to the best of their power, they should justly and indifferently make known the truth of their respective Laws and Customs, passing by none of them, neither adding to or diminishing from any of them; Spelman in Gloss. p. 437. I say though this was done, yet who knowsnot for all this, he chopped and changed them as he pleased; such as served his turn, he confirmed others he rejected: and though he retained the figure and Mould of the Nation, Rapes, Wapentaks, Jornalensis p 818. Hundreds, Countyes, with the little Jurisdictions and Manors in them, also the Councils, Wittenagemots, Shiremotes, Wardmotes, though mostly under Norman names; yet did he either put Normans into place and possession of them, or else made such additions to or subtractions from them, as Conquerors use to do, whose will is the Law: nor can it be expected it should be otherwise, so long as God has appointed time to ebb and flow with uncertain vicissitudes, to bring in and carry off the temporary Inhabitants of the world, and with them their language and manners; which is the reason, Bochart. Geogr. sacr lib. 1. c. 15. p. 65. that at this day language is so confused and mingled; as that nothing of the primaeve idiom almost subsists, and Nations, yea even our Nation has been so party per pale, as that the people of i● have been at one time one, and another time another; when the Romans were in power, they were Roman in Laws and Manners; (yea, Hic denique populus Colonias in omnibus Provineiis misie, ubicunque vivit Romanus habities, Senec ad Albinum. c. 7. though they did at first Romanam linguam abnuere, could not endure the Roman speech) yet by the Roman's civility of nature and conversation, they did not only Romanam eloquentiam concupiscere, Indè habitus nostri honour & frequens togapau atimque decessum est ad delinimenta vitiorum, porticus, & balnea, & conviviorum elegantiam, idque apud imperitos humanitas vocabatur, cum pars servitutis esset. Tacitus in Agricola. but grew to be Romanly vain and vicious, not only in habits, but in perfumes and bathe, in lawlessness of àyet and luxury of entertainments, which even the meaner sort of men called civility and kindness of hospitality, when 'twas part of their Slavery. so Tacitus: to which Gildas assents, when he says, England was called by the prevalence of the Roman power, Caesar Com. lib. 5. & 6. Bell. Gallic. and Customs in it, non Britannia, sed Romania, which prevalence was not only over the Laws and Language, In Claudio c. 25. but Religion also, which the Romans changed by abolishing the Druids, Lib. 15. in vita Constantii Tom. 2. August Scripture. p. 327. Edit. Sylb. whose nesarious carriages Suetonius tellus', the Romans would not endure; though I know, they long after were here: yet, as Mr. Selden says, not as the potent Inspirers of the Nation, but as Students of Mysteries; to which, Am. Marcellinus gives Authority. The like also was the issue of the prevalencies of the Saxon, Danes, and Normans, to which as conquerors, the same Methods are ascribable; Morum & linguae gaudentes similitudine Leges passim triumphatis populis inferebant, patriarum suarum ritus, & vocabula plurima retinentes. Spelman in Gloss. p. 435. De Gothis. Saxonibus, Longobard, etc. it being the inseparable companion of Conquest to be altered in language and in Laws, if not wholly, which seldom is: yet in a good measure which never is otherwise. And therefore though it may be true, that the Conqueror did confirm the good Laws of the Confessor; because they were just and honest, Preface to the 8 Rep. and extracted out of the very bowels of natural justice, prae cateris patriae Legibus, before any other Laws, because he thought it hard to judge by Laws he know not, Est enim sciendum; quod consuetudo Regni No wegiae est usque in hodiernum diem, quod omnis qui alicujus regis Norwegiae dignoscitur esse filius, licet sit spurius, & de ancilla genitus, tantum jus sibi vendicat in Regnum Norwegiae, quantum filius Regis conjugati, & de libera genitus, R Hoveden. parto poster p. 425. those of the Confessor probably being only the written ones; yet did he also allow, out of a private respect to the ingloriousness of his birth, the Norwey Laws, they allowing the base Son of any King of that Kingdom, equal privilege, though he be born of a Bond-Mother, with the Son and Heir born in lawful wedlock and of a free Woman; and that being his Case, he did the honour to those Laws to introduce them, though as to that end they never had any credit here; all which Premises considered, the Text's universality of Language in the behalf of the Law, is (as I said before) to be understood with limitation; for neither were all the Customs or Laws of England by them reatined, nor were they constantly used to govern by them: but every one of them as they saw most advantageous to them, took and left the British Laws and Customs or some of them, and in so doing were but wise in their Generation, and both served themselves of, and secure themselves by, the Providences God gave them auxiliarly to them, which if they had not done, (justice and honesty thereby being promoted) they had done weakly and (as their omission might have been causal of blood and cruelty) wickedly. Quae si optimae non extitissent, aliqui Regum illorum justitiae, ratione vel affecti●ne concitati, eas mutâssent vel omnino delevissent. This, flowing from the precedent Clause, will also be dubious, as it Historically was: For though our Text-Master, and Sir Ed Cook after him, make this an Argument for the Paramountship of the Common-law; yet as it here stands, it makes little for it, since that which is urged for the stability of it under all Powers, Preface ●0 2. Rep. is rather a flower and fruit of the Chancellour's love, then that which I can warrant from History. For although I cannot say any of the Kings here mentioned, Britain's, Romans, Saxons, Danes, did change the Laws universally; or that those parts that they changed, were by them so changed upon reason of Justice (which is a rare Jewel in a Conquering Ear, and not often the Companion of Prosperity; especially in Assaults and Successes of Foreigners, whose access being only to gain their success, is mainly seen in luxury and voluptuousness, associated with cruelty and oppression) yet that some of them were changed by the affection of the changers to their own stability, better forwarded by foreign Laws than these, is as true even as Gospel: yea, and that those Changers were overruled by God for the Natives betterance, is also most plain. For since we cannot but believe, that the Prudence of all Governments tended to honour and order, which were probablest soon arrived at, and sadliest maintained in, by the reason and justice of Laws, Iste Edwardus postquam Rex coronatus fui● cum concilio Baronum & eaeterorum regni▪ fecit renovare & stabilire, & confirmare bonas leges, quae sucrunt per 68 annos inter dormientes soporatae, & quasi oblivioni traditae▪ leges istae voc●ti sunt leges Sancti Edwardi non quia ipsas primo invenorat, sed quia quasi sub modio positae, & in oblivione derelictae, â tempore regis Edgar avi sui qui primo manum suam misit, ad ipsas inveniendas & sta●●enda●▪ Knigh●on, De Eventibus Angliae, lib. 1. cap. 15. pag. 2338, 2339. edit. Lond. made up of the quintessences of all collections and bodies of Laws. It is most likely, that the Laws in use amongst our Ancestors, which are in the forementioned sense to be understood, were the Laws which for the most part and longest time were the Laws here under all Governments. For though Saint Edward's Laws, which were but the Laws of Edgar revised, were here; and the Conqueror set (as I wrote before) a seeming value on them, and braved as if he should have them the standing Rule: yet when he found they would not fit Norman Interests, he either so wholly suppressed, or else so gelded them, that Norman they seemed rather to be, than British, or English; and divers Norman Customs were in practise first mixed with them, and to these times continue; as succeeding Ages, so new Nations (coming in by a Conquest, although mixed with a title, as that of a Norman Conqueror is to be affirmed) bring always some alteration. Notes on this Chapter, p. 9 By this well considered, that of the Laws of this Realm being never changed, will be better understood: thus Mr. Selden. Et maximè Romani, qui legibus suis quasi totum orbis reliquum judicabant. This Note on the Romans chiefly is, not from any secret antipathy they had to the British Laws, quâ such; but refers to the method that scientifically they as the best bred and politiquest Nation under Heaven, exerted themselves and their dexterity by. Livy terms them a Nation, Natam instauraudis reparandisque bellis, and being such in a height beyond others, 'tis likely they would introduce all the instances of Conquest for their own aggrandization, and the suppression of all hopes of reverter to the Conquered; Dominus nolentes, & invitos vasallos jure communi feudorum, & exceptis consuetudinibus privatis, non potest in alium alienare, nisi necessitate adigatur ad venditionem. Tholossan. Synt. Juris, li●. 6. c. 19 ss. 24 p. 138. which Conquerors cannot more signally do, then by change of Laws and Language: both which were done, and from the Romans possibly is it, that our old Laws, and Records of Courts yet are in Latin; as from the Normans, that our Plead and Books of Law were, and are yet in French. The Romans then, Subsidium adversus rebels & imbuendis sociis ad officia legum. Tacit. Annal. lib▪ 12. De Coloniis Rom. who first by the Law of the Twelve Tables, made the Civil Laws, and by their Emperors added daily to them, as they expatiated their Empire, cannot be thought to give way, when Conquerors, to our British Laws; so as to cause the Civil Law to cease exercise here, because it was their own Law; and therefore did they carry on their Martial and Civil Government every where, as well as in the Mother City by it. This must be granted, though it somewhat impair the drift of our Text, because amicus Socrates, See the Notes on this Chapter, and also on Fleta, p. 531.532. & Seq. amicus Plato, sed magis amica veritas. And therefore Mr. Selden yields it; and the sense of the Text-Master here is only to be understood with ingenuous allowance. Neque verò tantorum temporum curriculis leges civiles in quantum Romanorum inveteratae sunt neque venetorum leges, quae super alias antiquitate divulgantur, etc. As the former, so this is a kind of seraphic instance and argument, not exactly accountable to the plain tenor of History. For though our Chancellor were a most honest and exact man, well versed in all Learning; yet dare I not assert, or make a defensive Comment on this his Chapter barely upon his Authority. And though Sir Edw. Cook is, and shall be much my Oracle in other matters; yet in asserting the Common-Laws antiquity from Brute, and I know not what antique Ancestry, for which he says he has only our Chancellor, Preface to the ● Report. whom he rightly terms of profound know edge in the Laws, and an excellent Antiquary: yet in this I shall not (under favour) subscribe to him, because not only 'tis impossible almost if not altogether, to find truth at that distance; but because the consequence of that uncertainty, will be certain blemish to mine own Judgement, and import a kind of arrogant vapour over that which my duty and ingenuity rather bows down to and venerates, then in any thought or word will or dare disesteem; nor is there any fruit from such vain and profitless digladiation, as the heightening of one, Preface ●o the ●o. R●●●●. S● Im●●●m Pro● Glossary. and depreciating the other Law, occasions; but the forfeiture of the adventurers credits, and the display of their choleric passions Let these heats than die with Hottoman, and Cook the first and fierce Combatants. Comparisons between the Laws are as odious now to revive, as are the Precedencies and Antiquities of the two Universities; which though some think they do well vindictively to renew, is no true part of gallantry. Observe this well. For my part I do own equal honour to, and so I hope do all Cambridge men to Oxford, as to my Mother University; and I would have all Oxford's worthy Sons so to profess and evidence to Cambridge my Mother, and that considering them as the two only Nurses of good Learning in this Realm. They are the words of the 2 and 3. ●hil. and Mary, c. 15. And as these are the common Breasts that nourish the men of both Laws; The Author's Impartiality. so would I have the nutriment they therefrom receive, evidence itself in all the fruits of common kindness, which their growth gives them opportunity to show each to other: To promote which, as I a person equally obliged to the merits of the Professors of both Laws; and in neither myself a Professor, shall Christianly pray for their accord; so shall I in this Discourse willingly write nothing that may ●ffend either, or both of them, but keep my Pen steady, as near as I can, to truth, and to that sober peremptoriness in it, which becomes humility, and the consciousness I have of mine own weakness: Which digression I think hither to necessary; yet not further to be prosecuted: I return therefore to the Text, declining all comparisons between the two Laws, and resting in the grave Judgement of King james, concerning both their use, Speech Anno 1609 p. 532. of his Works. here. For a King of England to despise the Common-Law, it is to neglect his own Crown; and I think if the Civil-Law should be taken away, it would make an entry to Barbarism in this Kingdo●, and would blemish the honour of England. And after the King enlarges, My meaning therefore is not to prefer the Civil-Law before the Common-Law, but only that it should not be extinguished, and yet so bounded, I mean to such Courts and Causes, as have been in ancient use; as the Ecclesiastical Courts, Courts of Admiralty, Court of Requests, and such like, reserving ever to the Common-Law, to meddle with the Fundamental Laws of this Kingdom, either concerning the King's Prerogative, or the Possessions of Subjects, or any questions either between the King, and any of them, or amongst themselves, in the points of meum and tuum: So that King. From all which I conclude, that though it cannot, nor shall not need to be averred, that the Common-Laws and Customs of England, have been the only Laws and Methods of Government, which all the several Lords of this Nation, have constantly and precisely kept themselves too (the Romans using the Civil-Laws here above 350 years, Selden on Fleta, c. 4. and the Saxons, Danes, and Normans, abolishing and introducing what of their Country Laws they pleased) yet may it very confidently be said, that the Common-Laws and Usages of England, have not only been very ancient before the conquest, Preface to the ● Report. and very much approved by the several Lords of this Land; but are such for the nature of them, That there is no humane Law within the Circuit of the whole World by infinite degrees, so apt and profitable, for the honourable, peaceable, and prosperous Government of this Kingdom, 〈…〉 te well 〈◊〉 excellenc●●f the Common-Laws. as these ancient and excellent Laws of England be. And hereupon, since the Kings and Parliaments of England from the Conquest, have given reverence to the Common-Laws, and by their additions of Statutes strengthened and beautified it, making the wilful and obstinate violation and subversion of it, not only penal pecuniarily and by imprisonment, but also as the Case may be, capitally. It doth (I say) from hence appear, that the Wisdom of the Kings and Parliaments of England, and of the Reverend judges, who according to their declared Judgements have judged, did concur in Judgement with them, and with our Chancellor here, when he calls them bonae & òptimae Anglorum consuetudines. And so I conclude the Notes on this Chapter, being in no sort desirous to enter upon comparisons between the Laws: but as I said before, to acquiesce in the prementioned modest explication of the Text, and to avoid all dictatorian confidence, which in no sort becomes any man, leas● of all myself, who do write, non ut instruam eruditos, sed ut excitem paratos. And who, if I offend in any thing, shall not be ashamed, but be most ready to acknowledge it, crave pardon for it; and in the next Edition, if God shall let me live to it, and it be worthy of it, make amends for it. This be enough for the Notes on this Chapter. CHAP. XVIII. Statuta tunc Anglorum bona sunt necne, solum restat explorandum. Non enim emanant illa à Principis solum voluntate ut leges in regnis quae tantum regaliter gubernantur, ubi quandoque statuta ita constituentis procurant commodum singular, quoth in ejus subditorum ipsa redundant dispendium & jacturam. Quandoque etiam inadvertentia principum hujusmodi, & sibi consulentium inertia, ipsa tam inconsulte eduntur, quod corruptelarum nomina potius quam legum, illa merentur, IN this Chapter the Chancellor comes to the third part and proof of the goodness of the Laws of England, as the Statutes of them are enacted by the Sageness, Wisdom, and Justice of the Government of England; and to make his foundation more solid, he first proposes what the Statutes in their origin are not, and then proceeds to show what in their rise, progress, and nature they are; by both which he aims to make the Nation of England more splendid, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Plutarch. lib. De Fortuna Romanorum, p. 318. then Rome ever was: for though it had many Temples to Fortune, yet to Wisdom, Temperance, Justice, or any of the Virtues, it had none: Whereas England in the Wisdom, Temperance, and Justice of her Laws, devotes magnificent piles of praise and power to her Princes, whose Attendance, with their Prelates, Peers, and Commoners, as assenters to their Piety and Paternity therein, raise an immortal Pyramid of regular liberty, just subjection, and symmetrious order. To the explication whereof, our Chancellor advances, 1. Negatiuè, that they do not emanare à Principis solum voluntate. In which words, the Chancellor implies, that Statutes do emanare à Principis voluntate, for he is the Fountain of Statutes; and as Water flows from the Fountain, Fons emanat. Cic. 2. Divin. lib. 2. De Juven. t 621. ex impetu naturae, so Statutes flow from the satisfied judgement, and prudent omniscience of the King, ex impetu gratiae & regalis providentiae: nor can there, or ever has there been any Law made, but by the King willing thereto, which we usually call his passing the Bills, or giving his Royal Assent. Whence is the life of the Law; Eicon Basilic. c. 11. yea, and the duration of it too. For since Princes may exceed in wisdom, as much as in place and power they do any of their Subjects, no man can seek to limit and confine his King in reason, who hath not a secret aim to share with him, or usurp upon him in power and dominion. Thus said the good King when he was hardly pressed. The Chancellor then in this Clause, Eicon Basilic. c. 11. acknowledging the Prince to have a freedom and power of Reason to consent, or descent: As he advises him not to deny Laws that are pro bono publico, for the joint good of King and People; so advises the People to be quieted with such an answer, as the will and reason of their Superior thinks fit to give. And in thus doing, the Laws that are statuted, will emanare à voluntate Principis, which saves the King's Honour and Right, Giving unto Caesar that which is Caesar's, and unto the power of God in him that which is God's, Reverence and obedience. Whereas then our Text says, Non enim emanant i●a à Principis solum voluntate; as it does not suppose the Lords and Commons excluded Assent, so not the King denied his Royal Assent, and Consent; but shows that (as before I have said) the King is pleased to have, and have the Laws to be remembered to be such, that the endearment of F●ther and Child, Husband and Wife, being insinuated in them, there may reciprocations of love and duty be interchanged between them; the King's Will may be the Law, because the Law is the King's Will, and the People's Rogation be his Concession, because they ask nothing amiss, nor would have it, but with submission to their Prince's freedom; Remembering that at best they sit in Parliament as my Subjects (said the King) not my Superiors; Eicon. Basilic. c. 11. called to be my Counsellors, not Dictator's; their Summons extends to recommend their advice, not to command my duty. Thus wisely he. Vt leges in regnis quae tantum regaliter gubernantur. This is added, to show the privilege that Kings and People have, and the obligation they owe to God, and their Ancestry: Kings and People thereupon; because by it as Kings are delivered from the temptations of lawless Will, concerning which, King David cried out to God, Who doth know his own errors, keep me from presumptuous sins. So are people kept (unless they will be mad to provoke God, and mischief themselves) from all temptation to disobedience: (No subject of England being possible, under the legal government of his Prince, to become a Traitor, but by the instigation of the Devil, and premeditated malice.) I confess, in the most absolute Governments, when such as Augustus and Theodosius are in power, who were by their natural piety so restrained, that they did not only not put men to death for their pleasure sake, Cuspinianus in Theodos. Neque aliud ex imperio sihi cons●quuta est, quam justum bonumque nomen apud omne●. Tacitus, lib 18. but cry out, utinam mortuis vitam dare possumus, when they do use their power, as ●extilia the Mother of Vitellius is said to use her interest in her Son's power, only to gain her love while she lives, and tears when she dies. When I say such as these spirits are in rule, there is no fear of truculent Laws and Administrations, be the absoluteness of what they may do what it will, they will do but what is fit and gentle; but when the licentiality of the Will is in full carear, when they may make what they will, Law; then there is danger of what follows that, Statuta ita constituentis procurant commodum singular, quoth in ejus subditorum ipsa redundant dispendium & jacturam. For therefore is (onquest endeavoured, and absolute Dominion arrogated, because there is in the obtairers of them an aim to confound and lodge all their Subjects have in their own despotiqueness; the severity and partiality of which endeavour, contrary to the Laws of Nature, and the Rules of Equity, is that which the Chancellor calls here singular conemodum in subditorum dispendium & jacturam; which our good Monarches hating to once look towards, or be in any degree deservedly suspected for, thereupon are justly accounted Fathers to their Subjects, as well as friends to their own peace both of mind and State, I will only here add the words of one of our Chroniclers; Hooker and Vo●el in 1 Volume. of Description of Britain, p. 8. Divers other Conquists, saith he, also have been pretended by sundry Princes f●thence the Conquest, only to the end that all pristinate Laws, and tenors of Possession might cease, and they make a new disposition of all things at their own pleasure; as one by King Ed. the third, but it took none effect; another by Hen. the fourth, who nevertheless was at the last, though hardly, drawn from the Challenge by William Thorington, than Chief-Iustice of England: the third by Hen. the seventh, who had some better show of right, but yet without effect. And the last of all by Queen Mary, as some of the Papists gave out; and also would have had her to have obtained; but God also stayed their malices, and her challenge. Thus that Author. By which appears, that though some of our Princes have been solicited possibly by ill-disposed Favourites, or mistake of the Laws matchlesness, to all intents of governing this Nation: yet none of them have been resolute, in following such dangerous solicitations and prejudices; but having looked upon their duties to God, themselves, and their Subjects, avoided those Rocks of danger, which by embracing them they had fell upon. For the Oracle of Kingship said it, everlastingly to be in the memory and mouths of his Successors, Kings: If the divinest liberty be to will what men should, and do what they so will, according to Reason, Laws, and Religion; I envy not my Subjects that Liberty, Eicon Basilic. c. 15. which is all I desire to enjoy myself: so far am I from the desire of oppressing theirs; nor were those Lords and Gentlemen which assisted me, so prodigal of their Liberties, as with their lives and fortunes, to help on the enslaving of themselves and their Posterities. jactura, propriè damnum, dicitur quod fit praecipuè in mari quum quis magnas mer. ces, quas secum velut tempestate ingruente cogitur in mare conjicere, ni navis obruatur. Thus he. Which amply sets forth the truth of our Chancellors Character of conquerors, who do aim in their absoluteness to effect dispendium & jactaram, the not only immoderate and unadvised loss of their Subjects, but even to cast them and theirs overboard, in the storm of their passions, to an irrecoverable subversion; or at least do, by making Laws in a huff and height of humour, without and against counsel of any but themselves; which our Text calls, Principum inadvertentia, and sibi consulentium inertia] and make Laws, which in regard of the novity and incongruity of them, to the Reason of Government, and Justice of Law, deserve rather to be blushed at, J. Consulti. then promulged; which is also the sense of corruptelarum nomina potius quam legum illa merentur. 'Twould be infinite to particularise the instances of those Stories bound with them: But this shall suffice for our Chancellour's sense, what Statutes are not: come we to discuss his positive assertion what they are, and how they come to be what they are, in the following words. Sed non sic Angliae statuta oriripossunt, dam ●cdum Principis voluntate, sed & totius regni assensu ipsa conduntur. Herein our Text obstetricates to the Statute-Laws, and shows them to have a celebrious origin, Epist. ●5. 2 Aeneid. 137. ●. De Amicit. ●. Oriri est nasci vel surgere, saith Festus; and therefore, as Pliny says, Oritur fons in monte; and Virgil, Monstrum mirabile oritur, and Tully Oritur ab his sermo; and nothing is more frequent than dies eriens, lux oriens, stella oriens, and the like: so is it a propriety of speech that our Chancellor uses, when he says statuta oriri, intimating, that they rise up from the people, and being exhaled thence by the influence of the King, who is the Sun in the Firmament of Rule, do, from his consent to, and approbation of them, appear orient and replete with vigour and authority; and this concurrence makes the legal, as well as rational harmony in Laws passed, according to the English Constitution: the contrary to which, (only practised in heat and haste, but repent of at leisure) makes work for the emendation of them by calmer tempers. For God has so joined King and people in their concurrence to the passing of Laws, that where any seemingly public Act is otherwise then more majorum passed; there it not only wants its weight and esteem, but is also soon recalled and accused to boot, of defectuousness. For there are three that bear record to the legality of passing Acts of Parliament in England, the Lords Spiritual, Lay, and Commons; and these three are one in Assent under one Head, where the life of all the excellency of Power resides, and that's the King; Whom God long defend, the Defender of the Faith and the Laws. Quo populi laesuram ipsa efficere nequeunt, vel non eorum commodum procurare. Prudentia & sapientia, necessario ipsa esse referta putandum est, dum non unius aut centum solum consultorum virorum prudentia, sed plusquam trecentorum elector●m hominum, quali numero climb Senatus Romanorum regebatur, ipsa edita sunt, etc. This Clause enter; us upon the very weighty consideration of Statutes, as they are passed by the Wisdom and Council of the Nation. And the word quo, relating to the Assent of the whole Realm, that is, King, Peers, & People, makes the consequent words true, that they cannot be reasonably presumed to be grievous to either, but advantageous to all; since all have made them what they are, and what without them jointly, they could not have been. And this the Chancellor mentions, not more to bedignifie the Parliaments, 5 Eliz. ●. and by Oath of Allegiance. that are consistent of so many, and so rarely accomplished Members, then to illustrate the augustness of the Crown, to which all these are sworn, whose Liege's these are, and to whose Sovereignty they do not only bend the knee, but the heart, and aught to venture all they have and are for it; and so declared the Parliament of the 42 E. 3. 4 Instit. p. 14. Chap. Parliaments. Temp. E. 1. & 40▪ E 3. That they could not assent to any thing in Parliament, that tended to the disherison of the King and his Crown whereunto they were sworn. Yea, when the Nation owned his Holiness of Rome, (as they then called the Bishop of Rome) for their sacred Spiritual Father; yet even then did the Lords and Commons in Parliament, by consent of the King, declare a denial of what the Pope demanded, because it tended to the detriment of the Crown and Dignity of the King, and to the liberty of the People. Which wisdom and zeal of Parliaments, is by our Text-Master therefore said to amount to a cannot of injury to the People, and to a can and will of their emolument. And hence has it ever been, that the opinion amongst us holds good, that Nul cheese dishonourable, etc. No mean thought is to be had of Parliaments. For of it is that famous Rule uttered, Si antiquitatem spectes, est vetustissima, etc. If you regard the Antiquity of Parliaments, 4 Instit. p. 36. 'tis most aged; if the Dignity, 'tis most honourable; if the jurisdiction, 'tis most capacious. For there is no cause so abstruse, but it can dive into; so litigious, but it can period and judge; so important, but it can state and regulate. And hence is it, that Parliaments consisting of the King, and his Subjects environing him, are by the Chancellor said to do such notable Beneficencies to this Nation, because they are not only many, above thrice as many as Romulus instituted; his number being but 100, Messul● Corvinus, Lib. De Augusti Pro● 〈◊〉 ●7●▪ 377. which after, in the declensions of the honour of the Senate, was multiplied into a thousand. So that the Historian says, 〈…〉 H●m p 676. the Senate so overgrown in number, and so mean in accomplishments, needed an Augustus to restore it by a moderate number to its wont veneration; 〈…〉 momerum deformi & 〈…〉 enim super will, & 〈…〉 etc. Suetonius, in 〈…〉 35. 4 Instit. p. 1. and so Augustus did reduce them to 600. which Sir Ed. Cook computes our Parliaments, not much to exceed calculating them thus: Of the Lords Spiritual 24. Of the Lords Temporal, about 106. Of the Commons, 493. 623. And made the Members of the Roman Senate to be men of worth and worship, Seminarium Senatorum equestrem locum esse. Sueton. to Augusto, c. 39, 40. Magn●m virum esse oportere, quem saceret Senatorem. Aelius Lamprld. in Severo, p. 211. worthy the trust they judicially had, and were expected judiciously to discharge: Which as for the number, so for the nature of the persons, members of it, our Laws do follow this Roman Precedent; for though Cyclopique times may, to make up a Faction, In Senatum legit sine diserimino aetatis, census, generis, pecuniae merito. as Heliogabulus did, admit any person that was but a Consider, though he were of no fortune, saith, blood, nor, of orderly Principles: yet as by the Decrees of that wise State, no man was to be a Senator, but a rare person, wise, noble, and able to live to the height of the state of it: So in our Parliaments, there are Statutes of Regulation to Election of persons, both in Counties, Cities, and Boroughs: No Yeoman be he never so wealthy, is capable to fit in Parliament. By the 1 H. 5. c. 1. he must be some Knight or Esquire, resident, dwelling, and abiding in the Shire, and Cities, and Boroughs: so 8 H. 6. c. 7. the reason whereof is, for that it was presumed, that men of blood, fortune, and breeding, will have more knowledge in, conscience to, and honour by, which they will faithfully do their duty, and hold themselves concerned therein, by the great pledges they have at stake; and will be most probable to secure by good Laws, the public Interest, than those that have none of those obligations and ties. And this the Chancellor specially points out in those words, Prudentia & sapientia ipsa esse referta, because as multitudes of Councillors promise safety; so chiefly when those many are of such as are Spiritual Lords, men of all Arts and hours, Lords of the Laity, who are versed in secular Affairs, and accomplished with travails, and Knights and Esquires out of the best Gentile Families of England. All these, together with the most intelligent and wealthy men of Trade, sent to Parliament from Cities and Corporations, and in Parliament consulting, may well be presumed to pass Acts, Sapientia & prudentia consulta; especially when consideration is had, that these Gentlemen and others, ought to be plenae aetatis: no young men, whom pleasures or vanities will avocate, whom passions and emulations do incline from the via lactea of Counsel; but grave, stayed, and well-advised sad men, Virorum consultorum prudentia, says our Text, where prudentia virorum bene consultorum, is opposed to levity and versatility, prudence being that pondus that settles the mind in all worthy persistencies, against that rashness which precipitates all good intendments. Lib. 31. p. 507. Lib 14. p. 315. Consulto valerianis frairiss sui in Gallien●. p. ●52. Thus Lupercinus in Marcellinus is said, Properation: tumultnaria coactis militibus temere magis, quam consulte progressus; and the same Author writing of men of approved worth, calls them consulto consilio cognitos; and Trebellius Pollio puts consulto for consilio; Aliud in impera tore quaeritur, aliud in Oratore, vel poeta flagitatur. Idem codem loco. For in any great Affair the Heathens had their consulta numinum: and therefore Members of Councils, whatever they want (as no men have all blessings aboard their Vessels) they should not want Counsel, for that is of the very essence of their trust: which because sometimes men chosen to Parliaments have wanted; or if they have not, have wanted courage and integrity to show themselves; Acts of Parliament have sometimes passed, which have not been as wise E. 1. says he intended his Regni●5 ●5. to be, 2 Instit. p. 526. all honcur de Dieu, & des seinct Esglise, & au profit de n●stre Realm: which Sir Edw. Cook says, is, or should be the true end of all Parliaments. And by how much short of this end Parliaments fall, by so much are they less than they truly aught to be: To prevent which miscarriage which tends in dispendium & jacturam subditorum, it is good that the Rocks and shelves, upon which of old shipwrecks of Parliament-honour have been made be modestly remembered. For as the note of a wise Father is, that in five cases Parliaments succeed not well: 4 Instit. p. 35. so is it observable, that in sundry cases the Statutes of Parliaments succeed not long in credit or duration, Rastal. p. 150. as when they are effects of mere power and advantage, separate from legal Reason and Justice. By the 11 K. 2 c. 3. and 4. no person was to attempt revocation of any Ordinance made in that Parliament; but that Clause was repealed, 1 H. 4. c. 3. as against the jurisdiction and power of a Parliament, the liberty of the Subject, 4 Instit. p. 42. and unreasonable. By the 21 R. 2. c. 16. the power of a Parliament is committed to a few. By the 1 H. 4. c. 3. this is declared against the dignity of a Parliament. So by 11 R. 2. c. 3. No man against whom judgement or Forfeiture was given, should sue for pardon or grace. This was repealed by the 2 H. 4. and judged unreasonable, See Rastal at large, p. 752. and without example, and against the Law and Custom of Parliament. Thus were many Acts passed in Henry the 8 this time, which were hard; as that 33 c. 21. 31 c. 8. Which Acts, together with o●hers of like nature, were repealed by the 1 E. 6. c. 12. Deliberatio omnibus rebus necessaria. quae homjnum indis●ussos colores possit refraenare: Temporeque indignius, ut aliquid maturius agamus. Tholoss. Syntag. Juris, lib. 46. c. 2. tit. 28. And also when they are huddled up in haste, without due rumination of what they intent a remedy of, and rightly penning the Acts to that purpose. For Laws are like all things that have not due concoction and proper maturation, indurable, and not beauteous in their figure and acceptation. Which evil to avoid, it was wont to be the Wisdom of our Fathers, to premeditate Acts before they were preferred, scan them well when they were preferred, and pass them only for a candidateship, to see how they will approve themselves in experience; yea, and to be sure to make them as short, and as little dure as might be: & when in these things failer has been, the Acts made were either inconvenient, or but short-lived; witness the Act 11 H. 7. c. 3. which is called by a man that knew what he said, 4 Instit. p. 41. A most unjust and strange Act; and therefore was repealed 1 H. 8. c. 6. which that brave Chief-Justice said, he recited and showed the just inconveniences thereof, to the end, that the like should never hereafter be attempted in any Court of Parliament. 5 R. 2. Stat. 2. c 4. And therefore if Statutes be made according to our Chancellour's Legal Standard, they must answer precisely their Prescript, and not want their plenary counsel, as did that Parliament 7 H. 5. held before the Duke of Bedford, Guardian of England, wherein of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal, there appeared but 30 in all, who passed but one Act of Parl. & that of no great weight. 4 Instit. p. 43. But those that appear in full number be rightly poised, to perform unto King and People due benevolence, that is, to evidence conjugal designs of advantage to conjunct felicity. If the men which make the Court, what it in our Text is asserted to be, a seminary and repertory of wisdom in mind, and prudence of action, conform to which the expressions of them in the Statutes of their enaction will be. If the Members, I say, be men of honour, experience, integrity, fortune, ¶ 7 H. 4. c. 15. N●que sunt praecipitanda opera nostra, aut consilia, nec ordo corrumpendus. Cantela & illa laudabilis in quae totum agit ratio, & furor nihil sibi vendicat, agendumque nihil prius, quam concitatae mens ad tranquilitatem redcat. Tholoss. Syntag. Juris, lib. 46. c. 2. tit. 28. 5 Eliz. c. 1. and do propose no private emolument, but as they are freely chosen, and thought free from all pre-engagement of ambition, popularity, or perfidiousness, and bound in fidelity to the King, zeal to the Religion, honour to the Laws, reverence to Parliaments, and integrity to the people; so will they be very loath to do any thing for fear or favour, which may either prejudice their trusts, or engage their credits in aftertimes censure; but having the fear of God and the King, and the love of themselves, their Posterities and the people, before their eyes, will take heed of new ways, and inquire for, and keep in the old way, the good way. The declension from which has ever cost the Nation dear; and when it has been unhappily misteered that way, given the Nation just cause to say to their treacherous Pilots, as Fulvius did to his Son, whom he took in the Conspiracy with Catiline, Non Catilinae te gen●i sed Reipublicae; for sure the Laws of England, and the people, intent and expect Parliaments to be Oracles of Order, Repairers of Breaches, and Sanctuaries to Oppression; which because they have mostly been, as institutionally they were designed; not only people have doted on them, but even Princes, and by that occult prudence engined those affairs with a successful popularity, which otherwise would have stuck in the Birth, and not found a safe exition from the Womb of their Conception and Nutrition. Thus Adrian courted the Roman Senators, by being present constantly at it, In Senata etiam excusatis, qua facta erant. juravit se nunquam Senatorens nisi Senatus potentiae puniturum. Spartianus in Adriano, p. 128. August. Script. and excusing to them all irregularities; yea, complementing them so highly, That he assured and swore to them, that he would never punish an offending Senator, but with their consent and approbation. And this Henry the eighth did so practise, that he made them so supple to him, Herbert in H. 8. p. 475. that what almost he pleased was a Law, and so did Queen Elizabeth: For if the Power and jurisdiction of Parliament for making of Laws, in proceeding by Bill, is so transcendent and absolute, as it cannot be confined, either for causes or persons, within any bounds: Which Sir Ed. Cook makes good, as far as it is maintainable from many notable Precedents how much are we the people of this Land to pray to God for good Parliaments, and to praise God when we have them; when Parliaments are not black with fury, The very words of the Preamble of the Statute. 1 Westmin. 3 E. 1. and desire of change; but when they are like that of 3 E. 1. For the common profit of Holy Church, and of the Realm; and because the state of Holy Church hath been evil kept, and the Prelates and Religious persons of the Land grieved many ways, and the people otherwise entreated than they ought to be, and the peaceless kept, and the Laws less used, and the offenders less punished, than they ought to be, the King hath ordained and established those Acts, which he intendeth to be necessary and profitable unto the whole Realm. Then is there cause to bless God for Parliaments, wherein gracious Princes make happy noble Peers, prudent Gentlemen, and obsequious Commons, by the good Statutes of Religion, Peace, and Prudence, that emanates from them. And when ever the contrary has been, wise and pious men ought to he humble under God's corrections by them; for it is for the sins of the Nation that many are the Princes of it, and that he makes Oracles err: Witness the Parliament of 21 R. 2. which though it have as glorious a Prologue to its Statutes as words can make, To the honour of God and Holy Church, and for the preservation, salvation, and surety of this Realm, and good governance of his people, of the assent and accord of the Prelates, Dukes, Earls, Barons, and Commons of his Realm there assembled, etc. Yet this whole Parliament was by 1. H. 4. c. 3. repealed. 4 Instit. p. 52. So says Sir Edw. Cook, a Parliament holden at Coventry, in 38 H. 6. is wholly repealed by 39 H. 6. c. 1. and the whole Parliament of 49. of the same King, Gracchus legem tulerat, ut equites Romani judicarent; judicaverunt per annos 30 fine infamia: post victor Sylla legem tulerat, ut Senatorius ordo judicaret, & judicavit per annos decem turpiter; Nunc Aurelius Cotta legem fert, ut Senatores, & equites Rome & tribuni aeraru simul judicarent Budaeus in Annot. reliquas, in Pandect. reliquas. p. 240. edit. Basil. is said also to be repealed: but I confess, I find not these in the printed Statutes. These, and the like, which may further be produced, show us, that Councils and Senates of men, though never so wise, yet may at some times, and in some cases err, and ebb and flow with partialities, the avoidance whereof is a great blessing; for when no extreme frustrates counsel, and no private concern supersedes Justice, then are the Statutes of Parliaments, constant, standing, and durable Laws, Establishments: as were those of the Parliament of E. 1. whom Sir William Herle Chief-Justice, called, Le pluis sage roy que unque fuit. All which considered, the Chancellor did not without cause write, that Statutes in England, Populi laesuram efficere nequeunt; because Parliamentarily no injury can therein be done: not only because what is therein done is juridicè factum, and so not laesura populi (the Law being the Arbiter of right and wrong) but also because the wisdom of apprehension and action is such in the severals there conjoined, that they cannot reasonably (unless God causes Wisdom to cease from the Wise) be suspected, either to be deceived, or willingly to deceive the people's expectation; and so the nequeunt refers to their politic, as well as natural capacity. The like sense is to be given to non eorum commodum procurare; which if literally understood, would be confuted in the prementioned Authorities. But with allowance of humane infirmities, and politic encumbrances is mostly true, as is the rest of the Clause, which makes them prudentia & sapientia necessario referta: but enough of this; they, that concerning the method, manner, and form of Parliaments, and their passing Acts, would know more, Cook 4. Instit. Chap. Parliaments, K James' Speech 1605. & 1609. p. 506. & p. 538. Cambd. Britannia, p. 177. Sir Tho. Smith, De Repub. Anglorum, lib. 2. c. 2. Description of England, c. ● Hooker & Vowel, p. 173. may turn to the Authors quoted in the Margin; which amply can satisfy (search being also made into Rolls of Parliament) in what the useful curiosity of men can with advantage direct them to inquire after. I will conclude this with a rare expression of King james, Speech 1609. fol. 539. of his Work. who treating of the Members of Parliament, says thus to those of the Commons House; What you give, saith he, you give it as well for others, as for yourselves, and therefore you have the more reason to eschew both the extremes; as the one part ye may the more easily be liberal, since it cometh not all from yourselves; and yet upon the other part, if you give more than is fit for good and loving Subjects, to yield upon such necessary occasions, ye abuse the King, and hurt the People, and such a gift I will never accept; for in such a case you might deceive a King, in giving your flattering consent to that which you might move the People generally to grudge and murmur at it, and so should the King find himself deceived in his Calcule, and the People likewise grieved in their hearts: A good King's value of Subjects love. the love and possession of which, I protest I did, and ever will account the greatest earthly security (next the favour of God) to any wise and just King. Et si statuta haec taenta solemnitate, & prudentia edita, ●fficaciae tantae quantae conditorum cupiebat intentio, non esse contingant, concito reformari possunt, & non sine communitatis, & procerum regni assensu, quali ipsa primitus emanârunt. This Clause is as a reserve to the inefficacy and inconvenience of some Statutes: For as it is in all actions, the success crowns and commends them; so is it in Legislation, that is accounted wisdom of Government, and those Laws most prudentially compiled, which are most generally accepted, and by reason thereof longest last in their vigour; which because all Laws are not thus befriended by God's blessing on them, and people's resentment of them: therefore is this remedy here as the help at a dead lift, by the Law of our Government settled, and by the Discourser upon it introduced. And the Chancellor, that he may make this Clause appear suitably considerable to the real nature of it, sets it forth by these gradations; 1. It sets forth the equipage and concomitants of Statutes, which are commenced by prudence in the intent, and associated with solemnity in the method of their procedure to accomplishment; and is expressed in those words, tanta solennitate & prudentia edita. 2. It rehearses the defeat that all humane things, and so Statutes are subject to; while as they possibly may, so they as possibly may not answer their maker's intent, si efficaciae tantae quantae conditorum cupiebat intentio, non esse contingant. 3. The remedy and cure for this anticipation, and as it may prove, state and statute-evil, concito reformari possunt. 4. By what means this mischief is expelled, and cure effected; even analogous to the origin of it, una cademque manus, vulnus opemque tulit. That our Text sets forth in the last words, & non sine communitatis, & procerum regni assensu, quali ipsae primitus emanârunt. Si statuta haec tanta solennitate & prudentia edita. This has reference to the nature of the Editors, 4 Instit. pag. 16. Chapt. Parliaments. Satius est in tempore occurrere, quam post vulneratam causam remedium quaerere. Tholoss Suntag. lib 47. c. 7 tit. 9 and the Court of their Convention, or the Mint whence they have their Statute-stamp; which being the head and vital spirits of the Nation, endowed with a kind of Omniscience and Omnipotence, are in a legal sense understood to do all things like themselves providently and with an Argo's eyed circumspection, as not only intending that for good, but as so ordering them by a divinely-sovereign genius inspiring them, that nothing almost shall appear enormous or improlifique in them to those ends, for which they are contrived and published. For Prudence being a virtue of foresight, as Solomon specifies it, Prov. 22.3. A prudent man forseeth the evil, and hideth himself, does not only in our Chancellour's sense, direct the Co-operators in edition of Statutes, to be so subtle, as to hide themselves from the evil of detraction, in the wisdom of their enactions, from the devices of the crafty; as the phrase is, job 5.11. where 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the crafty is rendered by Saint jerom, Malignorum, of those that watch and look for their haltings, Prudentia non est tantum in intellectu sicut scientia & ars. sed habet aliquid in appetitu sicut rectitudinem. Sancius Thom. partis primae cue 22. and would be glad to find and blaze abroad their mistakes: but it tells them also, how they shall evict their malignity, and defeat it, by a rectitude of aim both at God's glory, their own discharge, and their peoples emolument; and this sapience therefore it called prudence, Prima secundae q. 66. art. 1. because it flows from a principle, &c imperat de ordinatis ad sapientiam, as the Schools say. And hence is it, that wisdom and prudence expresses itself in a vigilancy and parateness, to not only expect, but to provide against, and to encounter with whatever is insidiary to it; which, so necessary to greatness in every mo●ion of it, as well as in relation to Laws, seems to me some reason why Tully calls it a kind of Divination, the wisdom of experience leading men that are obsequious to it, to an introspection into not only the nature, but the probable, and almost infallible operation of things. 2 Sam 16, last. By this did Achitophel get the reputation to be accounted an Oracle; and the Holy Ghost says, So was all the counsel of Achitophel both with David, and with Absolom, that is, he was so ponderous and considerate, weighing every circumstance, that he hit every thing in the white which he aimed at, and pierced in●o the bowels of every thing he designed to know. Prov. 13. Prov 2.6 1 King. 7.19. This was wisdom and prudence rightly ordinated not only Solomon's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wisdom of understanding, and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 h●s superexcellent wisdom, but his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 prudence of action 14 Pro 15. And this Wisdom ●tatute-Makers abounding in, will not only shine in the face of their Laws, as the Scripture says, Wisdom makes a man in the face of his fame as body to do, but render them secure and serene in their consciences, whatever the sequel of things be; for as their integrity will endure trial, so their wisdom will foresee and prevent what's harmful in it. Thus did Publicola his eclipse, by the envy that attended his credit with the Soldiery and people of Rome; for he having built a stately Palace, which the Romans looked upon as too august for a Citizen, and thereupon had some jealousy whispered into them, as if he intended to improve his influence on them to a contentment of admiting his (bruited to be) affected Tyranny. Flor●s, lib. 1. c. 9 He, I say, fearing the City would rise upon him, Nocte intempestiva, etc. One night when all the City was quiet, and not aware of it, pulled down his building to the very foundation, which when the City, in the morning, perceived, th●y both admired his prudence, and be moaned their own groundless jealousy. And thus did the great Lawgivers of the World not only bring, but continue their Laws in credit, by the real, or at least opinionated wisdom of their rise and design, which not being questioned, but made good by the conformity of their enactions to Justice and equity, made them obeyed and not disputed, adhered to and not exclaimed against. Which considered, our Text having an eye to the wisdom, honour, power, and state of our Nation, concentred in that Court, wherein enactions of Statutes is, tells us, that they are prudentiâ editâ, and that not only as they respect the Editors of them, who are ever constitutionally and cathedrally wise, and also mostly personally such; but as they do evidence & exert this internal excellency in a method proper to it, expressed by tanta solennitas, which relates to the care that our great Council takes, in formation of a Statute, when either upon petition to, or motion in either of the Houses of Parl. a Bill prepared is proposed to be read; the Speaker of either House signifies the nature of the Bill, and it is thrice distinctly read three several days; Sir Tho. Smith, De Repub Angl. c. 3. Every Member of the Houses speaking upon any reading what he judges fit, for, or against it; If when after the third reading it be carried by the Major vote to be an enaction, than it passes in the respective Houses, and after all comes to the King who has the creative power, and either assents to its being a a law, or denies its passage, by all which as there is time to consider, and digest the consequence of it, so is the deliberation called by the Text a solemnity, tanta solenn●tate says he. And that to denote the consequence of Statutes which are set for the fall and rise of many; And here upon have their solemnities in the passing of them, as all things of extraordinary nature in all times had, The jews had their solennitates, their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 10. Exod. 9 their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 81. Psal. 4. where the word signifies a Throne wherein Monarches do use to set in robes when they pass Statutes, so are the words verse the fifth. For this was a Statute in Israel; And they had their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies not only Solennes conventus, jerem. 9.2. jerem. 2.2. but also a solemnity of time in which no common work was to be done 23. Levit. 16. All these kind of solemnities they had upon fundry unordinary occasions; so had the Heathens their Solennia, and their Festidies, which were Stativae feriae, Conceptivae, Imperativae, & Nundinae: of which Lilies Gyraldus gives us an account; so does Suctonius, Ammianus Marcellinus, Flavius Vopiscus, Lib. De Annis & mensibus, partis secundae, p 593. and multitudes of o●hers; yea, our Law allows many solemnities, In Vespasiano, p. 111. in Nerone, p. 84. and performs them to ¶ 2 Instit. p. 264. non-●urid qu● days, and on Festivals, In Juliano, lib. 22. p. 407. & lib. 14. p. 320. the Judges when they sit, sit in their R●bes of State: In Aurel. p. 271. so does, I suppose, our Lord the King and his Peers sit robed, when they consent to enaction of Laws. Thus we see the Chancellor's pregnant use of tanta solennitate, as well as prudentia, and this argues the dignity of Statutes. Si efficacy tantae, quantae conditerum cupiebat intentio, non esse contingunt. This is the second gradation or rather degradation, the possibility of abatement; for as all Sublunaries known but in part by us, and in but some remote and partial degrees subject to us, are miscarriable; so are Statutes. Men that are Earth, and have their own foundation in the dust, cannot six pillars of perpetuity here. The World is materially mutable; and God has made it Globular, that it may be more apt to not only motion, 2 Sam. 18.18. but monition to us, to fancy no Absalom's Pillar here. And if the World itself be thus, what can be better expected from the Men and Laws, the Polities and Governments in it, but that they should alter, and often do not if at all, Vrbis Romae parentem Romulum Senatus in amplissimo dignitatis gradu ab eo collocatus. in ●uria lacera vit; nec duxit nefas ei vitam adimere, qui alterum Romano Imperio speritum ingenuerat, rude nimirum illud & ferox saculum, quod conditoris sui cruore maculatum ne summa quidem posteritatis dissimulare pietas potest. Valet. Max. lib. 5. c. 3. answer their first Constitution: Romulus ennobled Rome, and made a Senate in it, assistant in Council to his Kinglyness in Succession; but that very Senate that he established to Kingly honour and aid, was the bane and boutefeu of Regality. julius Caesar thought himself secure in the Senate, and thence he had his death's wound, and that first from his Son Brutus. Scipio brought the Roman power triumphantly into afric; yet was so mistaken in the Romans gratitude, that he denied them his bones when dead, who had dealt by him living, no better than they do by dead bones, which they cast out. Charles the fifth of France was very wise in the greatest part of his actions; yet he mistook policy, in passing by Margaret the Earl of Flanders only Daughter, whom he might have had, and with her the Netherlands and Bu●gundy; and in the Act he made, that the Kings of France (though Children) should be crowned, and be under Protectors, which became the misfortune of his own Son; and (a) Lib. 9 & 10.] Immortalitate dignus Scaliger, in Ep ist. ad Manilium Citiusenim arcus caelesti variis coloribus sine nube apparebit, quam multiplex virtus sine invidia. Forcatulus, De Gallor. Imp. & Philosop. lib. 4 p. 497. Aemilius says, filled France with infinite troubles. Columbus that discovered the unknown part of the World, instead of being rewarded with the government of his discovery, was made nothing of by the Don's of Spain. Thousands of instances are producable to this purpose. In cognoscendo ac decernendo magna animi varietate fuit modo circumspectus & sagax, modo inconsultus & praeceps, nonnunquam Frivolus amentique similis. Sueton. in Claudio. The same defeats have Lawmakers had in Laws; people are of Claudius his humour, as by vice or virtue agitated, so are they in or out of love with Laws; yea, as in some junctures reasonfull Laws may hear ill, so in o●hers reasonless ones may be declared and approved good. Though therefore Lawmakers are to wish the blessing of God, and the popular approbation of, and benevolence to their enactions; yet are they ever as to eye, that by the justice and piety of their administrations they may deserve it; so to comfort themselves, that if they be not valued by the obedience given to them, they have but that measure meeted to their Laws, Nota bene. that they themselves meet to God's Laws. He gives them Laws and Statutes that are good, and they break them, and put his Law behind their backs, which they should set before their face to observe and do; and God suffers his quarrel to be revenged by their people's disobedience to, and non-approbation of their Laws. And God that accepts their virtuous intentions, the integrity of their wills, instead of the virtue of their actions, and upon their repentance turns an eye to mercy to them, will also turn their good intentions to the people, which they desired to testify in wholesome Laws for the government of them will in due time make acceptable with the people, which ought to encourage Princes to be gracious and worthy, as Theodosius was; of whom when some asked, why he did not pu● some of those that were declared Enemies to him to death, replied, utinam mortuis vitam darepossem. Culpinianus in Theodos. Would to God I could give life to those that are dead, meaning those that were dead with ingenuous grief for their Rebellion and contumacy against so good a Man & Prince who so only used his power, as to make him beloved while living, Neque a'iud ex imperio filii consecuta est quam Tacit. lib. 18. and lamented when dead: Which is the Character Tacitus gives of Vitellius his Mother Sextilia, which those that follow, will be sure to be happy, whatever the success of their endeavour in government be. For to desire to rule well, and to make Laws providently, for the matter, manner, and season of them, is all that Princes and Parliaments can be expected to propose, and as far as they may, effect: God, whose the event of them is to know and rule, can only and alone do more, and do better than this: but under men there is one only remedy for what is in the proof of Laws amiss in them, that is, concitò reformari possunt] Statutes or Common-Laws are not then irremediable evils, but accidental and curable ones; not by amputation only, as in Gangrenes, but by attenuations, as in Diseases of less danger. There is a power by the Law in our State-Physitian, and his College, not only plastic, but in a sort creative, whereby not only form and being is given by making that Law which was not Law, but alteration of that from what it is, to what it better aught and may be. This reformari is that not of Root and Branch, but of such Wens, Monstrosities and Excrescencies, as may be abated and taken off without danger to the peace or disfigure of the beauty of that they adhere to. Thus reformatio and reformari are honest, loyal, and useful words, leading to necessary works, if they be rightly bounded. So the Civilians use reformant, id est, qui formam aliam conventioni daunt; vel eandem substantiam conv●ntionis alia formâ retraectant. Tholoss. Syntagm. Juris universi, lib. 21. c. 7. art 4. Thus they also intent by their reformatio monasteriorum, sabrogatio in locum corum, qui eo titulo indigni sunt; Lib. 15. c. 15. tit. 17. and so vectigalia sine imperatorum praecepto, Hermogenes, De Public. & Vectigalibus. neque praesidi, neque curatori, neque curiae constituere, neque praecedentia reformare, & his vel addere, vel diminuere licet. And so the best Authors take Reformation to be the reduction of a thing into its old or a better form. Vt ostendam quam longa consuetudine corruptos d●pravatosque mores principatus parens noster reformet, & corrigat, in Panegyr. 85. Thus Pliny uses it, when he calls ●he Prince, He that like a good Father reforms and corrects the ill manners of his Children, and brings them back by the steps they have gone astray, So ¶ 165 Epist. Lib. 8. ad Minucianum. he terms him he admires, the very reducer and reformer of expiring and even dying art. Rhodi rursus reformandum ac v●lut recoquendum se dedit. De Cicerone, Quintil. lib. 12. c. 6. Nor does Quintilian intend less, when he makes reformare to be velut recoquere. For as boiling and burnishing Plate, renews it; so doth Reformation of Laws recuperate their respect, and re-ingratiate them. Thus the Statute of Marlbridge mentions Reformation, Statute Marlborough, 52 H. 3. Anno 1267. It was provided (saith the Preamble) agreed, and ordained, that whereas the Realm of England of late had been disquieted with manifold troubles and dissensions; for Reformation whereof, Statutes & Laws be right necessary, etc. Thus, in sense, Nemo prudens sin● justitia, sine temperaentia, sin● fortitudine, nec prudentia ignava esse potest, aut injusta, aut intemperans; quia si aliquid corum in se admitteret, prudentiae non esset. Jacob. Mausacus in judicio, De Plutarchi Scriptis, p. 27. edit. Paris. is the meaning of the Preface to the Stat. 2 West. and in other Statutes, where the words redress, amendment, and the like are, which do show that Reformation is always intended for the better, though not alike in the extent of it; for that it sometimes wholly repeals, and at o●her times but in part, as according to the wisdom of the King and his Parliament seems meet; which because it is festinum & certum remedium, the Text says concitò reforma●i possunt, intimating, that these politic Potters have power of the Clay-Laws, and can make them with their breaths vessels of honour, or of dishonour. For 'tis not con●itò reformari debent, but possunt; because there is not so much necessity of state, as conscience of duty to God and Men, which makes them to do what therein they can, and with all the speed and convenience they can, in this Reformation, which is to be only by them. So is the last part of the Clause, Et non sine communitatus & procerum regni assensu, quali ipsa primitus emanârunt. This is the unalterable method of enacting and repealing Laws by the King, as Head of the three Estates, the Lords of the Spiritualty and Temporalty, with the Knights, Citizens, and Burgesses, all assembled in the two Houses of Parliament. Now because enaction is only in strictness of Law and Policy, the Act of Majesty, 'tis only said here assensu communitatis & procerum regni, since to them Assent and Consent is ordinarily ascribed. And though the word communitas is as much as needed to be said to include a Parliament, 2 Instit. p. 526. (which is the common Assent of the Realm, and signifieth an Act of Parliament, for it cannot be per communitatem Angliae, but by Parliament.) Yet our Text, to show how great honour the Law does the noble Peerage, and he, as a worthy English man would do to that Honourable Order, mentions them particularly as the great props and instances of every dignified excellency. Which Peers are tither temporal men, King James' Speech, 1605. p. 506. who are hereditable Counselors to the High Court of Parliament, by the honour of their Creation and Lands; or Bishops, Spiritual men, who are likely by the virtue of their place and dignity, Counselors, Liferenters, or ad vitam, of this Court. Concerning these, many have so copiously written, that I forbear to add any thing, because all men that know any thing, Spelman in Gloss. p. 80, 81, 82. know these are so essential to a Parl. & so estated in it by all Laws, Customs, & constitutions of this Nation, & their places settled by 31 H. 8. c. 10. that notwithstanding we have heard voted these late unhappy times the contrary; yet as true as truth itself it is, that no true English legal Parl. can be without them; and therefore the Text puts the non sine communitatis & procerum assensu; for the rule is quorum est instituere corum est etiam destruere, as without the Lords and Commons both, and each of them, no enaction can be made; so without them can no enaction be discharged. But of this enough, because I have every where in this Comment, asserted their necessary co-operation to enaction of Laws, according to what the Books of Law, and the Law of use and practice warrants me; passing by the rest of the Chapter, as only matter of recapitulation and abridgement, together with application to the Prince by way of compliment, & prayer; that having in the Scale of Justice weighed the Arguments, and being throughly satisfied, that what the Chancellor had undertaken in behalf of the Laws of England, he had conveniently, and to his expectation satisfied him in, he would conclude, that the Laws that have so just, pious, and well-setled a Foundation, may be accounted of him not only effectual and good to promote Order, Piety, and Wealth in England, but also the best and most commodious to those, and such like ends, for this Nation, of any Laws in the World; and so I end this Chapter. CHAP. XIX. Solum igitur unum de his quibus agitatur animus tuns, restat explanandum, etc. THis Chapter brings in the Chancellor proposing the method of his Discovery to the Prince, how Judgement is inoffensively to be made of the two Laws; and thereupon how his promise to satisfy the Prince's mind in the scruples it has about them, will be accomplished. Now because the question was, Whether the Common-Laws were as good and effectual to the wise and orderly Government of England, as the Laws Civil were to the Empire, he seems in this Chapter to premise something antecedent to the main of the Arguments; as first that it is digna & nobilis quaestio, and such as will deserve his diligence to be informed of, and concerning it Princelyly to judge. For that I take to be insinuated in those words, etiam & accomodè judicari mereantur: then secondly, that in disquisition and dijudication of them, there ought to be solid judgement, and modest delivery, because comparationes odiosa sunt, that is, Accusatorem alicni comparare. Cic. pro Cluentio. Comparisons are as they are mostly managed, make baits and ventings of partiality, rather than inductions of reason into a method of proof and trial of things, Comparare canem ad rixam, ad pugnant, ad cursum. Columella, lib. 7. c. 12. upon the good and evil of them prepended. And this the Text-Master the rather mentions, because he would not only show, In ●stentationem comparare declamationem. Quintil. lib. 2. c. 10. that he does not enter on this Argument upon choice, but necessity, has aggredi non delector; but also to show, that there may be a profitable use of comparisons, and that in the sense they might and ought to be used, Parium comparatio nee elationem babet, nec submissionem; est enim equalis. Gic. Topic. 37. they are amiable, useful, and not odious. For besides, that comparisons are to the judgement, as light is to the eye, the medium of discerning; and that by them, In comparatione vis rerum cernitur. Idem. under the rational sense, appeal is made to the gravity of that Tribunal for judgement: even God, after the manner of men, uses comparisons, to reproach the stupidness of mortal madness, when he compared, as a fountain of living water saith, he is deserted by his ingrate Creature, for broken Cisterus that will hold no water. And thus he proposes his Controversy; God had delivered Israel from many evils, and many times interposed his power and goodness to their danger, upon which he expected duty from them in some proportion to his indulgence to them; which they not affording but the treasures of wickedness, being in the house of the Wicked, Mic. 6.2. ver. 10. and violence being in the rich men thereof, ver. 11. from the incorrespondence between the venture of God with Man, in his voyage of life, and man's return to him for his talents credited to him, he deduces this resolution to make them sick in smiting them; as directing in his method the true use of Comparisons, to learn by the result of them, after consideration of their circumstances, what is good or evil, best and worst of them compared, Sed cum lego, ex comparatione sentio, quam malè scribam. Plin. Ep. 150. and to choose the best, and refuse the worst, non ex meo judicio, saith our Text, sed ex his in quibus earum differunt sententia, efficacius capere poteris argumentum. 3. That there ought to be a due understanding expressed in the preponderation, and delivery over of a man's practice and choice to one and not the other: for comparisons being to an end of equality, the true nature of rational comparation is not attained; if wherein things are what they are, be not throughly considered, Vbi conveniunt leges, and in casibus ubi dissentiunt, says the Text: this is necessary to the proper apprehension of the Laws, as they are the subjects of choice, and as choice is made upon that digna pensatio, which is the refulgency of well-applyed reason. The drift of the Chancellor in this Chapter than is not to make, as Tully's words are, Lib. 1. Offic. 83. contentionem & comparationem de duobus honestis, to contentiously compare the two Laws; but to compare them so, as to understand whether of them is upon trial fit or unfit here for this public use Laws are designed for. Thus did Sallust compare Caesar and Cato, and julius Capitolinus Balbinus with Maximus; yea, thus did Plutarch the noble Romans with the Greeks, Alterum severum clementemque, bonum illum, istum constantem, illum nihil largientem hune assluentem copiis omnibus dicerent. Julius Cap●●olinus, p. 345. August. Scriptor. and with others of their own Nation. And thus does Wisdom instruct to do, to make the choice of what men like and adhere to, more rational; for were it not for comparison, and the view Wisdom' takes of things and men in the glass thereof, how would Polidorus, the Son of Aicamenes, dictus●rebel ●rebel. Pollio. p. 261. whom Pausanias reports to be one, who neither said, or did any thing, to the injury or reproach of any man, but joined humanity with justice; Sigonius triumph. Rom. p. 204. and Piso, the only and humble moderate man of his time; Nemo nostrum frugi esto. Strabo. lib. 14. and Hermodorus, whom the gaddy Ephesians banished, for that he was a grave and well-poised man; and such as Trajan, Antoninus, Qui luxu & flagitiis alter fuit Nero, Foris C. o, totus ambiguus, ut ex contrariis diversisque naturis unum monstrum novamque bestiam diceres compactam. Sanctus Hieronym. Ep. and others, be discovered from Nero's, Plautianus', and Corocotta's, who were Beasts in men's bodies, and who make all where they come, worse for them and weary of them. This good than comparisons occasioning, when they are used soberly, and according to the intent of our Chancellor, they are of excellent use; and will, (as our Chancellor hopes,) make good to the Prince, that the Laws of England are not only bonae & efficases, as he in the former Chapter calls them; but frugi & efficaces, that is, effectual not only to punishment of evil, but benign in the frugal and moderate expression of themselves, to encourage goodness; and thence deserve melius praeconium, then by their rigour they otherwise would: And so ends the 19th Chapter. CHAP. XX. Si coram judice contendentes, ad litis perveniunt contestationem super n●teria facti, quam legis Angliae periti exitum placiti appellant. THis is the first instance of the dissimilitude of the proceedings of the two Laws, and 'tis in the enquiry of the truth of the matter of fact which is in controversy, upon which duly cleared, the Sentence of the Laws is given: for though both Laws aim at the discovery of truth, and in both Laws the Judges are to proceed, secundum allegata & probata, and to deliver righteous judgement according thereunto; yet in the manner of the proof, not in the end whereto it tends, arises the discrepancy. Si coram judice contendentes] Here is set forth the party's pro and con called contendentes; not that always there actually is, or religiously aught to be enmity of mind, where there is legal difference: for then the power of God in the Magistrate's hand, would support a breach of that Commandment, which says, Love one another, and thou shalt not hate thy Brother in thy heart; because where ever there were rancour of mind, there would be a subterfuge to that distemper, in the pretence of legal justice; which though it too often be, yet is it not always, nor necessary to be so charged on all Contenders at Law; since sometimes that course is unavoidable, and may consist as well with habitual Charity, and amicitial integrity and fervour, as did Lots and Abraham's parting upon the contention of their servants; notwithstanding which, their friendlyness was full and cordial: but they are called contendentes, because the parties in course of Law are in a politic battle, wherein juridiquely they draw forth their Forces each against other; Contendere pro defendere & affirmare. Celsus, in Praesat. lib. 1. the Plaintiff affirming, and the Defendant denying the matter he is accused guilty of; and because what men either love or hate, desire to have, or are loath to lose, that according to the impetuosity of their passion they apply themselves to the obtainment of. Therefore all Authors, to express eagerness and intentness of mind on any thing, Grave agmen ad Euphratem contendit. Curtius. lib. 3. Cic. 9 Philip. 5. verrem 10. render it by contendere. Thus contendere cursum ad aliquem, is to set with a good will to any one; contendere agmen, to lead a force of men to the relief of a party, or to gain a pass. So Tully, contra vim gravitatemque morbi contendere, and omnibus nervis contendere, and plurimis verbis aliquid ab aliquo contendere. This and the like show, that the parties that would legally evict one another, are therefore thus called, because they do manage a civil Combat, and try a juridique mastery, upon which they are said, coram judice contendentes. Coram judice] This makes contention lawful, in foro saeculi, because it is an appeal to the Civil Magistrate, as the Oracle and Judge; and it supposes him to have power, because it appeals to him for trial and sentence, which it could not reasonably do, if it did not allow him cognizance of the Cause, which it doing, takes off all private revenge, and all contumacy against the Ordinance of God: for the Magistrate is set by God to settle debates, and thereby to prevent disorder, injustice, and confusion. Hence is it, that by the Law of Nature and Nations Judges are every where, and in all times, set up and repaired to, and all Contentions settled by them. And that this Office was Patriarchally in the Heads of Families, after in the Priests, after in Judges, civil Magistrates, and so is to this day, no Nation affords not testimony to it, no man can be ignorant of it. Ad lit is perveniunt contestationem super materia facti] That which the Common-Lawyers call (after the Arrest or Appearance, Lege Digest. lib. 22. tit. 4. p. 2085. in Gloss. and Declaration upon it, to which the Defendant pleads) the issue of the Plea is by the Civilians termed litis contestatio; because the Citation summoning the parties to appear, their appearance, and the legal testifications of their minds is termed litis contestatio; and lies we know is so called, à limit, because the first quarrels that were, are thought to be about bounds: and hence because the grounds of this variance were things solid; Lites were accounted other gates matter then jurgia, those we call Brawls; for they may be among Neighbours, Si jurgant ●enevolorum concertatio, non lis inim●corum. Tullius, De Rep. lib. 4. without breach of friendship; but these Contentions are things of Hostility: and therefore though they may be lawful, Jurgare igitur lex putat inter se vicinos, non litig are. Nonius. and are so; yet because they are perilous to, and minacious of the extirpation of Charity, not only does ingenuity decline, but Christianity reproach it, as a spot that is none of the spot of God's people, Non differendarum litium causa, sed tollendarum, ad arbitros itur. Celsus, Digest. lib. 4. tit. 8. p. 655. but a smack of the old Serpent in the leaven of his imparted enmity, and disaffection to man, whom he would make as unlike God, in good, as his malice can plot and effect: yet so far is the prudence of government necessitated to give way to it, that to prevent the freity of humane nature; Litis contestatio est hins inde, apud judicen● negotii principalis facli narratio una cum petitione ab actore facta & re● contradictione. Corvinus in Enchiridio, Tit De Litis Contest. p. ●82. which if it could not this way vent itself, would do it more butcherly: it allows Suits at Law to determine what otherways cannot be determined, the partialities of the respective contrarients, rendering them incompetent Judges. Quintil. Lib. 12. c. 8. And this the Law Civil calls litis contestatio. Quintilian names it litis productionem, the Libel or Roll in which the grievance we have from any one, or more, is at large specified. And the Lawyers makes contestation to differ from protestation, Alciat. in legem 40. Lib. De Verbor. Signific. p 109, 110. Litem in judicium deducere est litem contestari Lib 3. tit. 5. p. 448. Lib. 3. Tit. 3. De procurationibus Contestatum, in Gloss. p. 361. attestation, detestation, as Alciat has at large quoted Authorities; by which it appears, that this contestatio litis is the solemn production of the matter in contest before the Judge, with intent of affirming or denying the truth of the fact. For the fact being that, upon which the Law arises, the proof of that is the carriage, and the disproof of it the defeat of the cause or contention, Testes dicuntur quasi superstites & antistetes, qui stant dictis, In Leg. 238. tit. 1. De Verb. signify. vel factis: so Alciat. So that Witnesses being necessary to prove matter of fact, the Law requires that they be legitimi & idonei, Digest. Lib. 22. tit. 5. De Testibus, p. 2084. & Seq. those which in some sense were present, either by sight, hearing, or some other lawful way, by which they are enabled to give positive and indubitate testimony; Digest lib. 22. tit. 5. Dignitas H. p. 2087. Digest. lib 2. tit. 11. p. 225. Domestici Mag. which they the more unquestionably do, when they are assidui, as the Law of the Twelve Tables is: that is, saith a gloss, Locupletes, men of worth, who do not testify by their testimony to make a gain, Tholossan. Syntag. Juris, lib. 48. c. 13. tit. De Testibus. but are omni exceptions majores, which some are not, whom the Civil-Law therefore excludes. For matter of Fact being the ground of Contention, Fotnerius in legem 99 ss. 2. De Verb. signific. p. 233. the Judge is to see the proof correspondent to the averment, or else the litis contestatio will fail in the proof, and appear rather matter of malice, than zeal for justice. Exitus hujusmodi veritas, per legos civiles testium depositione probari debet, in qua duo testes idonei sufficiunt. All contestation is to some issue, and that issue must be determined according to the proof of Witnesses; Duo ad minus requiruntur testes in plena probatione. Tholoss. Syntagm. Juris. lib. 4●. c. 13. ss. 9 so is the Text of Civil-Law: for though in some Cases single Witnesses are allowed; yet in full proofs of facts two at least, and those spotless and plenary Witnesses are required as sufficient; Corvinus Enchirid. Tit. De Testibus. and this the Civil-Laws had from the Mosaique-Law, which undoubtedly was according to the Law of Nation's equity, Grotius, in Johan. 8. v. 17. wherein God has so instructed Mankind, to minister thus to justice, Vbi numerus testium non adjucitur, etiam duo sufficient; pluralis enim electio duorum numero contenta est. Ulpianus, lib. 31. ad edict. Digest. lib. 22 tit. 5. p. 2091. that no less, nor no other proof for the main should be, than this of Witness, and for the most part of 2 or 3 in number. For in Deut. 19.15. One Witness shall not rise up against a man for any iniquity, or for any sin that he committeth; at the mouth of two Witnesses, or at the mouth of three Witnesses shall the matter be established. Sapientor lex divina exigit testes in quaque causa binos aut ternos, primum rejiciens singularia testimonia, deinde oftendens cam posso esse viri alicajus famam, ut facilo non uni tantú, sed & duobus testibus sit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Tunc igitur tertius non exigetar testis; nam probationum pondera, angustis ●inibas circumscribi non possunt, sed pro personarum rerumque circumstantia boni viri arbitrio astimanda veniunt. Grot in Ma●th. 18.16. Bartolus, Digest. lib. 1. tit. 18 p. 143. In which words, God has put much weight upon Witnesses, provided they be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, such as witness de re vera & certa, in their own knowledge; and that which they knowingly and truly making known, and publicly standing to, are therefore by this Law to be believed, and the Judge justified in Sentence giving according to this evidence; yea, though in his own Conscience he believes the testimony is not good and just, he is bound to declare according to the testimony of two or three Witnesses; for God has said that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, shall stand as a Pillar that is not to be removed, Si lis aut accusatio confirmata fuerit, duorum aut trium testimonio rata erit. Vetabl. in Deut. 19.15. but bears the weight of truth on it. The truth of which is not only made good from the Texts of Civil-Law, but from the Expositors of this Text, and by the most unerring Doctor, who not only lay in the bosom of the Father, but knew the heart of man: yet even he our Lord jesus in the 18. of Math. 16. confirms this: so job. 8. 17. and the Apostle, 2 Cor. 13.1. and Heb. 10.28. These Authorities show the descent of two Witnesses for proof; In Cap. 10. ad Hebrzos. v●. 28. and therefore Ludovicus Capellus, a learned man, doth not without good ground reproach that Papal Sanction, juri tam divino, quam humano contrarium; which for proof, against a great Churchman, will have 72. Witnesses, against whom no exception can be: for since, says he, God says, every word shall be confirmed in the mouth of two or three: so much super addition is to make the proof impossible almost, and so to continue the sinner unpunished. Only the Text here puts in a word, which well explains the sufficiency of this number, when they are idonei; which what that is, the Laws mention, as I have quoted heretofore in this Chapter: yet 'tis worthy addition, that as the rule is praesumitur quis non idoneus nisi probetur idoneus; so by contraries, praesumitur quis idoneus nisi probetur non idoneus; for there is a good gloss to this purpose, Approbatur quis eo ipso quod non reprobatur. And surely, Digest. lib. 22. tit. 3. p. 2072. De Probatioaibus. Digest. lib. 2. tit. 8. p. 109. in Marg. gloss. where no just attaint can be made of a persons understanding, fidelity and privity to that he swears, his testimony ought to be taken as from a fit Witness; since no honest man will put himself upon the attestation of any cause, Digest, lib. 4. tit. 3. p. 513. which he is not, by knowledge of, a fit Witness in. Sed per leges Angliae veritas ist a non nisi 12. hominum de vicineto, ubi factum hujusmodi supponitur, Sacramento judici constare poterit. This is borough in, not to prove that the Law of England does not allow proof by witnesses, one in some cases (a) Crotius in Deut. 19 v. 16. unus testis sufficit non ad damnandum, sed ad inquirendum & in pecuniariis ad deferendum reo jusjurandum purgatorium, but not in Treason, (b) 5 and 6 E. 6. c 11. 3 Instir. c 2. Petit Treason, p. 25. E. Lumly's Case. Probationes oportetesse lu●e clariores. Reg. Juris. 1 Instit. p. 155. 28 E. 1. c. 9 34 E. 3. c. 4. 42 E. 3. c. 11. 11 H. 4. c. 9 2 H. 5. c. 3. stat. 2. Regist. fol. 178. Vicinus facta vicini praesumitur scir● Reg. Jur. here two must be; and so in other cases, the more Witnesses are, the clearer probably is the cause to go; but to show, that over and besides the two Witnesses, the Law appoints the Sheriff to summon a Jury of twelve men in number, and those liberi & legales homines, and those de vicineto, dwelling about the place where the fact in controversy is, who being presumed to know best the truth, are to pass upon their Oaths their Verdicts, upon hearing of the Evidence or Witnesses deposing, what upon their Oaths they believe to be the truth, etc. In all which Cases within the trial of Juries, there are special qualities of Jurymen limited by Statute, according to the nature of their enquiry. Thus Jurors in Indictments are by 11 H. 4. c. 9 Jurors within the County or without, 21 E. 1. upon life and death, 2 H. 5. c. 3. 8 H. 6. c. 29. upon forcible Entries, 8 H. 6. c. 9 before Escheators, 1 H. 8. c. 8. before the Sheriff in his turn, 1 R. 3. c. 4. to inquire of Felonies in Corporate Towns, 23 H. 8. c. 13. on Attaints in London, 11 H. 7. c. 21. 4 H. 8. c. 3. 5 H. 8. c. 5. These, and the like, the Statute. Law provides for Juries, without which no trial of fact can be. Which use of Juries, however some have been pleased to affirm, Polydor. Virgil. that they were introduced by the Conqueror, mistaking (I presume) his taking of twelve men, who out of every County were chosen Reporters of the Country Customs for these Jurors in matter of fact between man and man. I say, however mistakes may herein be; yet sure it seems to me, and to others more wise, than I dare presume to think myself, Cook Preface to the 8. Rep. Duodecimvirale istud judicium altioris est originis, & ab ipsis Anglo-Saxonibus. Spelman in Gloss. p. 398. Inter LL. Ethelrecii, c. 3. & 4. Lib. 2. c. 7. that Jurors are very ancient here even from the Saxons times. For in the Saxon Laws mention is made of them, and that as a peculiar set of men, that were in matter of fact to judge the truth, as in matter of Law the Judges are. And by Glanvil it appears, that when Duel was banished, Clementiâ principis de consilio procerum populis indultum, than the more frequent use of Juries begun for trial of Causes; which H. 2. did, to discard the uncertainty of that trial, Come enemy ex unius jurati testimonio procedat Duellum, duodecim ad minus legalium hominum exigit ista constitutio juramenta. Cambden Britania, p 153. For the number twelve, it should seem to be one of those Scripture sacred ones, which the Law delighted in. The Tribes of Israel were twelve, and the stones and the names written on them on the Breast of the High Priest were twelve; Rev. 2●. 12. our Lord chose his Apostles twelve, and their glory in Heaven is denominated by twelve Thrones; yea, the Heavenly jerusalem is said to have twelve Gates, and twelve Angels to guard it; so the Patriarches were twelve. Acts 7.8. and Solomon's Officers were twelve, 1 King. 4.7. So 2 Sam. 17.1. The thousands of chosen men were twelve, and the sealed thousands in the 7 Rev. were twelve; twelve Bullocks, and twelve He-Goats were an offering for all Israel, Ezra 8.35. So with us here the Judges of old were 12, the Counselors of State of old twelve; 1 Instit. p. 155. and he that wageth Law must have twelve, that is, eleven besides himself to be his Compurgators; yea, Secundum mittit quidem Jupiter, sed ex concilit sententia; duodecim enim Deos advocate. Natural Quaest lib. secundo, c. 41. it should seem that twelve was very much a valued number, especially in great matters; for Seneca tells us, that jupiter sends his lightnings by advice, for he calls twelve Gods to Council about it; and Tully sure intends something by it, Cicero, secunda legibus 93. when he writes, Discebamus enim pueri duodecim & carmen necessarium; and the famous Greek Laws, after the Parent of the Roman Laws, was called the Law of the Twelve Tables; Choppinus. De Domani● Francia, p. 331. the number 12. is famous in France, which hath 12 Peers. These, and such like things may prevail with us to believe, that something our Ancestors held fortunate in the number twelve. De vicineto] This is a word from vicinus, signifying the Neighbourhood, any place within the County or Hundred, which is in a large sense the Neighbourhood, the stat. 27 Eliz. c. 6. enacts a Writ to the Sheriff, Quod venire facias duodecim liberos, & legales homines de vicineto; Reg. Juris. and I suppose the reason is, Quia vicinus facta vicini praesumitur scire; which the Statute words in the Preamble somewhat otherways, as the reason of the Writ, For the returning of more able and sufficient jurors for Trials, and for reformation of abuses by Sheriffs and other Ministers, who for reward oftentimes, do spare at home the most able and sufficient Freeholders', etc. And because Jurors by the Law have great trust, they ought to be liberi & legales homines; for that's included in hominum de vicineto, that's virorum fide dignorum, ne'er locally, sufficient intellectually and fortunarily, sincere unsuspectedly. 1 Instit. p. 155. b. Sacramento] This word the Law uses to put a dread on men that are under the obligation of it; because it is not only an Obligation as an Oath, but as called a Sacrament memorative of us, with what integrity men ought to enter into it. They are understandingly, conscientiously, and resolutely to give Verdict according to their Consciences, and that not only because the Oath of God is upon them; and if they do otherwise then justly, God's vengeance impends them: but also because the Law has put her power into them in point of Fact. And if they have not the greater fear of God, reverence to the Law, and charity to their Neighbours, as well as to themselves, they may turn judgement into gall, Amos 6.12. and righteousness into wormwood. And if they do not perversely, but keep themselves within the limits of their Oaths and Verdict according to Evidence, neither for favour or affection: so help them God, and the Contents of the Testament; I say, if according to this they do, undoubtedly they will quit themselves like men, sacramento astricti, and do in their demeanours clear to the World the wisdom and care of our Ancestors, to provide such a remedy against falsehood and partiality. The truth of this I know by what I have seen, and found by mine own personal service in Juries with persons of quality, Knights and Gentlemen of the County of Middlesex, my worthy Neighbours, and that in causes of very great moment, and on grand Inquests; for only with such, and in such causes, have I been engaged: and I am further humbly boldly to say, that if Juries be kept up in their credit, and Gentlemen of the best quality be by no means excused, except where Law and necessity excuses them, there is no such way of trial for the justice and integrity of it in the World. For who that is by birth a Gentleman, and by breeding and fortune kept up worthy that degree, will charge his soul with the guilt of perjury, The credit of juries h●w preserved. for the pleasure or fear of any man? Nay, I further will, under the favour of my betters presume, to add, these great Freeholders' being thus in service, will do the Crown all right, in presenting encroachment upon it; and the people in presenting all common nuisances or entrenchments upon them. And this the Sheriffs shall do well to take notice of, that the King's Courts of Justice are never (to my observation) better pleased, then when they see Panels and returns of Knights, Esquires, and Gendemen, of rank and quality before them. And our Text gives the reason, because in matters of fact, Nonnisi 12. hominum de vicineto, ubi factum hujusmodi supponitur. Sacramento judici constare poter●t. No Jury returned, and appearing, no trial can be, so no Sentence; for matter of fact must be tried by Juries, ad questionem facti non respondent judices, Reg. Juris. 1 justit. p. 155. b. ad quastionem juris non respondent juratores. Q aritur igitur, etc.] The difference of Trials by the two Laws being patefied, this is ●he reddition and application, as it were, to its close order, that the Prince may see how the Chancellour's Arguments answer the end of their Production. The thing he was enquired about, and undertook to satisfy was, that the Common-Laws of Eng and were bona & ●ffica●es for England, as the Civil Laws were for the Empire. Now this he supposes he has done in part, by showing that the proof of matters of fact, is by the English Law to be by the Oath of two or three Witnesses, as the Civil Laws require; and because he supposes in the Engl sb Law there is a super-addition of strength to the validity of proof, and the prevention of falsehood by the Juries, which are on their Consciences to judge whether they think the matter of fact is deposed ●o and in its evidence clear, he ●hinks this the rationabilior & efficacior (via) ad veritatem, then otherwise. But of this enough; and if by any thought too much, which (under favour) I think has all imaginable modesty in its assertion. Let that excuse the Chancellor; and his humble E cho myself, the Law of England has thought so, & neminem oportet esse legibus sapientorem. Reg. Jutis. CHAP. XXI. Per leges civiles pars quae in litis contestationem affirmativum dicit, testes producere debet. THis is suitable to reason, and the method of all Laws, for those that commence a Suit to make good their Action by proof. For besides that, the Lawyers say, in his quae pertinent ad litis ordinationem, favemus actori potius, quam reo, which makes the Plaintiff have the advantage, as he is the occasion, and so may move fast or flow as he sees his advantage: Actor est qui alium prius, ad judicium evocavit. Digest. lib. 5. tit. 1. Gloss. in Tribus, p. 680. there is reason so it should be, because the Action or Contention either justifies or abates, according to the Actor's testimony valid or not. For though the Law Civil de require of an Actor oath, that he has not begun his Suit injuriously, Tholoss. Syntagm. Jutis. lib. 43. c. 6. tit. 8. or on purpose to disquiet his Neighbour, but upon assurance that he has a good cause, and the reus or Defendant do likewise swear, that he shall make a just defence; yet does the Law require testimony be given by such persons, Datur actori Sacramentum propter enormitatem criminis. Digest. lib. 12. Tit. 1. p. 1294. Gloss. A. quos ipsemet ad libitum s●um nominabit, that is, by such idoneous persons as he shall produce, and shall be allowed, and not excepted against. This is the tenor of the Law's direction in affirmative Contests, wherein the opinion is, Digest. lib. 4. tit. 8. Closs. K. consenserunt. p. 644. Duobus adserentibus affirmativam magis creditur, quam etiam decem negativam proponentibus; and therefore our Chancellor has rightly said, that pars quae in litis conte station affirmativam dicit, testes producere debet. For so, besides the other Authorities, Paulus adds, Lib. 79. Ad edictum. Digest. lib. 22. Tit. 8. De Probationibus, p. 2069. incumbit probatio, ei qui dicit non qui negat; on which the gloss says, Duas ponit regulas haec lex prima, qua dicitur affirmantem probare, etc. From all which appears, that the proof lies upon the affirmative party, for the reason that follows. Negativa autem probari non potest directè, licet possit per obliquum. All affirmations are opposed or weakened by negations, and negatives are either facti, juris, or qualitatis; of all which negatives, the hardest to prove is that of fact, Baldus in Marg. Gloss. Titul. De Probationibus, & Praesumpt. p. 2069. Digest. lib. 22. tit. 3. which our Text intending, therefore says, it cannot be directly proved, though indirectly, or obliquely it may, that is, negativa coarctata loco & tempore potest probari; otherways the proof of it must be indirect: as for example, A. accuses B to have been at York, and there to have committed such a facinus, in proof of which he produces C. D. E. B. cannot prove that he was not at York, against the positive testimony that he was; but he can prove the negative by collateral testimony, to wit, that at that very same time, B. was at Exeter, in such a house, and with such company; which admitted true, proves the negative obliquely, to the improbation of the affirmative peremptory; Digestorum, Lib. 3. Tit. 4. in Gloss. B. Debet, p. 377. for the rule is, omnis enim res sit dubia negatione; which I understand in a good sense applicable to affirmative testimonies, which are so far weakened in their credit, as the negative of them seems, and is most strongly supported by circumstances, introducing belief, that the affirmative is not true, medo & forma. Exilis quippe creditur esse potentiae, minoris queque industriae, qui de omnibus quos noseit homin bus, duos reperire nequit ita conscientiâ & veritate vacuos, ut timore, amore vel commodo, omni velint contraire veritati. This is written, to show the danger that the positivity of two Witnesses that do affirm, may do to the right of a cause; for if two in number assert upon oath what must stand, and the Judge must accordingly judge upon; then industry to seek out, and influence to persuade for love, compel by fear, or bribe by reward, may do what it pleases with two, that it may find out for its purpose: Which done, be the Judge never so learned & just; yet by the Civil-Law, he is supposed by our text to give Sentence according to the fullness and positiveness of the Evidence; which though it be a reason urgable against any thing, which is mortal and mutable; yet is thought by our Chancellor an Argument of strength here, when the Text says, testes producere debet quos ipsemet ad libitum suum nominabit; which advantage given to the Actor in a Cause, is so great a favour to him, that if he be not felo de se, and desert himself, he cannot but succeed in his cause. Now this wanting to one's self, as here 'tis brought in, is said to be ob exilitatem potentiae, that is, by want of wit, and inaptness to business; which is a sense Pliny puts on exilis, when he opposes plenus to it, making it the absence of what is vivid, vigorous, and masculine: so exilis aper gracilis & malè saginatus in Varro; Epist 114. Cic. 2. De Divinat. 46. 3 De re Rustic. c. 2. 9 Cic. 4. De Finibus. 2 De Orator. 87. Cic. 2. De lege Agtar. exilis copia; and genus sermonis exile, aridum, siccum, cui opponitur liquidum, fusum, profluens; and exile solum & exilia dicere de virtute, which arises from either a natural defect, or a desuetude and stupor of nature that makes men impatient to be troubled with business, and unhappy in it. They being as much to seek of wisdom to manage it, as the Psylli, a people of India, Ac si unum aliquem hominem, ac non rem incorpoream peterent. Sabellicus. lib. 4. c. 9 A. Gellius, lib. 6. c. II. are mopish and superstitiously ignorant, who because the Southwind is harmful to them, go to war with the Southwind: or the Thracians, who when they see their Governor make many high Ladders, pretending to mount up by them to Juno, Theatrum v. Humanae. 〈◊〉 5. lib. 1. p. 668. and before her to accuse them of contun●acy and stubborness, hereupon they are so terrified, that presently they do whatsoever they are commanded to do. This easiness of reach, and softness and indigestion of reason in the mind, will make a man key-cold to action. And so may Minoritas Industria, (as I may so turn the Chancellour's words) make a man not improve what he may to the uttermost; whereas industry has a notable effect, and almost an omni potentiality attending it, which I have in part heretofore showed in the Notes on the eighth Chapter, p. 144, 145. and will further in sundry Precedents, wherein Industry has served men to high and fortunate purposes, not only as it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that which makes men crafty to lie in Wait, but bold as hunters, are, to venture on the greatest design they have a mind to; which Rabbi David glosses on the words of David, Psal. 19.14. Prohibueris ne de industria peccem; but as it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Esth. 8.5. that which is the Net that encompasses whatever we have a mind to, and the girdle under which we bring all our aims; yea, that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which makes us enjoy what we obtain with the goodwill of all men, who account it rightly placed, and us not unworthy of it. This is the industry of Providence, that strikes while the iron is hot, and the spirits warm; and that by providing for a fore-seen evil day, makes the evil of it abortive, Lib. 6. c. 2. and conducts the havers of it into their Meridian. Fulgosus tells us of a notable young Don that was a pregnant spirit, and thought nothing too good for himself; who one day came to Alphonsus the eighth of Castille, to ask of him the government of Toledo; the King looking upon this Youth, as unmeet for such a charge and trust, refused his request: But the young Gallant would have no denial, but persisted in assertion of himself to a kind of courtless impertinency, telling the King, That he saw many young Nobles about him, who because they were his Companions in play, were also made happy by him when he was in earnest in a Throne; and that he found in himself great excitations to brave actions, which he desired to express in his service, if he might be honoured by a trust and command therein. Which Alphonsus hearing so boldly and so bravely uttered, granted his request, and a brave man he proved, fellow to any his Contemporaries. The like is reported of Hannibal, whose industry was such, that though he were many years in an Enemy's Country with an Army of men of different Nations, Sabellicus. Aenead. lib. 5. Language, Habit, Manners, who were differently religioned, armed, addicted; yet so did he unite them to him, and to one another, by the justice and strictness of his Discipline, and the industry he expressed in circumspection, that in the utmost straits of War, he never was disquieted with Sedition. So that by this it appears, that industry and diligence in business, has so much of the plenarty of worldly felicity entailed to it, as God permitteth; and that nothing in ordinary to the effection of extern means, is restrained from being the Trophy of its Conquest, and the sacrifice of its vigilance. Which emphatizes the Chancellour's Argument to the end he prolated it; for since industry is thus prevalent to good and to evil, as is evident in the examples of both, in which, especially the latter and worst of them it is more frequently and indefatigably expressed; witness Satan, who is said to go about like a roaring Lion, 1 Pet. 5.8. Micah 7.3. seeking whom he may devour; and wicked men his Emissaries who work iniquity with both hands, whose fect are swift to shed blood, and who design mischief on their beds, to whom wickedness is pleasure. I say, since thus it is; who that is industriously wicked, and wittily industrious, can miss of what he aims at, as it falls under an Earthly notion, and is the consectary of prudent endeavour. For as by this in good things, Vives, iib. 3. De Concordia, etc. Discordia. Augustus evicted Salvidenus, Lepidus, Muraena, Capio, Ignatius, and even Cinna himself, whom when he had in his power, he so reasoned out of his enmity, and laid his offence so home to him, that Cinna was ashamed of his insolence; and having all his Lands and Honours confirmed on him, ever after lived a most loyal Subject to his Prince: Nor did Augustus repent the prudence he thus fruitfully expressed, because never after he had any trouble from any he had condonated. That look as Mentor Rhodius Admiral of Asia (by sending Hermias the Aternensian Tyrant a subtle Message, by the belief of which he was cogged into his power; whom Mentor being once possessed of, so prevailed upon by fear & fallacy industriously applied to him, that he got his Signet, and then wrote Letters to the several Towns, that Hermias had entered upon, and for him were held, signing them with his Seal; whereby he (without blood) gained delivery of all his Master's losses, with his Enemy also: and all this Diodorus says he did, Lib. 16. Bibliothec. by the prudence and industry of a Warlike Soul, which preferred secure Policy, before dubious War, and subdolous stratagem to manly encounter. As he, I say, did do this great service to his Master, by industry, in knowledge of Hermias his humour and weakness, and accordingly thereto framed his applications: so may any man of power and diligence, wind himself into either an admirer of his parts, or a fearer of his power, or a flatterer to his favour, or a vassal to his purse, and them makes his servants to any pleasure he will command them. For men are to the sovereignties of love fear and advantage, such Vassals; that they make rendition of their integrity to them, D. Siculus Bibliothec. lib. 17. as readily as the World did to Alexander, Whom no Enemy encountered with (saith Diodorus) whom he overcame not; no City besieged he, which he carried not; no Nation came he near, which he victored not: Which I do not mention, as only the extraordinary pleasure of God to have it so, as it is evincible in sundry cases: but as it seems to be the consectary of Martial Prudence, and active wisdom; In Vita Iphicratis. which Probus methinks puts out in a notable example of one who was ever in the head of his armed men; and as he attempted no great thing without them: so did he no grievous thing by them. All his enterprises had the ballast of counsel; and because they were once well done, as they needed not to be repent of; so did they not miss of his end, which was either to reform what was amiss, or to introduce what was expedient. In consideration of all which, supposing men be knowing, and will be active, what may they not accomplish; and especially in testimonies, where if they go by number, they may be so contrary to truth, as nothing more can be. For Witnesses a man may find enough; and if they be conscientia & virtute vacuos, they will depose anything they are cajouled to depose. For Conscience is that sweet noted Siren; that makes a man have all delight, while it witnesss integrity and clearness; 'tis that which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Antiphon apud Stobaeum, Serm. 106. p. 350. which will render a man bold end fearless; free in captivity, joyful in sorrow, abundant in want, glorious in rags; 'tis that, which when good, is a continual feast, which holy men have rejoiced in, and evil men only made shipwreck of. The excellency of a good Conscience is known by its companions, Faith and Charity, 1 Tim. 1. v. 5. and 19 and c. 2. v. 9 by the study St. Paul expressed to keep it, Act. 24.16. and the use he made of it, and the defence he had by it, 1 Pet. c. 3. v. 16. & 21. Indeed, what a good Conscience is, the contrary can tell; for a bad Conscience is, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Gregory Niss●n expresses it; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Stob loc. praecit. Psal. ●17. 1. Philo lib. De confus. john 14.6. Linguarum, p. 337. john 8.32. john 17.17. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Olympias apud Stobaeum, Serum. 59 and Philo, that every evil man is condemned by his evil Conscience. And when truth is not regarded, which God so highly values, that he calls himself a God of truth: and his Son calls himself the truth, and says of truth, that it shall make his free; that it is the means of their sanctification; That it is a fruit of the Holy Spirit. If truth be a Denizen of Heaven, and a Fellow Commoner with God at the Mess of Eternity; and if the reward of it be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Epictetus says, If God loves truth in the inward parts, and will be served of those that draw near unto him in spirit and in truth: Then, Then, to be void of truth, to have that kept from its office in informing Conscience, and so keeping a man free from the great offence, is to lie open to all mischief; 'tis to be beautiless, and without all form of virtue. Thus the Earth is said to be without form, and void, Gen. 1. Thus the wanton young man is said to be deficiens cord 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Prov. 7.7. which our Translators render void of understanding; yea, and void has a sense of perishing and adnulling, Deut. 32.28. It is a Nation void of counsel; So Psal. 10.16. Jer. 43.36. the word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, periens consiliis; and thus the Lawyers use the word, making void, for nulling, cancelling, unsaying, undoing. So that when our Text says, conscientiâ & veritate vacuos, it intends such prostigateness and debauchery of soul, as has no tincture of God, no grain of restraint to the utmost degree of vildness; no not to such a measure of impiety, as the Apostle calls working iniquity with greedeness; insomuch, as what God says of Israel turned into the degenerate Plant of a strange Vine unto him, Jer. 2.2. and is expounded by the Prophet Hosea in the 10. of his Prophecy and the first, to be an empty vine, is but what this passage imports, in those phrases of detraction and abasement, conscientiâ & veritate omni vacuos, & is what the Wiseman says of the lewd Woman, She forsakes the guide of her youth, and forgets the Covenant of her God, that is, she is as vild, as voidness of truth and conscience to God and man can render her. Vt timore, amore, vel commodo, omni velint contraire veritati. This follows upon the former vacuity, when God is not in the terrors of Conscience, and in the conviction and light of truth in all a man's thoughts, than he lies fit for all occupants, and hangs out a bush, to toal in all comers; vice as well as nature, in a sense, endures no vacuity Hence is it, that it says to God, Depart from us, we desire not the knowledge of thy Law; Job 21.24. but it compliments Satan and his Creatures in, and bids them welcome. Those Lovers, it has strewed its bed with Roses to entertain; and all this is done, to gratify the combination he is head of against truth: Truth is the Queen's Daughter, all glorious within; and he only delights in her whose she is, and who only knows throughly what she is. Dulcis veritas in interiorem melodiam. Sanctus Bernardus. in Cont. And so far are only men aimers at, and prosecuters of her, as they are partakers of defecated reason. The Soul while it fits at home contemplating truth, it seeds on Mannah Celestial Viands; but when once it wanders abroad, and will find truth, where God hath not bid man to seek it, nor promised he shall find it; then there is danger of Dinah's misfortune amongst the Daughters of the Land, Innocence and Integrity have no Mines and Snares so corruptive and ruinous to it; as fear of power, love of favour, hope and desire of profit: these are in most the price of conscience, and truth with them. Fear, 'tis a fruit of sin; and therefore the fear of man is a snare, because the fear of God is not made the guard: he that has commanded not to fear man, whose breath is in his nostrils, has dictated, why he dehorts therefrom, because such fear hath a snare and a ●it attending it; 'tis timor absorptionis non cautionis; 'tis a fear that disables to opposition, and leads man a captive to all mischief, jer. 48.43. This was Moab's fear, timor exantlationis; Matth 8.25. 'tis a fear that makes men desperate to venture, and helpless in miscarriage: No, save us Master we perish, when the storms and winds engage those our embarquing, Christ is not a friend at hand in this trouble. And therefore no wonder this base fear wrought so on the Cardinals, In Platina in vita Julii 2. Papae. when Pope julius secundus stood to be Pope, that they knowing him to be a bold and daring spirited man, and impatient to be crossed, Platina in vita Julii 3. were so awed by him, that they durst not but choose him Pope, because they consulted more how to wave his displeasure and purchase his favour, then discharge a good conscience. O amor, quite appellem bonum an malum, dulcem an ama●um; ita enini utroque plenus es, ut utrumque esso videaris. Salvianus. Lib. Amore] Love that's the next fury, a passion, like the Apples of Sodom; if good, very good; if bad, very bad. When it's by a kind of Miracle from Water become Wine; by a prepotency of Reason and Religion, reduced and bounded: then 'tis like the precious Spickna●d, which Mary Magdalen anointed our Lord's head with, odoriferous, very costly and amiable: no ingenuity and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of Art or Nature, but superlatizeth itself by the touch and tincture of this; it is the rhapsody of all transports; and if the magnetiques and cabalistique Charms of Nature be any where, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eurypid. in Antigone. 'tis here in love. The love of every man is his weight, that he is that he loves: there is a fixed truth in the Poet's fiction, the Moon will forsake her Orb to kiss her Endymion. Thus Circean is love, that it leads Creatures madding, without Reason or Religion; which causes, the Holy Ghost to cry to us by the Wiseman, Prov. 4.23. Omni custodia, Keep thy heart (the fountain of love) with all diligence; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theophrastus apud Stobaeum, Ser. 185. p. 626. for out of it are the issues of life and death. And because love, which way soever it byasses, is so potent; therefore St. Paul when he recounts what a Christian should do for Christ, who has done so much for him, mentions this as the motive, The love of Christ constraineth: 2 Cor. 5.14. no influence of the Pleyades is so sweet and so effectual as love; it has a magnetism, that when it relates to art, will persuade an Eudoxus to be a Mathematique Martyr, and pass his li●e away to the Sun's flames; so he may purchase the dimensions of tha● fiery body, for the benefit of Posterity; and when it is set on worse objects, 'tis as heroic and impetuous. I Joh. 2.153. For which cause our Lord leaves no Antidote more commended to his followers, than that Amulet against love of the World; because there is danger any love rival with Christ, will be prevalent against the love of Christ in us: Christ is spiritual, and we are carnal; Christ is holy, and we are wholly averse to it: and because Amor est inter pares, & quic quid impar dissidet; therefore Christ, and the World, and ourselves, cannot be Coparceners in love: Love, like the Rainbow in the ●●orm, is nothing but every thing, save what it should be: 'tis David, white and ruddy, the Victor of Goliath: But the Victory of Bathsheba, which I note, to usher in the specifique Worm, that corrodes and eats out the vitals of pure love; this World and the lusts of it. This than stronger than death, because it carries men beyond the fears of death, to gratify the pleasures of sense, being the mist before Solomon's eyes, that he could not see what his amorous wander after knowledge would penitentially cost him, is that in which every man almost miscarries: as 'tis that Fog and Gloom, in which neither Sun or Moon, or Star of Religion or Reason is visible. Vel commodo] This is the third Traitor to Integrity, and a terrible one 'tis too; the Poet could tell us so, Munera, crede mih, capiunt hominesque deosque; the prevalence of this with most men, made Satan apply it to our LORD; though as subtle as he was, he miss his aim: For the Prince of the World had nothing in him; there was no soul or faculty in him seducible; no lust of the flesh, no lust of the eye, no pride of life to gratify: he was all pure, he was altogether sinless; which if he had not been, Satan would have tried him with an Omnia haec tib● dabo. This, this advantage is the bait to every sin; it seduces the Priest from his zeal, Platina in Act. 6. the Statesman from his integrity, the Soldier from his honour, the Lady from her modesty, Guallo, Legat. temp. King John. Holingshed, p. 193. p. 120, 145, 128●. the Servant from his fidelity: 'tis the great Apollyon of Souls: this made Banister betray his Master the Duke of Buckingham, Holingshed, p. 744. in R. 3. his time. This made the Wiseman call the love of money, the root of all evil. Oh! the treachery of rewards! it has blinded the eyes of the Judge, and hardened the heart of the Father, and rebelliously lifted up the horn of the ●on, and heightened the ambition of the Servant: yea, it hath made the Philosopher a mercenary, and the Threasurour Apostle a Traitor: and therefore Severus that loved money so well, Xiphil. in Epitome. Dionis. p. 404. edit. Sylb. that the Historian says, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Though he gathered money from every Project, and loved to have a full Chequer; yet he never spilt blood, or put any man to death to get money by it. Which considered, our Chancellor has well accented the contraition to truth, to depend on the seduction of these, or some of them. And the rather because not only the seduced's own soul may be endangered by it, but even the souls of others, who by the oppression of this may become desperate; for the Law being, that the testimony of two must stand, Hos potest tunc ipse producere in testimonio in causa sua, says the Text. Hos potest tunc ipse in testimonio producere in causa sua. 'Tis not said hos debet, but potest, because that he does discredit his cause; by such inidoneous Witnesses is his own folly, and his causes loss: the Law Civil is not hereby chargeable with neglect of justice; for as by that, they that are blemished, are uncapable to give testimony; so by that the Judge is allowed to refuse it: that testimonies are accounted, as their persons are that give them, is plain by that of Modestinus: Lib. 8. Regularum. In testimoniis autem dignitas, fides, mores gravitas, examinanda est; & ideo testes, qui adversus fidem suae test ationis vacillant, audiendi non sunt. Digest. Lib. 22. Tit. 5. pag. 2085. 2088. And Calistratus, after he has notably told the qualifications of apt Witnesses, concludes, Nam si careat suspicione testimonium, Lib. 4. De Cognitionibus. Digest. Loco Praecitato. vel propter personam à quâ fertur, quod honest a sit; vel propter causam, quod neque lucri neque gratiae neque inimicitiae causa sit, admittendum est. And that there are many Causes that do invalidate testimonies, Tholossanus. Lib. 48. c. 13 art. 4, 5, 6. p. 1052. De Testibus. Tholossan, has to my hand collected. To whom I refer the Reader; which clears the Civil-Law from admitting testimonies, quâ such, without consideration of the persons, and circumstances of the Deposers of them: yet further, as the Text is thus clear; so the Judges of that Law are required to see to Witnesses, that they be staunch, and their testimonies clear and pregnant. For Bartolus writes on the Texts prementioned this, Digest. Lib. 22. Tit. 5. p. 2085. B. Rubr. Nota quod potestate judicis conceditur utrum debeat adhiberi fides testi vel non; Digest. Lib. 3. Tit. 3. A. B. in Marg. p. 375. and judex potest refraenare numerum testium; for though the Judge cannot arbitrari in determinatis à lege, Digest. Lib. 22. Tit. 5. p. 2086. gloss inimicus. yet can he by the Law judge of testimonies; an fides ● sit adhibenda, judicis mandatur officio, saith the gloss: and in matters of Fact, ¶ Lib. 12. Tit. 2 p. 1281. ss. B. the Judge may not admit impertinent Articles. So that all things considered, I do not understand our Chancellour's meaning, to impeach the Civil-Law of any defect; but to commend the Common Law, which to that way of proof by Witnesses which it allows also, superadds the trial of Juries as a remedy, if any subornation of Witnesses should be; which because 'tis easier done with two Witnesses alone, then with them and 12 Jury men, which are, and aught to be men of fortunes and integrity, when Witnesses are not required to be so strictly such. The Chancellor applauds the way of trial in England, upon this consideration, that it is less probable to be tortuous, then that of bare Witnesses is. Concerning the stoutness of Juries, Holingshed, p. 1105. & Seq. in keeping close to their Evidence in point of Fact, and not to be tempted or threatened therefrom, see the carriage of Sir Nicholas Throgmorton's Jury, primo Queen Mary: And by reason of the sufficiency of the Jurors returned, and the penalty in their corruption, there is (1 dare say) less error in Justice with us in England, then in any part of the World: yea, our Justices being such learned and grave Gentlemen, as they ever have been, and are, do so rightly inform Juries, in the right method of digesting their Evidence, that a nobler and braver trial can no man desire, Note this. then by a Jury of twelve men, Good men and true. Et si contra eos pars altera dicere velit, vel contra eorum dicta, etc. This is added, to show that every Action consists of two Parties: and as it is the Affirmants, or Libelers part, to impeach; so the Libelleds, or Defendants, to justify themselves against it. This the Text calls in the Defendant, or Opponent, contra eas dicere, a crimination of their persons; or contra eorum dicta, an impeachment of their Evidence. For as the Law does not allow an infamous person to bear witness; so not his witness to be believed, but excepted against, if he be rationally presumed not to be upright in it: only that which seems hard, is, Non semper continget eos eorum mores, eut facta apud contradicere volentem agnosci, ut ex eorum faeditate, & vitis testes illi possunt reprobari. 'Tis true indeed, it were to be wished, that Witnesses might be enquired into, what fashion they are of, and where they live, and how they behave themselves, before their testimony pass in a Court of Law. It were also to be wished, that men's hearts were so far knowable; that the fruits of them, in the faedity of their actions, and the contagion of their practice, might be public and they not pass for Cato's, who are Nero's; nor for Saints, who are Devils: but that not being possible, nor any humane Law usurping cognizance of the good or evil intent of men, but as they are manifested and visibilitated in the practice. How are the Civil Laws to be blamed, which when it appears, do provide against it, and by reason thereof, account the testimony weakened in a great measure. For though the Judge cannot arbitrate in the positive Rule of Law; nor in a civil Cause, deny the affirmatives of two Witnesses that plenarily swear: yet may he defer Sentence, till the party oppressed by false Witnesses, Cur enim ad arma & rixam procedere patiatur Praetor, quos potest jurisdictione sua componere. Julianus. Digest. lib. 7. Tit. 1. p. 889. in Textu. C. may find some expedient, either to disable the testimony; or the Judge seeing the perverseness of the Prosecutor's end, persuade them to agreement; which is somewhat of probability to the effection of reparation to the injured, and disappointment to the injurer, Opprimi aliquem per adversarti sui potentiam non oportet. Digest. Lib. 1. Tit. 16. B. in Text. though it be not such a curb, as that in trial by Juries is. For there, though positive Evidence is the trump that ruffs all before it; yet that positive testimony is scannable, and having so many eyes upon it, may have a hole picked in the coat of it; and though the Jury cannot take notice of a negative oath, to balance an affirmative; yet they may see such cause of doubting the clearness and veracity of such affirmatives, and they may hear truth, denying the charge against it by such circumstances, as if true, are inconsistent with the affirmative Depositions. And frequent it is with Juries to verdict, as they think in their Conscience, the truth of the Fact is, upon consideration of the Evidence on both parts; and if so they do, they do (as I humbly conceive) what they ought. For they being Judges of the Fact, are to determine, what their Consciences judges clearly proved concerning the Fact, and no more: and the Fact once stated and fixed, the Sentence of Law is pronounced by the Judge. So that all that hence, can be argued, is, that still falsehood seems to be put upon a harder task, and amore inextricable labour, and to grapple with (as it were) an impossibility, which it cannot so easily overcome or evade, in the evidencing before Justices and Juries, as before Judges alone; where they do but deal with two Witnesses, and one Judge, (who are a less number than the Electors of the Empire were, who yet by Richard Duke of Cornwall, were so made pliable, that they chose him King of the Romans, who was no German, and who was only Brother to our Henry the 3d; Tum propter ej●s fidelitatem & sapientiam, tum propter sui thesauri abundantiam. M. Paris. in H. 3. ad annum 1257. p. 940. which occasioned a Poet of that time to say, Nummus ait pro me, nubit Cornubia Romae,) and the work is done, and the cause carried: Whereas in our Courts of Justice, where there are 3 or 4 Judges, and twelve Jurymen, of fortune, blood, breeding, and conscience, (for such the Law requires they should be, & so often I am sure they are) 'tis a Hercules labour to attempt this; yea, and 'twil be that, by which the attemptor is sure to be deceived: for if but one honest unengaged person be in the Panel, no Verdict can be, and so no judgement; which is the reason that the Chancellor here reasons so tightly for Juries, and against the sole Evidence of two Witnesses; for though a Conslave of Cardinals may be bribed, as Platina confesses, in the choice of Pope Alexander the sixth they were, and names Cardinal S. Fortia for the Merchant; In vita Alexandri 6. who drove the bargain emptus pro●uldubio profusissima largitione; yet Juries are not so to be dealt with, which makes the credit of them so much in England. Quis tune poterit suorum aut sui ipsius, sub lege tali vivere securus; dum cuilibet sibi inimicari volenti, lex tali praestat subsidium. This is to be understood moderately; not as if our Text did make the Civil Laws subsidiary to injury; for that were to cast an odium upon the sacred Law of the Empire, which so great and so many Nations have in all Ages been governed by, and as strenuous Patrons as himself, do defend to be a very noble and learned Law, and conform in the greatest part of it to natural equity. But in that the Chancellor says, Quis tunc poterit esse securus, etc. both in body and fortune, when such may be evicted by two Witnesses of dissolute condition, who may be Sons of Belial, and for swear themselves, to act a malice against him. His sense is, that to him it seems a greater latitude is left thereby to such sinister courses, then in England by the Common-Law trials are. For I take the words not to be verba approbatoria, but oratoria, and to have no further intent, then to make the Common-Law more popular, and applicable to general security, than he would have the Civil-Law accounted. Nor is this thus interpreted piaculary in our Chancellor; considering, that the Municipe Law of England, is the Darling of the Nation, and to speak well of what's Native, is much the honour of an Englishman; though always it be a generous man's quality, to praise what he loves, with no reproach to what is rival with it, at least with as little reflection, as his fidelity to what he prefers, permits him. To sweeten then what has been charged, as somewhat too sour in my Great Master, I humbly premise this, That though the Civil Law requires direct and positive proofs; Par est probationi prasumptio quod quidem ad effectum attiner, quia probatione habetur. We senbechius. yet does it not reprobate presumptions wholly; but if they be strong and forcible, whereby the certainty of the cause may be illustrated, admits them; Digest. Lib. 21. Tit. 1 in Marg. p. 1980: it being a rule amongst Civilians, Argumentum sumptum à praesumptione valet; and praesumptioni statur donec probitur in contrarium; Lib. 4 Tit. 2. p. 501. F. Presumptioni. gloss. Lib. 23. Tit. 3. p. 2146. X. contrarium in gloss. which the gloss thus explains, That though these presumptions do not transfer probationem, yet they do durius onerare actorem probatione tam alias apertiore, quam in civilibus, etc. For though praesumptioni levi non est standum, is a rule with them: yet where presumptions are firm and violent, where they have poise and conviction of reason, Digest. Lib. 4. Tit. 4. p. 533. in marg gloss. there they are leading; as Tholossanus has in his 48. C. ●1. Lex legum. Chapter at large made good; and as Dr. Wiseman has very soberly and solidly on this matter defended his Laws. Only let me be excused, if I (notwithstanding all) do in my apprehension conclude the trial in a Court of Justice, by twelve men indifferently chosen, and to be excepted against, if there be legal cause, who after hearing Evidence, and considering the nature of it, give their Verdict upon Oath, according to what they hear really proved before them, as by the Common-Law is used, to be the best and most probable trial to be equitable, of any in the World. And though men may possibly be secure in body and goods under trials by Witnesses, according to the Civil-Law, as we suppose men are abroad: yet do I not question, but that the security of an Englishman, under the Common-Laws defence and administration, is equivalent to any, if not paramount to all. And I pray God, as born I was, and have ever lived under the good government of it; so I and mine may live and die by the direction, and under the favour of it. Et qui iniqui duo tam incauti sunt, quod facti de quo ipsi examinabuntur in initio non antequam in testes producantur, occulti fingant imaginem & figuram, componant quoque eidem omnes circumstantias, quales sibi fuissent, si illud in veritate constitisset. Et qui iniqui duo] This sets out the number two, and the nature, iniqui. Now iniquus, the Learned know is one that does any thing, contra aequitatem, against right: Terence couples iniquus with inimicus, In Prol, Adelp a Serm. satire. 7. Ovid Epist. 14. ●1 Aenead. Plin. lib. 12. c. 19 Cic. Pro Roscio Amer. and Horace with iratus. And hence every thing of displeasure, we are said iniquè far. Thus iniqua conditis in Tully; Praecium pictatis iniquum in Ovid; Pugna iniqua in Virgil; and Iniquitas loci, iniquitas hominum, iniquitas temporis, is frequent, to express the straits, difficulties, and miseries, man suffer in them. So that iniqui here, are such as are made instruments, to make an innocent cause suffer by their villainy. Tam incauti sunt] The Text in this interrogation, strongly affirms the temper of men set on mischief; not to do what they do rashly, but with advice, that it may succeed; or in the Scripture phrase, appear done with both hands, with all their might; which they seldom do, who run hand over head, and incautelously about it. Nature has taught us this even in her instinct in Beasts; the most harmful and spiteful of which, are the subtlest and least-noised Creatures: who by project as it were, and infidiarily steal upon their prey; and as they design their rove and rapacity in the night, so they come gingerly and softly to it. This our Text calls in the contrary of it, incautien, a frailty that innocence is often guilty of, and as often smarts for this its Dovelike credulity: But that which men of the World think in themselves inexpiable, because its the loss of their design, & of that opportunity, which as it may happen, they may never have again. Thus did Flaminius lose himself by engaging with Hannibal neglictis comitiis) as it were before his Commissions were dispatched into all parts of his Quarters; Collatis signis exercitu amisso excisus est. Sigonius in Fast & trumph. Rom. p. 136, 137. who for want of Conduct, Hannibal every where circumvented; which was so great an error in a Commander, Neque imperatori bono quicquam minus, quam temeritatem congrui●● satis celeriter fieri quicquid commode geratur, Aurelius victor in Augusto. as nothing can by him be acted more nefarious to his cause, more proditorious to his Soldier's lives, than so to do. And thus do all men of passion, who are, as Varro terms Paulus, temerario & prae propero ingenio, lose themselves. And therefore Satan chooses no feathers for his Cap of Seduction, no men levis armaturae for his Triarii; he carries on his Designs by the Achitophel's, the Goliahs, the Saul's, the julian's, that are men of might, that bark not before they by't; that roar not, before they have their prey in their clutches; as he himself comes crawling on his belly into our paradise our souls by ill thoughts, sins of pleasure, fanciful dalliances, and pleasing dandlings, till he has engaged us to a nonretreat; so does he institute his Instruments by sophistry and subtlety, by pretensions and fictions of seeming good to the most portentous evils. And all the prevalency he has (next the permission of God) he owes to the liquor he pickles his projects in; he steeps them in highseasoned counsel, and the darkness and indiscernible night (as it were) of death. No eye he suffers to peep into his projects, but that which is sworn to secrecy: no Emissary he sends forth to act it, but such as has drunk down greedily the potion of his intoxication, by which he being lessoned to, and confirmed in sin, works it with greediness: not only is pleased so himself to be, but zealous to proselyte others, and make them as bad as himself. And all this Satan effects by counsel and deliberation, by advice and pre-appointment. The pharisees had a mind to destroy our LORD; they would not rudely and unthoughtly enter upon him, and then consider what to do with him: but they took counsel against jesus; and because they found his words might soon be carped at, they sought to entangle him in his words. Matth. 12.14. Chap. 22.15. Mark 12.13. Luke 20.20. So in the other Gospels, The chief Priests and the Scribes watched him, and sent forth Spies, which should feign themselves just men. This was the wile and forlorn of these Caitiffs, Quoniamque ut bona naeturâ appetimus, si● à malis natura deslinamus, quae declinatio sicum ratione siet, cautio appelletur eaque intelligatur in solo esse sapiente. Cic. 4. Tulcul. 2 De Oratore 166. by which they sought to express the malice of their hearts, by bringing him into trouble: which shows, that Satan arms his with caution; they seldom do exire incauti: he lessons them too well to be surprised; they have all the stratagems implanted on their mind, that may both enable them to supplant others, and keep themselves free from apprehension and suspicion. Prudens & qui sibi probus, & negotiis suis scit eavere. Terenc. in. Phorm. 4.5. These Fauxes and Catesby's have the Cellar and the Night; yea, and the dark Lantern, whereby they can see, and not be seen. And hence is it, that they being not incauti, are uncaught, till God bring the fear, the snare, and the pit on them, which in his good time he does: but till then, they do not forfeit their prudences by rashness, but do not only lay low in counsel, what they are to act but do fix on their minds the manner and circumstances of their action, which the Text here terms ●cculte fingere imaginem & figuram, etc. they do act what they are to execute. Thas did the execrable Murderer of H. 4. of Fran by reading Mariana's damnable tract, De Regis & Regni institutione. act in his mind the form, and inure his hand to use that Instrument, that he sacrilegiously murdered that brave Prince by. And thus undoubtedly did Faux, by being in the Cellar, in sight of the Match, Powder, and combustible Materials, with which he was to do that execrable villainy, See Stat. 3 Jacob. c. 2. meditate in his mind, and in the externity and figure of the action, embolden himself to the real acting of it: that look as a Painter does, fingere figuram & imaginem of the picture he intends to draw; and an Orator does contrive in his mind the speech he will utter, and a Soldier does design the method he will fight in, and a Lover does fancy the beauty he could love, which seeing he loves for nothing, is in the intellect embraced for good, but such as the sense admits such: so when an evil Witness is resolved on an Evidence, and will desperately depose in a Cause against any one whom thereby he would overthrow, Qui testibus pecuniam dederit, ut falsum testimonium dicent, vel certè, quod setunt taceant, aut non exprimant venitatem, vel judici praemium dederent, ut sententia contra justitiam dicat vel non judicet; humiliores capite puntantur, honestiores bonorum suorum amissione multentur. Edict. Theodori Regis, c. 91. Annexum Cassiodor. p. 366. he does premeditate what to do, and provides what to say in all parts of his Deposition, which may more than ordinarily conduce to his end. Thus wise are the Creatures of this World to carry on their Work, though they have Hell for their wages: whereas the only way to express honest wisdom, is to engage in no fordid action; but to make the answer of a good Conscience, which will comfort in all conditions. Contra singulas objectiones ita luculenter, & argumentose respondens peroravit, ut omnibus admirationi & venerationi haberetur, ita ut nulla suspicio de his in quibus accusabatur, in cordibus audientium ulterius remaneret Math. Paris. in R. 1. p. 173. This our King Richard the first found relief in, when in the Emperor's hands he was charged with injuries done to the Sicilians, He made so pithy and direct answers to them, and excused himself in every point so throughly, that the Emperor much marvailed at his high wisdom and prudence, and not only greatly commended him for the same, but from thenceforth used him more courteously. Prudentis viri intellectus quorundam generosum animalium assimilatur, qui die tanquam caliginosi ac somnolenti dormirant, sed noctu acutissimè vident, hosti aggrediendo praedaque intenti. Inter instructiones Cardinal. Montalti, p. 429. Thesauri Politici. And indeed, difficulties are the proper touch of prudence; for as every man can sail in a calm, when in a storm he must be a good Pilot, that can keep by steerage his Vessel from danger; so every man that is not a Drone, can give answers in easy and ordinary matters; but to give them ripely and readily in difficult Cases, that's the trial of prudence. Upon which consideration, vae soli is a truth in this sense, which is one of the Wise-man's sense. For be one never so wise and dexterous; yet he is but a semiplene Witness, and nothing will be carried by him; but when two are in joint testimony, and the Devil to back and breast them, with steels that are of proof, when he has obdurated them, and turned them loose as sinners that will not shrink or give back, than his work goes on with all possible caution. D' Avila, p. 350. Thus warily did he steer Charles the Ninth of France, to set Villoquer to murder Lignerols, who from the Duke of Anjou knew of the Massacre; and yet though he had set the assassin about it, yet when he heard it was done, showed great trouble for it, and committed Villoquer and Mansfield, that jointly did it by his command, to Prison. Thus did he further lead the same Prince to some seeming favour to those of the Religion, till his designs were brought about, and they were mastered; Pag. 361. which while he was effecting, as he endeavoured by corrupting Cardinal Messandeino to misrepresent better than it was, and to put a fair gloss upon it to Pope Pius the Eighth; which he honestly would not do, telling him plainly, That by his majesty's unexpected falling from the zeal of the Catholic Religion, all his most valued and precious jewels, were no more than dirt in his estimation. But also when he had effected them, than he sets on the King of Navarre, and terrifies him from his Religion, and then tells the Prince of Conde, that there was no more ado, but he must turn from Calvinism, Pag. 379. or else expect Mass, Death, or Bastile: which three words so wrought on him, that to Mass he came publicly. Nor much of a better nature, but sure a like work of darkness, was that of the persuasion of Poltrot to murder the Duke of Guise; if a truth it be that is reported, that Coligui the Admiral proposed him infinite rewards. And another told him, (which I believe to be but a mere fiction, Pag. 176. and malevolent calumny) that he should merit of God, by taking out of the world so great a persecuter of the Faith. Lord! what Hellish advisedness is this, to make darkness a withdrawing room to such villainy of plot and contrivance; which makes me often think of St. Paul's Aphorism, as of that truth, which will one day be visible in the punishment of it, when the Judge of quick and dead shall come, The wisdom of the World is enmity with God. For as that Spanish Proverb is, He is a King that never saw a King, that is, he is the happy man that contents himself with moderate things, and can sit at home with short commons. So is he the wise and wary man, that is aware of these wary men of the World, D'Avila, Lib. 10. pag. 820 of H. France. whole unhappiness it is, more often than they think, to have their Religion counted Hypocrisy, their prudence a wicked craftiness, their policy meanness of spirit, their liberality licentiousness, their affability contemned, their gravity suspected, their name detested, th●ir private conversation imputed to enormous vices, and their deaths extremely rejoiced at. 'Tis a good account of the use of power indulged to great men, Quanquam potestati nostrae Deo faverte subjaceat omne quod volumus, voluntatem tamen nostrum de ratione metimur, ut illud majus existimemur elegisse, quod cunctos dignum est approbare. Theodoric. Epist. 12. ad Eugenium Cassiodor. variat. lib. 1. p. 7. that Theodorick gives, not by it to accomplish wicked, but worthy things, and instead of making their will the reason their subjects should walk by, bring their wills to the reason God will judge them by. To apply this then to our Text, the Chancellor by these words, Qui iniqui duo tam incauti, etc. means that wickedness in Witnesses, two or more having designed what they will act, and prepared for whatever can come upon it, are but in so doing true descendants from Satan their Ancestor, who from the beginning was a liar, and who principles his to carry on his design by any means: which two thousand thousand that are, iniqui, shall not prevail to effect further than God pleases to permit them; for he taketh the wise in their own craft, and the counsel of the froward is carried headlong, as Iob's phrase is, Chap. 5.13. maugre the prudence they think to express in it, who are as it follows. Prudentiores namque, ut dicit Dominus, sunt filii hujus mundi quam filii lucis. This scripture is in the 16 Luke 8. uttered upon occasion of the parable of the unjust Steward, which while he had opportunity feathered as we say his nest, and in the Halcyon of his gainful Steward-ship, provided against the winter and storm of his Eclipse and disfavour, the wariness and sovereignty of which providence benign to the futurity of his condition, and preventive of the disfavour of his indignated Lord, Our Saviour not only commends, but transmits' it as a rule for his to practise spiritually, so to use the day of grace and life that the day of desertion and death may be sweetened by the provision laid in, for and against it, For the children of this world so do, And therein are more wise in their Generation then the children of light. Which scripture because it has much of concern in it to a Christians erudition, in the wisdom which concerns both direction of himself, The Author's humble Prayer to God. and detection of his rival, the worldling. I shall humbly and shortly write a little of Beseeching God that he would assist me as a child of light, to understand the wisdom that is from above, which is pure in principle, and peaceable in practice, and that he would by his Grace keep me, in that happy ignorance of the children of this world, whose wisdom though it be notable in its Generation, yet in God's account, is earthly, sensual, and Devilish. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉] These are one of the parties in comparison so called, not only because they in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 those of which the world is built and inhabited, Or, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 darlings and infants which the world suckles, but as they are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unhappily so the worlds as the world is theirs, by a complacency and inseparableness, or dearness of love, Pagnin. in verbo. qui volunt esse filii mundi, aut quorum desiderium est in mundo, saith R. David. The Holy Language expresses every thing that is more than ordinary, by the name of son, he that is condemned to die, they call a son of death, a lost man, a son of perdition, those that are married sons of marriage, Qui nihil aliud curant, quam vitae huju, commoda, filii mundi appellantur. Grotius in loc. and so the sons of this world, worldly men, because they are conformed to the fashion of it, and not transformed in the spirit of their minds, as children of light are, but do M●ndana sapere; relish only the cookery of this world, and not savour the things of God; They do mundana quaerere, all their love is so to, and their labour after the world, that they think no toil too hard, no self-denial too great, so they may grasp the world, and join land to land, and house to house, till they be alone in the earth, and then they do gaudere mundanis, having acquired the world, they acquiesce in it as their portion, and sing that requiem to their souls that they have enough, when as they are in Gods account miserable, and poor and blind and naked. These Saint Bernard compares to Oaks and Elms, which are Great in bulk and of a procerous growth, but they are not planted in the noble Garden, Sin● arbores infructuosae, ut quercus & ulmus & arbores silvestres aliae; sed hujusmodi nemo plantat in borto suo, quia non faciunt fructum & si quem faciunt, non humano sed Porcino usui aptus est. Sanctus Bernardus, Serm. 1, De Sancto Benedicto. wherein the Master of them delights to walk, because they yield no fruit, or if that they do, 'tis fruit for swine, not men, Tales sunt filii hujus seculi agentes se commessationibus, saith the Father, And hence it is that because they bring fruit only to themselves; and none to God, they are called not only by john the Baptist a Generation of Vipers, but by God in a vehemency of indignation rebellious children, Matth. 7. 30 Esay 1. lying children verse the ninth, children of transgression, chapter the fifty seventh verse the fourth, backsliding children 3 jer. 14. and chapter the fourth verse 22. children of whoredoms; 1 H●seah 2. children of Iniquity 10 Hosea 9 children of the flesh 9 Rom. 8. children of disobedience 2 Ephes. 2. and of wrath verse 3. children of the devil 1 john 3 chap. 10. These are the men denominated here, the children of this world. The Nimrods', and mighty hunters of the world, who sail in seas of blood, to ports of power, who waste Countries, deflower virgins, violate matrons, dissolve polityes, and turn the world topsieturvy, that they may be known to be powerful, The Achitophel● of this world, who poison ages and persons with fraud and falsehood, being Proteus' and Polypus', and to save themselves cannot only be willows, and not Oakes, bend rather than break, but become mals, and Axes to dig up their own foundations, and to ruin others body and soul, to secure themselves; who can curse with Balaam, for a reward those whom God has blest; and are so pertinacious in their wickedness, that they neither fear God's Angels of terror, nor regard the miracles that he admonishes them by. These are the Herod's of this world, who are so in love with what they should not be, themselves, that they study to be applauded vainly, and in the elevation of it forget God impiously: the Iudas' of this World, whose kisses have more harm in them, than the staves of Caitiff jews, or the swords of Butcherly Assassins; the Simon Magus' of this World, who will be trucking for every spiritual thing, and will, with our Cardinal Wolsey, let nothing pass, unless it pays tribute to them. These are they that our Lord calls the Children of this World; and whom the Prophet David calls the ungodly who prosper in the world, they increase in riches, Psal. 73.3. and from whom he prays deliverance: and why? because they imagine mischief in their heart, continually are they gathered together for war. And who by reason of this, Psal. 140.3. Sanctus Bernardus, Serm. 6. in quadrages. are not only a grief to, but the terror of God's little Flock, which made the Father cry out to God, Heu, heu, mihi domine Deus, quoniam undique mihi bella, etc. Oh miserable man that, I am, O Lord, who am every way beset, and have snares on all hands of me, whom the darts of envy, and the open war of fury threatens; Woe is me, who am insecure in my pleasures, in my delights, in my sleep, in my sustenance; against whom, both labour and rest are combined: thus that Father. This is the notion of ●he Children of the World, whose malice, power, and policy, would dishearten the Children of Light, Were it not that they were but Children of this World, sinful in what they do, changeable notwithstanding what they do, miserable after what they do: for all that they do, God either undoes, o● undoes them, that they shall not see their projects in the plumes of their pride, and in the spread sails of thei● success. These Achans get the Wedge of Gold, and the garments of gaudery, but they have God's curse with it. They get Children, and name Lands by their own names, but God condemns their Children to obscurity; so that they are in genitorum vituperium & laesuram, or else die, and they leave no name on the Earth, no heir to inherit their acquisitions. They think themselves admirable Architects, that can pyramidize their names and governments, in some durable Monument of strength, and admiration; but God tumbles down in his fury these mis-instructed Structures, and makes his counsel stand. And therefore the power and policy of the World had need to look to its foundation, that it be upon the Rock against which no winds or waves shall prevail, and into which no moth of God's curse, or canker of times injury, will work itself; were it not for this damp, and this hand-writing to the World's Nebuchadnezzar's, What a Bochim▪ what a Golgotha, would this World be to God's hidden ones; to his Jewels whom he renders as the apple of his eye; there would be no lighting on the Earth for these Doves, though it were to but pick up the Crumbs that are the offals worldling's live upon, but God has in wisdom made the world, and all in it versatile, that there may be some serenato and breeze under its solstice, and that the greatest felicity of man might be even by its own sentence imperfect, Galienus the Emperor came a youth to the Empire 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Eutropius in Brevia●o, lib. 9 edit. Sylb. p. 121. etc. His first years were prudently and quietly reigned, after, he slackened in his Gubernative happiness, and at last he was wholly a bad man and a bad King, Severus was a victorious Emperor, and of austere discipline in his Army, military rudeness he endured not even in Britain, though here he had many intolerable provocations; yet as successful as he was, who was the glorious Phoenix of his time, He did not only say when he lived and looked upon his life and actions Omnia fui & nihil sum, but he caused his urn to be inscribed with this, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Xiphilinus in Epitome. Dionis, p. 424. edit. Sylburg. Thou shalt contain the man whom the whole world could not, thy narrow bounds shall conclude his body, whose ambition the world was too strait for. Thus does God furl up the flying Colours of the Sons of this World, and put them into a storm, in which they are forced to strike their Sails, and levelly their Mast, that they may live and ride out his fury; which if they do in this World to such a degree, as Portius Cato did, in spite of all the envy that attended him, which only injured him to his aggrandization, polishing his prudence, and making his tried virtue more truly standard and defecate, then otherwise it would have been: which is not often, yet their Deathbed terrors and their after-torments, declare them children of the world, who are only more wise in their Generation, than the children of light, who are the other part of the Subjects opposed to Children of this World. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉] Here light is opposed to the World, as it is the region of darkness, not in the natural and ma●hematique notion of it; for that is illustrated by the light of that great Taper the Sun and its Celestial Peers, that do beday and belustre it, but in the sinful & penal notion of it. Thus as the world lies in sin, so the state of sin is termed darkness, 1 Pet. 2.9. thus S. Peter uses it, who has called us out of darkness into his marvellous light; ye were sometimes darkness, but now ye are light in the Lord. So that look as Children of the World, suck the milk of the World, sin and pleasures, and cry after the World as their Parents, and play with the toys of the World, as their senses and labours are gratified and expended about worldly things, 1 John 1.5. so are the children of light, intent on light; they love God as light of perfection in himself, John 8. 1●. and communication to them; they love Christ as the light of matchless Charity to die for Enemies, and to example his to a suitable goodness; they love holiness, as the light of irradiation, kindled in the heart of God's Elect, Ephes. 5.8. by a spark from his essential holiness; they love heaven, as light of clarification, Colos. 1.12. wherein their vile bodies shall be made glorious, and they shall see God face to face; in his light they shall see light. These are children of the light, that lucem amant are not delighters, in surfeiting and drunkenness, in chambering and wantonness, but put on the Lord jesus; and in his robe appear to men in the light of shining, and reformed works, works fruits of repentance, worthy of the light of God's countenance, manifestation of the Gospel's prevalence and prescription, and of holy men's practice and approbation. These are children of light, qui lucem quaerunt, they seek whom their soul loveth; light is their joy, and they search after light, to know and prise it, that their joy may be full, in plenitudine lucis internae, quae luci aeternae est praefatoria. And this is much of their happiness, that God in this instinct of theirs to seek light, does not let them seek in vain; they seek not the living among the dead, light in the darkness of this world, which is wholly obfuscated by the incredulity of Jews, Cum pene totus ipse mundus nox sit & totus semper versatur in tenebris, nox est judaica persidia, nox ignorantia Paganorum, nox Haeretica pravitas, nox Catholicorum carnalis animalisve conversatio. Sanctus Bernardus▪ Serm. 15. in Cantic. Cantic. the ignorance of Heathens, the obstinacy of Heretics, the carnal and sensual sinful lives of Catholics; may I not (saith the Father) call that night, ubi non percipiuntur, quae sunt spiritus Dei, where there is a clear sight into all policy of project, all mystery of mechaniques, but a darkness to the simplicity that is in Christ, where men see not the holy spirit in his addresses, nor feel him in his operations on them. No these Seekers, (far from the fanatics, and Enthusiastiques of our age,) do not seek light out of levity and sceptical unsatisfiedness, which keeps them lax and unfixed in every principle of truth; but they seek light as it is coelitus data, as it comes from the Father of light, to direct his Children to walk in the light; and they seek it as it is res simplex & aperta, as it is that which will make them walk honestly as in the day, and let every eye into their Cell and Closet. These illuminates no Heretics, Dan. 1.10. are Heavenly daniel's, that will have their Conversations open, that they being transparent all may see them. And this they do, quia luce gaudent, the more light they have, the more are they justified; for as they pray, that God would make them lights in a crooked generation: so when they are hea●d in this, that according to the will of God they have requested, they acclamate the light by which they are illustrated to be what grace has made them, O quanta amaritudine adveniens, liberasti adveniens bone jesu, etc. Sanctus Bernardus, Serm. 32. in Cantic. burning and shining lights; and they assault their Lord with many grateful tears, O blessed jesus, (say they) how many sorrows and sighs has thy presence in my soul rescued and resolved into comforts? How many mists and fogs, in which all sense of thy blood my ransom, thy spirit my guide, thy advocation my security, has thy manifestation to me despelled, and thy balm anointing my galled and oppressed Conscience, assuaged and calmed? How hast thou caught and saved me sinking, comforted and satisfied me despairing: How, O Light of Lights, hast thou lightened my heart, when it saw thee in it the hope of glory. Thus that Father. These are the Children of light, who have all the properties of light; Light is res pura, so are these pure in heart; Matth. 5. ●. Gen. 12.2. Prov. 12 26. Ephes. 5▪ 15. 1 Cor. 10.32. Light is res commoda, so are these useful to the age, and time, and place they are in; Light is res decora, so are these the beauty and glory of their dwelling; Light is res placida, so are these. And hence they are said to walk circumspectly, not as fools, but as wise, giving no offence, neither to the Jew, nor to the Gentile, nor to the Church of GOD. And are not these thus qualified rare Jewels? Do not these whom God accounts his jewels, and over whom he extends his everlasting arms? whom he hides in the evil day, and whom he hears for thousands of sinners, that reproach the holiness of their lives, and would but for them have Hell out of Heaven soon pou●ed on them. I say, do not such, rarae aves in terris, deserve to be favourites? And ought they not to be prayed for, that they may fructuose uti luce, that they may, while they have light about them, not be in darkness, and complain of want of light, running into Factions and Pharisaical follies, by which the true light of Religion is blemished, and for which blasphemed, but that they keep themselves free from Faction, Schism, Heresy, Separation, and walk by God's light in his Scripture-Candlestick, which the Catholic Church faithfully sets forth in its useful posture. And I pray God my soul may have the light of its conduct to Heaven, The Church of England. by the Ministry of our holy Mother the Church of England, whose humble Son, I ever (I bless God) in the worst of times, have conscientiously and convictedly been, and hope ever to continue, beseeching God to visit with his light and truth her many seduced ones, and to make her Doctrine and Discipline sweetly effectual to their reduction; whose wander is not more her blemish, than their own danger. This shall suffice for my observation on our Lord's Description of the Subjects he speaks of, Children of the World, Children of Light. Now of the Predicate, or our Lord's Sentence, Prudentiores sunt, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; this is a word which Critics make to import not barely a wisdom of mind and speculation, but chiefly of action and dispatch; not only a knowledge how matters are to be done, and to give the rule of them, 6. Ethicor. but an exercitial and effective knowledge of them. And thus Aristotle uses the word, and thereupon says, that Anaxagoras Thal●s and others, were called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, who were not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, utpote 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; and therefore to the complete knowledge of this word, we must take in that sense that not only Xenophon does, when he terms one 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that is, a dexterious Warrior: but that in which even our Lord uses it, in Mat. 25.7, 8. where he calls the Virgins that had their oil in their lamps, and their lamps ready trimmed, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and those that had their oil to seek, when their lamps should have been lighted, and they ready for their Lord, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, because they wanted expression of more wisdom to make them acceptable, as the other that were punctual in their duty arrived at. This prudence than is of three sorts; the prudence of the Serpent, which when he supposes any danger, Nervus prudentiae est conjectura, quae futurum quod o●s●urum ●st prosp●tens, as●imilatur itineri, quod ●o●t●● aggredimur Instructio ad Cardinal. Montaltum. Thes. Politic. p. 427. will secure his head, and observing where he may mostly be injured. Secondly, the prudence of circumvention, and a wittiness of defraudation. And lastly, the true wisdom, which Saint Basil calls the knowledge, what is fit to be done, and not to be done. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Sanctus Basilius, Homil. 12. in princip. Prov. Tom. 1. p. 461. The two former were the wisdom of this unjust Steward, he would be sure to keep himself from want; and that to do, he thinking nothing more expedient, then to make him friends of unrighteous Mammon, his Master's goods under his power, (he having a value of his corporal worth, and the security thereof from disesteem for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Budaeus makes to have a sense of ●fferri, Commentar Gr. Lingua, p. 891. and animo tolli) he gives occasion thereby to our Lord to say, The Children of this world are more wise, etc. Which words are not to be understood absolutely, but secundum quid; not as if there were a more real wisdom in the world's choice and practise then in holiness and her ways▪ for then the wisdom of the world would not be enmity with God as it is; nor then would the fear of God be the beginning of wisdom, as it is, and a good understanding have they that do it: but it is meant to those ends that their worldly & sinful actions conduce, In rebus suis agendis, nam actiones Hebraei vocent 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Grot. in locum. Sanctus Bonaventura in locum. as they are children of the world, & only desire to approve themselves to the world 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, As Owls and Cats can see better than men in the night to catch mlce, and vermin, but not to read books, that is in their kind and according to the actions that are proper for them; so are and no otherwise the children of this World, wiser in their spheres, to gain their temporal ends, than the children of heaven are to eternal & spiritual ones. This then, I humbly conceive, our Lord uttered▪ not to approve sensual and sinful diligence, but to exprobrate spiritual sloth, and by this Cock of Worldlings vigilance, to awake his drowsy Peter. And methinks our Lord in saying they are wiser in their Generation, than the children of light, provokes his to rouz themselves to holy activity, from this that worldly men show Prudence. And in three things manifest their Prudence, Probitate electionis, ardore prosecutionis, constantia adhaesionis: The first evidences the legitimation of Prudence, as no hand overhead, and extemporary sudden thing; but that which is cum avisamento consilii & rationis, a fruit trial and experience; Wisdom dwells with Prudence, dictating to it, right time, right method, right instruments of actions. The second propalates the activity of Prudence; 'tis no Dormonse that lies snudging, and creeps softly, or appears coolly: no, when it has well chosen, what, when, and by what means, and to what end it is to act; it vigorously, and with a masculine fortitude executes them, aut vincere, aut mori, is the Motto of Prudence. The third discovers the fortitude of Prudence, 'tis big of a generous indefession, and a noble heroiqueness; what it has chosen it prosecutes, and in the prosecution is weariless and undiscouraged: these are the gradations of Prudence. Our Lord then does not in the first sense strictly predicate this (wiser) of the children of the world, in this place. For according to the examen of defecated and primitive reason, as the World is under sin, and the wisdom and tendency of it folly of sin; so the wisdom of the World is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a very senseless choice; 'tis the choice of Leah before Rachel, darkness rather than light, Belial with refusal of Christ: but our Lord says they are wiser in their Generation, because in the choice of the world, they do choose what's more quadrate to their sensual selves, a sensual world will best please a sensual heart, and sensual affections; and because the world is so consanguineous and proportionate to corrupt reason, will, and affection, therefore all the sails and streamers of endeavour are flying, to take the World's full wind in them; they make the World only their choice, and admit nothing in competition with it; they have no other Diana Valentina, no other Mistress they value and apply to; they rise up early, go to bed late, and eat the bread of sorrow, that they may obtain the world, and that had, care not what they miss: and herein they outstrip in generation the children of light. For though they have a more transcendent object, in whom are concentred all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge, and though the Kingdom of Heaven, and the righteousness of it draw with it all superadditions; yet the whole thoughts of the devout soul fix not upon God, but scatter and remit their intention to couple with other objects, which makes them miss the mark of having God always ready to be their help in trouble, because they tempt him to punish their ●rail inconstancy with some temporary withdrawings. O how rare is it for a soul to be of David's temper, My heart is fixed, O God, my heart is fixed: the desire of my soul is to thee, and to the remembrance of thy name. Where are the Saintly Merchants, that sell all they have to purchase God's pearl? and the Mary's that forsake all the trash of the World to sit at their Lord's feet? where are the Mary magdalen's that prefer to be mourners in the Sepulchre of a crucified Saviour to the theaters of mirth and the rooms of state and pleasure. The world, alas! has these Minions and Zealots for it, that will adieu God, a good Conscience, Relations, yea, even life for it; and all this with an heroiqueness and cheerful gallantry, as they say, when God's Clients come to him with cold zeal, and serve him with refracted and divided affections, looking aside upon the world, when they seem to look direct upon God; like those of old, whom God reproaches for their prevarication with him, and requires them to cast away their abominations, Ezek. 20.8. and not to defile themselves with the Idols of Egypt; Zeph. 1.5. and those whom he detects for worshipping and swearing by the Lord, and by Malchom. Such parcel guilt Christians, his Holiness cannot endure; because their project is to serve themselves of him, not to serve him with all their might: when a storm they see, they consult evasion of it, though it be with abnegation of the truth of God deposited with them, and professed by them. Let holiness shift for itself, they are of judas his company, when they are most and successfullest: so much do good men often give way to corruption, that, with Peter, they dare not venture the least trial; whereas the World's Creatures, as they mind earthly things, so they exert their addictions with vehemence and indefession, as if they meditated the success of it. As God does every thing in weight and measure, that is, to the perfection of its kind, and as comports with so matchless a Master; so do these comply with whatever may be auxiliary to them. Fit objects to work on, fit subjects to work by, fit methods to work in, fit time of production, fit rewards to instruments, fit menace to opposites: so great masters of diligence, and so cunning enquirers are they, that they serve times and men, till their Mine be ready, and then their arrows are at the mark before the blow is prevented: what posting● for intelligence, See my Discourse of the Piety, Policy, and Charity, of elder times, and elder Christians, Printed Anno 1653. what pensions to false servants, what subornation of Cabinet-counsel, what prostitution of confessions, what depredations of territories, what, in fine, Satanique subtlety does the men of this World act, to bring to pass their desires? Let the facts of Caesar Borgia, Rich●lie●, and other the great Cormorants of Christendom's policy discover; Hypodigm. Neustriae. p. 175. Holingshed. in H. 4 p. 536. yea, surely the carriage of that terrible Duke of Burgundy, who collected all the venom and poison, that was in the filthy matter of dead Serpents, Scorpions, Adders, and other mischievous Creatures, and threw them in barrels into Calais, on purpose to poison the Soldiers that held it against the French, and by poisoning the Inhabitants render it intenable. I say, let the prudent love of children of the world to the world, be calculated by this, and 'twill appear to be prudence with a vengeance, though it be but that of their generation, in which they only are wiser; O my soul enter not thou into their secrets; O my God give me not a portion with these men in their delicates; let me be none of those wisemen, The Author's Prayer. who do go down into Hell, because they forget thee; but vouchsafe me that prudence of the Serpent, that may protect me from being harmed, and that innocence of the Dove, that may keep me from harming others; and let my soul ever prefer honesty to policy, and to save myself with thy fools, rather than to perish with the World's wisemen; whose Deathbeds have no comfortabler notes than those of Despair, D'Avila, p. 365. which Walsey uttered, O that I had served my God, as faithfully as I have done my King, than he would not have forsaken me in my distress as the King doth: or as those in Wisdom are brought in groaning for anguish of spirit, and saying, This is he whom we had sometime in derision, and a proverb of reproach. Wild. 5.3, 4, 5. We fool's accounted his life madness, and his end to be without honour. How is he numbered among the children of God, and his lot is among the Saints? This I no further prosecute, though it were worthy some further Discourse, because it is the Gangrene of the Age, which has so prevailed against the severity of piety, that there is nothing seems more to be a man's reproach, then to be of pristine simplicity: so far are men declined from that Christian candour, and plainness of meaning, that they seem to say that to Religion and honesty, which Popili●s did to his friend King Antiochus, when by the Romans he was sent Ambassador to him. Facessat privat● amicitia dum publica agitantur negoti●. . While we have to do in business, let's do that without either thought of God seeing or hearing us in our Counsels, and lay Conscience behind our backs, while this that so highly concerns us to effect, be continually before our faces. But God undoubtedly will meet with this, when he besieges with his terrors these Worldlings, and reduces them to such straits, that they shall be glad to release all their confidences, to obtain a minute's ease; and when it is too late, cry out despairingly, as Lysimachus did; O for how small and short a pleasure have I lost a Kingdom, for how vain an humour have I passed away Heaven. This shall be the portion of these Politicoes, if they miss temporary disgrace; which some of them have not done, as in the following words appears, which returns me to the Text. Sic Jezabel sc●leratissima testes duos filios belial, contra Naboth in judicio produxit, quo ipse vitam perdidit, & Ahab Rex ejus vineam possidebat. This Clause is quoted out of 1 Kings 21 and it hath a notable Narrative of an innocent Subject oppressed and murdered; and that not by assassination, but judicially, and according to the preciseness of the appearance of Justice; and three things are narrated in it; Who was the prosecutour, That the Text says was jezabel, a Woman by Sex, and a Queen by Dignity; but no honour to either: for it adds, she was sceleratissima: Then quomodo, how she brought this artifice about to reach Naboth's life, duos filios belial, contra Naboth in judicio produxit: thirdly, in quem finem, she did this; that's double, first that Naboth might die a Malefactor, and then that Ahab might have his Vineyard, as his Escheat. 1 Kings 16.31. jezabel sceleratissima] This Lady was Wife to King Ahab, a Woman of a busy humour, and masculine spirit, as appears in the impiety of her life, Instrumentum erat diaboli accommodatissimum, & plus quam dict possit maliciosum, P. Martyr. in Reg. c. 21. and the tragickness of her Counsel, whom Satan (of all her Sex) culled out, as the most accommodate Engine for seduction and cruelty, that the World in her time, or in any time after incarnate had. Rev. 2.20. In allusion to which, the Holy Ghost charges upon the Church of Thyatira, that she suffered the Woman jezabel to teach, Hic impia mulior prius vitiavi● Dei cultum introducendo Baalis Idolatriam nunc●● tiam leges politica●●●ntaminat in republica; 〈◊〉 duabus partibus corruptis, sani quid potest super●sse. Per. Martyr. in 1 Reg. c. 21. and to seduce his Servants to commit fornication: the allusion being to this very woman, who because she was a Sidonian, and a worshipper of Baal, brought in the worship of Baal into Israel, and stirred up her husband to prosecute the Prophets of God, whom by his authority she is said to cut off. Now this woman being so tart and subtle, whom nothing would content, but Tyranny in the State, as well as Idolatry in the Church, having always in her mouth that of Caracalla's Mother-in-Law, Imperatores dare leges non accipere, and willing her husband should rule over, rather than rule by the Law, is here termed by the Text sceleratissima. Sceleratissima] Not as an Epithet of dedecoration to Women, the most tender, delicate, delectable, obliging; yea, the only Phoenix part of the Creation; that which the Father of men, innocent Adam, upon God's first presentation of Eve, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Dictum Athletae apud Plutarchum, Lib. De Cuckoe riositate, p. 521. termed bone of his bone, and flesh of his flesh, himself in another, and I had almost said better Sex; and ever since his Sons and Male-Posterity have, when they have done manlily, and virtuously, doted on. No such opprobry than is our Text-Master guilty of: nor were he would his Commentator suffer such his mistake, if he could be guilty of it, to go uncorrected. So much a valuer am I of that incomparable Sex, My two dear Wives, Mary and Elizabeth, buried and lying in St. M. Magd. Milkstreet, London; to whose memory, I intent this a second and more durable Monument. in gratitude to those excellent Pair of Virtues which once in that Sex I successively could have called mine own And the memory of the last of which, I shall mournfully carry to my grave, as the SHE, whose person alive was my delight; and her memory, now dead, my joy to have had, and my grief to have lost. Ravisius, De claris mulieribus. Richardus Dinothus, De rebus & factis mirabilibus, lib. 7. c. 2, 3, 4. Fabianus Justinianus. in indice universali. Plutarch, in Lib. De mulierum virtutibus. p. 242. I say no such Epithet has the Woman here in the Text for her Sex sake; for that has produced matchless Heroics, divine Prophetesses, seraphic Illuminates, perspicacious Oracles, harmonious Sirens, what not, that has been Heaven on Earth, Spirit in Flesh, Merit in Mortality, as the Authors that have honoured themselves with treating on them, have abundantly evinced. But she is by our Chancellor called so, as she is degenerated; of sweet become sour, and of gentle and soft, perverted by Satan into a turbulence and bloodiness of nature. As she is another ¶ Tarqvinius superbus à Tullia incitatn●, advocato Senatu regnum paternum repeter● caepit. Aurel. Victor. De Vir. Illustri. p. 491. Aug. Script. Tullia, Messalina, and another (a) Maritum suapte natura crudelem ad omne facinus procliviorem reddidit. Cuspinianus. Constantia, whose influences are to confirm in evil, not withdraw from it. This Lady so ingeniously savage, and zealously terrible in the designs of her mind, and execution of her Ministers, is by our Text called Sceleratissima. Sceleratus in quo scelus sit constitutum, Ea erat fervidis admodum asperisque moribus. Jovius. De Elisa matre. M. Sfortiae, in vita Sfortiae. Scelerata castra, Sueton in Claudio. c. 1. Vicus sceleratus Aurel. Victor. in Tullia. p. 491. Aug. Script. Et scelerato signatur nomine, quae proficiscentes in praelium portâ dimisit. 1 Florus, lib. 1. c. 12. sed commissum, saith Donatus. Tully couples Impurus with Sceleratus; and if in the positive the word be so significant, what degree doth the superlative import? Surely no less, then that she was nequitiae antesignanus; or as the Holy Ghost brands her, when he says, Ahab sold himself to do wickedness. He adds, whom jezabel his wife stirred up, and made the cause of multiplied mischiefs. For this Sex, as in its integrity, 'tis the Womb of all sweetness and tractability; and not only civility, but also Christianity, has been ushered in to Nations by their fair hands, Messalinae quoquo amorem flagrantissimum non tam indignitate contumeliarum, quam periculi metu abjecit. Cum adultero Silio acquiri imperium credidesset. Sueton. in Claudio. c. 36. and at their influential entreaty: so in the degeneration of these, are the darkest nights of turpitude, and the deepest Woads of malice tinctured. We say there is no murder, but a Woman is in the company of it; and when all the instances of a cruel she were lost, one might draw the portraiture of it most livelily from this sceleratissima here, Plutarch. Lib. De sole●●ia animalium p. 972. who like that Aetolique Woman in Plutarch, was as cruel as if she had accompanied with a Dragon, from whom she learned all truculency. For she was not only an active and busie-spirited Lady in discourse and influence on every person, and every thing, but she was one that thought her wit more regal, then that of her husband-soveraign; whom when she sees dejected, because modestly denied, what earnestly he desired, she caresses increpatorily, Art thou my Lord Ahab, quoth she, a King, and wilt thou be denied? Is there any thing that Israel has, which Israel's Monarch shall not command. Let me but use thy name, and thou shalt have thy pleasure, and make the Contrarients to thee pay dear for their insolence. Grotius in 〈◊〉. Do but now, my Dear, own me, and I'll fetch the vineyard and his life with a vengeance that holds it against thee. Has thou his Lord and Master asked it on exchange or purchase? and gives he thee no better answer, Leu. 25.15. than a God forbid, that I should sell the inheritance of my Fathers; a Law indeed good against private persons, but not against the King, whom, because he knew not how to obey, he shall ere long be ruined by. This is the sum of her speech and design. But this is but the apertura to her wickedness: that which confirms all she does, is the King's Seal, with which she seals Letters to the Elders or Heads of jezreel 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Candidates or Nobles that were clad in white. For so of old they were (white being a token of Dignity.) To whom, so soon as the Regal Mandate comes, all obedience is given. And so Naboth enters on danger by a wicked Woman, wickedly designing her revenge in his ruin. So are the words, Testes duo filios Belial contra Naboth in judicio produxit. A formal trial it must be, and but formal; for Naboth's vineyard had made him criminal before accused, and Iezabel's malice condemned him before found guilty; Witnesses there must be, and two; three josephus will have, which Grotius says was usual upon a person of note, Nam adversus insignis famae virum tres requiruntur. Grotius in loc. as Naboth was: but alas, they are lose profligate men, that know not what they ought, nor care not what they do swear; something they must depose to convict him, and they boggle at nothing Iezabel will put them upon. These Ruffians and Monsters that defy all Conscience, Seducers, Deut. 13.13. 2 Sam. 21.1. men of violence and hubbub, Judg. 19.22. Chap 20.13. of uncleanness and beastly ignorance, 1 Sam. 2.12. despisers of God and his appointments, 1 Sam. 10.27. churlish and rude Monsters, 1 Sam. 25.17. 2 Sam. 16.17. These are the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the men at large, that say their tongues are their own; these are the Witnesses. And they are said, in judicio produci; because they, in due form of Laws, as the pretence was, do accuse and evidence against Naboth. The word Witness, comes from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 depredari & expoliari; not to right him, if Justice he had on his side; but to spoil him of his life and fortune. 'Twas before such a High-Court of Justice, as David the King complained of, Psal. 119.61. the Bands of the wicked 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 have robbed me. But Rabbi Himmanuel reads it, dolores impiorum, id est, quibus me officiunt impii, expoliaverunt me bonin mundi. For what jezabel had contrived, these were to make oath of, and that with boldness, and in affront of Naboth's innocence; for so our Text says, they were produced, contra Naboth in judicio. And that not to fine and imprison him, as a man disaffected to Ahab, and as one who was rustiquely stubborn, and contumacious to Majesty; but as a Miscreant, neither fearing God, nor regarding the King. For of blasphemy against both they do accuse him, and such by oath make good against him; and thereby that of our Text is confirmed. Quo ipse vitam perdidit & Achab Rex ejus vineam possidchat. jezabel gave the counsel, to falsely impeach him, and by Witnesses of ratification to sentence him; so is the Holy Text, ver. 10. And therefore the murder of Naboth is attributed to jezabel; God saw she made use of her husband's name to colour her violence and oppression. And he that hates wickedness, though he suffered it for a while to prevail; yet punished it throughly on the injurer. It's true Naboth lost his life, for Blasphemy was ever capital, Leu. 24.14, 16. and that the Sons of Belial witnessed against him, and to entitle the King to the vineyard of him, when in law defunct they depose also his Blasphemy against the King, which being made good, for the blasphemy against the King, Posside vineam] Titulo consiscationis, quae apud Hebraeos locum habebat in omnibus delictis adversus Regiam Majestatem. Grot. in locum. Luke 7. is a blasphemy against God, (whose Vicars Kings are, and by hos●●e power they reign) all Naboth had becomes forfeit and seizable into the King's hands, as escheated to him, since capital offences corrupt blood, and leave no heir, but are casualties to the Crown. Thus is Naboth ruined in person and possession, and that by jezabel, who may well be termed a Woman, labouring with an infirmity of blood, not in the Gospel's sense, but in a worse sense, prae gravitate peccati de orsum ●ergentem, & depressam, as Nicet in Nazianzen comments on that of the Gospel; In Greg. Nazian. Orat. 42. H. a Woman who had no temper; no compassion in her, but was made up of fulminating and fiery principles, thinking power not worth the having, if it might be in any thing capitulated with or denied; wherein by the Law of its own constitution it denies itself; and those not worthy to live, who would live happier than tyranny would allow them to do. So true is that of Tacitus, Trucidare, rapere, falsis nominibus imperium appellant. But alas! fond Lady that she was, who spurred Ahab to such cruelty: Better be no King, than a King of terror and trucidation, better have no desire gratified, then to have it by the spoils of innocence, Aerarium sub Domitiano spoliarium cevium cruentarumque praedarum saevum receptaculum. Plin. apud Grotium, in c. 21. v. 19 1 Reg. and the preys of cruelty, as Domitian had, and as Ahab here had; for which God foretell a plague on him, her, and their Family, and that of extirpation and death, even in this very portion, that thus injuriously was evicted from Naboth, v. 19, & 23. of the 1 Kings 21 and fulfilled by jehu God's Executor, 2 Kings 9 So true is that of the Poet, De malè quaesitis vix gaudet tertiushaeres. Sic duorum etiam judicum testimonio, mortua fuisset pro adulterio uxor castissima Su●●nna, si non ea● miraculose liberasset dominus inexcogitabili prudentia quam à ●atura non habuit puer junior non dum aetate provectus. This instance is out of that part of Apocrypha, entitled Susanna; which though some prefix to Daniel's Prophecy, Hunc Historium Judaei non plane negunt. Grot. in loc. upon design probably to impair the credit of the Canon, by adjunction of somewhat to it, dubious: yet others, as our late Reverend Translators also, See the Title of this Book in our Bibles. set this History apart, from the beginning of Daniel, because it is not in the Hebrew. Our Chancellor here uses it, to make good this charge against two Witnesses, where no other circumstances or presumptions are admitted, Hi duo Senatores multas mulieres Hebraeas adulterassent Susannae, etiam pudicitiam 〈◊〉 tas●ent. Grot. in V, 1. to invalidate the testimony of that number, and where it is maliciously contrived; and as in the former quotation he discovered two Witnesses, suborned by a lend Woman, against an innocent man; so here he alleadges one chaste Woman, accused by two lewd men, and like to die upon their false testimony. The Story has many passages in it, opprobrious to vicious and caitiff old age, laudative of chaste and innocent youth, attributive of the miraculous detection of both, by God, who only judgeth righteously. The persons concerned in this story, are of three sorts; the contrivers of the Plot, those are ver. 8 said to be the two Elders: the person against whom the Plot is contrived, that is against Susanna: the conviction of the false Evidence, and accusation of the Elders, by the wisdom and integrity of one more righteous than those, whose spirit, though a youth, God stirred up to discover the impostry, v. 45. Duorum senum etiam judicum testimony] Two for number to make the testimony legal, Hebraei nunquaem judicis brer● annals, aut birios ● sed poterant hi esse astessores ejus, qui crat 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Grot. in loc. Elders by quality to make it credible, and pass unsuspected: Of the number two, I have written heretofore, and now shall only touch their quality Senum etiam judicium) In the fifth verse 'tis said, There were appointed two of the ancients of the people to be judges, where ancients or elders do not always signify such in years but mostly mwn of dignity, place, power, worship and wisdom who are said to be seniores, quia presumuntur esse saniores: Thus the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 coming from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 barba, signifies a man of years; because such usually are bearded, and wore it very long, as yet persons of degree do in the Eastern Countries, and anciently did with us here; yet it also, and ordinarily denotes place and respect, so Gen. 50. verse the seventh joseph went up to bury his father, and with him went up 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Elders of his house and the Elders of the ●and. The Elders were the Peers, heads of Tribes and leading men of the land, by reason whereof in all great affairs they were consulted with, hence those scriptures joel 1.14. Ruth 4.9. Exod. 3.16, 17 c. v. 5. Lam. 1.19. and others in all which the Elders were sine qua non's to all affairs of import. The Greeks called these 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which is the cause the 70 read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by it and Suidas terms 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; and hence was it, that when the expressed any one of ancient extract and noble quality, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Helen 4. they termed him by this word. Thus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, one that was so disposed to public spiritedness, that he with Codrus spend and be spent for it, thus Xenophon takes the word, and thus the term Presbyter is attributed to the consummate order of Ministry called Priesthood, which we know is conferrable on men of thirty years old or under, Spel. Council anno 750. Christi, p. 266 which is no old age, though I confess, more usually 'tis taken for men of good and great years, and as a notation of Antiquity; and Plutarch uses the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉: so in those words, In Symposi ac. Philo, Lib. 3. De Vita Mosis. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; and Philo, when he calls the fire 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. And so I take the phrase here to intend that like, as v. 5. Wickedness is said by God to come from Babylon, Temporibus Saxonum vocabantur Aldermanni, non propter aetatem, sed propter saep●entiam & dignitatem. Inter LL. Edvardi Confess. c. 35. from ancient Judges, who seemed to govern the people. So here were two ancient Judges, Alder men, not in the Saxon sense, men chiefly of wisdom; but in the Scripture sense, men of years, old enough to be wiser and honester, than herein they proved themselves, since age is chiefly honourable, ● when it is found in the way of righteousness. Which it was not, God-wot, in the people projecting these villainies; for though God had weakened nature in them, and they were rather like deserted Castles, Monuments of Nature's declension; though the Sun, and the Moon, and the Stars, were darkened in them, though the Keepers of the house trembled, and the strong men bowed themselves in them, Eccles. 7.12. and all those juvenile ornaments, which by age's assault, do suffer eclipse, were on them, as the description of Solomon elegantly sets it forth; yet are these fully set on fire by the lust of their minds, and the turpitude of their speculative lubricity, to attempt that on the chaste person of Susanna, which was vild and vicious in men of youth, and roisters of deboistness, but in aged and judicial gravity is abominable, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. A wicked old man, as a worn out light, is good for nothing, said Plutarch: Apud Stobaeum, Serm 270. yet where Youth has been villainous and deboist, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Custom in sin has made even the Winter of old age bud afresh with lustful Blossoms; Sanctus Basilius, apud Eundem. though they have been incalid, and so not arrived to any perfection of naughtiness active; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Evagrius apud Stobaeum, Serm. 163. yet have they been the same sins before God, as if acted, and greater too; because forethought, and applied to, by all the experience and counsel many years life administers to. For then only are men of old age worthy reverence, when exemplarily, and not to the scandal and seduction of youth they demean them; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Sanctus Chrysost. apud Stobaeum, 165. which if they do not, they are the more ridiculous and absurd, as were the Elders here, who plotted against Susanna: and thereby not only sinned against God, their office, their years; but also did a folly like him in Seneca, who did exactâ viâ viaticum quaerere, In Libelle, De Moribus. Adag. Cent. 4. Chil. 3. Adag. 45. p. 8●6. which Erasmus wittily applies to old Age's covetousness; which the less time it has to live, the more solicitous it is to provide to live. Tullius in Caton. Major. And I apply to Lust, and carnal follies, which had the same fatuity in the reign of these besotted and luxurious Elders, who plotted the execution of their villainy on a chaste Woman, and worthy Wife Susanna, who is the second person in this story. Vxor castissima Susanna] Three words of our Text pointing out her persons name, her mind's virtue, her relation and state of life. Concerning names, to write at large, would be endless; divers Authors have purposely done it, and somewhat I have touched of it in the Introduction to this Comment; That names were used ever, and are at this day every where, is plain; and that by the wisdom of the humane nature, to distinguish persons and things, and to nourish order, converse, and society, is plain also. And I suppose, as plain it is, that Susanna is not an Heb but a Greek, or exotique name. There is in all Scripture but once besides here mention of it, and that is Luke 8.3. where amongst those Women, that had been healed of evil spirits and infirmities, Susanna is one; by which I may conjecture, that as probably the name was given to persons of excellency, and bodily beauty; so were such named persons, troubled with impure solicitations, the usual temptation and attendant of rarity and transcendency. And if they are not injured by, and prevailed on from those subdulous and captivating insinuations, 'tis by miracle of mercy, that reserves them to their future conspicuity, as in the case of the two Susanna's, the first whereof is the she of our Text, who is set forth in the story of her to be fair, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a beauty, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, saith Suidas, to have no disproportion in her. Hence the Septuagint render that place, (God saw every thing that he had made, Gen. 1. last. and behold it was good,) by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that is, it was such as answered the perfection of its kind. That then in Susannah, here termed good or fair, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Suidas in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. is a beauty of body and gate, of speech and utterance; a Jewel she was in flesh, and one that feared God, and as a chaste Wife, made her husband the covering of her eyes. Vxor castissima] As she was honestly born, the Daughter of Chilchias, and virtuously bred, ver. 3. taught according to the Law of Moses: So was she wealthily married to joachim, a very rich and hospitable man in Babylon. And as to him, she was obliged by vow; so to him did she keep by resolution, and from him could she not turn, without blemish to her virtue, and loss to her happiness, for he was more honourable than all others, v. 4. These Charms notwithstanding on her, their lust endeavours to entice her to avoid; and that by such occult & dexterous methods of design, as were propitious to their end, and but for the impediment of a miracle could not but succeed. First, they consider what she takes pleasure in, and mostly frequents as her retreat of safety and pleasure, her husband's garden; and there, jews as they were, they would have made the sepulchre of her modesty. There where the senses are most pleased and satiated with the favour of scents, and the sight of colours, the melody of birds, the taste of fruits; there, where are shades against heat, and springs to relieve thirst, and retreats for contemplation; there, are the liars in wait to work mischief; as our Lord had the bloody Agony in the Garden: so had Susanna her trial in the garden. And secondly so impudent are these Var●ets, that though the garden were near the house, and in the close view of her husband; yet there would they have raped the only lovely flower of his garden, Qui suasione plectenda matrimonia dividere nititur aliena, ipsius conjugium habeatur illicitum. Edictum Alathar. Regis, lib. 9 c. 49. his Susanna. As no fear of God, or love of the husband; so no prudence persuades them to choose another place, then that, which they thought least suspected, because adjoining to the house. Oh the impudence of vain desire! it hurries men of age and wisdom into actions of folly and madness: no sampson's of fortitude, no David of piety, no Solomon of wisdom, but lies open to the temptation of his flesh. If he give way to its wander, and foster its suggestion. Oh danger! thou attempt us from all quarters; from men of high and low degree; from things lawful, abused; unlawful, used. Thou art on the earth of covetousness, in the air of ambition, upon the waters of tumult, with the fire of lust, in our beds of pleasure, in our shops of profit, in our studies of Learning, on our Benches of Justice, in our fields of labour, in our journeys of business, in our pleasures of retreat, in our Assemblies of Devotion. Thirdly, this fact was aggravated, by the advantage they took of her constant hours, as well as place to walk in, ver. 8. they saw her go in every day. Because use creates delight, Satan watches to take us napping where our delights are, and if he cannot one day, hopes another to prevail: so did he use Potiphar's Wife, to subvert Ioseph's continence, Gen. 39.10. she spoke to him day by day, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, dietim, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the word here. Poor soul! she took the garden to prevent temptation, and there she finds it; she walked there to see no body with desire inconsistent with chastity, and a wively fidelity, and there she is lustfully looked upon, and tempted to be made unchaste. Oh! how studious ought we to be to please God, that being at peace with him, he may direct our paths, and keep evil from us, since our ruins are so often involved in our contents. How careful ought we to be to prevent evil, by denying the occasions of it, who are so watched by, and so stolen upon, by the many disguises of its Avenue. If a light dress, and a loose gate, and a bright active eye; let Hamor lose upon Dinah, and the harmless disports of marriage seen by others, than the married enjoyers of them provoke Abimelech to attempt Sarah, whom thence he thought provable the same to any Courtier as to her Abraham. If Caesar's Wife prostituted her name by intuition of only pictured naked men; and if David's eye lost him body and soul in the lust of Bathsheba, and the murder of Uriah, how much care ought to associate our repasts, and the least appearances of us; considering, that the frequency of Susannah's repair to her husband's garden to walk, proved an occasion of their design on her there. Fourthly, their lust was aggravated in the combination and unity of it, v. 14. they made one joint stock of counsel, and to one purpose of action. Wickedness knows union carries on all enterprises, and therefore it's ever for agreement and conjunction. The Kings of the Earth are said to set themselves and the rulers to take counsel together against the Lord, and against his anointed, Psal. 2. And by this that of job is true of these Leviathans; One is so near to another, Job 41.16, 17. that no air can come between them. They are joined one to another, they stick together that they cannot be sundered. Thus they conduct their designs to their issue, fortiter & suaviter. No eye, as they think, seeing; no tongue censuring them. And if they fail of that, and discerned they be; then by their union are they more plausible in their defence, more pardonable they think in their guilt: as many hands make quit riddance, so many heads form deep counsel: then they machinate how to put a creditable gloss on their putidness. O how glad are these Misereants of a Zoar, though it be but a fig-leaved Palliado. Thus Hectorean madness, they call generous valour; Absalomish Treason, high-metled discontent; Tarquinian lust, kindness of nature; and highbred civility, Solomonique lubricity, A Springtide of reason, covetous to know infinity of objects: And to this the unity of sinners inclining them, makes their union destructive to God and a good Consciences interest in us. Fifthly, their lust was aggravated by the effrontery of it; they come upon her not with Pirates colours, not with the soft and modest pretensions that win on credulity, and steal under the vizards of kindness, the monsters of lust; but rush open-mouthed, like Beasts of prey that are in haft, and must do what they do on the sudden, v. 20. We are in love with thee, lie with us. O courtless rudeness! O merciful mistake! by which they were prevented to win, whom they were resolved to ruin. O the mercy of God, Jer 5.6.8, 12. that guards innocence! by its assault reversed, and its temptation disarmed; because they were not ashamed, when they endeavoured these abominations, therefore God counter-courted them, and undermined their machination. If the Lord be on his Susanna's side, she need not fear what men, old in sin and counsel, can plot, to act against her. Sixthly, their sin was aggravated by the reserve of their malicious revenge, in case of her consent denied, and their plot defeated, v. 21. If thou wilt not, we will bear witness against thee, that a young man was with thee, v. 30. And therefore thou didst send away thy Maids from thee. Deprehendimus ipsam 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, ut est, Joh. 8.4. Draco dixit, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Solon, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Pomponius, in ipsis rebus venereis. Ulpianus in ipsaturpitudine. Grot. in loc. v. 38. Lo the true character of lust, mischief in the act, & no less in the defeat. ¶ Hist. H. 4. of France, Grimst●n, 1132. The most deplorable confirmation of this is from the horrid project of one La-Mot, who being an Ensign, pretended love to a Virgin in Metz in France, entices her by an old Woman, he employed, to frequent his company, he gets her into a prison, and there ravishes her, her Parents running up and down bewailing themselves for her: the Governors finding her not by search, sent for the Captain of the Soldiery, thinking some of them might have got her, and commanded them to deliver her untouched. When thus they were charged, Mot the Ravisher stood by trembling, but not discovered. When he saw, if he should restore her, she would appear ravished, he meditated, to hinder the discovery by murdering her, and that he does; and that done, cuts the body in pieces, puts it in a sack, and casts it into the next River. Behold! the bloody event of lust! Nor much unlike was that intended by the Elders. What defence has innocence against calumny: poor soul! she innocently went to cool herself in the Water of her Husband's garden; out she sends her Maids, probably not having confidence enough to be seen naked by her own Sex, whom she seen, could have been but the reflex of their own bodies, shut they must after them the doors, that no one may enter, but she alone may be private; this was her chaste care, this her innocuous modesty, and sincere zeal to her joachim. But see how all this is by malice and intended rape frustrated of its purpose on her, turned as they think to her disadvantage. They misrepresent her sending away the Maids, and shutting the doors, to be in favour to the Courtship of a young man appointed by her, and concealed there, to enjoy her by their furtherance, and under the umbrage of those contrivances; and they not only vow to detect, but to depose it in all the circumstances. This is the carriage of the Elders, to subvert her chastity, and loosen her confidence to, and interest in her husband. But honest soul and wife as she was, she trusted in God for the right of her wrong, and the asserter of her innocence; no Amazonian raving, or masculine indignation, shows she to them; no Lucretian violence to herself; no forcible entry makes she on her tender skin, True Chastity. through her veins to her blood; nor did she with a jael-like fortitude dissemble her anger, till she had them under the perpendicular of her fatal revenge; she did not endeavour her defence by arguments impotent to it, weeping without calling out, and wailing without resolving their defiance, like that great person the story tells us of, who pretended a surprise; but when she was taken away, and the Lords of the Nation sent her word, that if she were surprised, they would come with an Army and set her free. She answered, Spotswood History Sco●l. p. 202. That it was against her will that she was brought thither; but that since her coming, she had been used so courteously, as she would not remember any more that injury. No such actor of a part was Susanna; too modest and well-meaning was she to express these fasts and loses, which are rarely the figures of any thing better than falsehood and wantonness; but she trusts to the alarm of her innocence, which she knew God would take, who was all ear and eye; though her husband at that distance could be neither to her rescue, and aloud she cries, and so do the Elders to drowned her Poor soul! what a strait was she in, whose modesty in assenting, or life in denial, were at stake, or at least must be candidates to the judgement of the Law and the charity of her Neighbours. But God gave her as well the wisdom to choose to suffer innocently, as the courage to defy the temptation to sin bravely; consent she will not, but put the issue on God she will, and does; and the guilty Elders amazed and discouraged, recede from tempting, and apply themselves to defamation of her, as their Inchantress and the contriver of their seduction; Elders they were in years, Judges by place; and to be accused by such persons, was too much for aught to contest with, that had not lived unsuspected; but Susanna being such, as no report of ill had passed upon, Ver. 43. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Dicitur falsus & iniquus testis, qui crimen fingit ad opprimendum alterum. Grot. in loc. Badwellus in loc. To. 5. Crit. Sacr. was the more comforted under her impeachment: yet as guiltless as she was, the Law must pass on her, the two Elders depose stoutly and falsely against her, and Sentence passed on her as guilty, and to execution she was leading. God who had all this while permitted the progress of this mischief, for the greater defeat of it when it was discovered miraculously (as says the story) raised up the spirit of a young man called Daniel, to improbate this testimony, and by cross interrogation to denude the impostery of it, ver. 45. and so forward. And then Susanna, and the Elders change turns in the Bail-dock, and that divine endowment that was by miracle fermented in him, taketh to task those Hellish Sophisters, whose artifice it was, both to be tempters to sin, and accusers for sin. Thus much of the Elders, and their false testimony, which had took effect, if somewhat had not interposed; which the Text thus phrases, viz. Si non eam miraculosè liberâsset Dominus inexcogitabile prudentiâ, quam à natura non habuit puer junior. Here our Chancellor ascribes the patronage of innocence to God alone, whose the peculiar care and love of truth is, and who by a wonder of mercy and power does dissipate the contrivances of wickedness, and provide salvation for Walls and Bulwarks. For though our Master well knew, that Daniel, whom tradition and general consent makes the young man here, was Magically and Astrologically instituted. I hope I may use those phrases without offence; because I suppose those words, skilful in all wisdom, Et Deus quidem hanc suae legis observation●● ministris suis rependere volens, locuyletavit hos quatuor adolescentes multa rerum prudentia, atque intelligentia. Ita, ut q●osvis. Libros intelligerent, multaque sapienti praestaren● caeterum Daniel is praecaeteris ha● praerogativ● claruit, atque insignis fuerit, quod omnium visionum ac som●orum intelligentiss. fuerit. Tossarius, in c, 1. Danielis. and cunning in knowledge, and understanding science, whom they might teach the learning and tongue of the Chaldeans, Dan. 1.4. import so much. Though I say he knew Daniel ten times better than all the Magicians and Astrologers, even in their own art; yet does he piously ascribe this heroiqueness and divine spirit in him, to the special efflux of God's spirit on him, who had qualified him signally for this service above, and beyond the possible attainment of his years, or the extent and energy of his breeding; which I the rather note, because many atheistique minds, and bold asserters of natural causes and the influences of them, are not content to publish the great and mysterious operations of nature, and to reduce every thing to her norm; but to detract from the extraordinary instigation and assistance of God. Which though I believe not to be in the bravadoes and mad frenzies of giddy Enthusiasts, and sanguine fanatics; yet I doubt not but to be in very notable degrees on the spirits of all great and good actors, and to appear in their grave and orderly actings; yea, and as God does sometimes permit an evil spirit from him to kindle great and grievous flames, as his execution on sinful Nations: so does he by a mercy of miracle, rouz up the souls and senses of Instruments proper for him, to assist and effect his purpose, in his time, according to his instinct on them. And therefore, though some holy, or rather some unholy Pirates, when they would subvert the faith of God's Elect, hang out false Colours, pretend Scripture, Revelation, Spirit, impulse from God to do deeds of darkness, derogatory to the pure God, and to the peaceable Gospel; yet are there holy and serious impulsions on men, which I doubt not to aver, to have the image and superscription of God on them. Note this. And that because nothing but the finger of God can inscribe them with the perfection and to the prevalence they arrive at. This was in joseph, when he was presented to Pharoah's favour, Gen. 41 38, 39 which he so merited by his discretion and wisdom of carriage, that Pharaoh calls the spirit of GOD in him, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not only one in whom the spirit of God, but (with reverence be it written) the will, and as it were a part or angle of God, is; that is, in whom is an excellency of spirit to discern, and of will to discover what he knows, good for men to do, or evil for them to avoid: so is to be understood those passages in Scripture, which entitle God to men's extraordinary endowments, and make them that have them, eminent in their times. So it's applied to Bezaleel, Exod. 31.3. Chap. 35.31. so to Moses, Numb. 11.25. and to Caleb, Numb. 14.24. to joshuah, Chap. 27.14. so to our Lord Christ, Isa. 42.1. By this Spirit God came on Balaam, and made him prophecy, Numb. 24.2, 5. By this made Othniel deliver Israel, judg. 3.10. jephtha, Chap. 11. v. 29. Samson, Chap. 13. ver. last. By this David was enabled to his Royal Office, 1 Sam. 16.13. yea, by this (I believe) is God with his Haereditary Apostles in the order of Ministry, whereby he casts down the strong holds of Satan, and notwithstanding the mighty oppositions of the World, accomplishes the number of his Elect. To which, alas the foolishness of Preaching, and the frailty of those Earthen Vessels, in which the treasures of wisdom and knowledge are conveyed, would be but despicable means, if they were not made mighty by God, and by his spirit and co-operation pointed for, and prevalent to those ends. Nor do I think they are ceased wholly in the last Ages of the World; but that God upon sundry occasions, stirs up the spirits of men to great works, and makes them fortunate and prophetic in them. And that not only as they may by the divination of experience, foresee and fore-warn danger, and be directed in the seasonable preparation for it; but as they may be awakened by God to know and foresee; and by being armed and fronted with courage, to despise discouragements, and encounter with seeming impossibilities. Thus God stirred up the spirit of Athanasius, and St. Augustine, against the Arians, Donatists, and Novatians, who had prevailed over Catholicism. Thus God raised the spirit of our Bradwardine against the Pelagians; Bradward in Praefat. lib. De causa Dei. of Wickliff and Luther against Popery; and thus he stirred up the spirit of our Reformers, not only the Kings, the Nobles, and the Commons in Parliament, to reform Religion, but to enable the Father-Bishops, & Presbyters of our Mother-Church, and other learned men of this Realm, to contrive a form of service for the Church: concerning which the words of the Statute are, 2 & 3 E. 6. c. 1. The which at this time, by the aid of the Holy Ghost, with one uniform agreement is of them concluded, set forth, etc. a very godly order, agreeable to the word of God, and the primitive Church, very comfortable to all good people, desiring to live in Christian conversation, and most profitable to the affairs of this Realm; as the judgement of Parliament is in the fifth and sixth of the same King, c. 1. I say this Book so framed and owned, by so wise and religious Parliaments, 1 & 2 P.M. c. ●. yet God stirred up a contrary spirit to defame and extrude; which spirit, notwithstanding its fierceness long continued not, but another spirit came on the Nation stirred up by God, and cast out that spirit, and censured the rejection of that Book, as a great decay of the due honour of God, and discomfort to the Professours of the truth of Christ's Religion; the first Eliz. c. 2. says so expressly; and the 8. Eliz. c. 1. calls it, Ezra 1.5. Jer. 51.11. a godly and virtuous book. And as God raised up the spirit of the Builders of jerusalem in Ezra's time, and the spirit of the King of the Medes against Babylon; so God raised up the spirit of Queen Elizabeth, and all our Monarches since her, In the Office for the 17 Nou. Qu. Elizabeth's day. The 3d Prayer. to deliver the people of England from danger of war and oppression both of bodies by tyranny, and of conscience by superstition with liberty both of bodies and minds. They are the words of Authority; yea, and when an evil spirit came from the Lord upon this Nation, to divide and scatter it; and we were all like water cast upon the ground, that could not (without a miracle) be gathered up again: even then when the fury of war fanned us, and the wind of animosity, rage, and unfixedness, was carrying us away, Isa 41.18. Then the Lord opened rivers in high places, & fountains in the midst of the valleys; then he gave the Nation his eyesalve, that they should look upon him whom they had pierced; The Duke of Albemarle. then he put courage into the matchless memorable General and Parliament then sitting, to beseech our absent ¶ See the Common's Letter to the King. 2 May 1660. Pilot to commiserate our Naufrage; then he by a Miracle, second to none in any time or story, Vers. 19 planted in our wilderness the Cedar, the Shittath-tree, and the Myrtle-tree, and the Oyl-tree; that is, the King (not only the highest Cedar for altitude, but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Cedar for excellency. For so that Shittah signifies, for its wood is lignum imputribile nitore & pulchritudine facile caetera superans; of which the Ark of the Covenant, the Tabernacle, and all the Vessels of them were made.) This Cedar of Affliction and Circuit, Pagnin. in verbo. who was exposed to prey and contempt, when he was off his Majestic Mountain, did God, notwithstanding the * Ord. Feb. 1648. c. 16, & 17. O stupendious Providence! Myrrhae virtu● est ut corpora imputribilia reddat. Plin. lib. 12. c. 15.16. Ordinance to the contrary, which God concurred not in, refix, and with him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Lords, whose reduction into their Orb, wherein they with the Myrtle, do strengthen and assist the Crown, and keep evil from it, makes good that Prophecy of Gods to his Church, Esay 55. last; Instead of the Thorn shall come up the Fir-tree; and instead of the Briar shall come up the Myrtle-tree; yea, and with them the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the wood of the Olive; that which not only flourished, but that which is arid and cut off: so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies; and it admirably answers the expansion of the mercy. God brought to life not only the Lords, whose House was wholly voted down; but even those Commoners, Members of the then Voters, who were secluded, and by their prevailing fellows cut off and cast out. And by this mercy to the Pia Mater of our Order, Lustre, and Grandeur, has deserved of us everlasting Eulogies; and what exceeds Vocal, Vital Doxologies. And oh that God would once more stir up the spirit of this Nation, not to animosity, dissension, disloyalty: No (God forbid that evil spirit from the Lord should penally burry England any more; No Holy, humble, penitent Spirit in the Nation but from God. we have too fatally felt the fruits of intestine War, to return (I hope) again to that folly and ferocity;) but the spirit of humility, moderation, charity, this spirit stirred up by God, would sedate our spirits in our own, and inflame them only in God's quarrel, with those regnant sins that are in their tendency and pride Deicidiall: Such Adders are we to the loud voice of that never to be forgotten Miracle and Mercy, of the 29 of May, 1660. That nothing seems less to be heeded, than the stupendiousness, and almost incredible transcendency of it. But Lord lay not this sin to our charge, our deliverance is as it were dead and buried; and since no man regardeth the work of the Lord, Psal. 29.5. jer. 39.23. nor the operation of his hands, how just may it be, that God's Whirlwind should go forth with fury, continuing whirlmind, and should fall with pain upon the head of us wicked ones. Like as his judgement did in a good measure on the wicked Elders here in the Text, who maliciously combining against innocent Susanna, were by the spirit of Daniel excited by God to discover their impostry, denuded; and as false Witnesses, and perjurious Villains put to death, & that Lege Talionis. For as they would have brought Susanna to the flames, which amongst the Chaldees was the punishment of Adultery, (for Grotius says the jews had there no exercise of their National Civil Polity, but were adjudged by the Topique Laws of Babylon) though the 62 verse of the story says, they put them to death, according to the Law of Moses; which is most probable, and so understood by our Text-Master, who thereupon brings in the Lex talionis, according to the Prescript of God by Moses, Deut. 19 v. 19 So did they by that machination cusnare themselves, and remain an eternal shame to lewd and treacherous Elders. But enough of them, I return to the Text. Nosti & tu Princeps divine qualiter jam tarde, Magister Johannes Fringe, post quam annis tribus sacer dotali functus est officio, duorum iniquorum depositione, qui cum antea juvenculam quandam affidasse testati sunt, sacrum presbyteratus ordinem relinquere compulsus est, & matrimonium cum faemina illa consummare. In this Clause he does not only bespeak the Prince's attention, by a compellation of highness that he owns in him, and a duty thereupon, that he knows he and all men ought to testify in word and deed towards him; but to this Divine Prince, produces a ternary of instances, wherein the mouths of two Witnesses have been wickedly produced, and made use of to matchless and monstrous villainies. This then is the third instance; and the person mentioned to be the ingenious Contriver of this Delinquency is one john Fringe, of whom, as he is here charactered, no either English or Latin Story, that has come to my view, makes mention; probably either because what he did was in the time of Combustion in England, when many things passed in the crowd unnoticed; or else because it was done in France (especially the Treason) where the Prince then lay an exile hence. That there was a truth in it is not to be questioned, but the Circumstances I cannot supply, nor clothe this naked Narrative with such varieties of art and ornament as would make it symmetrious to the other parts of the Comment, that which is notizable in it, is first the quality of the person, a Priest, and such not only by the Confirmation of his Order, but the continuation of him in that Confirmation, three years. Secondly the degeneration of him from what he ought to have been, but was not, to what he ought not to have been, but was; Gladium perimentis sub Pallio consulentis gestabat, He had judas his heart with judas his kiss; he did currere ad sacros Ordines sine reverentia, sine consideratione, etc. By all means he would have holy Orders (those Entrusts that even Angels do admire and adore) without consideration of that humility and divine zeal that ought to reside in the mind of him that has them and the honour he should pay that honour done him, by a holy life suitable to them; whereas no man ought to offer himself to those Mysteries in whom covetousness reigns, Lib. De Conversione ad Clericos. c. 29. ambition rules, pride rages, iniquity sits, and luxury commands, as Saint Bernard says to the Clergy of his time. From this our Fringe should have been free, but he was not it seems, but though by order he was sacred to God, yet by devotion of soul he was nothing less but like Paulus Cremensis the Pope's Legate here, while he was inveighing against the Clergy's Lechery, himself was taken a-bed with a common Strumpet; so did our mentioned Presbyter, while in his Orders he pretended a Dedication to God, he in the profusion of his vicious life devoted himself to his Mistress, which was his shame and his sin. For though I would be a Constantine to him, and refer his Case to his last Judge, De Sacerdote nihil mala aut foeda natura est temere presumendum. Reg. Can. with silence of whatever may be written against him, as reflecting on his Order; yet in as much as the vices of him were flagitious and to the vituperation of him and his Profession, to both which they were scandalous; 'tis no breach of Charity to follow the Text with a Commentary as well here as in other parts of it. That than which he is in our Text detractingly charged with, is first, that he was libidinous; and notwithstanding the restraint of Orders, and the assiduous seeming continence in them, he did meditate effeminacy; and to make way to his freedom, contrived the annihilation of his Orders. Secondly, That to effect it, he plotted to procure and confirmed two in their perjurious resolution, who should depose that which ipso facto if true, as it was not, should dissolve his Orders. Thirdly, That the sacrilegious Combination between him and the Witnesses to so execrable an end should not be confessed by him till he came to die. Fourthly, The Justice of God in punishing one sin with another, sacrilege with treason, and perjury with perdition. Spelman Concil. p. 266. Post quam annis tribus sacerdotali functus est officio.] As three years were according to some Canon, though five as other Canons appointed to intercurr between Deaconry and Priestshood; so this Priest is deposed to consist undetected three years after his Presbyterating, not that he was not probably under a hot lubricity before, but because the depositions instructed by him were to commence date thence: Sin has gradations, no man is at first bade to the badst degree; but first there is levis & pudicus tastus, a Virgin blushingnesse as it were, and after more confidence, till at last a confirmed effrontery. No man knows where to stay, that stops not at the first appearances of evil, and does not obviate the pullulations and first glimmerings of them; 2 Kings. 8.12; 2 Kings. 13.22. Let Hazael be a warning to all confident Presumers, who think themselves not so bad as mercy foretells them to prove, time discovers them to accordingly be; and Peter who when the Lord told him he would be the signallest starter from him, made a bold bravado of holy valour; but by peeping into the high Priest's Hall, in curiosity to see what became of his Lord, was so overtaken with pusillanimity, that he not only denied in the Palace to the Maid that taunted him as a follower of jesus, that he understood not her language, but called them all to witness that she mistook him; Matth. 26. v. 70. but even in the Porch when accused by a second Maid, he denied not only that he was his follower but that he knew him, and forswore both with an Oath, v. 72. yet again when a hotter hue and cry came after him, and more and confidenter suspicions came upon him, to evade them and extricate himself he falls afresh to curse and to swear that so far was he from owning his person and cause, Ver. 74. that he knew neither, or would justify either of them. Here was a parum abfuit, to utter abnegation: so probably was it with our Priest Fringe, at first may be thought to dabble with this juvencula, by a kindness of Courtship; after by the engagement of speculative turpitude, pressed her to more familiarity; thence was provoked to that desire, which to accomplish, neither his orders, or her condition would permit. At last he resolved, being hurried headlong into the torment of lubricity, to quit his Orders, rather than to desist his Courtship, and he contrives to do it by subornation of Witnesses: and thus, as much as in him lay, damned their souls, to be pleasure his own and h●s Paramours body. Qui eum antea juvenculam quandam affidasse testati sunt.] The Witnesses were two, and those to give legally a testimony of an untruth. He knew there was no discharge of his Orders, but causâ professionis; for the Councils of the Church were much against Marriage of Priests, ‛ O 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Concil. Naeo Ca●sar. Sub Sylu. Tom. 1. c. 1. p. 234. Synod 2. Rom. Tom. 1. parte 1. p. 260. Tom. 3. par. secunda, p 414. Tom. 1. par p. 195, 612, 642. & Tom. 4. par. 2. fol. 232. Concil. Rom. 1. Sub Greg. 7. as that which they accounted dangerous, full of encumbrance, derogative from the zeal of men, temptative of them from their studies, and the like. This Fringe wickedly takes hold of; not as he found Women, stealers away of the heart and their society scandalous to Priesthood, especially those that do blazon their wonts with them, notoriè & publicè, as the words of the Council of Saltzburg are; Temp. Martini 5. Papae, Tom. 3. Concil. p. 996. for this had been venial, nay heroic in Fringe: but no such motion had he, Order he had taken, and in them long and loosely continued; and to be quit of them, as too severe Reins for his base mind to be restrained by, he contrives a false accusation against himself, and raises up an evil testimony to confirm it, and thereby to occasion his Ecclesiastical: Censure and Deprivation. Which was, that before he took Orders, he was betrothed to a young Woman. And herein he makes himself censurable; first, of levity, that he took Holy Orders before he had a settled mind, and had some assurance of that self-denial and humility, that becomes that Calling. No man is to rush on that, chiefly as a lift to preferment, A good Memento to those that take Orders in the Ministry. o● a relief to necessity of life, or as an occasion to a popular appearance; the parts and pomps of men are not to be consulted with in this undertaking. The design men have to glorify God, and the enablement from him to deny themselves, to please him, in a serious, zealous, and painful course of Ministry, is the best evidence of fitness, & call, and the hopefullest title to success in it: this had Fringe attained to, he would either not have entered into Orders; or when he was in them so long, not so have profaned them. But if corruption had so prevailed on him, he were better have directly married, as Saint Bernard's counsel was; Esset autem sine dubio melius nubere, quam uri; & salvari in numero fidelis populi, quam in cleri sublimitate & deterius vivere & destrictius judicari, Cap. 29. De Convers. ad Clericos. and as ¶ Epist. 307. Aeneas Silvius, after Pope Pius the second counselled john Freund, a Roman Priest, to do; then thus to contrive a remedy of sin and shame to himself and others: But, poor man! in a sinful storm he was, and he took the next course his corrupt nature presented him, and that was but a tortuous and tortuous one, not only accusing himself of levity; but also, secondly, of lubricity, by a predominancy of sinful passion, which made him n●n apt nubere, that is, not marry (a) See a● rare wife Arch B●shop Parker● Fuller Church History, p. 108. a grave and decent person, that might keep his piety steady, and dispose him the more to the sober prosecution of the things of God; Luctuosa des●riptio carnaliter viventium Sacerdo●um E. Prospero, apud Concil. General. Tom. 6 c. 32. p. 257. as I am sure fit Marriage does beyond all singleness, that has not a very strict gift, and does not abate the edge of Nature by low and moderate Diet, devout and religious severities, laborious and incessant studies, frequent and intent devotions of soul, Marriage upheld commendable in Churchmen. evidenced in resolved avoidances of all opportunities of aversation; I say, and that knowingly, let who of the Batchellour-Pretenders to seraphiqueness be offended that will, there is no such ordinary help to piety and sanctity in the World, (the gift of perfect chastity only excepted,) as fit Marriage is. But this our Fringe is willing to be thought not to choose; Bract lib. 2. ●● 11. Constit. Siculae, lib. 2. tit. 37. Spelm. Gloss. p. 25 for the accusation is, that he did only affidasse, which is as much, as contract himself in order to Marriage, Fidem dare, fidei vinculo se connectere, as the Canonists say, that is, he fairly promised, that marry her he would; which affidavit he confirmed by oath (in which sense, our Lawyers call a Deposition an Affidavit) that thereby he might not so much assure her of his fidelity, Episcopus Wintoniensis in manu Archiepise. Gantuariensis coram Episcopis affidavit tempore Stephani Regis, Brompton. p. 1039. as entitle himself to the command of her upon the presumption and assurance of her, that the marriage was good, in foro Dei, and legitimated them to the consent, which they had affidavited between them. This he only is represented to do, which was no more but the security that men do give each to other for performance of pacts; Brompton, p. 1182. as Richard the first, and the French King, are said, in propriis personis affidaverunt firmiter & fideliter. juvenculam quandam] Wisdom, as it is seen in the actions of life, so chiefly in promising what we can and will perform. No man ought to say, what he will not swear, nor swear what is not true; yet the Priest is contented to not only own himself guilty of Affidation to a Virgin, (and probably no pure one,) according to the Deposition of his Accusers; not as a testimony of his sorrow, for his unworthy mind in that holy function, and for his profane life, notwithstanding his holy vow; but purely he prostitutes his name and calling, to bring about a Disfranchisement, and to procure his Vows unvowing. An vero gravior ullaphrenesis, quam impanit●ntia cordis & peccandi obstinata voluntas; siquidem manus nepharias injicit sibiipsi. nec carnem, sed ment●m lacerate, & corrodit. Sanctus Bernardus Capitul 4. De Conversione ad Clericos. For though Charity conjure me to believe, that he confesses that this subornation of Witnesses to accuse him, was only to make way to his Marriage; yet I do verily believe, and I hope not in any degree uncharitably, the sparks that kindled this combustible matter in him, was too intimate conversation with this young Woman, whom here our Text calls juvencula, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Quod esset privata & occulta viro, Hebraei. a tender and taking Creature, florenti atate, not yet sub maritali capistre; for to such as are fresh and excellent in their kind is this word given. And such he concluding her, Meditates the Marriage enjoyment of her, though with the violation of his vow, and the abjuration of his profession; for upon the oath of the Witnesses it followed. Sacrum Presbyteratus ordinem relinquere compulsus est] That is, the Canons of the Church being transgressed, as by concubinacy or marriage they are, (as by the prementioned Authorities, with sundry others every where in the Tomes of the Councils appears) under the grievous pains of Excommunication, and Censure of Schism and Sacrilege, he is to desist not only from the exercise and benefit as a Churchman; Tom. 1. p. 642, Tom. 4. parte secunda fol. 232. Tom. 1. parte prima fol. 195, 612. but even ab honore clericuli. Which resolution of Gregory the seventh, as I take it, being made known by the Germane Bishops, Concil. Roman. 1 sub Greg. 7. Anno 1074. to their Clergy, upon their return from the Council at Rome, so offended them, that they resolved rather to relinquish their Benefices, than their Wives. So did also the French Clergy in Pope Hildebrand's time; Anno 1051. Inter Canon's Aelfrici. Canon. 5. Spelman in Conciliis: p. 573. nor before I think Elfrick's time was it ever enjoined our Clergy in England, but long before the contrary practice was legitimated by our Councils. In Anno 456. ordained it was, Synod. St. Patricii, Spelm. Concil. p. 52. that the Wife of a Clergyman should be veiled; and if they were not, they were without honour from the Laity, and to be removed from the Church; Nota ad Prov. Afric. Spelman, p. 43. p. 99 and before that Anno 314. Deacons were allowed Marriage upon their craving it, and yet to continue their Ministry; and so Gregory's resolution is to Augustine the Monk's Interrogatory. P. 434, p. 443. See more in the Marginal Quotations. I know in the General Council of Aenham, Anno 1009. Calibat is commended to the Clergy, and they reproved, for having two or three Wives, which lest they should prefer to hold before their Orders, the Council concludes, Qui antem ordinis sui regulam abdicaverit, omni cum apud Deum tum apud homines gratiâ exuatur; Spelm. Conc. 514. Pag. 530, 574. notwithstanding all which the Seculars had their Wives, which the stricter or loser Clergy called their Mynecenae; probably those we call to this day mincing Dames; for when any one goes lightly, we say, she minces as she goes. But Priests had not, nor were permitted to have any Women in the house with them, Spelman Concil. p. 592. ne eos ad peccandum iliiciant; notwithstanding all which, the Clergy that were not Votaries in England did marry, and their issue was legitimate and enjoyed Lands; and this probably was that which moved Fringe to be the more eager to marry, Cook Instit. p. 687. Fox Martyrol. p. 1138, 1140. because as he knew by discharge of his Orders, he might enjoy his juvencula, his young Wife; so by the Marriage his issue should be legitimate. And this was that which made him will the severity of the Law upon himself, as it follows. Et Matrimonium cum faemina illa consummare.] Here is a change, Plutarchut in conjugialibus praeceptis. his Affidatio being consummated, becomes Matrimony, and ●his juvencula in years, is become famina in state of life; Matrimony is a state of life, which the Heathen calls the safest boundary of Youth; and though it be not inhibited Priests, neither by the old Law, or the Gospel's Sanction, or Apostolic Authority, but merely ex statuto Ecclesiae, Lib. 4. Distinct. 37. quaest. 1. De Conjugio Cleric. capite cum olim. as Durand determines, to which agree St. Thomas, and others; yea, though Cardinal Cajetan confesses, that Marriage entered into by a Priest is good, and the Children legitimate; and though true it be, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Plutarch in Amator. p. 752. edit. Paris. that it is the Seminary of Immortality to Mankind, not only in Plutarch's sense, as it peoples the World, and makes a kind of eternity in it, but also as it delivers men from sin, and keeps them by the remedy of it, in the love of God, and practice of virtue, which tends to a Heavenly Immortality. Yet for all this, marriage in Priests, is the mark that many (who may themselves doubt, as well as doubtlessly others do, whether they have any continence above that which is the lowest step to it) levelly at, and discharge much more of their malignity and defamation upon it, then becomes sober or religious men to do. The late renowned Bishop Hall. But these being answered by a most holy and learned deceased Father of our Church, much to the honour of the undertaking, and the shame of the opposite Tenent, I content myself to forbear; only let me ingenuously profess, as I honour highly those Seraphic Virgin-people, who in the office of Ministry keep single, and notwithstanding it do enjoy that calmness and content in their single life, which is the gift of God, the blessing of continence, & the absence of those provocations that are in virtuous persons troublesome, and in loose scandalous, the probable avoidance of which, being (in the Martyr's words) honest Marriage, Dr. Taylor Temp. Q. Mary. I am bold to judge as meet for Clergymen, as for any: And more, for as I persuade myself, the Devil more designs to undermine these the eminency of whose calling casts the blacker shade on the conversation unsuitable thereto, and the World greedily appetiting the denigration of their reputation, who are most signal in the fruits of Learning and most sacred in the opinion for religions: so do I believe, if there be any help to heaven, next to divine mercy and power, Tholossanus, Syntag. juris, lib. 9 c. 19 Exhortation to the Solemnisation of Matrimony. 'tis this of Marriage, which is the Manifesto of them both; which our Mother the Church of England, according to the old Doctors & Authors, says, was instituted of God in Paradise, in the time of man's innocency, for a remedy against sin, and to avoid fornication, that such persons that have not the gift of Continence might merry, and keep themselves undefiled members of Christ's body; and for the mutual society, help, and comfort, that the one ought to have of the other, both in prosperity, and in adversity. So our Church; whose judgement and favour to the Clergy's Marriage, I prefer, before the humours of any private Opinionists, especially since it is not with any diminution of the just honour and praise of devout chastity and singleness, but in supplement to it, as a refuge to the non-attainers of it, and an honest help to a sacerdotal blamelessness. Hear the Judgement of the King, Nobility, Clergy, Commonalty in Parliament, 2 & 3. E. 6. Although it were not only better, for the estimation of Priests, and other Ministers in the Church of God, to live chaste, sole and separate from the company of women and the bond of Marriage, etc. yet for as much as the contrary hath rather been seen, and such uncleanness of living, and other great inconveniences, not meet to be rehearsed, have followed of compelled Chastity, and of such Laws as have prohibited those (such persons) the godly use of Marriage, it were better and rather to be suffered in the Commonwealth, that those which could not contain, should, after the counsel of Scripture, live in holy Marriage, then feignedly abuse with worse enormity outward chastity, or single life. These are the words of the Preamble to that Statute, which makes void all Laws, prohibiting spiritual persons to marry, who by God's Law may marry; which Statute mistaken by some stubborn Votaries, who stood more upon blind obedience to the Pope, then to the liberty Christ had endowed them with; and choosing rather to truckle to turpitudes, (I am modest) Quam contra Papae mandatum inire Matrimonium. I say, some mistaking our Church and State's meaning therein, were so bold, to the high dishonour of Almighty God, the dishonour of the King's Majesty, and his High Court of Parliament, and the learned Clergy of this Realm, who have determined the same (Marriage of Priests) to be most lawful by the Law of God, in their Convocation, as well by the common assent, as by the subscription of their hands, as the Statute words are; That the State saw great need to make a further Act of corroboration and vindication of their meanings, from their injurious glosses; and thereupon passed the Statute 5 and 6. c. 12. which though by the first of Marry 2. it was repealed, yet that Repeal was repealed by 1 jacob. 21. and so by that the Statute of E. 6. being in force, the judgement of Parliament is for the Clergyman's, continence and singleness, if it may be; but to avoid inconvenience for his lawful Marriage. Our Fringe then did not amiss to marry, he not having the gift of singleness, In Matrimonio annulus arrba loco saepe daretur, ut vir atque uxor invicem se coemerunt. Salmuth in Pancirol. lib. 1. p. 294. and having betrothed himself to a Woman, in order to Marriage; for fit it was, that he should perform it; but that which was faulty in him, was, his dissimulation and sacrilegious contrivance of falsehood, with a subornation of Witnesses to depose it; in the complication of which, all the fruits of the flesh, which make up the deadly sins, and oppose themselves to the Cardinal virtues are visible. But I pass to what succeeds. Cum qua post quam annos 14. Moratus, sobolem septimam suscitaverat demum de crimine laesae Majestatis in tuam celsatudinem conjurato convictus subornatos fuisse testes illos, et falsum dixisse testimonium in mortis suae articulo coram omni populo fassus est. This clause declares God's vengeance on the first sin by the second, and the consequence of it; The patience of God had long been provoked, and the mistaken pleasure of his (as some think) Apostasy as well as Lechery, were for a long time permitted him, not for an earnest of Impunity, but to show him the obduration of his heart, and to tell the world that there is no man so perfect but may slip, none so peccant but aught to amend and return to his Loyalty by prayer and penance, to pardon and acceptation. Yet for all this Fringe recollects not, but as one swallowed up in the pleasures of his wife, and the prebends of his marriage, Persists in Impenitence not only one year as did David, but fourteen years, Grimston Hist. H. 4 p. 1134. 1135 & Seq. and all perhaps to maintain his young wife. Thus did Fava, who having a wife, children, and family, and being unable to subsist by honest means, entered upon the most notable cheats that ever was; and when he was detected, and Judgement passed on him, poisoned himself to avoid the shame. So did Mussardus, a valiant man in Picardy, during the combustions in France, who because in peace he could not live so high, Pag. 1138. as he was wont, falls to ill courses to maintain himself. First, he kills a Gentleman his Neighbour; then despises the King's mercy, takes a Castle; and when he and his Partisans could defend it no longer, they shot one another, and were burned in the straw they had environed themselves with to that desperate purpose. So also our Fringe was so far from being mindful of his misacquirement of his wife, that he more doted on her, and on his issue by her, than divined the abbreviation of his life and happiness, by a Treason which should determine both, and leave them corrupt in blood, and poor in condition. So just is God, that though he seems to permit the inordinacy of men's desires in the manner and measure they propose them to take effect, though their projects be what they would have them, and their prosperity what they can most secondarily wish, yet at last they determine, Bonam conscien tiam, optimam famam, maximam authoritatem▪ praterea familiam, uxorem, nepotes, sorores, interque totpignora veros amicos. Plin. Ep. De Corellio Rufo. One Corellius Rufus who had a good Conscience, a good fame Great authority, a wife, daughters, nephews, sisters, all good and with them good Friends is enough for an Age, most men have the contrary, or at best but viciffitudes, yet God has left some Instances of it, that men might seek to, and serve him who can curse and bless whom he pleaseth, and not always suffers it to succeed virtue and industry lest it should be ascribed as a fruit and consectary of them, and not a blessing of his He it is that fortunates some families and Eclipses others, that makes some worthy men obscure, and other worthless once eminent, he it is that inclines the hearts of Queen Elizabeth's, to stoop for her Cecils sake, that would not stoop for the King of Spaine's sake. The only way then to prosper, Fuller Worthies of England, p. 160 is to procure god our aid, and to preserve him our ortion, which they will never do that make lies their Refuge, and that work by i'll and mischievous Engines. If men would be rid of their Faustina's as Anteninus couldl have been contented to be, they must reddere dotem, vomit up all their ill getting by them, God will not clear the soul of guilt, that does not part with all that is sacrilegious, a depredation on his son's purchase, which if Fring here had done, he might have been a longer liver with his wife and Children, For some blessings his marriage had, which no wise and worthy man can choose but value, as First a larg● time of continuance 14 years, Time enough to make a man comptus & moratus, well trained and throughly polished, and assueted to the nature and temper of marriage, that's the Orators sense of moraetus, though our Chancellor use it as a term of duration for commoratus (the noun being mostly taken in the former sense, and the verb morari denoting stay; So Virgil long â ambage aliquem morari; and Pliny nè pluribus moramur in re confessâ and Pomponius uses moraeri apud aliquem, vel cum aliquo, to stay with any one, morari solutionem, or praesidium, to defer payment or aid.) In this sense Fringe had more happiness than many most excellent husbands, and high valuers of their wives have had. Who though they both prayed for, and delighted in the enjoyment of them, yet had them taken from them, in much shorter time than our Priest held his. Besides, secondly, He had Children, which the Wise man calls the gift of the Lord, and the fruit of the womb, his delight, and these he had not sparingly, but in number, and in that sacred. Number seven, which of all numbers the Ancients thought most divine; For though all numbers being adjutants to memory, are ascribed to the invention of Minerva, (quasi quaedam Meminerva, Lilius Gyraldus lib. De Annis & Mensibas, p. 5●5. parte secunda. which Minerva, they say was the capite jovis nata, and therefore they ascribe all parts of Ingeny to it; ¶ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Idem codem loco. p. 530. As to counsel well, to judge rightly, and to do justly,) I say, though all numbers thus devised, Parte prima Syntag. 11. De Nat. Deotum. and for this purpose intended are useful; yet some certain ones were more Cabalistique, and esteemed Chryptick than others were. Pythagoras' valued the number Three, because sacrated to Hecate, who was called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Others think he did it upon other grounds, Also to Apollo the number three was devoted, as 6 to Venus, and 12 in scripture as I have heretofore noted; but this 7 is the only number conducing to the life and body of man, Quod per cam Ternionis numeri mysterium col●ret, eum quando numerum in sacris adhibendum putavit L. Gyraldus in Aenjgm. parte secunda p. 479. Hence probably is that of the Civilians from the Physicians, septimo mense nasci persectum partum jam receptum est, and of the seventh son's fortunateness; But greater honour is yet done this number, God himself rested from Creation on the seventh day, and sanctified it, and the jews counted it numerus quietis & felicitatis, In allusion to which, King David may be thought to mention often praying, 1 Revel. 11.13. 16. c. 4. v. 5. by seven times a day do I praise thee, because of thy righteous judgements, and how oft shall I forgive my brother, unto seven times, c. 8. v. 2. c. 15. v. 1. so we read of seven Churches, seven Candlesticks, seven Stars, seven Lamps, burning before the Throne of God, which are the seven spirits of God, seven Seals, and seven Angels with Trumpets, seven Angels having the seven last great plagues, These do set out the number seven, which applied to our Text's purpose, declares Fringe happy as well in the number, as in the children; God had not only more blessings than one but even seven in store for him, and those he had by his wife in a fourteen years' marriage, Now see the danger involved in this pleasure, the Priest had lost his Church income, and had contracted a charge which he probably knew not how to maintain: And that evil heart of his that made him to desert his Orders, and that by an imposition upon the Law as well as upon his own name and his seduced Witnesses Conscience, now tempts him to seek to support his pleasant life by Perfidy and Treason by which no man long advances himself. Guevara Horol. Princ. p. 94. Censuit justias fieri si inter perfectos Christi quam si inter perfectos Caesaris constitu●retur. Sidonius lib. 7. c. 12. For though God often blesses sincerity with the gain of greater blessings than men lose, to preserve it, as he did Valentinian, who hated by julian and discharged his trust in the Army because he was a Christian and retired to a private life, was upon Iulian's death in the Persian War chosen to be Emperor; yet he mostly recompenseth one successful sin with a sin of ruin: thus did he, the Priest here, after a fourteen years' prosperity. Demum de crimine laesae Majestatis in tuam celsitudinem. This Clause shows the just return of God on Fringe his falsehood; Mercy had a long time waited for Repentance, Eccles. ●. 11. but because judgement was not suddenly executed on this Sinner, therefore his heart was fully set to do evil; and that no ordinary one, but such an one as shall pay all the Arrears of his own and his other men's sins: That look as Montgomery (by being casually the cause of all the troubles in France which followed upon the death of Henry the Second of France, whom he unhappily killed running at Tournament with him) I say, as he was thought many years after punished therefore by being taken in Rebellion in Danfront, D. Avila p. 406. and by judgement of the Parliament of Paris executed as a Traitor: Pag. 818. And as Henry the Third of France, who caused the Duke of Guise to be murdered, was himself after murdered by Clement: And as Henry the Duke of Guise proud in the Excellency of his mind and body, so that he boastingly would swim in a strong currented River against the stream in his complete Armour, and all this to tell the World his strength; whose pride God punished his by permitting him to side with a Faction against the Crown, Pag. 753. which brought him to shame and to ruin: I say, as God was revenged of these men's former sins, by the latter punished, so was he with Fringe. Into a Treason he is led, and probably leads others, and by it is brought to a shameful End, and worthily and without pity; for Treason is as the sin of Witchcraft against the Law of Nature and Nations, Note this. a falsehood to the Pater Patria, who ought to be adored and defended. Treason, God himself very early punished in Lucifer and his Comrades, in Corah and his Company; neither did Heaven bear the one, or earth brook the other. And hence was it that of old Tribuni Sacrosanctum corpus attingere capitale fuit, for Treason is that which has so much horror involved in it, that it denudes a man of all Comforts, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. When one man rejoices in his family, Plutarch lib. De animi Tranquil. p. 469. another in his house, a third in his Wife, in his friends. This Treason rescinds all those, and dismantles him of all but sad thoughts and deep despairs, which makes all Nations to abhor it, that they think no punishments too dreadful for it; Crimen in hos (Vicarios Christi Reges) commissum proximum sacrilegio est. Ulpian. ad legem Jul. Majest. For it being a diminution of Majesty, for which cause (a) Tholossanus lib. 35. c. 1. & 22. Civilians call it Imminutae seu laesae Majestatis crimen, there is as much done by it as Malice can do to disarray the glorious Majesty of God, of that resemblance, of his sovereign power, which he hath clothed his Deputies Supreme Magistrates with, for the good of Mankind, and the preserving of Justice, Order, and every thing that is praise worthy amongst men. Hence comes it to pass that Treason being as much as in man is the defeat of these Glorious ends, is by all Nations and all Laws severely punished, Non tautum actor sed & conscius adjutor, Minister gladio puniatur. Corvinus Enchyrid. Juris. p. 679. not only with death in the Actors but in all the Counsellors, Abettors, or Concealours; and not only against them but against their Posterities, Families and Allies, all which for Treasons have been unfortuned, Tholoss. lib. 35. Syntagm. juris universi. Grimston in H. 4. Decianus Consult. 18. num. 315. Corvinus Instit. lib. 4. p. 678. banished, yea put to death, and that with all the exquisite torments imaginable; not only to tell men the horridness of the fact but to deter them from acting the like wickedness. Amongst us the Laws have ever been most severe against Treason, as that which is contra celsitudinem tuam, as the Text saith, against the life, Government and being of the sacred person of the King in the fixation of his Throne; and therefore accounted inter scelera jure humano inexpiabilia. Hence the Law of Canutus made it death and loss of all; so King Alfred confirmed the Law with many Additions c. 4. Inter leges Canuti c. 61. and so the common Law punished it with death, Si quis saluti Regis aut Domini sui insidias tetenderit, vita & rebus suis omnibus plectitor. Inter L. Canuti cap. 54. Edit. Twisd. loss of all both fortune and family. And because the crime was so deep died and contracted such a penalty of non-ultrality in this World, the Parliaments of all times have not only ascertained Treasons and given men definitions and characters of their consistencies, Bracton. lib. 3. fol. 11●. Britton. fol. 16. Fleta lib. 1. c. 21. 4 Instit. p. 5, c. 1. Glanvil. lib. 1. c. 2. l, 14. c. 1. (preventive of expositions that power may be tempted to make, and mischief in the committer● pretended ignorance of;) so that those consulted with, cannot but let men see their duty, and their danger, and leave them wholly causal of their dishonour and ruin if they observe them not: thus did the Parliament of 25 E. 3. in the Statute of Treasons, which Act made by that blessed Parliament, * Sir Edward Cook pleas Crown, c. Treason p. 2. for so 'tis called as it well deserved; not only for the many good Acts, but for this Law, For except it be Magna Charta, no other Act of Parliament hath had more honour given unto it by the King, Lords Spiritual and Temporal, and the Commons of the Realm. for the time being in full Parliament, than this Act concerning Treason hath had. For whereas in the Statute 21 R. 2. the twelve first Chapters of the Statutes of that Parliament were spent upon Inquiries and Treasons, according to various Opinions and Successes; by which, the 1 H. 4. c. 10. says, No man knew how to behave himself to do, speak or say, for doubt of such pains. Sess. prima. Those Statutes of 21 R. 2. were repealed, and Treason only stated according to the 25 E. 3. confirmed by 1 E. 6. c. 12. and 1 Mar. c. 1. which grave and gracious Statute of the 25 E. 3. was promoted by the renowned Judges then living; as were the Statutes of Confirmation, which Sir Edward Cook mentions, and I here from him, 3. Instit. Chap. Treasons p. 3. To the Honour of them, and of their Families and Posterities, who were not by those expressions of public spiritedness, more just to own their profound knowledge in the Laws, and merciful to their own Nation and Posterities, then to their Sovereign's Honour and his Crowns stability, Observe this well. in promoting the fair Lilies and Roses of the Crown to flourish, and not be stained by severe and sanguinary Statutes; For as much as the State of every King, Ruler, and Governor of any Realm, Dominion, or Commonalty, standeth and consisteth more assured by the love and favour of the Subject towards their Sovereign Ruler and Governor, then in the dread and fear of Laws made with rigorous pains and extreme punishment for not obeying of their Sovereign Ruler and Governor: In the Preamble these are the words of the Stat. 1 Mariae sess. 1. The consideration of which, as it induced our Kings in their Parliaments to make no more things Treason, then necessarily were such to be, and as such to be punished; the particulars whereof are in a great measure specified in the Statute of the 25 E. 3. which Statute is so commentaryed upon by Sir Edw. Cook, 3 Instit. pleas of the Crown, chap. Treason. Tholossanus Syntagm. Juris lib. 35. that I refer the Reader to him, who as to those things doth give abundant light to the understanding of the Statute; the particulars of which are for a great part Treason by the Law Civil; yet have there been additional Laws to make offences Treasons, which by that Statute I think would not have been, for that did but declare what the common Law was, and what they discovered then necessary to be made Treason; but it was never intended to be the universal Standard of Treason, since that Parliament which made it, knew well there would be the same power in subsequent Parliaments that was in the present one, and they reasonably might, and prudently aught to employ that power of theirs to the provision for all emergency, as well of Treason as misprision of Treason, as in 1 and 2 Phil. and Mary c. 9, 10. 5. Eliz. 11. 14 Eliz. c. 3. 18 Eliz. c. 1. 13 Eliz. c. 1. 5 Eliz. c. 1. 23 Eliz. c. 1. 27 Eliz. c. 1. 3 Instit. chap. Treasons c. 1. these and other like Acts declare Treasons as occasion shall be; which makes good, that Treasons being high offences are not left at large to be vagely expounded, but when any Treason is not within the 25 E. 3. or subsequent Acts unrepealed (unless by common Law it be) no Treason I think aught it to be accounted, although I know sometimes power (though Quo warranto God only can question, Dion. Cass. lib. 67, p. 765. De Mesio Pompusiano. Ecçe serenissimus Dominus Imperator fieri simiam Leonem jussit; & quidem provisione illius vocari potest, fieri autem Leo non potest. Sanctus Gregor. in Regest. lib. 1. Ep. 5. who is paramount power) makes that called Treason, which is not so really; but as the King of Navarre told Henry the Third of France when the Pope had excommunicated him (about the Duke of Guise, and the Catholics cause, as they were called) and complained of the Pope's violence against him; D. Avila. p. 811 O Sir, said he, let your Majesty endeavour to conquer, and be assured the Censures shall be revoked; but if we be overcome, we shall all die condemned Heretics. According to this calculate, I say, power has ever in the world made strange Treasons, witness the late Declarations of that Nature, which England these 700. Scobel's Collections, 2 part. fol. 3. 7. 15. 175. 372. years never heard or read the like of, that by name of january, black and blue, fatal january 1648. c. 4.16. that of july, 1649. c. 44. that of August, 1651. c. 14. that of September, 1656. c. 3. these were Declarations of Treasons, not known in Books before, nor according to the Books I read in more majorum authorized: but to this our Text has no respect, for the laesae Majestatis in it was in tuam celfitudinem, not only against a single person, but the best, or at least second best of persons in England; if not against the King himself, yet against him, whom our Chancellor thought the Heir-apparent to the Crown. For truly when, or where this Treason was committed, or in what manner, I am altogether ignorant; though the word conjuratò makes me believe it to be by treachery and secret practice, either to betray his Prince or reveal his Counsels; it probably being not recorded, at least in History, as I before wrote: but sure that it was our Chancellour's Authority gives me undoubtingly to believe, and that the judgement was according to Law, upon either his Confession or proof by Witnesses; for the Text says, he was conjuratò convictus, which I conceive he could not have been but by trial and judgement upon it: since (the rule of Law says Res non ideò vera est, Reg. Juris. quia asseritur, sed quia probatur,) which being done modo & forma, he remains an infamous Traitor, and so adjudged to shame and death, yea to shame after death, the Quarters of whom are Monuments of terror to all such Successors in Treachery: For surely he must be seduced by Satan and his own evil heart, who can be treacherous to a King of England, who governs by the settled Laws of his Kingdoms, Eicon Basilic. c. 27. In his advice to the then Pr. of Wales now our most gracious Sovereign. Which are (said the wisest and worthiest of Kings and Men of his time) the most Excellent Rules you can govern by, which by an admirable temperament give very much to Subject's Industry, Liberty, and Happiness; and yet reserve enough to the Majesty and Prerogative of any King who owns his people as Subjects, not as Slaves; whose Subjection as it preserves their property, peace, and safety: so it will never diminish your Rights nor their ingenuous Liberty, which consists in the enjoyment of the fruits of their industry and the benefit of those Laws, to which themselves have consented. I say, who dare be treacherous to such a King, deserves the severity of the Law as Fringe here had; who Foxlike dealt under ground, and, privily conspiring against his Sovereign, was conjurato convictus, and put to death therefore. And now it behoves his disguise to be taken off, and him nakedly to appear what indeed he was, who had masked so many vices hitherto under the covert of Religion and the gravity of his profession; and he having but a Moment (as it were) to live, in ipso mortis articulo, when the abjuments to his dispatch were sitting, josh. 7.19. than he follows the Prophet's counsel to Achan, Confesses his sin and gives glory to God; in not biting in the lip, but openly publishing, that not only as a Traitor he now died: but that God had brought this guilt on him to shame his former prevarications, and to display his occult desultoryness and theatrique personation of what he was not: Seneca, Ep. 31. And he that should have followed the Moralists Advice; subsilire ad coelum ex angulo; though he failed in that, yet did exsurgere modo, & se Deo dignum fingere. Now outcomes Confession, the second best thing to innocence, and he penitently acknowledges that he did suborn Witnesses to depose his Contract with the woman he married; whereas there was no such thing in truth, but that he did it to procure his legal release from his religious Calling and severe single life. O how happy are afflictions and deaths to those who by them are made penitent sinners! how great cause have God's jonahs' to bliss God for a storm, Illud pracipue salutem impedit quod cit● nobis placemus; ideo mutari nolumus quia nos optimos ●sse credimus. Senec. ●p. 69. M. Antoninus' Edit. Gatakeri, p. 378. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. loco praecitat. Lib. 6. Ep. 13. and a Sea, and a Whale to swallow them, to prevent the swallow of the bottomless pit? How merciful is God to men in love with themselves when prosperous, bringing them to see themselves miserable and to look for a better State above themselves. O 'tis happy when afflictions are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the discipline and exercises of virtue and goodness; when men by them are, as that Laconian said Children were by teacking them, made more accustomed to and more delighted with virtue; when God by them brings our sins to remembrance which we had forgotten, and which we would have stifled and buried till we had for them been buried in the pit out of which there is no redemption; thus benign was God to our Priest here, who was sub temporaria gravitate, vel potius sub gravitatis imitatione, as Pliny's words are; and seemed to deserve some praise for his faithfulness in performing his troth to his Mistress, which is the part of an honest man; nor is any man just or worthy that does it not (I mean not to a Mistress of pleasure as Gallants call them (for they neither keep nor deserve to have faith kept to them (but of virtue in order to a Wise) who so, I say, to these keeps not faith, will have it one way or other punished notably; as Fringe had for those sins which were as bad as bad could be, contriving a lie, suborning Witnesses to depose it, Apostasy (as it were) from his order and habit (for God accounts Fringe a voluntary desertor, not under compulsion of Canon because he contrived his own degradation, and the Law was as to that blameless) and what makes all the rest appear? Treason: which had it not been, and by it death, the Priest would probably have not at all confessed this his sin, or not so publicly and so amply as he did; but God that saw in secret did reward him openly, not in the sense those words were uttered but in the sense they w●re threatened against David's sin, 2 Sam. 12.12. Thou didst it secretly, but I will do this thing before all Israel and before the Sun. By which God made Fringe conspicuous in the penance of his death, who was not so in the innocence of his life; so true is that of the Emperor Antoninus, Though the Cedar be lofty and beautiful to behold, yet the coal thereof is nothing the whiter for it; Licèt Cedrus alta & pulchra sit, nihilo praeterea candidior est illius carbo; & licèt ilex humilis deformisque sit, nihilo propterca nigrior est illius cinis; saepe Deorum pormissu honoratiora sint ossa pauperis Philosophi, qui vitam duriter egit quam Principum qui delicatissime vixère. Marc. Anton. in Epistola ad Egelippum Nepotem. and though the flint be vile and underfoot, yet the dust of it is nothing the blacker for it; often God makes the dissolution of mean men, Who are bred hard and live nearly, more signal and remarkable then that of Princes, who feed high lie soft, and are full of pleasures, thus that Emperor. From which notable example of Fringe, we should all learn to make our lives referential to our ends, and to do nothing in health, prosperity and life, Certus sum. ei qui'in vit● nulli hominum male fecit in morte Deos neutiquans malefacturos. Cuev. in Horol. Princ. which shall upbraid us in sickness, distress, or death. For as dying Bruxillus comsorted himself, Sure I am, saith he, to him, that in life has done no injury to men, the Gods will not be unkind at his death, Psal. 118.14. Psal. 16.5. Psal. 37.4. Psal. 22.11. that is in Scripture-phrase, He that has made God his song, his portion, and his delight, in this house of his Pilgrimage, will find him not far off when trouble is near and there is none to help him. And so I leave the consideration of Fringe. Qualiter & sape per verti judicia, faelsorum testiam medio, etiam sub optimis judicibus, non est tibi inauditum nec in●ognitum mundo, dum soelus illud (proh dolour) creberrime committatur. These words are the conclusive deduction from the Premises by which the Chancellor is not to be understood to lay blame on the Law-Civil, which allows deposition of Witnesses, to cast causes, and rules Judges to sentence according to them; though they be, as in the prealleged Cases, never so unjust and perjurious: but serves only to commend those Laws most, where the greatest care is expressed to prevent them; which though the wit of man cannot do, without the Grace of God restrain; yet there is most probability of obviating it, where the severest scrutiny is of the Witnesses, and the most material Exceptions to invalidate them allowed: which for as much as the Civil Laws do their part in the Empire, and the Common and Statute Law performs its part here; there is no cause to charge either of them for the Mischief of ill Accidents in their respective Orbs. God has condemned all under Sin, and under the fatal effects of it; and Errors will fall out sub optimis judicibus. No Magistrate so holy and wise, no Law so severe and punctual, but may be deflowered with evil men and evil practices under them; Non est tibi incognitum, nec incognitum mundo, says the Text, with regard to the Community, and so not to be wondered at appearance of such Monsters. All that rests to good men is, to take heed of their Ways, that they ●ffend not with their Tongues, and to hate every evil way and work; which is the sense of proh dolour:] and to have the Motto of the Family of Momorancy fiducially in their eyes, D. Avila p. 12. Deus primùm Christianum servet, which the Wiseman translates into other words to the same sense, Acquaint now thyself with God, and be at peace, so shall God come unto thee; and thus if they be guarded, They shall not need to fear in the evil day: Nor shall the Sons of Violence do them harm: but that God, whom they serve, will not reward them with disfavour, as Henry the Third of France did his old, noble, and wise Marshal Momorancy, whom he removed from Court, because he pretended he knew not how better to reward for his great Merits, then with easing him of the trouble and toil of Affairs; Psal. 91.11. Esay. 26.3. Prov. 15.15. but he will keep him in all his ways, in perfect peace; which is the portion only of those, whose hearts are stayed on God; who, to his, is the only continual Feast in life, and after, receives his to Glory: where, to praise him shall be their Delight, and to enjoy him their Eternity. And so we conclude this Chapter. Chap. XXII Non igitur contenta est Lex Franciae in criminalibus, ubi mors imminet, reum testibus convincere, ne falsi dicorum testimonio sanguis innocens condemnetur. Sed mavult Lex ista reos tales torturis cruciari, etc. HEre the Chancellor takes off the asperity of some Civilians against the proceedings of the Common-Law by Juryes as well as Witnesses, upon consideration that even France, where the Civil-Law is the National Law; yet does allow the Rack to prevent false witness in criminal Causes, which is besides the ordinary Prescript of the Civil Law; whereby deposition of Witnesses is only allowed to Conviction. Nor surely is it amiss that Laws should be framed according to the Natures of the people over which they have influence, but very prudent and just it should be so; yea inconsistent it would be if it were otherwise. For as all people have clothes, Tortura quantitas & qualitas statuetur seoundum morum regionum. Tholosl. Syntag. Juris universi, lib. 48, c. 12. ss. 25. diet, pleasures, company, and all enterprises, means, and instruments peculiar to them; so have Kingdoms exercise of Legislation according to the Vices and Virtues regnant in them. And as there was reason that led our Ancestors to try matters of Fact by Juryes; so was there no doubt like reason in France for the use of the Rack, not only the Purgatory, but the Hell to torture falsehood, and by confession of latent mischiefs to prevent innocent bloodshedding. For though we in England have a Rule Nemo tenetur seipsum accusare, and in Judgement of Law he is no offender that is not proved such; yet in France, because perjury hath brought many to death that have not deserved it, but only had a charge from malevolence, and the effect of it, At in Gallia promiscuè omnes cujuscunque dignitatis & nobilitatis fuerint cum luculentioribus delicti indiciis torquentur si indic●a duorum idoneorum testium fide constent. Imbertus lib. 3. Instit. Tholoff. lib. 48. lib. 12. ss, 24. subornation of Witnesses: Therefore the Law is there, that if a man be criminally accused, the bare depositions against him shall not condemn him, unless he himself confess the fact either voluntarily without compulsion or terror; or upon the Rack applied to him. Imbertus, and Tholossanus after him allow this the Law in France, and without this, Non contenta est Lex Francia, says the Text. For since the end of torture is punishment for indagation of the truth, it is thought fit there to do it by this means, which is Quinquepartite, and consists 1. of threats of Racking. 2. In leading to the place of Torment. 3. unclothing and binding the Party. 4. Lifting him up upon the Rack. Lastly, Adding weights to his feet, etc. These and Circumstances of them, the French Civilians abound with; and this the Law of France does, as not finding the proof by Witnesses (who may be suborned or maliciously acted) the very infallible way to discover truth and prevent innocent bloodshedding? and though by the common Rules of Law even Racks and Torments are not allowed in certain Cases; yet even in them Cases the practice of France enfranchises it, and the reason is, Quia interest Reipublica delicta manifesta esse, & detegi ut puniantur; and this is no new Law, Idem eodem loco ff. 32. ad sinem. for the Author adds, Atque ita majorum more inductum est, ut delicta quae clam committuntur semotis Testibus per tormenta appareant. Reum Testibus convincere.] Witnesses ought to be by all Laws, and without them no conviction ordinarily lies; now the person to be convicted by them the Text terms Reus. The Greeks called this: 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; Fatetur facinus qui judicium fugit. Reg. Juris. whence our Common-Law has the practice to charge the Inquest upon criminal and capital Offenders, Ye shall inquire whether he stead for it, since (a) fuga praesupponit reatum: (a) Reg. Juris. the Civil-Lawes by Reus understand the same thing in Qui accusantur Rei criminis, qui conveniuntur Rei, that is in Tully's words, Rei sunt dicti quorum res agitur; and so again 4. De Orat. Reos autem appello, 2 De Oratore. non eos modo qui arguuntar, sed omnes quorum de re disceptatur; and Tholossanus when he makes Reus to be a Relative term, Syntagm Juris universi, lib. 24. c. 2. ff. 2. understands judgement at Law to consist of three parties, the Actor, the Judge, Lib. 22. ad Edict. Text. Digest. lib. 12. Tit. 2. p. 127. the criminal person, that is Reus. Thus Ulpian, Eum cum quo agetur, (a) Lib. 23. Tit. 2. p. 2112. Reuss] Gloss. accipere debemus ipsum Reum; and the Gloss on (a) Ulpian, lib. 3. ad L. juliam & Pap. makes Reus Accusatus. So then the sense is, that whoever is accused of a Crime which forfeits his life and Estate, must be convicted of it by solid proofs of two Witnesses, or by confession or flight. So is the Law of God, so the Common-Law, and no new courses has the Government of England ever introduced; for if any one guilty of Treason, be slain in it and cannot be brought to Trial, which is, Testibus convinci;] the course is to attaint him by Act of Parliament: so was it in Hin. 6. time, Stat. 29. c. 1. whereby jack Gade was attainted; and so has it been deservedly often since. So that though our Common or Statute-Law has not, thanks be to God, our Kings, and Parliaments, enfranchised and made legal the odious torture of the Rack to discover Conspiracy or secret Villainy by; though perhaps in some high Cases, and upon supposition of Martial Exigencies, high punishments such as the Rack either threatened or executed has been used: yet has it a very grievous punishment for Conspiracy, and that by a Writ of Conspiracy, and an Indictment at the suit of the King; 3 Instit. c. 66. Of Conspiracy. the manner, punishment, and extent of it, Sir Edward Cook sets forth. But the Law of France is not contented, saith our Text, to take this accusation of Witnesses for infallible, therefore mavult Lex illa tales Torturis cruciari, Neque pertinaces, neque nimium timidi unquam, vel vix verum fateantur. Tholoss. lib. 48. c, 12. ff. 6. which choice of France, thus to subjoin Tortures to come to the discovery of truth, yet for all them, is fallible, and the Trials of them to be eluded. For since they are to join with presumptions and so far are only practicable in France, severed from them tortures must not be, and the reason is, Quia ex praesumptionibus solis nemo damnandus est capitaliter. Which considered, though the Tortures in France may be intended to search out truth and secure innocence, yet are they no otherways available thereto, than other milder courses are with us. Truth depends on God, and if he do not lighten men into the discoveries of it by an extraordinary sagacity, and open the dark cells and vaults of its recess by his co-operations with men's endeavours, violence will do little. How many do we read in story whom tortures worked not upon to declare what they knew of Secrecy, by name Leaena Aristogiton's Mistress; Chariton and Menalippus; Polyaenus lib 8. Valer. Max. lib. 3. c. 3. Egnatius lib. 8. c. 4. Val. lib. 8. c. 4. Theodorus, whom Jerome the Tyrant of Syracuse so in vain tortured; Anaxarchus, Aretaphila, Alexander, Fannius his Servant; Philip Servant to Fulvius Flaccus; the Servants of Mark Anthony and Plotinus Plancus; that famous Mother Lygus, whom Tacitus mentions as despising death to conceal her Son; that woman Hector Ephicaris, privy to the Pisonian Conspiracy against Nero; Quintilia, Polyaenus lib. 8. privy to the Conspiracy against Caligula; that famous Servant in Spain, whose Master being slain by Hasdr●bal the Carthaginian, he on Hasdrubal revenged by killing him, and when he was tormented, ridens, gestiensque laetitiâ, in medio dolore expiravit; Fulgosus lib. 3. c. 3. add to these Bonetus of Verona, Bardilo, Viucentinus, Pontanus lib. 2. c. 7. De Fonitud. Domestica. Vincentinus, that Servant of Mauritius whom Pontanus writes of: these and many other like Examples may be produced of the ineffectuality of torments. That cursed Raviliack, who had the exquisitest torments that art and severity could invent, acted on him to make him confess his Companions; yet confessed nothing, but that he was instigated to it by the Devil. For Sin is of an obdurating nature, and he that has been so wicked as to design, is not often terrified by punishment from acting it; Conscience indeed may work much towards confession, but death and tortures work often nothing, which surely is one cause (besides the Christianity that is expressed in avoiding inhuman torments) that the Law of England, Serres in life H. 4. Lib. 3. fol. 105, & 137. though it allows Prisons ad detinendos, non ad puniendos, as Bracton's words are; yet it allows not Prisoners in them to be durely used, not to be bound in shackles, nor to be beaten: for whatsoever is of pain to prisoners, other then to keep them from escape or mutiny, is criminal in a Gaoler: And therefore there is no present Law, that I know, to warrant tortures ordinarily in England, nor, saith Sir Edward Cook, can they be justified by any prescription being so lately brought in, Cook pleas of the Cro●n p. 35.91. and never heard of with us till 26 H. 6. when john Holland Earl of Huntingdon, and Duke of Exeter, being Constable of the Tower, brought it in; but to little purpose; for it never had, as by Warrant of the Common or Statute-Law, place (God be thanked) here; for it was a new punishment here, and such Tholossanus says, Syntagm. Juris universi lib. 42. c. 12. ss. 25. Fox Acts and Monuments. p. 1512, 1516, 1536. Quae magis ad Carnifices immanes, quam ad Christianos judices pertinent; and as the Holy Martyrs found inhumanely exercised upon them in Queen Mary's days, when their hands were burned off, and their bodies abused, not by Order, nor according to Common, or Statute but upon some pretence of Canon-Law; the which I the rather note to show the happiness of the Reformation, which determined cruelty of persecution to death simply for opinion, (except it be for Heresy within the Statute of 1 Eliz.) and leaves men secure from that while they are not Traitors, Heady, high minded, Lovers of Pleasures more than Lovers of God. And if the Statute of 1 & 2 P. & Mary, c. 3. called by a great name A dangerous Act, Sir Edward Cook 3 Instit. p. 218. chap. 101. was but a probationer to the 4 & 5 of the same Reign; and then only to continue to the end of the next Parliament: which being the 1 Eliz. was by that confirmed to Queen Eliz, and to the Heirs of her body, which failing, This Act hath lost its force as, saith the aforesaid Author, it was well-worthy. I say, If the Nation were so sparing to endanger one Limb of a Subject, how much care did they intend to express to the whole body, which the Rack disjoints: but of the care of our Government, 3 Institutes chap. 101. Of Executions and judgements. to exclude Foreiners greatness, and foreign Customs hence, read Sir Edward Cook, and the Statute 4 jac. c. 1. about Trials of Scotchmen and Englishmen. In all which this mavult Lex illa reos Torturis cruciari, is, as I humbly conceive, by the Law of England left out of its Allowance and remains purely French. Quousque ipsi corum reatum confiteantur.] This is one end of the Rack, that they, that are accused, may be brought to Confession; that is, that they may make that known which is strongly suspected and sworn against them: not that Confession in torture presently makes a proof, Tholoff. Syntag. Juris. lib. 48. c. 12. ff. 26. for that it does not, nisi reus ratificet eandem à tortura remotus, in juris auditorio, as the Doctors say, ídque expresse apud acta extra carceres & tormenta; and if he shall deny what he is accused of, the first and second time, and that a day after every of their torments, when he is in cool blood; then the third time he denying is absolved, nè in infinitum procedatur ad Tormenta; for thus suffering and denying his guilt, videtur purgâsse indicia: so that the Law of France, in requiring Confession by so terrible punishments, supposes there is something to confess; and it may be feared to press some by terror to confess that against themselves, (to please the Judge or the State by whom they are prosecuted) which never was in thought or intendment. And thus that danger which tortures are intended to prevent, may be incurred, Passiones iniqua! What more such then base fear, and what subornationes ad perjurium are there more dangerous than Revenge and Reward, to conceal others by accusing a man's self: these may be, and have been; notwithstanding Confessions on Racks, and have been as injurious as per jurious Witnesses; and therefore our Law here, though it had purgations by Ordeal and Battle; yet because they were cruel, and God did not ever, for reasons best known to himself, determine Innocence and Gild by the Events of them; but that many innocent persons perished when nocent ones escaped by them: therefore has the Law obsoleted them now. And where Offenders are not by clear evidence cast, there they are not to be sentenced and executed; notwithstanding which favour of the Law, as few great Offenders in England lie hid, and avoid their deserved punishment, as in any part of the World. Quali cautione atque astutia, criminosi etiam & de criminibus suspecti, tot Torturarum in regno illo generibus affliguntur, quod fastidet calamus ea literis designare. Quali cautione atque astutia.] This is brought in to show the formale internum, of Laws penal and provisional, wisdoms forms them with such wariness, as that theremedy shall neither prove the disease, nor shall the Probe be too short for the bottom search of the wound; but there shall be every grain of virtue and vigour that is necessary to the effection of its intendment. And thus composed Laws are worthy their name, Omnino omnium horum vitiorum, aetque incommodorum una cautio est, atque una pro visio; ut ne nimis cito deligere incipiamus, neve von dignos. Ad Attic lib. 1. 14. 11. and operative to their end. Hence cautio is ranked with provisio by Twy; and astutia coming from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the old word for a City, in which men are made wise and wary by experience and conversation. Our Text predicates these endowments of the Law even of France in the case of Racks, which no doubt but were invented by the wisdom of worldly men to carry on their Terror over their treacherous Subjects; whom they can punish, if either they really be guilty, or be only suspected to be guilty: for so the Text says. Criminosi vel de criminibus suspecti.] These tortures are appointed for both parties, whether they are actually or suspectedly criminous; the former of which are called criminosi euphatiquely; for words terminating in osus have an import of augmentation, Ebriosus, gulosus, famosus, bellicosus, formosus, furiosus, imperiosus, seditiosus, so Tully uses it: and when Bonosus the Emperor is defamed by the Historian, Hic Tribunus plebis, modestus, prudens, non modo non seditiosus, sed & seditiosts adversarius; ille antem a●erbus, criminosus, popularis homo 〈◊〉 turbulentus. Cic. pro Cluentio. 75. as one born ut bibat, non ut vivat, there is somewhat of Analogy hereto intimated; it being part of the Triumph of Wit's liberty to express the grandeur of things by words of altess, which, having a sharpness of accent and syllabique pomp, are understood either expressive of excellent virtue, A. Gellius. lib. 4. c. 9 & 10. or execrable vice: so that our Text by criminosus intends a noted Offender, patens crimen; and as it were fine teste probatum, whose guilt is not so much necessitatis as voluntatis; not such, because he cannot avoid it, as he will not, because he being wicked delights in wickedness, to whom it is a second nature, and that which gratifies him. Such pride some men take in their combustible and sinful humours, that they cannot account themselves happy, but when they are in some criminal singularity; like our Proto-Brownist Master Brown, who made so little account of his Schism from the Church, that he would glory He had been in 32 Prisons, in some of which be could not see his hand at Noonday; Fullet's Church History 2 part. p. 16●. yea when he was above eighty years old, his obstinacy is said to be such, that for breach of the peace he was committed to Northampton-Goal, wherein he died, but this by the way: that which I mainly note is, that criminosus here in our Text is such an Offender as is willingly and designedly a breaker of the Law and that with obstinacy. Et de criminibus suspecti] These incur the Rack too; for there being in the Law vehementia indicia, which are, Tormenta fine presumptions non sunt instigenda. Gratian. Decret. secunda parte. Caus. 1. qu. 1. c. 10. though not full proofs, yet seconds to it; they are therefore said to draw a man into question, In criminibus serutandes quastio adhiberi solet. Tholoss. lib. 48. Tit. 1●. De Quaetionibus. Art. 1. Gen. 4.9. because in canvas of crimes, questions are propounded for them to answer, and just it is that before men be punished they should be examined: God precedents this in his question to Cain, Where saith he is thy Brother Abel? And reason dictates this Method. For since there may be offences dangerous though indiscernible, there must not only be a study of not being openly guilty, but of avoiding whatever may justly give suspicion; for of all things suspicion is the most prying and cankerons encumbrance; 'tis a fruit of envy, tenerity, subtlety, and hatred amassed, and it has all the spawn and venom of them in it; it in Ely made Hannah a deboist lewd woman, Crimen, falsa suspicio. Donatus in Virgil. 11 Aen. who was a vehement Zealot, and who in the bitterness of her soul begged of God his own Glory in a blessing to herself. Suspicion is crime enough, as good before men be guilty, as suspected so to be; only in * Nullum tormentum conscientia majus est, illa incellumi hac externa despicite, intra te est consolator tuus. Petrarcha in Dialog. 65. De Tormentis. Tunc demum ad torturam deveniendum est. cum suspectus e● rens, & cum multis argumentis urgetur. F. Pegna Scholar 11●. in tertiam partem Directorii Inquisit. lib. 2. p. 22●. Edit. Eimerici. Impress. Romae, 1528. 1 pensieri stretti & il viso sciolto. Sir Henry Wotton's Elements Architecture. p. 396. Of his Works. Conscience suspicion without ground finds Relief. Much suspected may be, Nothing proved can be, was the Motto of our Virgin Queen when she was enough, and more than she deserved, suspected; but God cleared her innocence: and so will do if men walk circumspectly, keep good company and good hours, use moderate pleasures and live in moderate expenses. That in fine will best secure from suspicion which comes nearest to Albertus Scipioni his stage Advice for Travel, Your thoughts close and your countenance loose, will go safely over the whole World; that is, keep a good tongue, and an unbusie spirit, and suspicion of crime will be a non ens. Tot Torturarum in regno illo generibus affliguntar, quod fastidit calamus ea literis designare. This the Chancellor adds, not to raise a wonder that offences should be variously punished in different places and Nations; Eadem scolera in diversis Provinciis gravius plectuntur, et in Africa nessium incensores, in Mysia vitium. Ulpianus apud Digest. lib. 48. c. 16. Text. Guido De Suzaria. Tract, De Tortuza cum notis Bolognini. for nothing is more ordinary and convenient than that it so should be: but to evidence that the French as they are a very ingenious and nimble fancied Nation, so do they express it in all things that they do either of word or Action. And indeed, as I am not ashamed to own my disaffection to their fashions, P. Pettae De Castro. Tract. De Tonuris. much as I humbly conceive to the dishonour of our pristine Gravity introduced amongst us, and to the waste of our wealth which was wont to be expended on hospitality, and now is lavished in toyish baubles and airy nothings; so is our Chancellor as much out of love with their Method of discovering truth in cases of great consequence and of latent nature; though it is said they are intended not to explorate cruelty, but to penetrate truth and to avoid all danger by malevolence. For since reason supposes a man will not willingly, if at all, affect himself to be guilty of what he is not, Fr. Pegna Scholar 118. in tertiam pa●tem Directorii. Inqulsit. lib. 3. p. 225. authore Eymerico, Impres. Romae An. 1578. the Canon Law (for I suppose it first to allow tortures) enjoins that where vehement suspicions are, & the Indicia are proved by two Witnesses, there, if the accused party will not confess, racked he must be; because by his obsticunning, the fact can be no otherway proved; for torture is subsidium quoddam extremum ad inveniendum veritatem; and where any other way can be taken to discover, torture is not to be used; and wherever the contrary is, the learned Spaniard says, 'tis De consuetudine sanguinariorum hominum. And this to prevent, I humbly conceive to be the cause why the Law of England is so sparing to leave any thing to discretion in punishments, because men are so apt to prefer passion before Justice; therefore are all opportunities of passion rescinded and the positive Law is prescribed, which the Reverend Judges do observe precisely; and were it otherwise, that inconvenience might be with us that is abroad, where much of judgement is arbitrary; for though in the Civil and Canon Law the Rules are strait enough, Pldem eodem loco. .226, 229. That no man is to be tortured when there is other proof; only by Report no man is to be tormented; that the Indicia ought to be proved by two Witnesses; that only fame is not sufficient to bring a man to torture, except the man be of ill life, ill belief, and ill conversation, etc. Yet because in these Cases the Judge is to determine, nothing is more usual then to act something like cruelty under the pretence of Justice. And therefore though all Doctors agree, that in case of Treason, ubi criminaliter non potest probari, tortures are necessary, Gratian. Decret. parte secunda Causa 159. c. 6. gloss. 1. p. 1079. and no person is exempt and privileged therefrom; and the like in Heresy: yet do even they who are most for it conclude, that they must be by wont and known Tortures, which Grillandus and julius Clarus make five in number, Pegna loco praecitato. and Marsilius improves to fourteen, and boasts he had invented another per somni substractionem: Dicam quod sentio, hactractatio de novis tormentis excogitandis; carnisicum est potius crudelium quam jureconsultorum & Theologorum. Loco pracitato. but Pegna so far abhors this wicked ingenuity, that he parley says, That Invention of cruel Tortures to afflict men by, is rather the work of Hangmen and Cannibals, then of Lawyers and Divines; which calls to my mind a speech of that mild Spanish Father Alfonsus, Confessor to King Philip; who, when he saw the Protestants so hurried to the flames for their Religion, professed, Purpurensthic imber monstrosos producit foetus. All which considered, though France do abound in various Tortures, such and so many as is tedious to rehearse, and troublesome to think upon; yet blessed be God these tortures are restrained to that Country. For in Arragon (Pegna's noble Country, & semper Catholice regno, as his words are) torture cannot be inflicted by the Judge, but only in Case of Heresy; nor in England, so far as I can find, can any man suffer death upon religious accounts but in case of Heresy upon the Statute of Eliz, 1. which Heresy is also there limited to prevent the danger of misinterpretation. And though with us we have many different punishments for Felonies, as Infalistatus a Felon was at Dover, Selden notes on Hengham. p. 153. 154. Hengham parva, c. 3. p 87. Demembratus of his eyes and stories at Winchester & Wallingford, at Southampton drowned, at Northampton, beheaded (and so I think at Hull and Halyfax, the suddeness of which gave occasion to that speech, From Hell, Hull, and Halyfax, Good Lord deliver us,) and so in sundry other places; yet have we no such tortures for Malefactors as France has. For such the tenderhearted Chancellor, who had long attended his noble Prince and his hard misfortunes there, knew the tortures to be, so various in their number, and acute in their nature, that he says plainly, Fastidit calamus literis designare; Am fastidit a●●●● Ovid. 〈◊〉 alium, si in his fastidit Alexis. Virgil. in Bucol. that is, he thinks it pity to propagate the memory of them, and refuses to give them the honour of aught, but his abhorrence; for fastidire is as much as recusare: and the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which he uses to express his mind 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by, tells us, that his stomach rose much against them, and his tender soul did penance, while he remembered what dreadful accounts the Engineers, that invented them were to make to God. I confess 'twas a most hellish, execrable, monstrous, unpardonable Parricide, that Raviliack committed on that brave and puissant King H. 4. and no torment was great and grievous enough for it; but yet to read the Narrative of it, Serres in his life. is a terrible torture to a meek and merciful spirit: and the tortures that james the Grand-Master of the Templars in France was put to, when they tormented him to death by peice-meales to make him confess such things against the Order (which they had a mind to extinguish) as they were in no sort guilty of, Paulus Aemilius in vita Philippi Pulchri. which he confessed he did to be rid of the pains, and in hope of life, though he craved God and his Order pardon therefore. These, Shutes Hist. Venice. p. 287. I say, are great tortures; so also were those that the Venetians executed upon Calerio, assassin to the Venetian Gentlemen in Candy, who being by the Venetians taken, was thrown down from the top of the Palace on swords points; and Mossolerico his brother, being convicted for sending Letters into Milan; while besieged by the Venetians, was with two Priests confederate with him put alive into the ground between the two Columns with their heads downwards. But yet these are such as France affords, for so in the particulars it follows. Quidam in Equuleis extenduntur.] This is one of the kind of tortures France has, and a grievous one it is. The extension of the body on a wooden Horse, on which the hands and feet are so fastened and the body stressed with weights, that as it follows, Eorum rumpuntur nervi & venae in sanguinis fluenta prorumpunt, Haec etiam in Equuleum conjiciuntur, quo vita non aspirat beata. S. Tuscul. 19 this was a Heathen Roman punishment, Tully mentions it: Of kin also it is to the Rota or breaking on the Wheel, which the Germans of old used. Of these punishments that is true which the Historian says of the extraordinary punishment of Metius Suffetius drawn in pieces with wild Horses, I●ud veluti immite praeterque Legum immanitatem, in exemplum deductum non est, Al. ab Alexand. lib. 3. c. 5. which is the reason, I suppose, I find no mention of it in the Digest, either in the Title Quaest or poenarum. From which acuteness of the pain and rape of the violence of this torture, Lib. 49. c. 11, 19 our Text's says, Rumpuntur Nervi, that is, that is, it breaks in upon the main Battalia of the body, and that it must do by a violence of assault, and a not to be resisted force; Galen. lib. De Motu Musculorum, ad initium. for the Nerves which the Greek, call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nutare vel flectere, are the motive instruments of the body, of a spermatique and bloudless substance, endowed with sense and motion; and therefore as the Arteries and veins, Lib. 1. De Elementis. so the nerves are reckoned, Inter prima & simplicissima elementa humani corporis; and so available are the Nerves, that by them are expressed the most necessary furtherances to motion. Hence it is that Galen by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 understands not only that genus totum, quod à cerebro & spinali medulla est, or that which arises out of the Muscles, and by Hypocrates is called the Tenon; but also that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Ligament which Physicians call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Lib. 15. De usu partium. the binding or holding together Nerve, which having according to the old Philosophy its Rise from the heart; or as the later Anatomysts refer it to the brain; from either whereof, as the noblest parts of life, is argued, the Nerve to be a choice instrument: and this the learned understanding so, express every thing of excellency by it, as the Notes on our thirteenth Chapter do declare. So then the Text by this rumpuntur nervi,] understands a total subversion of nature, such a Rout in the Microcosm as is unrallyable, and with Sampson's strain of strength, carries the foundation from underpropping the superstructure, that which disseises life and enters death as a forcible Possesser, & vena in sanguinis fluenta prorumpunt,] that is, by a breach of those china ampuls in which are the liquids of life reposed, not only their wont circulation is impeded, but all its spirits evaporated and substance lost. Fluentum signifiing a small River, and the blood being by breaking of the veins, which are tenuous and lucid, moved, all the contents of them flow out; and that is true of job, We are all as water spilt upon the ground, that cannot be gathered up again. Quorundam vero, diversorum ponderum pendulis dissolvuntur compagines & junctura. This is another kind of Torture, that of disjointing the body, and that by Weights which are too heavy for the joints to bear up, by the weight of which the body is torn a pieces. Alex. ab. Alex. b. 3. c 5, This is worse than that punishment in Aethiopia, where those that are criminous, are forced to drink the Herb Ophiusa, Ophiusta, or Ophinea, which will so terrify the mind of those that take it, and present to them such terrible views of things, that they shall choose rather to make themselves away then endure it. Or like that Persian torture called Disphendomena, whereby men are tied to the bodies and tops of trees deflected; which when they let loose, rends the body, with its forcible return to its natural position, into pieces; this is that, which in another sense then S. Paul declares the two edged sword, the word of God to do, divides between the Marrow and the Bones, not only beats up but blows up nature's Quarters into Nullity, dissolutione continui: Such a like cruelty as this was in Richard the Seconds time butcherly and barbarously here, by the L. Holland and others, acted on a Carmelite Friar, Who accusing the Duke of High Treason, which the Duke (great in power) excused, and his Excuse by the King being excepted, Hollingshed in R. 2. p. 442. he thereupon prayed the King that the Lord Holland, the King's half Brother, might have custody of the Friar, till the day that he should come to his full Trial; the Night before which day, the said Lord Holland and Sir Nicholas Green Knight, came to the Friar, and putting a Cord about his Neck, tied the other end about his privy Members; and after, hanging him up from the ground, laid a stone upon his belly, with the weight whereof and poise of his body withal, he was strangled, and tormented so, as his very backbone burst in sunder therewith, besides the straining of his privy Members. Et quorundam gaggantur ora, usque dum per illa, tot aquarum infundantur fluenta, ut ipsorum venter montis tumescat more, etc. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 aramentum est quo ora filentinm ●bturantur & laxantur cum opus est. Budoeus in Pandect. p. 687. Edit. Basil. 3. 1534. This is another Torture, to apply to the mouth the Gag, called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, so fast clasped to the extended orifice of the mouth, that it not only hideously pains it to be kept at the height of extension, but also impedes all speech or complaint; as also gives opportunity to exercise utmost fury upon the entrails, by infusion either of scaldding lead or any metal into the body, or such vast quantities of water as the Trunk cannot contain, but must break with the burden and stowage of it. This surely was an Ethnique punishment; to which * Tit. 1.11. Vitruvius' lib. 9 c. 13. De Hydraulicis Organis. S. Paul alludes, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, speaking of false Teachers. And the Gag is only here used by Thiefs, who to hinder outcries, whereby they may be detected, gag men: and so when some obstreperous Offenders have been brought to punishment, to prevent their blasphemy against God, and the Authority they die under, some Powers have made use of this, though never that I read of in England, there being a better way to prevent such raving, speedy execution: for though the Law does, as I think, allow the Sheriff liberty to give the condemned and to be executed person, freedom of speech upon presumption that he will testify some remorse, or declare somewhat of sober exhortation to the people; yet when his concession is abused to raving and vehement execrations, to insolent and high justifications, which are derogatory from the honour, authority, and justice of the Magistrate; the Sheriff is, as I think, to hinder that by executing the Law; for Reason as well as Religion directs not to abuse Liberty for a cloak of maliciousness. Piget (proh dolour!) jam penna exquisitorum ad haec cruciatuum enarrare immania. Nam eorum variatus numerus, vix notari poterit magna in membrana. This the Chancellor adds to show his abhorrence of the wicked ingenuity of these torments; and his vehement abjuration in (Proh pudor) is first observable; for any thing that affects the heart with grief or the face with shame, Authors have expressed by Proh dolour, prob pudor: and though pro be used sometimes and but rarely, yet Prohob aspirabilem literam plus afficit, say the Critics, perhaps doing respect to H out of that Rabbinique reason, because 'twas a Letter of the name of God, and so dignifying what ever it was conjoined with. The sense is, that our Chancellor thought these practices rather matter of sorrow and shame then joy & triumph, adding, that there can be little love and pity where these tortures are insultingly practised. Our Lord jesus when he prophetically beheld the City near to those exigencies, that the Romans soon brought it unto, wept over it; saying, O that thou hadst known, eventhou, in this thy day, the things that belong to thy peace, etc. And the Prophets, when they had burdens to disgorge on the people, did it, as it were, beshrewing themselves to be the Messengers of it. Holy Moses, when God would be let alone to destroy Israel, and bids him desist his prayer for their salvation, interposes with God thus, Blot my name, Deut. 32. 32. O Lord, out of the Book of Life rather than destroy Israel. Passions, if ever they are religious and commendable, are, when they are exercised about grief for sin, and shame for want of sorrow. O what a disanimation and amazement was there in Luerece, when Tarquin had raped her chastity, she wounds herself to be revenged on the insolence; yet heals her reputation of chaste, by the reason that accompanied the blow: O Petus, quoth she, the Wound, I thy forced Wife h●v● made in my heart, Vulnus, Pete, non dolet quod ego feci, sed quod in fecists. does not afflict me; but the wound thy love hath made in me, who ought, and would only have enjoyed and been enjoyed by thee, but am violently against my soul and power made disloyal to thee: This, This, was her Proh Pudor. Piget penna exquisitorum.] This Metonymy the Chancellor rhetoricates his preterition of these things by; not, but that he could enlarge on them, but because he would rather bury and obliviate, then brighten and perpetuate the memory of them. When a man is writing, as David says, The things that concern the King; Of the piety of Constantine; the mildeness of Trajan; the gentleness of Marcus Antoninus; the strict discipline of Severas; the Justice of Aristides; the temper of Augustus, who lived a renowned Lord of an Empire, Nible Livia. and of a Lady, whom he more grieved to leave than he did his greatness: Dion. Cass. lib. 56. in August. Caesar. I say, when a man's pen is thus nobly employed, 'Tis the Pen of a ready Writer, Viget tunc penna; but when 'tis to gild over dirt, and make a Blackamoor white, when it must commend Lais for modesty, Heliogabalus for continence, Pompey for temper, Caesar for self-denial, Nero for probity, julian for piety, Origen for fixedness, Severus for lenity, when thus it is to serve fordid ends to the disservice of truth, then piget Penna:] especially if it be exquisitorum. No figure so torvous and tragical can Apelles draw, his Pencil cannot artisie such foam and filth of putidness; Noble wits and penns are not parasitique, they can serve Princes and Ages in display of Virtues, and Record of Truth; but they cannot call evil good or good evil, there piget penna exquisitorum. For as it follows, 'Tis Cruciatuum enarrare immania.] God has condemned sin to shame, and the pen of exquisiteness is not to reverse the Reverse of the Escutcheon of State that wickedness hangs forth; what the great Marshal of heaven and earth has stigmatised, and charged with a Battoon of Alloy, no wit of man must plead for, no pen honourably character: Justice gives to every thing its just Essay, and art to every figure its symmetrious lineament. Devils in practice and invention must be portrayed savagely, and the freity of their deeds be dreadfully as they deserve, represented. This me thinks was notably done by Roger Bacon a witty Preacher in Henry the Third his time; for there then being one Petrus de Rupibus, Bishop of Winchester, whom the Nation disgusted; He, the said Roger, told the King, that Petrae and Rupes were most dangerous things at Sea, Speed. p. 521. which facetious Counsel the King following, called a Parliament, took counsel of his Peers, and was ruled by them. Here was that which did answer penna exquisitorum; and, blessed be God, it did not spare to speak but was accepted to speed; which had it, the Nation had been under Cruciatuum immania. Nam corum variatus numerus, vix notari poterit magna in membrana. This is added Hyperbolically to signify, not only the malignity, but also the multitude of them; these Devil like inventions are Legion, not terminable to those persons that invented them. For happy were it, if only (as sometimes it is) those that were this way ingenuous, might taste first the fawce of their own cooking, and die with Haman, by the Engines they had invented for others. — nec Lex est justior ulla, Quam necis Artifices arte perire suâ, but extendible to others who are often taken in their snare: For many they are, so many that they cannot be crowded close, not contained magna in membrana, that is, says Pliny in a sheet of Parchment: Membrana charta Pergamena ● pellibus animantium concinnata. Plin. lib. 13. c. 11. the Lawyers using to engross all in Parchment, which they call a Membrane from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, whence melbrum or membrum, thence Membrana quae circa membra; the Greeks call membrana by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, because it clothes (as it were) the body; for the Arteries are covered with Membranes, which (I humbly conceive, and if I err I crave pardon) is the superior pars membri, which we call the pellis: so that by this exstatique expression, there is that intended which may make the sense of the Chancellor to be figurative, and denote largeness, and capacity, like (in a sort) that which the Evangelist uses in those words, There are many other things which jesus did, Last St. John. last verse. the which, if they should be written every one, I suppose, that not the whole world would be able to contain the Books that should be written of them: which elegant Clymax and height of Hyperbole is to have no other construction but that very many they are for number; which also, according to its proportion, is the import of, vix notari potuit magna in Membrana. Leges Civiles deficiente testium copiâ, in criminalibus, veritatem consimilibus extorquent tormentis. Lib. 48. c. 12. Digest. lib. 19 De Poenis. This, I suppose, cannot be denied, for Tolossanus quotes abundant Authorities for it; and though they have in that Law other punishments for capital Offences, either death or banishment or servitude: yet does that Law in high Cases, where it seems it is not to be avoided, (Conspiracy being heinous and secret) allow torments to detect and thereby prevent it. This leave of God's absoluteness Government takes, to try all means for preservation; and as things are hurried together, and precipitated in some places and Ages of the world, Tormentum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ‑ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, non recti, seu curvi & inflexi Etymologiste. all little enough: no violence, no torment, though it be such as bends a man together, and breaks the silver Cord and golden Ball of his life asunder, will work on him; 'tis God only must persuade to confession, his torments in the sinner's Conscience make him discover the accursed thing. Experience of this, though it has not persuaded quamplurima Regna; yet our Nation it hath, to punish legally Treason and Conspiracy with Death, Quartering, and Corruption of blood with Forfeiture of Estate. Indeed there was a time when poisoning was frequent with us, than the Stat. 22 H. 8. c. 9 made the punishment boiling to death; but the Nation judging it too severe and un-Christian an infliction repealed it by 1 E. 6. c. 12. Such a Phoenix Kingdom is England, so merciful are our Kings, Parliaments, and Laws, that all savage punishment heretofore used, either have been by Act of Parliament repealed, or obsoleted by disuse: of old, grievous Offeners were hanged in chains alive, M. Paris. p. 490, 584. Gloss. in verbo. where they, farnishing, uttered dismal moans so to the terror of passers by and of women with child, that use reduced it to hanging them in chains when dead. So in the isle of Scilley there was a punishment of Felony very tragical, Felons were let down in a Basket from a steep Rock, with the Provision only of two loaves of Barley bread and a pot of water, to expect as they hang the mercy of the Sea. Notwithstanding these terrors have been in use, and our Nation has been branded for fertility of Tyrants, Porphyrius apud Holstenium, lib. De Scriptis Porph. c. 4. p. 17. though we have had high and jarring spirits which have made way for Attempts and foreign Successes against us; which Tacitus long ago observed to be the Romans Key to Conquest of us: Olim Regibus parebant, nunc per Principes factionibus & studiis trahuntur; nec aliud adversus validissimas gentes pro nobis utilius, quam quod in communi non confulun●. In vita Agricola. though, I say, this was our keenness and high stomach; yet has God brought liberty to us out of the steel and flint of servitnde; and we are yet free from the Rack and those torments which quamplurima Regna have admitted. And as my continual Prayer is, that From ' all Treason and Rebellion, Sedition and privy Conspiracy, from all false Doctrine and Heresy, from haraness of heart and contempt of God's Word and Commandments, We may be delivered: This Prayer becomes every true English Subject. So do I also pray, From Fire and ●Fagot, from Rack and Torment, from new Lords and new Laws, Good Lord deliver us, and make us thankful that we see the King in his beauty, and that our judges are as at the first, Isay 1.26. and our Counselors as at the beginning; This shall be written that the Generations to come may know it, Psal. 102.18. and the people that are yet unborn shall praise the Lord. But it follows. Sid quis tam duri animiest, qui semel ab atrocitanto torculari laxatus, now potius innocens ille omnia fatertur scelerum ginera, quam aserbitatem sie experti iterum subiretormenti. This is brought to confirm that Tortures are apt to work on some men to confess any thing, if by such Confession they may be released; and this I take so far from being a justification of Torments, as subsidiary to truth, that as it may fall out in coping with either pusil or resolute minds, nothing may less by it appear then truth, weakness alleging that for truth through fear, which is nothing but fiction, and wilfulness luring up all in silence and resolute secrecy. And therefore the Chancellour's Quis tam duri animi, is not only a questionary speech, carrying a vehement affirmation in it; but is a flower of Oratory, which has a kind of persuasive assertion in it; that most men are so terrified by pain and torture, that any thing they would rather do then undergo the pain they have once acutely felt: though there have been Examples of men, who not innocent but criminous, have so resolved the contempt of tortures and torments, that they have even consolidated themselves to suffer, and by a bravery of courage to outdare them. How resolutely did that Villain Olgiat, one of the Murderers of Galeatius Duke of Milan, who seeing some of his Comrades in that Assassination, fear and begin to faint as they drew near to behold the Torture they were to undegoe; he, though but twenty two years old, desired the Executioners to begin with him, ut suo Exemplo Comites patientiam discerent; being laid upon the Rack naked, and fastened that the Torture might more work on him, he with a very audible voice and bold Countenance, even when he was half dead, was heard to say, Confide Hieronym, etc. Be of good cheer Jerom, Death is terrible but Fame is durable; Fulgosius lib. 3. c. 3. Egnat. lib. 3. c. 3. yea, and when he was just dying, be ended his life, praying to God most devontly. Nor have we been at home here without instances of Malefactors, that have died justifying themselves, and without all show of terronr; Michael joseph the Black Smith, taken in Perkin Warbeck's Insurrection, being executed, comforted himself, That by this he hoped his Name and Memory would be everlasting: Temps. H. 7. Speed. p. 754. But an honester Blacksmith, and of juster courage, because more innocent, was he of Burntwood in H. 3. time, who being sent for to make Shackles for Hubert de Burgh, Earl of Kent, then apprehended; when he heard it was the Earl of Kent, fetched a deep sigh, and said, Do with me what you please, and God have mercy on my soul, but as sure as the Lord lives, Speed. p. 52●. I will never make Iron shackles for him, but will rather die the worst death'that is; for is not this that worthy, loyal, and courageous Hubert, who so often hath preserved England from being destroyed by Strangers, and restored England to England. I say, it is less wonder to see innocence courageous; but to see Gild on the Conscience yet so steeled that it can boast of confidence in God and implore his mercy when it justifies Murder, Parricide, Sacrilege, and all upon cold blood and under pretence of Justice, this is strange; but not so strange as true: the eyes of many have seen, and the ears of more heard it to their consternation and amazement. Indeed when men have suffered for righteousness sake, nothing has been more common with God's Hectors, then Huperhumane Fortitude: Look into the Stories of the Martyrs in Heb. 11. and in Ecclesiastical Authors, and you'll find death their joy and torture their ambition, constancy their renown and charity their Coat of Mayland Armour of proof; they knew God valued more fidelity than any thing else, and therefore they persevered in it to the death; judex seculi plus deferet Clerico continentu quam diviti, & magis sanctitatem tuam venerabitur quam opes. Sanctus Hieronimus Epist. ad Heliodorum. De vita solitaria. and as they suffered joyfully the spoiling of their goods and bodies, so they would be sure that in such their suffering they had a just cause and were innocent. O they knew the spirit of glory restson the In●●censille, in our Text, Nihil Christiano felicius, cui promittitur regnum coelorum, nihil laboriosius que quotidie do vita periclitatur, nihil fortius qui vincis diabolum, nibil imbecillius que á carne superatur. Sanctus Hieronymus. Epist, ad Rusticum. who will go through much triumphingly; This has made Christians offer themselves to torments, and turn the edge of their Persecutors swords with the glut of their blood. This has made men forsake their noble Mansions, their pleasant Companions, their profitable professions, their beloved Countries, to preserve their innocencyes. Indeed this innocency will carry God's jewel not only to deny subscription to sin, but embrace proscription on for not committing it. job. 27.5. This job so kept close to him, that he resolved not to part with it till he died. This Innocence is the best defence the soul has against all temptation to, and tribulation for sin; 'tis that which few value because few have it, and few have it because few pray for and prise it; O Innocence where art thou? Whether art thou fled? In what order or profession of men art thou resident, that we may seek after thee to find thee out? Thou art in Angels, and thou hast been in Prophets, Apostles, and primitive Martyrs, though not in the brightness of thy divine Oriency; yet in transcendent proportions, making them burning and shining lights, spiriting them to despise tortures, resist violences, insult over conflicts, embrace poverties, deny favours, glory in sufferings: but in the world now thou art not, we are all now adays decocted and abated in our holy servours. No need of Racks and tortures to bring off men now from innocence; make but a motion at the Bar of Power, and threaten to enter judgement and take out Execution upon them for their singularity, and all's hush. 'Tis well with the world, as now it effeminately is modelled, that Ethnicism is over; for if such times should have been now as was then, the Text's innocens ille would have been a nemo scit. No courage can be in any soul but in the soul that is sincere; which because men are not, therefore God gives them up to fear fordidly, and deny the truth shamefully, as those Carpet and Outside Reverends did I Mariae, who were zealous Protestants in King Edward's, and as zealous Papists in Queen Mary's days: yea in the Convocation of 1 Mariae, there were of all the Clerks but six, Fuller's Church History, 2. part. p. 11. that withstood the reduction of Popery; and the Goodly Prolocutor Weston, told Master Philpot one of them; that because he stickled so against Transubstantiation, which was against the Doctrine of the Church of England' constituted in Edward the Sixth's time, That he was a Madman, meeter to be sent to Bedlam then continue there: Lo a taste of innocency which will never cope with flames and tortures. That which enables to endure, notwithstanding all, must be faith in God and frailty supported and sublimated by him; this will make a man not only die daily by mortification, but die strenuously and suffer patiently for a good cause: and that not from a durities animi the effect of sin, but from a resolution hardened by the fire of holy zeal, which none has but that innocens ille which our Text speaks of. Who will do by the cause of God, Shutes History of Venice. p. 250. as Matheo Fasceolo did by his Country? He being a Citizen of Chioggia, when the Genoesses wann it from the Venetians, lost a great Estate in it; after which he repaired to Venice, and finding the City in a great strair, went to the Senate, and told them he was willing to serve his Country with all he could; his Estate he had lost, and had nothing left but his Wife and Children, and them he tendered to serve the State, though it were to be sold to raise money for the States use. So if God's glory be concerned, a good Christian, Innocens ills, will part with all that's dear to promote or rescue it. Et non semel mori mallet, dum mors sit ultimum terribilium, quam toties occidi, & totidem gehennales furias morte amariores sustinere. This our Tex-Master adds as the reason why an innocent man would rather choose once to die, then long and often to be tormented; because in death there is but one short brunt which over, all terrors are past: but in tortures and torments, as there is scarce perfect life; so neither is there complete death, but an interpendance of the miseries of both, and the mercies of neither. Whereupon the Chancellor concludes, 'twere more eligible to an innocent man to die for ado as we say, then to be tormented, which is protracted death: And that the Chancellour's intendment may more signally appear, 'tis fit to consider his order in that he proposes; 1. He concludes that a good man's choice is always De re licita & possibili; if he had his choice, he would desire nothing but what ought and is to be, semel mori mallet. Sin requires nature's punishment by death, and God has appointed that all, that do live, shall die. The Canon is, Dust thou art in nature, dust thou shalt be in dissolution by death; To dust thou shalt return: Gen. 3.19. Heb. 9.27. and Saint Paul declares this the second time, It is appointed for all men once to die; not for all Creatures, for good Angels live eternally, yet they are Creatures, But for all men, once to die: not that all shall die but once, for there is a second death mentioned in Scripture, which is the punishment of sin, and which wicked and impenitent sinners are condemned to; but once to die as a payment to Nature, which the best of men are to make then, this the innocent man chooses, because he knows 'tis God's appointment and Nature's order; and he yields to it, not only as 'tis inevitable, but as certainly it is lucrosum quiddam. For Death to him is ultimum terribilium, that is, of natural terribles; his pains, his terrors, his wants, his defects, which in life pinch him, then adieu: and therefore to be rid of those incommodations, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Sophocles apud Stobaeum, serm. 125. he chooses rather to die then live; for as the Poet says, Better not to live then to live wretchedly: and Aeschilus, Death is preferable to a sor did life. O but no man can call death the last terror, but he, that has Christ, the Victor of Death, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Aeschil. and him that hath the power of Death, his Portion. No man can choose to die, who has his Heaven here, and must have an Hell hereafter; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Philo lib. De praemiis, & poenis p. 921. and therefore because no man delights in terrors (and death affords such to all but innocent and holy men) there can be no mallet mori, as death is the ultimum teribilium in any: but a virtuous soul, who knows, when his earthly tabernacle is dissolved, he shall have a building made of God, not made with hands but eternal in the Heavens; this makes him choose rather to die then to live so encumbered, as men in nature are, and in sin more: for their life is nothing but a file of sins. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Sophocles. And therefore no man can account death the last Physician of diseases; and as he in Aeschilas prays death not to refuse him but to case him, as that, which alone cures incurable diseases, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, because no grief follows the dead. No man, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Stobaeus serm. 274. p. 883. I say, can, as the Causians in Stobans are said to do, weep when men are born and laugh when they die, but those that are either holy or that believe souls are mortal and leave the body without account of what in conjunction with it they were guilty of; for if they believe that body and soul must conjoinedly stand in judgement before God, Ea victoria habet glorians placendi Deo & praedam vivendi in aternum. Tertullian. in Apologet. c. 50. De Martyrio. then, if they be not holy men that die, death is not ultimum but primum terribilium: for death is then only a victory over terrors, when, as Tertullian's words elegantly are, It has the glory of pleasing God, and the prey of everlasting life, this made jacob salute his death with this fiducial calm, O Lord I have waited for thy Salvation; Cur non (bone Jesus) ducis sponsam tuam in hortum tuum. Serm. in Cantic. Cantic. and Saint Paul, I desire to be dissolved; and Hilarion importunes his souls exition from the body; and Saint Bernard to long, and to utter his longings, Why O Lord Jesus dost thou not lead thy spouse into thy garden, and entertain her with thy delicates after life, Nos dolendi magis qui quotidie stamus in praelio peccatorum, vitiis sordidamur accipimus vulnera, & de ocioso verbo reddituri sumus rationem. In Epist. ad Theodoram. whom thou exercisest with thy sufferings in life? A good man, faith Saint Jerome, may be pitied in his life, God hedges his way with thorns, he calls him to combat against Principalities and Powers; he has a Law in his Members that rebels against! the Law of his mind, he is for God's sake killed all the day long, he has a fountain of evil thoughts, and must give account to God of them. These things make their hearts heavy, and mingle Vinegar and Gall with their Nectar; but their Liberata, their emancipation and manumission by death, is their gaude-day: to these death is ultimum terribilium, God has given them a release by it, 'tis their rest from their labours, and their pass to their happiness. But death is not so to all; Joseph, lib. 17. c. 8. Sabellic. lib. 10. c. 13. Cuspinianus in vita Theophili. not to Herod who lived in Adultery and died in Murder; not to Marius, who desired life only to revenge himself of Silla his Enemy; not to Theophilus the Greek Emperor, who expressed he could not depart life, till Theophobus his Deputy in Fersia, whom he was displeased with, were murdered; which done, he died, uttering this, Neither shalt thou hereafter be Theophobus, nor I Theophilus; Vae illis quibus praeparatur dolor vormium, ardour flammae, sitis sine e●inctu, etc. Epist. 111. ad Julianum. such as these that die impenitently and are without hope in their death, do but, when they die, begin their terrors, their great woe is to come: For them is prepared the neverdying Worm, the inextinguishable flame, the unquenchable thirst, weeping and gnashing of teeth, utter darkness, and so forth; as Saint jerom sadly characters it. Therefore these are not those whose to die is choice; but he that can do that, is alone Innocens ille, God's Lazarus, whose sores shall have balm, and whose soul shall have comfort in Abraham's bosom. This, This, This is the Innocens ille, who cries to the World and the Devil as his Lord did, what ye do, do quickly; do your utmost, in spite of your rage I shall be more than a Conqueror. He can not but be victorious, whose faith, with reverence I write it, has overcome that jesus, whose passion and merit overcame this, and purchased the next world. By all which it appears, that to die once is natural to all; to die happily, so, as to have death the last of terrors, is peculiar to innocent men, who therefore choose death rather than miserable life, because they shall avoid those torments in life which our Chancellor terms Gehennales furias. Gehennales furias.] Tortures are well set forth by these: For as the Furiae were Acherontis & noctis filiae, as jupiter by them turned a King into a Wolf; so do tortures act savageness upon the noble body of man, Psal. 139.14. which David says is fearfully and wonderfully made: and because as the furies, so tortures by either, wrath desiring revenge, Poela tres furias dixerunt qua mentes hominum exagitant, ira ultionem desiderat, cupiditates opes, libido voluptates. Lactantius, De vero cultu. lib. 6. c. 19 covetousness aiming at gain, or lust gratifying pleasure in such cruelty, are cruel to men exposed to them. Servius also has made three sorts of these, assigned to three several Orbs, Lib. 3. De Natur. Deorum: Orat. pro Roscio. Dirae to Heaven, Eumenides to Hell, Furiae to Earth; Tully, after he has smartly treated of these, concludes, He sunt impiae, assiduae, domesticaeque furiae, que dies noctesque Parentum poenas à consceleratissimis filiis repetant; Pro Sestio. which considered, the Ancients did well to term every thing of dread and unacceptableness by Furiae: thus Tully has his furiae ac pestis patriae: and Claudian his Tristes furiae: and the Poets express the eagerness of love by it, Malis furiis actus, furiis agitatus, concepit furias, are Epithets, that Virgil, Horace and Ovid give love; and Suctonius tells us of Verberibus furiarum exagitari, and so do other Authors of Arma furialia, I● Nerone. ausa furialia, saedes furiales, ignes furiales, caput & virus furiale; which warrant our Text's resembling of tortures by them: yea, in that our Text has added Gehennales furias to display them, it has abundantly set forth the terror and direful nature of them. And our Text seems to make tortures by this, a local Hell, an Engine of cruelty, and that not to be endured. Gehenna is a word adopted into the Greek and Latin tongues from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a Valley South of jerusalem, in the possession of Hinnom an eminent jebusite; 'tis called also the Valley of Tophet, judges 15.8. 2 King. 23.10. jer. 19.6. jer. 7. 3●. because abused to Idolatry and cruelty, For there they caused their Sons and Daughters to pass through the fire alive to Molech; for which God cursedd its fertility and changed its name: so that at last it became the lay-stall of the City, and every filthy thing was cast on it, this was Gehenna in the History. Now the sense of our Chancellor was, I conceive, to set forth the sanguinariness of Torments, not only by furies, but by Hellish furies; which none, but he that is the Prince of darkness, and whose odium is versans circa totum genus humanum, could invent. And therefore I repeat my thanks to God and the Laws of England, that though Offenders do deservedly die, when guilty; yet that their bodies are not ¶ resolute. of the Judges in Felton's case. Difficile immo & impossibile est, ut & praesentibus quis & futuris fruatur bonts, ut & hic ventrem & ibi mentem impleat, ut de deliciis transeat ad delicias, ut in● utroque saeculo primus sit, ut & in coelo & in terra appareat gloriosus. Sanctus Hieron. Epist. ad Julianum. tortured, but they left to that repose that Conscience will afford them, this is Christianlike in the Law: nor shall they need to be tortured here in their death, who are to be tortured (if they die impenitent) for ever after death. Nor surely does the God of nature design to it an Hell every where, for since the good man's Heaven is hereafter, he may bare with his Hell here; and since the evil man's Heaven is here, it seems not just to add to his affliction, to torment him before his time: this the Devils cried out upon, Art thou come, say they to our Lord, to torment us before our time. And this, God, I am apt to think, did insinuate to men in the Patriarchal and pure Ages, Tholoss. Syn. tagm. Juris. lib. 31. c. 13, 14. & seq. Idem c. 17. yea and to the jews his own people; for though die Malefactors did by God's own judgement, either by stoning or by the Sword of the Magistrate, or by some immediate hand of God: yet those deaths were quick and dispatching, not protractive of time and augmenting torture. And when the Romans brought in the Cross, which was an Ethnic and torturous death, which the jews in token of malice executed on our Saviour because of the torture of it which was inhuman, I suppose they are, in the Prophecy of their Conversion, and the sorrow that then should seize on their natural obstinacy, Zachar. 12.10. said to look upon him whom they had pierceed; which is prophetical not so much of the spear that pierced his side, as of the nails that fastened his hands and feet to the Cross: By all which I humbly conceive the deaths of Malefactors by tortures may be thought not so Christian, as dispatches of them more calmly, by a quick stroke or sudden throttle, are. But it follows. Et nun Princeps tu novisti criminosum quendam, qui inter tormenta hujusmodi, militem nobilem, probum, & fidelem, de proditione quadam, super qua, ut asseruit, ipsi duo insimul conjurarunt, accusare. Still the Chancellor multiplies instances of the invalidation of torments to discover truth, and the uncertainty of proceeding according to them; and as before he quoted Fringe for suborning Witnesses to depose falsehood, so here now he produces an Example, in the Prince's own knowledge, of one that accused a man of Honour of Treachery; which he after Racking ratifyed to be so, and being racked again, when he found himself unable to live, confessed his Accusation false and himself only guilty. And this the Chancellor does, not more to show the danger of relying too much on frail man, who in his best estate is altogether vanity, apt to be seduced by his corrupt heart to deal falsely, Shute's Hist. of Venice. p. 292. and not to be pitied in being punished therefore, as Pipus the Florentine was, who being sent by the Hungarian with great forces to invade Italy; was bought off from that War, and betraying his trust returned, whom, the King of Hungary punished by causing him to have poured down his throat Molten Gold: I say, not only does our Chancellor produce this example to show mortal Villainy, Si ego latens in caverna & quasi sub modio non quidem lucens sed fumigans ventorum quidens impetus, nec sic declinare sufficio, sed continuis tentationum variisque fatigatus impulsibus instar vento agitatae arundinis huc illucque circumferor; quid positus supra montem, supra candelabrum. Sanct. Bernardus, Epist. 42. Ad Archiepis. Senonensem. but also to admonish all men that stand, to take heed lest they fall. For if obscurity of condition is prone to Temptations, what are the Ruffles and Trials that Mountains, Cedars, and Grandeurs of men meet with; O they have need of many prayers that are in high places. The Text here tells us of a brave person a Knight, Miles quasi unus è millibus, a man of a thousand, nobilis ordine, probus ment, fidelis corpore, who is impeached; probus quasi prohibus, See my Discourse of Arms and Armoury printed March. 1660. qui se à delinquendo prohibet, as Festus descants on it, a Gentleman spotless, so wary that he undergoes not the desert of suspicion, whose mind is so moderate and passions so calm, that he seems a pattern of all excellency; (for so Probus imports, and so Authors use it, witness probae Matronae for chaste Women, not to be drawn aside to wantonness, probus Artifex, Occasio proba, Facinus probum, Ingenium probum, mores probi; yea Tully joins sanctus with probus:) Pro Cluentio. I say, though thus staunch this person accused is said to be, yet he is the man impeached, and that of Treachery, who is termed fidelis;] Fidelis cord, found at heart, all Loyalty; Fidelis ore, found in speech, one that regardeth his words, who will not speak evil of his Prince, no, not in his Bedchamber, when he is most alone; Fidelis opere, that does every thing that a loyal Subject aught, and nothing which a loyal Subject ought not: Nobilitas nihil aliud est quam cognita virtus. Cic. Epist. ad Herennium. even this man, though thus firm and fixed as that he is notable therefore, (for nobilis here is quasi notabilis, God having given him virtue and blood which has made him eminent;) yet this man with all these accomplishments is accused. Accusare] is a forensique word well known to Lawyers; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 est aliquem ad causam dicendam urgere: and Tully defines the nature of accusation pithily, Accusatio crimen desiderat, Pro M. Caelio. Syntag. Juris. Lib. 32. De Accusationsbus. rem ut definiat, hominem ut notet, argumento probet, teste confirmat. Concerning accusations and the nature of them Tholossanus treats at large. Accusers the Bulgarians held of old so dangerous, that their Legislator appointed no Accuser should be heard nisi vinctus & tortus. This I suppose was the condition of the Accuser in the Text, who yet did so much the more vehemently falsely accuse Militem nobilem, probum, fidelem, and that only to evade the torment; so ready often is the Devil to suggest evil to us, that to ease ourselves of one evil we will bring on others greater, which is every day visible, when men to right themselves care not whom they wrong. Those two Florentine Families of the Medici's and Pazzians are examples of this; for the Medeceans' having surprised the Pazzians, they were so enraged that they vowed revenge though they seemed friends; and so it was, that the Pazzians had contrived Assassination of the Medicean's even in the presence of the elevated Host. This makes me think of an holy life as the best guard, and a self visitation as the safest employment. He that lives at home and detracts from no body, gives his life much serenity; Speed. p. 503. which had the Wife of the Lord Bruise done, she might have had H. the Third's good favour, and spared her Present of 400 milch Kine and one Bull all milk-white, except only the ears red, which her lavish tongue of the King made unacceptable to him. De proditione quadam, ut asseruit ipse, duo insimul conjurarunt. Proditio] is a falsehood in friendship, as it were, datio veritatis pro mercede; and it consisting in betraying a trust is execrable amongst all Nations, & deservs extermination from Mankind: Lib. 35. c. 5. Tholossanns has a whole Chapter about it which I refer the Reader to. That, I suppose, which this Knight is accused for, is either holding correspondence with the Prince's Enemy, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Philo lib. De specialibus Legibus, p. 801. or promising to deliver up some strength that by Commission from the Prince he held. This Prodition, however it was, all Laws make capital; and therefore the Accuser, in torments, confesses it against him, that by engaging a person of more note than himself he might have the more liberty: yea, and to possess them with a belief, that he both knew the nature and would discover the truth of his knowledge concerning it, he accuses himself Confederate with the Knight; this the Varlet did once and again in hopes to evade the torments: but when he saw the torments would end his life, and he ought to be in earnest with death that was in earnest with him; then he turns his Tale, than he begins to be real, Sed demum cum ex poenis illis laesus, usque ad mortis articulum infirmaretur,] says the Text, than he does right to the wrongfully accused person; and his Accusation acknowledged by the very Accuser to be malicious and false, makes the Knight that was eclipsed ten thousand times more orient. So God often rewards oppressed Innocents', that he makes their Cloud their Lustre, and their misfortune their advantage. Famous is that story of Nicholas Rucino, who was set to Sea over many Galleys against the Genovesses, a Tempest arose which cast him into the Haven of Cariste towards the Negropont; Shute's History Venice. p. 198. there he thought his design lost, but there he unexpectedly found fourteen Galleys of the Genovesses, richly laden with Merchandise and provision of War, lying at Anchor; and knowing them to be the Enemy he was to encounter with at Sea, he set upon them and overcame them. Pisani was cast into Prison for his misfortune at Pola, Tag. 246. but God so distressed the Venetians after the loss of Chioggia, that they were fain to court their Prisoner, and put all their strength under his Conduct. There are infinity of these examples, joseph, jephta, David, Daniel, Mordecay, and others, who, had they not seemingly been defeated, had never arrived at those notable advantages that God designed them to be aggrandized by. Cosmas the incomparably learned Italian, when taken by the Saracens, and wanting any man of learning to converse with, or any lad inclined to it, bemoaned more that want then his captivity; Cressolius Mystag. p. 203. yet God so ordered it, that he was brought from his servitude by one who set him to tutor johannes Damascenus, by making whom so great a Scholar he got renown enough: whereas in ways of wickedness God gives no opportunity to advantage, unless he intent to bring the soul off from it by his mercy to repentance; and that sometimes he does in the last gasp, in ipso mortis articulo, not only when the body is brought low with torture and restlesseness, but in ipso mortis articulo, in the very 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the entrance of death on life's quartars, (for so articulus is by Plautus understood, Articulus pro momento & tempestiva rerum faciendarum hora sive puncto, seu alienjus rei aut temporis particula. Etymolog. Cic. pro Quinctio. 10. Opportunitatis omnes articulos scio: so Tully, ut eum suis conditionibus in ipso articulo temporis astringeret.) Then, Then, does the truth find being in the breath of our dying Varlet, Tum demum, etc. Ultimum quoque viaticum, Christi videlicet corpus, sumpserit. This is well added to show the custom the Ancients had of giving the Sacramental Elements to dying persons, which they called Viaticum, because the manner was when Travellers were entertained in the Eastern Countries, where vast Deserts were, and they were to carry their Provisions with them, there being no Inns in the way, there this Provision was called Viaticum. Hence Plautus mentions the Viatica caena quae datur abituro, like those parting meals we call Foye's, as I take it, which men give their Comrades when they go to travel. Yea Viatica signified every thing necessary to Journey, money as well as meat and drink, so Tully, Velim videas quid viatici, & quid instrumenti satis sit; Cic. ad Attic. lib. 12. Horat. 2. Epist. 2 and Horace tells us of collecta viatica multis aerumnis, and of largum & liberale viaticum. Now this Notion spiritualised, our Chancellor makes use of to show the practice of the Church, who considering the Journey from this to the next World, required Provision for it, and that there was nothing so proper thereto as the Sacramental Elements, did mind the party dying to repent and to cast of all confidence in the World or in himself, and to rest only on the mercy of God in Christ; and to beseech Christ jesus to make him worthy of his acceptation, and to own that Sacramental body of his, which the humble and contrite sinner has taken into his body towards the preservation of his body and soul to life eternal: for sure to a worthy Receiver great is the benefit of the Sacrament of Christ's body and blood. Saint Bernard thought so when in those words he said, Et sensum minuat in minimis, & in gravioribus peccatis tollit omnino consensum. And hence was it that the Church, Serm. In Caena Domini. when the Minister was satisfied a sinner was penitent and had confessed ingeniously his offence, did for his comfort give him the Sacrament called here Corpus Christi; Magdeb. Cent. 5. c. 6. p. 134. and a purgation of any one from suspicion by solemn taking of the Sacrament to oblige the truth of a thing was quittance enough: this was done in the case in hand, the Knight, that was by the person racked accused, is upon the Sacrament taken at his death, Innocens dicitur, non qui nocet leviter, sed qui vihil nocet. 5 Tusc. Quest. declared innocent and free from the crime he was accused of; Innocentem militem illum & immunem, that is, he is not only not so much as not at all guilty, but as free, as we say, the unborn child is. Every good man not only being careful not to be guilty of evil, which David calls, Keeping from the great offence, but from the appearance of evil; for though with worldly men and loose livers, not to be grossly and actually facinorous is as much as they look to: yet a Christian should, Exasmus in Adagiis. Chil. 2. Cent. 5. Adag. 57 as that Heathen did say, though in the Corinth of this world, to be not so had as the worst is an happiness, yet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, I am a child of Light, I must walk as in the day, wisely and virtuously. This is Innocens worthy to be mated with Immunis.] Immunis qui nullo fungitur officio, liber ab onere publico, qui vel aetate vel alio privilegio praestare omnia non tenetur, saith Festus, and this admirablely reaches the Purgation of the Knight to be free from all temptation to, or advantage by crimes of Treachery; he was a man of Honour and Fidelity, who had no putrid Principle which would truckle under sordid proffers: he was where he would be, God had bounded his mind within the verge of Providence, and content he was with his station; and thereupon though he was falsely accused, yet is now worthy to be purged, as one innocent and free from the malice of the charge. Tamen ait, poenas in quibus ipse tempore delationis suae fuerat, it à atroces exstitisse, quod priusquam eas iterum experiretur, etiam eundem militem ille iterum accusaret, similiter & Patrem proprium. This Clause notably shows the disarmation of not ●onely manhood, but even of integrity by fear, the terror of which, in the penalty that the bodies of offenders feel under Racks and Tortures, is not only probable at some times, but even apt with most to make them say or do any thing, though never so untrue and unjust, to avoid them. This, there is evidence of in this example, where not only the fear of Peter, but the falsehood even of judas seem concentred. An innocent person he accuses, stands to his Accusation in Tortures, then having no hope to outlive them, confesses the Knight innocent and free, and seals his vindication with the Sacrament to confirm the truth of it; yet, for all this, publishes his so great dread of the Tortures, that rather than suffer them, he would accuse any innocent man; nay his own Father. O self-love, what a corrasive art thou to holy Courage and Martyr-like Constancy! How much dost thou abase the Nobility of manly minds, when thou courtest to save the shadow to lose the substance? How treacherous art thou to truth to secure the trash thou valuest above it? Peter, Peter, Thou Pillar of Apostles hast left a blot on thee for this, Ego te. semper Simon, plurimi feci, & tu, Simon, dormis. Ego te tot modis honestavi, & tu dormis, etc. Diserrissimus, & Strenuissimus Morus Equ. Aurat. in Exposit. Passion. Inter opera Impress. Lovanii, Anno 1566. p. 121. B. never Mortal more obliged by a Master then Peter; yet never a Master more dishonoured by a Servant then Christ by him was: thanks to thy merciful look, O blessed Saviour, for Peter's tears and his after-Constancy. 'Twas bad enough with Peter while he was Peter, and it had never been better with him while he had been Peter; but that thou, O Lord, hadst some future work for to which thou preservest him by thy courage in him. 'Tis a rare advice that the Knight that died courageously according to his Prescript (for that, which charity would persuade me to judge, he believed he ought to do, though the Law & State judged otherwise) Quos in id pati vocat Deus intendant prosperè, In Commentariis Pass. Impress. Lovanii, Anne 1566. p. 119. etc. Let those says he, that God puts resolution into, suffer for him, buckle to their work manlyly; for they serve him that has times and seasons, men and means at his beck, and will rule and intend them sweetly and effectually to serve his glory. O this playing fast and loose, this being neither hot nor cold, this plannetaryness is the preparatory to tergiversation, 'tis prevarication which ends in cowardice; what a wretch does our instance show him to be; that, to avoid bodily torture, would torture his Conscience, and incur Hell by an impenitent and unnatural sin. O, self-love is the dangerousest Aqua fortis to penetrate, that Satan works by; Congratulor quidem tibi quid sis exoneratus, sed vereor nè Deus à té quantum in te exhenoratus sit. Epist. 86. Saint Bernard thought the Abbot of Saint Theodorick in danger by it, when to save him some trouble, or to gratify an humour he quitted his charge: but the Father tells him, he had best look to it, that his own ease was not God's burden. And how ill God took his carriage, Spotswood History of Scotland. p. 194. who consented to the Murder of Davye, and underwit the instrument of the combination; and yet had the confidence to cause it to be proclaimed at the Cross in Edinburgh, that He was innocent and never consented to the Murder, let the Records of Heaven in due time tell. For though it may have warrant from reason of State for the Venetians, who kept Treveso forty years, and lost it most unwillingly to Leopold of Austria; yet when their Enemy had it, History Venice. p. 273. the Venetians so dissembled their regret, that they sent Ambassadors to Leopold upon Congratulation of his welcome and entering into it: yet truly it is in the nature of the thing, but a worldly bubble, which being insolid, teaches men not to rest on the favour, or dote on the felicity it promises. Give me the staunch virtue that will not do a sordid illiberal act to better itself, but had rather have Cato's Chains in Prison then Nero's Sceptre on the Throne; for when a man is more led by sense then justice, what does he not dare to do that is facinorous, so it be but accumulative to his ends: he'll not only accuse innocent persons, sed Patrem proprium,] the sacred Genitor, who did, to give him being, patefacere semen, impart himself. Servius in voce Patris, in 2. Georgic. 2. His Father, that religious name, unde omnes Dii Patres vocabantur, faith Servius; Father, a name of Honour, to which is entailed every dramm of duty and respect imaginable, to the honour of which, the first Commandment of Promise is made: De poena patricidii, lege Turneb. Advers. lib. 13. c. 13. Edit. Basil. yet, even this Father, not only for age, but even in nature, fear of the Rack, and hope of avoidance of torture, would induce to accuse. Nec verò ipse mortem quam tunc metuit, evasit. Sed demum suspensus, tempore mortis suae ipsam militem purgavit ab omni crimine de quo dudum defamavit. All that I observe from this Clause is only, I. Curse of God on cowardice; many think to avoid tortures and death by fallacious compliances with wickedness: and God when they have showed their naughtiness, has indurated the bowels of those they thought thereby to oblige, so that though they have loved the Treason yet they have hated the Traitor. For though confession of guilt be a due from every Christian at all times, and at death especially, that those that hear may be warned and admonished to live better that they may die better; yet, when a man is near death to be so yarc of life, as to confess or rather fancya nothing and set it up as something, to lengthen out a few minutes of ease and life by what is indulged to it, as supposed truth, is to dishonour God and deserve no attainment of so cursed ends. 2. That though life conceal much of truth yet death often reveals it, demum suspensus, tempore mortis suae militem purgavit. 'Tis time to speak truth to men when men cease to a Malefactor, as they do when he is judicially dying; then cries he for his Confessor, and decryes his sewd Companions; then he execrates his debauchery, and exclaims on his costly idleness which made him facinorous, and for the punishment whereof he is a sufferer. 'Tis good and welcome news to charity, when a sinner converteth, and concludes well an ill life; and therefore the Angels in Heaven rejoice for a sinner that repenteth, because not only he by repentance puts himself into the arms of mercy, but also desists from that enormity which illaqueates and makes unhappy the life of many innocent holy ones, whom he traduces and misrepresents. There was not in all Scotland a more brave and pious noble man than Archibald, Spotswood. p. 371, 372. Lord of Angus, in his time was; yet he died by incantation and witchcraft: nor was there here a braver Knight than this in our Text, yet he was accused of Treachery, and not acquitted by his Accuser till at the Gallows, and then the false Accuser had his reward; not that which the Priest by order of the Star-Chamber in Anno 1544. had, who was set on the Pillory and burnt in both Cheeks with an hot Iron with the letters F.A. which the paper over his head expounded for false Accusation; Stow's Chronicle Summ. p. 257. 312. or as the other in 1556. was, for accusing one of the Court of Common pleas of Treason: but by hanging at the Gallows by the head while dead, and then cut down and buried without Christian Burial. Taliter proh dolour & quam plures alii miseri faciunt, non veritatis causa, sed solum urgentibus torturis arctati, quid tunc certitudinis resultat, ex confessionibus taliter compressorum This Clause affirms that which i affirmable of all relating to erring man, to wit, that nothing he fayes or does, is infallibly to be concluded upon further than it is regulated by a divine Principle, which regards truth and fears falsehood as a provocation of the pure God, who is the revenger of it. Nor is the Argument here applied more strong against tortures then any other trial wherein men are instruments, who by being possible to be corrupted, may so be under Juryes as well as tortures; only this it shows that then the excuse of the invention of torments is detracted from, in the ineffectuality that they prove to the discovery of truth, which, notwithstanding them, is concealed; and justifies lighter punishments (though mortal) to be both less barbarous, and as much, if not more effectual than those. For whereas in France, where torments are, trust is altogether to the acuteness of those sufferings, as if the terror of them would work enough without any softer applications; With us in England because our kinds of punishments are lighter, we do apply religious Arguments to the Conscience, and lay home the terrors of God to sinners; and because the Magistrate comes not to encounter this Goliath of Desperation in his own strength, in which no man shall prevail, but with spiritual weapons which are mighty through God; therefore God makes them prevalent to work contrition and confession. Piety is the noblest and nearest way to politic permanent Issues and Successes, Nor are Statists ever more wanting to themselves then when they neglect the spiritual weapons of the Church to second the carnal ones of the State. The bottom of any villainy will sooner be founded by an holy and serious Divine's humble Prayer, serious conviction, prudent encounter with a wicked Conspirator, then by all the terrors and allurements whatever; because Satan and his own corruptions incrust him against the one, but against the other which is God's Engine and Key by which he turns all the springs and wards of resolution and secrecy, they are invalid: this is evident in experience, not only in many examples with us, Shute, p. 209. but also abroad; the History of Venice has a notable story of Beltrand a popular man in that State, who was privy to the Conspiracy of Phalerio against the Government, whose Conscience so troubled him that he revealed it, brought the Conspirators to execution and delivered his Country. And yet how hard is it to persuade the world that Piety is the best Policy; when as, if men would observe it, there is no folly like that of the worldling, who serves a Master which cannot support him, Quam misera hominis conditio quae quasi mercenaria aliis laborat, sibi indiget, & nisi aliena misericordia sustineri nequit, quotidie sub timidine sub timore gravem tolerans servitutem, etc. Sanctus Ambrose, lib. De Interpell. c. 3. but leaves him as Saint Ambrose says, in an helpless and hopeless misery. And yet the world is a goad in holy men's sides, and often a snare to them; nay, ever so, when they love it above their boundary, when they take it as their friend, and delight in the repasts and umbrages of it, when they suffer it to corrupt their moderation, and to tickle and hallucinate their passions, and by them surprised, to engage them to foedity. There is a notable instance of this in Master Mountgomery the Minister of Striveling in Scotland, who was a fierce a man against Episcopacy as any his contemporary; yet shortly after this man accepted the Bishopric of Glascow, Spotswood Hist. Church Scotland. p. 316. which he fordidly came to by making over to the Duke of Lenox (who was his Patron thereto) the Land of the See, which the Duke had a mind to, and by taking in lieu thereof a thousand pound Scotish, to be paid by the Duke and his Heirs; to which, I had almost said sacrilegious, Condition, no Clergyman in Scotland would yield, and by yielding have the Bishopric, but only he. In which frailty we are taught to mistrust ourselves, and to look on men, as temptable and various; and therefore the Text's inference is good, Quid tunc certitudinis ex confessionibus taliter compressorum.] For men not being themselves when they are in pain and under pressure, the Oppression of it often making a wise man mad, there is little heed to be had to what is said or done under the torture of it. Nor has God given certitude to any thing that is extrinsique, for every thing being subject to his interposition, there is no certainty to be concluded, but that he will rule all for the best of his glory and his Saints good; but as to outward things, alas they go cross, and are vicissitudinarious, and that by the special appointment of God; nor can any thing be depended on in them, or collected from them, but what is subject to contingency: Men intent one thing and God disposes another; States make Laws to one end, but God nulls those Enactions by his occult pleasure, which alone must stand: yea, if Counsels and Laws are never so well made and laid, if God do not reveal the seasons and opportunities when to set them on foot, and whereby to improve them; all the wisdom of Lawmakers is defeated. Doria the Genovesse was a brave General and got a mighty victory against the Venetians in Phalerio's Dukedom, Shute's History, p. 237.246. which had he prosecuted, as he might, and come directly to the City, he had utterly determined the Venetian Government and Power: so had the Genovesses after the taking of Chioggia, but God gave them no certain knowledge of the event; and so they miss the improvement of the victory. No more certainty is there of the truth of that which a tortured person confesses to avoid his pain, than there is of that which may, and may not be. Tortures are like Physic, on some trinid and easy natures they work fully and readily; but on others they must have notable acuteness to stir them: and when sink they do, 'tis their bodies and nature, not their malice and venom that yields; confess truth they may, but as often they confess nothing at all; or if any thing, not that they should: And therefore the Text says, Quid tunc certitudinis resultat, ex confessionibus taliter compressorum. Caeterum si innocens aliquis non immemor salutis aternae, in hujusmodi Babilonis furnace, cum tribus pueris benedicat Domino, nec mentiri velit in perniciem animae sue, quo judex eum pronuntiat innocentem, nun eodem judicio judex ille, seipsum reum judicat, omnis saevitiae & poenarum quibus innocentem afflixit? This Clause is brought in to show how instrumental some Powers of the world are to torment Christ's Innocents', who are for the most part the only sufferers in the world; at least in those exquisite torments which are the effects and instruments of the implacablest Malice. For as lenity in man is a ray from God's oceanal Mercy, so the contrary is a con sectary of God's absence and retraction from man; and when the spirit of man is simply natural, and has no adjunct good which sweetens and abates the tartness of its peccant rage; then is it virulent and demoniacally rapacious to make others as unhappy as its malice can, and to oppose its self to whatsoever is not as impetuously depraved as its self is. This being the Rise of Antipathy, the Road to Persecution, Tortures, the Emanation of it, fall to no Lot more directly then to God's lot, whom the world is said to hate, because it hated me (saith Christ) first, and because they are not of the world; therefore they do not only speak all manner of evil against, Non exhibemns ullum gestam honorisicum coram statua obstante Decalogi praecepto seeundo. Grot. in locum, but act all manner of evil to them, specially that of making their lives unquiet and their deaths bitter to them. The proto instance of this in the latitude of its inhumaneness is here borrowed from Daniel 3.13. where the three children, Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, more timorous to sin against God then to incur the King's displeasure, refuse the adoration of the Idol, and accept the punishment that Nabuchadnezzar annexed to the recusancy thereof: And that it may appear, that not humour and singularity, but zeal and conscience led them to this resolution; it is remarkable that they do not revile the Decree, nor reproach the Power under which they suffer, but as Christ their head is said, Acts 8.32. like a Lamb led to the slaughter, not to open his mouth either in complaints, or denunciations of judgement: so these Confessors, his Members, showed no renitency, but willingly embraced the suffering, trusting in God, whose Champions they were, for the issue. Alas! they knew the jews were envied by their Chaldaean Masters, Viri Chaldaei accusaverunt Judaeos] invidentes Judaeis, & ad eos opprin●ndos aut suasores hujus edicti aut na●a occasionis seduli aucupes. Grot. in locum. and that they had purposely invented this trap to catch them in; whom having ruined, they thought the Hebrew Religion with the chief Assertors of it would cease and all become Ethnique, as Chaldaea was: but God's thoughts were otherwise, he suffered his to be led, not only to, but put into, Deut. 4.20. Leu. 26.26. jer. 43.9. not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Iron furnace, so rendered ab excidendo, seu fodiendo, because the Iron Oare is digged out of the earth; nor 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Baker's Oven, wherein bread is baked; nor 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Tilekill or Brick-kiln; nor yet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a Founder's furnace to melt metal in; though these all are exquisite fires and intense in the torment they put those, Poena non infrequens apud Chaldaeos. Grot. in locum. that are cast in them, to; but 'tis 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a Chaldee word emphatique to express a Chaldee punishment, into a furnace of fire seven times hotter than ordinary fire, that is, into fire purposely heightened by the Materials of subtlety that feed it; into this fire, which was the creature of ingenious cruelty and sinful Malevolence, were the three Children cast; Ex ipso eventu statim liquebit non sine arcano Dei impulsu hoc totum suisse factum Galvinus in locum. yet for all this, they neither prayed mitigation nor relucted the cheerful acceptance of it, but having a clear Conscience of their innocence and a just confidence in God's power, they put themselves upon the flames, and in the mercies of the Almighty they did not miscarry; but not only had security from the flames exustion, yea or accession to them, but had also the association of Christ jesus to assuage the fury of the fire, and sweeten that intended Cross into an honour by his compartization with them; as the story read at large will more accurately inform the Reader. Now this our Chancellor makes use of to show the force of passion, however it be objected; for as love to Idolatry, and indignation not to see it propagated, moved Nabuchadnezzar to make the Decree, and the Chaldaeans to inform against the three Children as Contemners of it, and criminal for so doing; so love to God, and confidence in his mercy and power, kept the three Children from complying with the Text's terms, mentiri in perniciem animae suae,] and made them choose rather the fiery furnace then to worship the Image: Whence our Chancellor collects, that to sentence an Innocent is so great a crime that it not only deserves from God a sentence of retaliation, Matth. 7.2. according to that of our Lord, For with the same measure ye meet to others, it shall be meeted to you again; as befell the busy Informers in Daniel by judgement of Darius; Dan. 6. v. 24. but it also makes such a torment in the Conscience of a Judge that condemns him, that he never or very hardly sedates and abates it; but in the Text's words, Seipsum reum judicat omnis saevitiae & poenarum quibus innocentem afflixit. And how much a prudent natural man will decline the guilt of blood, innocent blood, we may see in Pilat's case, who though he was cunning enough to make the best of his Deputyship, and knew the way to cajoul the jews, and to render them supple to Acclamation of him; yet, when his Wife sent to him word of her Dream; wherein she had discovery from God, that the Prisoner to be brought before him was a just man, and that the jews thirsted after his blood; which judicially they could not come at, Matth. 27.19. but by Pilat's sentence and delivery of him to them to be crucified: when, I say, in the 21, 22, and 23. verses, Pilate had done as much as he cunningly could, to blunt the rage of the prosecuting jews, and to weaken and evirtuate their evidence; Vers. 20. and yet for all this, obstinate they were, being set on by the chief Priests and Elders: when all this, I say, was done, and yet they would not be discouraged, than he took water and washed his hands before the Multitude, saying, I am innocent of the blood of this just person, see you to it, v. 24. which, though I take to be no absolution of him, yet declares that he thought, that to judge Innocence to death is to draw judgement on ones self, and to bring Hell into a man's own Conscience; which David felt so sore, that he cryeh out to God, that of all Mercies he would bless him with Delivery from bloud-guiltyness. Psal. 51. 1●. And therefore our Chancellor, in terming cruelty Pernicies animae,] writes emphatiquely here, as every where; for pernicies comes à pernecando; and the Latins to show the direful nature of it, couple it with pestis: so Lucilius, satire. 2. Adelp. 1 Offic. Hostibus contra pestem perniciemque; and Terence, Eripite hane pestem perniciémque mihi; and Tully, Pernicies omnium adolescentum perjurus pestis; so of Catiline, Cum tua peste & pernicie; I say, the Chancellor in this applause of honest recumbency on God, rather than to provoke him by lying in perniciem animi,] does commend, the not only holy constancy, but wisdom of good men, who thereby save themselves much horror; which, their lukewarmness would occasion in the remorse of their conscience for it. O there is no danger men run into like that which they occasion themselves by forsaking the truth, and trusting to lying vanities, 'tis the Fog in which all Confidents miscarry, and bring themselves by sin to shame & sorrow. Religion, Scripture, and the Laws of the Land, are the only Guides of our duty to God, men, and ourselves, and he that walks according to these in the moral Duties and just Prescripts of them, shall neither err in judgement or sink in reputation; but shall dare to do as that generous, learned, pious, prudent, stout * Bishop Brumrigg, late L. Bishop of Exon. See my venerable friend, the eminently, storid, generous, painful, and pious Doctor Gauden, late L. Bishop of Worchester, his Memorials of him. p. 1●7. Zamzummim, as learned D. Collyns termed him, did, to a person, and in a time, when to counsel to give to Caesar the things that are Caesar's, and to God the things that are God's, was to bid him undo all that he had unduly done: I say, he, that is thus innocent, shall have from God the grace & favour thus to do, and not himself be undone for so doing. Whereas, when men are led by private Spirits and tickles of vain glory, vile ambition or vage covetousness they must expect pernicien● animae: Thus a Prophecy and a Vision, which two Priests, jointly averred they saw concerning the Duke of Buckingham in Anno 1521. Speed. p. 783. His obtaining of the Crown lost the seduced Duke, and the like lost others. And had that Reverend Chief-Justice (for so, Holingshed. p. 677. while he was himself, he was) Sir William Hancksford, Temps. E. 4. not more feared men's wrath, then trusted God's power and mercy; he would not have contrived his own murder to avoid the danger of difficult times: Holingshed. p. 1092. Tu, inquit, testis Domino Jesus, cui occultum nihil est, qui scrutator renis & cordis; non ideo me negare velle, ne peream; sed ideo mentiri nolle, ne peccem. Sanctus Hieronym. Ad Innocentium. nor Sir james Hales in Queen Mary's time. 'Tis a good rule Saint jerom practised, Thou, O Lord, the searcher of the reins and heart, knowest, that I did not therefore deny, lest I should suffer; but therefore I would not lie, lest I should sin; for if once truth grow cheap, and men learn the sinful subtlety to own her no further than she may serve their ends, and credit their designs and enterprises; then they care not to make lies their refuge, L. Archb. Laud. In his Epistle to King James in answer to Fisher the jesuit. and to blemish innocency rather than suffer the abortion of their Project. 'Tis a rare passage of the late Grand Arch-Prelate of our Church, who in many things was prophetical, Where the foundations of faith are shaken, be it by Superstition or Profaneness, he that puts not to his hand, as firmly as he can, to support them, is too wary, and hath more care of himself then of the cause of Christ; & 'tis a waryness that brings more danger in the end than it shuns, for the Angel of the Lord issued out a curse against the Inhabitants of Meroz, judges 5.13. because they came not out to help the Lord against the mighty: thus incomparably he. 'Tis good therefore to do all things with respect to justice, for the day of retribution will come, and then the lex talionis will be revived; which, they need not to fear who do righteous things, and they shall be unable to abide or avoid who do the contrary; the consideration of which wrought so with Antonio Venieri the 62 Duke of Venice, that he did a notable Justice on his own Son when an Offender; Shute's History Venice. p. 271. for Ludovico his son being in love with a Senator's Wife, there happened some cause that he and her Husband fell out, and Ludovico caused Horns to be hung up at the Senatour's Gate; the insolence of that injury coming to the Duke's ear, so offended him, that he caused his son to be imprisoned, where he remained till he died, a rare Precedent: and such, as if all Judges would follow, they would not need to be strictly tied up, which they being not in the Civil Laws, View of the Civil and Eccles. Law. p. 17, 18, 19, 20. wherein much is left arbitrary to them, as the learned Doctor Ridley has very judiciously collected the Instances to my hand; I presume there may some reason be for some to doubt whether Judges in that Law may not be men and err in judgement by having the opportunity of that latitude; but that they have transgressed that way is no part of my charge to inquire, or of my work to blazon: I am a great honourer of the learned Civilians, and shall ever in my Orb further all Civility to their renowned Profession; as owing myself much enriched from the light I have had and Collections I have made out of Tholossanus, Budaeus, Hopper and Grotius, four matchless Civilians, which I think fit here gratefully to remember: But I proceed. O Iudex, quibus in Scholis dedicisti, te presentem exhibere, dum poenas luit reus? executiones quippe judiciorum in criminosos, per ignobiles fieri convenit. This Apostrophe our Chancellor uses to show the tenderuess of his soul, which, though it can serve justice in pronunciation of its sentence on Malefactors, yet cannot abide the view of that execution it judicially awards criminals to; and this the good man thus sets forth to call men to trial, whether they have bowels of compassion to Manhood, when they have resolutions of vehemence against vice the abusion and dishonour of it. For since it is tragical to behold sanguinary executions, and custom is apt to naturalise cruelty to men, the Chancellor dehorts (as I think) in this expression all Judges from seeing Execution of their sentences; lest they should lose that softness and lenity which the Law entrusts them to express, where not derogatory to Equity and prudence. And therefore what Saint jerom said of Hylarion in another case, Mirentur alit signa quae fecit, mirentur incredibilem abstinentiam, scientiam, humilitatem, ego nihil ita stupeo, quam gloriam illam & honorem calcare to nisse. Sanctns Hieronym. De Hylarione. I shall apply to this; The profound Judgement of the Judges, the diligence, impartiality and calmness they express in their hearing, examinining, and judging of cases, I admire not so much, as to see and hear them do this; because they know not to do it is to derogate from God and the King, whose Delegates in judgement they are: yea, not to do it is to contemn the glory of doing good to Mankind. And thereupon our Chancellor looking upon cruel Judges as great Monsters, calls them to account to him whence they learned their terrible Principles, and how they thought they should give God their answer for such misuse of his indulgence. O Iudex, quibus in Scholis, saith he. Quibus in Scholis] All learning was in Schools from the teaching of the Master or Professor in them; and Scholes were the repose of learned men, where they did seat themselves to Meditation, and institution of those that applied themselves to them for learning's sake. Etymologists say Schola comes from the Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, vacavit, or otio vixit; because when men had wearied themselves with travel and peragration, their quiescence from that toil was called their School, that is, they sat down to distribute to others their Collections, and to propagate their acquirements to the good of succession. Athenaeus Deipnosoph. lib. 1. c. 17. The Holy Text tells us of the Schools of the Prophets; Berosus and Middendorjuus story the Assyrians and Egyptians to have Schools; the Phoenicians also who had Colonies of Trade and Correspondence all the world over, trafficked also for letters, Berythus amongst them was famous for it and termed pulcherrimam & l●gum nutricem; and among the Grecians Schools were so frequent, that all Greece was almost nothing but a great School, Caelius Rhodigin. Antiq lib. 18. c. 25. though Athens was called Civitatem linguatam, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the eye and choice centre of Science, because the notedest Masters resided there, and from thence dispersed themselves into all the World: so that Scholes were the Darlings of all Nations. Hence read we of the Corinthians 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, where Dyonisius the Syracusan Tyrant was Professor after his banishment; Laertius lib. 6. in vita Diog●n, Cic. lib. 5. Tuscul. Sabellic. Ennead. 6. the Rhodian Gymnasium, to which Pompey the Great was so great a Benefactor; the ¶ Strabo lib. 14. Schools of Alexandria which Strabo remembers, and from whence some say the name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by way of eminency was given to Alexandria, as those of Athens did the name ● As● to that; the Carthaginian Schools in which Tertullian was Professor, Saint Cyprian a Rhetorician, and Saint Augustine a Student; the Constantinopolitan Schools which brought up Saint Basil the Great, and julian the Apostate; these, added to Plato's Academas, Aristotle's Lyceum, Zeno's Stoa, the Cyniques Cyrosarges, the Academiques, Peripatetics, Stoiques, and Epicurean Schools, make a large Muster of learned forces, and a strong Battalia against Barbarism. But if to these the Schools of later times be added, there will be such an appearance of learned Liberality and Princely Greatness, as but to mention them will be the work of a life; Lib. 2. De Trad. Discipl. In Platea universali Discurs. 14. Ad finem To. 2. Operum. I shall therefore refer my Reader to those excellent Authors that have written on them, as Middendorjuus, Hospinian, Sturmius, L●dovicus Vives, Gatzonius, and multitude of others, which Fabian, justinian, and Dra●di●s, in their Bibliotheces mention; yea, as not the least of all to junius his Academia, and hold myself excused in writing no more of Schools here, because the sum of what I can briefly think of pertinent hereto, I (though very unworthy, yet I thank God I dare say it with a very great and just love to learning and Religion) did (a) See my Apology for learning and learned men. Printed Anno 1653. Apologetically publish in those tragic times, when they both were in hazard of (b) Strongly pressed in the Commons House that University Lands might be sold and the Colleges discolledged. Naufrage; and to the prevention of which, God knows, I therein did my utmost endeavour: To that Mite then, which God (I am assured) accepted into his Treasury, from my humble and honest zeal, for those then Orphans, do I refer my excuse for no further enlargement here, humbly beseeching God, that as he by his Grace then excited, and in that weak measure enabled me to that service, which no man can think had any Advantage attending it, unless it were that matchless one of being Valiant for the Truth: And, (c) This was my Message with the Apology sent to D.C. by Doctor Bernard, who honestly delivered it in my words. Expressing it by conjuring him, that then had the Power, as he was a Gentleman, to do by the Counsel and Information of the Address, as he thought in his Conscience God expected from him, that had the opportunity to do good or evil, as he had;) so He would graciously assist me in this humble undertaking, that from him I may be blessed with Deliverance from the strife of Penns and tongues: This I here introduce not superbly, as if therein I thought myself to have deserved of learning, nothing less, (for I know, that my undertaking was but my duty; and that which God required of me, whose uninterestedness in the actuality of Contests rendered me less subject to the exception of any party than some others were.) But to notify to those honourable, learned, and worthy persons abroad, that though England had too many Furies in it, who breathed out ruin to all that was sacred; yet, that there were many in it also, that were true men to the King, his Crown and Dignity, faithful to the Church of England her Order and Discipline, and cordially affected to Learning's Lustre and Increase: But of this, if I have said too much I crave the Reader's pardon, and proceed to what our Chancellor prosecutes, to wit, the redargution of those persons, not only that fatally invent, but that judicially promote tortures and torments. These, the good and grave Oracle interrogates where they learned that Incompassion to be present at Tortures, and to see their fellows in Manhood tortured, Te praesentem exhibere, dum poenas luit reus? For though the Judgements uttered by them against Offenders be the Law's Justice languaged by the Judges who are called the Lex loquens; Shute's History Venice. p. 288. yet the Executions of them, says the Text, per ignobiles fieri convenit.] Since though such Greatness, as Carrario's, was delighted in giving those he was offended with to wild and ravenous Dogs, which he kept on purpose to devour them; and others, whom he called to his Hall to speak with him, he tormented with two Scorpions which he had for their dispatch; Though Parasites ' the Mother of Cyrus the younger, Quoad corpus miserabiliter i consumptum mortem lentius admitteret. Sabel. lib. 3. cap. 3. pleased herself to give men that which should breed worms in their bodies, which by degrees should eat them up, and yet protract their miseries upshot; Pontanus lib. ●. De Immanitate. And Volesus Augustus his Proconsul caused three hundred men in one day to be slain by his Command, Fulgosus lib. 9 cap. 2. and walked through them all agore, crying out, O Kingly sight; Cael. Rhodig. lib. 10. cap. 5. And Macrinus tied dead and living men together till both were alike by the stench and Vermin; yea though butcherly Claudius' can look upon tortured persons and take pleasure in their afflictions, Tormenta quaestionum ac poenas parricidaerum coram aspiciens, glad●atoriisque ac bestiariis spoctaculis plurimum delectatus. Sueton. in Claudio. and those lamentable outcries, that by reason of them, they express; yet none but Monsters can thus do. Executions, though things as necessary in bodies politic, as Cuppings, Lance, Scaryfying, Amputations in bodies-natural, being the delight of those that are not of relenting bowels; which God himself expresses to us in that representation, which his wisdom, by the Prophet's pen, records to our Learning: when He complains his people were bend to back-sliding from him, Hosea 11.7. and though his mercies called them to the most High, yet none of them would for them exalt him; what provocation would be greater than this, yet He expresses himself by a pathetic of undelightedness in afflicting them proportionably to their demerits; How shall I give thee up Ephraim, Vers. 8, 9 how should I deliver thee Israel, how shall I make thee as Adnah, how shall I set thee as Zeboim? My heart is turned within me, my repentings are kindled together, I will not execute the fierceness of mine anger, I will not return to destroy Ephraim for I am God and not man, etc. And if the Good Angels do rejoice in Heaven at the good of man, surely their Philanthropy does indispose them to be instruments of his evil on earth any further than God's glory and his Saints good are concerned therein: 2 Sam. 24.16. Revel. 16. although therefore we read in Scripture of Angels of the Lord that execute the Viols of his wrath, and express the grandeur of his power over the contumacious and refractory world; yet are we not presently to conclude they are always the good Angels that do it but mostly the contrary, Executiones quippe judiciorum fieri convenit per ignobiles, saith the Text, that is, by lapsed Angels that hate God and every footsstep of his image, and by men who are unworthy to live, and therefore are made the Dispatchers of other wicked men out of life. Hence is it that the Law both Common and Civil make those Executioners or Headsmen, who are condemned persons, Tholossan. Syntagm. Juris. lib 31. c. ●●. and who purposely have their lives given them that they may serve the public in that necessary though infamous office; which how hateful it is all men know that know any thing; as, not only the common taunt gives us to understand, when rude men say scornfully of any man, they call him an Hangman, but also all Authors testify: Sunt enim exosi vel natura ipsa humana hujusmod● homines. Fornerius ad legem 42. p. 123. whereupon they are called ignobiles, which Authors conjoin with vilis, ignotus, abjectus in contemptum; so Tully mentions (a) 1 Tuscul. 164. Peregrina facies videtur hominis atque ignobilis; so inglorius & ignobilis a little after; Ignobilis profaece populi, saith Servius; and Virgil mentions ignobile gramen for that which is a weed and grows in every ditch; so that not without cause is that office Carnificis, quasi faecis carnis, of execution said to convenire ignobilibus, for they are only fit for it, and them it fits as directly as a Thief does the Halter or the Halter the Thief: for persons of any whit raised spirits and sublimated Ingenuities abhor employments of vexation and violence, to which the curse and reproach of Vulgarities is appendent; and therefore some of the Emperors made Laws to secure the public Executioner from that violence against, and detestation which the people had of him. And if, notwithstanding he were the Executioner of justice, they had such an abhorrence of him, how greatly would they have banded against him, Shutes History of Venice. p. 218. had he been as Calergo that base Greek was, who murdered with his own hand all the brave Venetian Gentlemen in Candia; and how joyfully would they see such an one rewarded as he was, who being taken by the Venetians was thrown down from the top of the Palace upon the point of swords, and being rend into divers pieces was cast upon the Dunghill. For if the Sun in Heaven did retreat its oriency, as ashamed (as it were) to lend its light to deeds of cruelty, as in the Case of our Lord on the Cross; If a tender spirited Vespassan justly adjudged no Malefactor to death but with tears and in compassion to virtue, Sueton. in Vespas. which otherwise could not be defended; If Frederic the Second made a Law against wrecks at Sea, as thinking them not fit to be Royal Boons, Si quo casu rupta fuerant navigia, vel aliter ad terram pervenerant, tam navigia quam navigantium bona, illis integre reserventur ad quos specta●ant. Titul. De Statu & immunitate locorum Religiosorum. when the owner was ruined by their Naufrage; If our Henry the Sixth of England was so mild and merciful that he could not endure the Quarters of a Traitor to be hanged up for him; If these Executions are so displeasing to brave Spirits and Christian generous minds, those, that take content in acting them, and show a more than ordinary readiness to accept the office of execution (though a very necessary one in any Government) may well be accounted ignobiles quasi non notabiles, unless in the sense Herostratus was for his wickedness. For as it follows. Non enim per Angelos sed per Daemones exequi facit Dominus judicia sua reddita in damnatos. This Clause confirms the former, for Angels are Philanthropique, and by reason of that do not only convey to the souls of those they inspect discoveries, secundum intellectum illuminationis, which they are capable of, but they do serve man, and the elect chiefly, by an exact vigilancy, non ex debito servitutis, sed ex effectu charitatis & ordine Legis Divinae. Now these which are described to stand before God, and to do his will, the Pursivants and Jannisaries of his Puissance, these are never instruments of torment to the damned, for they are without their Pale and Charge; the evil Angels being the Plagues of evil men: but sometimes they are commissioned to reveal to evil men good things from the Counsel of God, good to them which in his good time he will discover; and to the opposition of which, he, by it, blunts the edge of their malice and vehemence. For though the knowledge of Angels is too mysterious for our viatory State, and the Ambition of the Schools has displayed itself somewhat too curiously therein; yet this, I hope, I may safely add to what heretofore I have delivered of Angels, that, They are favourites of God, and have, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the first Discovery of God, Dyonisius Areopag. D● Coelesti Hierarchia, c. 4. p. 18. Edit. Paris. Anno 1615. and make known to us, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the things that transcend our nature, and are of consequence for us to know; and being so beneficial to us, aught to have an awe in us towards them; as those impure spirits, the Apostate Angels, which are called here Daemons, have over those on whom they are said, judicia reddita in damnatos exequi. Daemons.] This word, in the latitude of its Criticalness, is subject enough for a whole Volume, many having taken great pains and showed much learning concerning them, by name (a) Investigatio Peripatetica. Andre as Caesalpinus, Steuchius, Crespeti●s, Pselius, (b) In Militia Christiana. Gomez, and may others; my humble aim shall only be to make way to the Chancellour's intendment, by a short consideration of Daemons as Antiquity notioned them. The Greeks by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Lege Boissardum lib. De Devinatione. understand Plato's gnarus, sciens, intelligens; the Pythagoreans thought the Air full of souls, and those they distinguished into Daemons & Heroas; and Ficinus tells me, that they had an opinion, that to every one a Daemon is given for good, In Plotin. lib 3. Ennead. 2. p. ●2. which occasioned the Pythagoreans precary sonnet to jupiter, that either he would be graciously pleased to deliver them from the evils they were subject to, or direct them to that Daemon they should depend on for their Tutelar; the Stoiques called these Daemons 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and Saint Augustine out of Plato divides the rational soul into three partitions, that of the Gods, Plutarch lib. 1. De plac. Philosoph. cap. 8. that of men, and that of Daemons; to these Daemons he reserves the middle residence, Lib. 8. Civit. Dei. c. 14. Nam Deorum sedes in Coelo est, Saint Thomas on't of Apuleius defines these to be corpora aerea, animo passiva, ment rationalia, tempore aeterna, part. 1. qu. 51.1. prim. & qu. 115.5. Daemonum in acre, hominum in terra, perhaps resting on the literal sense of Saint Paul, who calls the Devil the Prince of the Air; to which Ficinus suffragates in those words, In Daemonibus positum est propinquum corporei mundi hujus Imperi●m; which does not only point to that notion of their power as they are superior, but of their influence as they are the Genius that inlive●s, Plotinus Ennead. 3. lib. 4. p. 286. propends and inclines Nature to its proper specifique expression of itself, Porphyr. lib. 2. D● Abstinentia, c. 36. p. ●0. Edit. Holstenii. as that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which carries to good and evil; which Epicharmus intended to us in those words, Apolog. c. 32. ' O 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; and Tertullian in those words, Lib. 2. c. 14. Nescitis Genios' Daemons dici; and Lactantius when he says, Hi Spiritus sibi Geniorum nomen assumunt; these, and infinite such like passages out of the Ancients do inform us, Sunt enim Carnifices & lictores in hac Dei Republ. improbi Damones vilissimo ministerio addicti in poenam antiqui sceleris. P. Mirandula in Heptap. lib. 5. c. ultim. p. 28. that as the Eudaemons were tutelary of men, so the Cacodaemones (which are the Daemons of our Text) are the Executioners of God's severity on the Godless world, who are not only pestered with their ill motions here, which Porphyrius expresses by calling them, Lib. 2. De Abstinent. ●. 40. p. 83. ● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. The Causers of Plagues, Barrenness, Earthquakes, Drougths, and other evils in this world, but shall be hereafter with that fire and torment which they are condemned to with them under the name of the Devil and his Angels, so says our Lord, Go ye cursed into everlasting fire prepared for the Devil and his Angels; which confirms the Chancellors positions, that the Executions of God's judgement in damnatos, Non naturaliter mali Daemones sed propria voluntate Aqu. parte prima qu. 63 art. 4. Lib. 8. c. 16. D● Civit. Dei. that is, on impenitent Malefactors, whom Justice has doomed to an eternal Exile from God's comfortable presence, is by these Daemons performed, which the Scripture calls the Devil, who is not only himself an evil spirit, but the cause of all the evil in our spirits, which by his temptations and craft he lurches into his power; and therefore Saint Augustine's advice is very good, Magna Dei misericordia necessaria est, ut nè quisquam cum bonos. Angelo's amicos se habere put at, habeat malos Daemones amicos fictos eosque tanto nocentiores quanto astutiores ac fallaciores patiatur inimicos. For as there is no good Action that men, whether Christian or Ethnique, do, but is, as Phavorinus says, By God's leave, juvante Deo, hoc est, favente Angelo Impulsore, suasoreqúe ● egregia gesta, admirandaque visu. Phavorinus, De Excel. homin●s. Part● prima, c. 53. p. 151. and by the concurrence of some good Angel impelling and persuading to the performance of it; nor did Curius, Fabricius, Coruncanus, Calatinus, Metellus, L●ctatius, Cato, Scipio, Laelius, or the rest, do any Heroic deed but by this Motive; and as that seeming Mariner, who Anno 1291. took the charge of above 500 Fuller's Holy Warr. pag. 228. Matrons and noble Virgins upon the Siege of Ptolemais, and was by them offered all the wealth they had, and which of them he pleased to take to wife, so he would transport them any whether from the Sultan's rage, which he freely did, landing them in Cyprus, and that done, could not be found; as, I say, I can judge this to be no less than a good Angel, that officiated in so charitable and Christian a work; so do I veryly believe that the contrary works are often the deeds of Daemons, Devils or evil Spirits, whom God permits to afflict the world with disasters for their Rebellions against him; and who, in the tormenting of them, are the more diligent, because they are desirous to make others unhappy as they themselves are, as * Daemons esse credendum estnocendi cupidissimos, à justitia penitus alienos. superbia tumidos, invidentia lividos, fallacia callidos, qui in hoc quidem aere habitant quia de coeli s●perior●s sublimitaete dejecti merito irregressi●ilis transgressionis in hoc sili congruo velut carcere perdamnati sunt. lib. 8. De Civit. Dei, c. 2●. Saint Augustine well notes: which gives me occasion to mind myself and others of that duty which our Lord enjoins us to, ¶ Matth. 26.41. Watch and pray that you enter not into temptation. Daemon est caput omnium malorum, non insluxu interiori, sed gubernation exteriort, in quantum avertuntur à Deo. Sanctus Thomas part. 3. qu. 8. art. 7. For though Satan has a direct power over the damned, and God gives him a latitude of Commission against them, exequi judicia,] to thoroughly torment them; Tentare ad nocendum est proprium daemonum, sed mundus & ●aro tentant instrumentaliter. Sanct. Thom. part. 1. & qu. 114. art. 2. yet he can do little or nothing to the Godly without special Concession from Him whose jewels they are, whom he tenders as the Apple of his eye, and against whom he will succeed no power that is laesive in any degree, but only what advances his own Glory and their good. Nec vero in Purgatorio cruciant animas quamvis praedestinatas ad gloriam Angeli boni sed mali. This our Text-Master brings into imponderate the argument he uses, that Executions are by ignoble persons; since not only evil Angels or Devils do torment the damned in Hell, but even they, and they only do do what is of terour and torment in Purgatory to the souls of God's predestinate. This is his sense, which I lift not much to write on because it seems to me an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of his religious mistake more than any serious matter on which to ground an argument. For though I honour Baronius, Volum. 1. ad Annum Christi 34. p. 242. who makes the Doctrine of Purgatory Ex Apostolica Traditione; and Bellarmine, who undertakes proof of it from the Scripture of the Old Testament, De Nomine Purgatorii. c. 3. from the New Testament, c. 4. from the Councils, c. 9 from the Greek and Latin Fathers, c. 10. of Catholic Consent, c. 15. yea though (a) Centiloqui parte secunda sect. 4 p. 70. Tom. 6. Bonaventure, (b) Volum. 2. in 1 Cor. c. 3. p. 95. Cajetan, (c) Lib. 3. Dist. 22. qu. 4. resp. ad 4. Durand, (d) In Supplem. quaest. 69. art 2. in Conclusione. Aquinas, (e) Par●e quarta quaest. 5. De Sacram. Paenitentiae. Alexander Halensis, (f) Partis primae de universo pars prima. c. 60, 61, 62. p. 640. Impr. Venetiis. Cent. Magdeb. Cent. 8. p. 549. Chemnitius in Historia Purgatorii. parte prima, Examinis Council, Tridentini, p. 78. etc. Tom. 2. Isaiah 1.18. Guilielmus Parisiensis, and multitudes of other do assert it; yet truly, saving their learned and venerable names, Purgatory to me (in their sense) seems but a fiction, or rather a politic Engine to bring the gold and silver of credulous and well-meaning men into the Pope's Crucible. I do readily and humbly own my Lord jesus the true Purgatory, he it is that purges us by his blood from all sin, and presents us spotless to his Father; he it is in whom that promise of God, Though their sins be as red as Scarlet, they shall be made white as snow, is yea and Amen to his Saints; and under him I bless God for another Purgatory, Afflictions, which God in this life mercifully sends His, and by the merits of jesus this Purgatory leaves us better than it found us. These purgatories the reformed and glorious Church of England, my Holy Mother, will acknowledge, and I according to her Declaration of the truth therein; but Purgatory in the Romish sense, for a third place between Heaven and Hell, and for a detinue of those that depart hence between the joys of Heaven and the torments of Hell; this I cannot understand: for our Lord, who knew all things, delivering it so plainly, Matth. 25.34. Come ye blessed Children of my Father inherit the Kingdom prepared for you from the beginning of the World; Vers. 41. and, Go ye cursed into Hell-fire prepared for the Devil and his Angels: Nor in the Apostles days is any mention made of Purgatory. Cent. Magdeb 1. lib. 2. c. 4. p. 353. I say, these being the only two States after life by him mentioned, Magdeb. Cent. 6. c. 10. p. 370. Cent. 6. c. 4. p. 134. Cent. 8. c. 6. p. 166. Cent. 9 c. 5. p 116. Cent. 5. c. 4. p. 262. Cent. 13. c. 4. p. 214. Cent. 11. c. 4. p. 103. the third is by me suspected, in their sense, for an invention of subtlety, to trepan the world into a purchase of Pardons and Indulgencyes, and with the Gain thereof to support the State of that Papal Hierarchy, as well in the Head of it, the Pope, as in the Toes of it, the Priests; both which find a great advantage from this Doctrine, and the popular Assent to it: for, As the Case now standeth, saith our incomparable jewel, and as most men think, Defence of the Apology of the Church of England, p. 358. part. 2. the Pope could be contented to lose both Heaven and Hell to save his Purgatory. Waving then the belief of the place, there is no cause to write much on the Cruciant animas non boni Angeli sed mali. For though I yield the souls of evil men have a cruciation wherein their souls really are tormented, poena damni & poena sensus, both in the loss of God's vision, and in the sense of inexpressible terrors, and intolerable and unendable torments; yet can I not see ground to believe the souls of holy men, who are the purchase of Christ's blood, should be deprived of the felicity, that is the fruit of it, Habent omnes anima cum de●saeculo, oxierint diversas receptiones suas, babent gaudium boni & mali tormenta, sed cum facta fuerit resurrectio, & bonorum gaudium amplius erit, & malorum tormenta graviora, quando cum corpore torquebuntur. Sanct. Aug. Tract. 49. in Johannem, lege lib. 1●. De Civirate Dei, c. 8. one moment after their dissolution: nor would our Lord have said to the Thief, This day shalt thou be with me in Paradise, had there been any interstitiary State as Purgatory is made. In the mean time if the souls of the godly are in this life tormented, 'tis by the permission of God without which no evil Angels can accede them; nay, not only does God keep the souls of his under his Sovereignty, as that jewel in their bodies which has the oriency and is the centre of reason, ‛ H 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Sentent. col. 17. p. 225. Edit. Cantabrigiae, 232. which Porphyrius allows it to have; and Trismegist tells us God loves, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as his own issue, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the character and representation of God; the Oracle of Apollo, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, part of God, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and such like expressions, Lib. De Excellentia hominis, c. 43, 44, 45. which Phavorinus has collected to the souls aggrandization: I say, God does not only reserve the souls of his to himself, as exemptions from evil Angels, but even the bodies in which these souls are. For though I know the Saints of God are afflicted in this world by Satan and his Emissaries, evil men, and all the imaginable practice of their rage they execute upon them; yet is this both for the kind and measure only so far as God by it appoints consequence of good to his; and therefore good men are by mortification and abnegation, cruciare animas here, and then they shall not need the Purgatory that is attended by evil Angels: nay, God that has predestinated them to glory has so manifested his benignity to them, that as they have no cause to love him less than the most they can, Aureolus in 1 Sent. Dist. 40. p. 910. Alex. Alensis. qu. 26. art. 2. p. 155. Sanctus Augustin. c. 14. lib. De Praedestinat. & gratia. Lib. 6. Hyponostic. so need they not fear his gracious conduct of them (humbly and holily demeaning themselves) to their eternal accomplishment. Concerning which Predestination to Glory, though much may be wisely and worthily written, yet I forbear to venture on it, the knowledge of it being too wonderful for me; Nunquam nos verecundiores esse debere, quam cum de Diis agitur, si intramus templa compositi, si ad sacrificia accessuri vultum submittimus togam adducimus, si in omne argumentum modestiae fingimur quanto hoc magis facere debomus cum de syderibus de stellis d● Deorum natura disputamus. Nat. Quaest lib. 7. c. 30. that being my Rule which Seneca citys from Aristotle, That we never ought to be so modest in any thing, as in that which concerns the counsel and secrets of God, which this Predestination being, I dare only adore it, remembering the Sovereign command and counsel of Authority, which sober Laymen as well as Clergymen ought to observe, Since secret things belong to the Lord our God, His Majesty's late Letter to the Lord Archbishop of Canterbury, to be sent into every Diocese. but the things revealed to us ' and our Children. Maligni enim Spiritus sunt per quos Dominus in hoc mundo miseris tribuit malum poenae. This the Chancellor proceeds in to fortify his Argument, That Executions are convenient to be done per ignobiles; and as he in his believed Purgatory makes the evil Angels to be there the Tormentors, so here, says he, evil men are the Plaguers of Mankind. Now these evil Instruments he terms Maligni, a word that has Emphasis in it, gnus the termination implying so much as from benè benignus, from digné indignus, so likewise malè from malignus, which carries not only the sense of malus which Critics derive from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, debilitavit or infirmavit, as if the evil represented by it were malum defectus only; Exercit. 30●, sect. 3. in which sense Sealiger tells us, Soldiers that were cowardly and had not heart to face and fight the Enemy were called Caculae militares from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, whence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is used in Authors for that vitium in malitia cum amittunt locum in acie, I say, Malignus does not only import this, but also a superadded asperity and delight in Mischief and Malefaction, when men do mischief totis viribus, Epigram. 63 which Catullus expresses by ment maligna facere aliquid; Malignus qui asper, difficilis, invidus, avarus est, saith Donatus, when men are peevish and short, not to be dealt with by dehortation from their touchiness; for Pliny ranks malignum & breve together, Lib. 7. c. 50. when men are as barren of good, Malignus ager agricoli illiberalis & minus ferax. Nonius. Plinius Ep. 4. F lib. 2. as Soil is that eats up all the Dung and Compost that is put into it, and yet brings forth nothing but weeds, such is Pliny's phrase in maligna terra; when I say a man is malignant, à malo Genio, & prava atque per versa voluntate, than no wonder that he is said by our Chancellor to be an ill Neighbour, A Spiritu Sancto Satan vocatur adversarius, Angeli vero vocantur silii Dei, quo significatur Angelos sponte obtemperare & ultro servire, Satanam vero invite & coacte. Calvinus 1. job. 1.6. a Tormentor of mankind: for as Satan is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Malignant, and we pray to be delivered 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, from his temptations, because they are the effects of his hatred and subtlety; so ought we to deprecate wicked men as the Instruments of punishment on the World, for as much as the Instruments to torture, execute, and dispatch Malefactors are such as are as bad as those they dispatch; who are therefore excused the Halter, that they may serve Justice in that ignoble and execrable, though necessary office, which better principled and less vicious men will not undertake. Nam cum dixerit Deus 3 Reg. 22. Quis decipiet mihi Ahab? Malus erat Spiritus ille qui respondit, Ego ero Spiritus mendax in ore omnium Prophetarum ejus. This Scripture is brought in to confirm the prealleged Instances, not that Historically there was any such conference between God and any Spirit, or that really any Spirit made such answer to God; Tostatus in l●●, Quaest 37. for I humbly conceive with Tostatus, that it was solum Visio imaginaria, whereby the sacred Penman introduces (by Authority from God) Ahab deceived by his own sin penal upon him; and thereby the just judgement of God, for his matchless Impiety, severely passed upon him: for here we are to take in that Rule of Divines, Those things that are spoken of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, are to be understood of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. And whereas in the Text 'tis said, Quis decipiet mihi Ahab? It is not to be understood as if God properly could be the Author or Incourager of deceit quà such, for that being the defect of veracity is inconsistent with his Attribute and Essence; but then he is said to deceive (with reverence be it written) when he does that per effectum which turns to wicked men's disappointmens', when he frustrates the counsels and enterprises of their Wisdom, takes them in their own snare, and withdraws that prudence from them which should stand them instead to their Conduct, Deus permittet mala fieri ad ostentionem potentia divina vel sapientia vel benignitatis vel justitia. A. Halensis, par●. 2. qu. 94. Numb. 4. art. 2. and the fortunation of their counsels; and when he suffers Satan's implacability to exestuate against them and to work effectually upon them; for though true it be, that God does not (as I humbly think) indulge Satan more power then naturally he hath, yet in not giving him restraint to that power, nor men defence by his grace against it, Satan and his Instruments have power of deceiving men how potent and wise soever they be: And thus Ahab comes to be deceived by God's permission of the evil Spirit to be a deluder of his Prophets, and they of him, Malus erat Spiritus qui respondit.] An evil Spirit or a Daemon is here visionally meant, Quaest 37. in locum. some have been curious to inquire what Daemon it was; Tostatus saith Rabbi Solomon thinks it was the soul of Naboth, for the blood of which innocent Subject, slain, this penal delusion and ruin on Ahab was brought; but he will not allow, as I think he has reason, this conceit: First, Because Naboth was a just man, and his soul being in Abraham's bosom could not come thence to deceive any one. Secondly, Because Naboth as a just man died in charity, which would be inconsistent with this revenge of his soul. Thirdly, Because the souls of good men have no desire to harm any either good or bad, but to benefit them the most they can. Fourthly, Because his question presupposes a real Congregation of counsel, and yet the thing here mentioned was but a Visio imaginaria; whose soul then this was, if a soul it were, matters not; a Spirit the Text says it was and a mendacious one, and therefore I think the Devil, who is said to be a Liar from the beginning: And probably it was that Daemon or Daemons which used to answer Ahab's false Prophets in their Inquiries of unlawful things: This Oracle that they rested upon as their strength and stability, God makes to be their seduction, and that not only to Ahab, but to him by his sycophanting and Idolatrous Prophets. So it follows, Ero Spiritus mendax in ore omnium Prophetarum ejus. 1 Chron. 21.1. job. 1. Zach. 3.1.2. Luk. 12.32. ] As God suffers Satan himself to tempt some good men for their trial, as he did David, job, joshuah the Highpriest, and Peter, so does he let loose Satan on evil men to bring to pass his displeasure against them: thus not only by the immediate Accesses of Satan to them, but by the mediate Applications of his instruments no less prevalent to his ends, such here as the Prophets of Ahab, men of influence and popularity, of reputation and credit with Greatness, Ahab's bladders that bore him up, his favourites on whose breast he leaned, and to whose fidelity he impiously attributed more than Kinglyly he ought: These Satan undertakes to suborn and by these to make the delusion strong and inextricable. Ero] 'Tis not sum or esse possum, not I am or I can be, but, I will be whatever I mischievously have been or possibly can be to draw a mist over the eyes of Ahab's counsel, and to intenebrate his Prospect into the consequence of this Ginn of ruin to him; so fatally will I steep my subtlety to overreach him, that whatever of extraordinary Injury my long experience and accurate malice enables me to, shall be discharged against him, Ero;] and that unawares to him I will be Spiritus] a mischief secret and indiscernible, he shall not know whence his bane ariseth; it shall be latens malum that shall provoke him to his ruin, Ero Spiritus mendax,] he shall account himself most happy in that counsel which shall at once prostrate his life and his glory: and this I will do not by any Instruments but those unmistrusted ones, his sacred favourites, o'er Prophetarum, The mouth of his Prophets: jer. 22.32. ] O that is poison with a witness that comes wickedly from the mouths of deluding Prophets, therefore God sentences those as causers of his people to err; when those mouths are not seasoned with sanctity, but have the poison of Asps, and vomit out the mire and dirt of falsehood and fanaticisme, Princes and people are in danger. No times so tragic as those are in which such dealbatores Potentum are, nor do any Leathergies so possess Nations, ' as when they are lulled asleep by blind Guides and unseeing Seers; when Prophets are fools and spiritual men are mad, then is the Day of a Nations Visitation: Israel found it so in Ahab's time, in which, not only one, but all of Ahab's long-robed Favourites were tinctured with demonical mendacity, Etiam ab exemplis malorum sacerdorum vitiorum labes fuit dimanant in populum quandoque minus two idouci sunt ad impetraudam gratiam ad quos vigilandi & orandi populo spectat officium ranto in mirum magis opus habet populus ut vigilet, sargat & impensius oret, ipse pro se, nec pro se tantum, s●d & pro Presbyteris ejusmodi. Tho Morus Equ. in Euposition● Passionis, p. 126. Impress. Lovan. 1566. not one of them excepted; for such was the Daemon's confident Affirmation to God, That he would be a lying Spirit in the mouth of all his Prophets; that it seems to carry a Warrant to our belief, that he had taken Livery and Seison of them to be his own, jurare in verba Magistri, to be such and only such as he would have them, who being himself the Author of seduction, and the great Imposter that by his gulleries out-wits this world's Politics, and by his frauds deceives, as far as God permits the possibility of it, the other World's wise men, the very Elect, according to that of our Lord, Matth. 24.24. which he left his Church (in those Ages in which these feats should be acted) as their premunitional caution against them, and their Lesson to intend the defeat of them, which they can no ways better do then by Faith in God's Power and Promise, the Victory of which overcomes the World, and Satan the Prince and Arch- Malignant of it. Non enim decuit Spiritum bonum exequi talia, licet à Domino prodiit judicium quod Ahab mendacio deciperetur. Here our Text-Master shows whence it comes to pass, that Ahab was thus seduced and that not from a contingency or a fortuitous casualty, but from a just and sovereign preappointment of the penal act of Justice upon him, à Domino prodiit judicium. He that made the World with a word can with a word do what he pleaseth in it; He it is that commands times and seasons, men and Angels, creatures and Elements: the whole Regiment of Nature is his, to order and disorder it as he pleases; from this matchless Potentate, King of Kings, and Lord of Lords, comes Ahab's final and fatal Period, à Domino prodiit judicium: and that not only that Prophets should be the men, by a lie in their mouths, the means of his deception; but that as God permitted the thing to be effected by Instruments proper thereto, so did he employ none but such to those ends, because non decuit Spiritum bonum talia exequi.] If holy Spirits cannot in respect of their purity and charity condescend to those derogatory Acts of seduction and fraud, and such Artifices must be practised to effect the punishment of sinners demeritings; then either those that are proper for it must do it, or it must not be done, which omission not being allowable, for God's will must succeed, the deduction will be, that evil Spirits must be the Instruments; for the non decuit relates to the nature of good Spirits which is to do good, which execution of punishments quaà punishments and laesive to nature are not, nor is it suitable to the office of good Spirits (who are tutelars; to keep off) not Executioners to intrude upon men perplexities and discomforts. And therefore I conclude, that be the Daemon never so smooth, faced and beauteous, let his pretences be never so fair and obliging, let his pompous Inscription be Holiness to the Lord, or, The Everlasting Kingdom, or, Behold my Zeal, let him have in his Banner the quinque Vulnera of our Saviour, and profess to set him upon his Throne; yet all these are but splendida mendacia, but varnishes of a purid and diabolical Villainy, which can no more excuse itself by these sucacious trickings and meritricious Ornaments, Huic prorsus mulieri cuncta alia fuerunt prater honestrum animum, opes splendori generis sufficiebant, sermo comis, nec absurdum ingenium, erat prudens, magnifica, liberalis, sed & lasciva. Aeneas Vicus, invita ejus. than Poppaea Sabina could to the Age she lived in, who knew her to be well-spoken, witty, generous, and sweet natured, defective in no natural perfection, but that which is the only Glory of a Woman, Chastity. Sed dicet judex forsan, Ego nihil egi manibus meis in cruciatibus istis; sed quid refert propriis facere manibus, an presentem esse, & quod factum est iterum atque iterum aggravare. This is well here objected, that it might as well be answered; That God weighs not so much the Act as the Motive and Principle. Matt. 26.3. c. 27. v. 1. & 25. The jews were the Cryers-out for Christ's crucifying, yet in as much as the Scribes and Pharisees, the Elders and Priests, set the people on and by their subtlety modelled his death, God's omniscience imputes to them the malice of the actual execution of him; Urijah was slain by the hand of the Enemy, though joah was accessary because he connived at the Plot, which tended to his murder, 2 Sam. 11.14, 15, 16, 17, etc. yet David that willed and wotted it was chiefly charged by God with it. 'Tis not enough not to be openly evil, for that may be the Act of Policy not Innocency, abscondore vitia non abstindere, as Tertullian's words are: but he that will have a good footing, and lay a clear Title to God's Protection and Blessing, must be free from having any thing to do in evil. Ad impietdtem perinde valet unum obulum conferre ac si omnia conferas. Marcus Arethusius gave the Rule, One Farthing subsidiary to wickedness beguilts the giver as much as Pounds to that sinful purpose; no posting it off to others when they are what they sinfully are by our Authority. If qui nou vetat peccare cum possit, jubet, what a Mountain of Impiety do they lie under, that will, direct, command, compel men to evil Actions, and are not satisfied till they commit them; certainly God has great reckonings to make with men in Place for this, because the errors of all underlings will be charged by God on the negligence, if no worse, of Superiors, who are not only to look, that they themselves are not personally evil, but that no evil has countenance and corroboration from their Authority; all unrighteousness acted in a Nation, by the Governors' privity, is the Governors in the account of God, because God has given them the sword, and that which is done by the colour of that, is, in God's account, done by them whose the Sword is; which if the Judges of the World would rightly consider, they would not think they should be excused by the darks and shades that they abstrusely wrap themselves up in, who are the chief Engineers in that which is torment to some and temptation to more: yea, were it not that greatness has some unavoidable naeves and flaws in it inconsistent with that durable peace and continual feast which nourishes an endless Jubilee in the soul, wise and holy men would not so little seek it as they do shun it; and bless God for Agur's Portion, Food convenient for them: but good men knowing the corruption of their hearts, and the dangerous influence of temptation in Greatness, 2 Kings 4.13. Neh. 2.1. 2 Sam. 7.12. 1 King. 13.21. have as well blessed God for the happiness to dwell among their own people, as, to be buried in the Sepulchre of their Fathers. I know the number of these modest unwilling ones is but small, but yet some there are, and those not the least excellent in their Ages and Places; Of all the Fathers of the Church, none merited more than Athanasius, yet no man shunned Governmen in it more than he; Shute's History of Venice. p. 225. Of all the Dukes of Venice, none a braver one than Contareni the 60 Duke, yet he fearing to be chosen Duke left the City on purpose to avoid it, the Senate sent Letters to invite him to the City, but come he would not till they had chosen a Duke, at last the Senate concluded to confiscate his Goods, and for ever banish him the City if he came not to the City, which dreadful sentence brought him thither, and by his return brought the Dukedom with it to him; and the reason is, because Power does engage men to delegate that to others to act, which they must answer for to God as the Commissionators of it: for the rule is good, Qui facit per alium, facit per se. And therefore the Chancellor says in the following words. Credo quod vulnus, quo santiatur animus judicis paenas hujusmodi infligentis nunquam in cicatricem venict. Here the Chancellor shows, that in justice pronounced by a Judge has often a Return upon him in the dismal effects of it, Terror and torment of mind, which he calls vulnus, which is not a light superficial scratch or a shrewd dry rub and bruise, but a deep wound fixed in the quick which discovers its laesion in emission of blood and expiration of Spirits; this is the nature of a wound which the guilty Conscience of a cruel Judge is said to labour under; and a sore torment it must needs be, for it is said sauciare animam, which denotes such a galling as is in the tender parts when they are rawed and tortured with scourges of rodds, In Ruder 18. Cic. 3. verr. 47. Idem in Fato 55. so Plantus, Quid causae est, quin virgis te usque ad saturitatem sauciam; and Tully, Servi nonnulli vulnerantur, ipse Rubrius in turba sanciatur; from this grievous pain, which the jews probably learned from the Nasions, the torment of a guilty Conscience is metaphorized, for that it makes the life of man turbid and uneasy by it, which the Greeks hinted in that Adage, ' H 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. How these terrors of God in the souls of men have afflicted them, the examples of Cain, Manasses, David, judas, make appear in holy Writ, In his Chapter of God's punishments upon Persecutors and Contemnors of the Gospel p 2106, 2107, 2108, 2109. and the like other Stories afford: Master Fox has many Collections in his Martyrology to this purpose, and were all the instances of the affrighting tristicity of it perished, that notable one of Spira would inliven the memory of them all; nor are the Stories of Bonner, Judge Morgan, Thornton, Arundel, with others, much behind it; but declare notably, that when there is a sanciatio animi, as in these notable returns of God upon presumptuous sinning there is, Non delectatum esse cum jure illo acro. Cic. 5. Tuscul. Respiciendum est judicanti ne quid ant durius ant remissius constituetur, quam causa deposcit, nec enim aut severitatis ant clementia gloria affectanda est sed propenso judicio prout quaqn● res expostulat statuend●●m. Bractonus, lib. 3. c. 6. than there is but a black night of horror and despondency in the soul. Therefore as all men are hence admonished to look to themselves, that they provoke not God to chastise them with these Scorpions, so are Judges especially, because they are God's delegates, and they doing unjustly in the place of the just God, and to his vituperation and scandal, are by his just judgement, so much the severelyer handled, as there crime is more enormous: for this is crimen lasa Majestatis coelestis, since it is sacrilegiously to entitle the just God to unjust sentences, which indignity to him he recoils in that fatal judgement of setting men's sins in order before their faces. This is that which makes the wound nunquam in cicatricem venire,] that is, never heal; for when a wound tends to a scar, which is the sign of it on the superficies of the skin, than men reckon the festery matter is outed and all the noxiety removed, by reason of which nature closes its orifice and shuts its mouth from craving further aid from art, leaving only the scar as the testimony of its danger being over and escaped; but when the Conscience of a prodigious cruel sinner has got a wound from God's stroke upon it, and the sins of a cruel life, with all the aggravating circumstances are marshaled and set in rank and file before a man, than he sees nothing but despair and horror, terrors and amazements, such as Cain and judas had, and such as all bloody wretches shall find to their consternation, for God who is good and does good, cannot away with evil men and evil actions, but brings them home upon the Actors in all the tragical fruits of them. Had jehu peace that slew his Master? Had Bonner the comforts of God on his deathbed who made Hecatombs of Triumph to his deluded zeal with the bones and bodies of burned Martyrs? Fox. Act. & Monuments. p. 2096. Had Benefield, the butcherly Keeper of Queen Elizabeth, who thirsted after nothing more than that incomparable Lady's blood, and not only suborned Witnesses against her, but joined with others (purely upon the account of her being a Protestant) to persuade the Spaniards at Court, either to dispose of her abroad or rid her out of the way? Had these, I say, any comfort, was their wound ever healed? O 'tis much to be doubted they had not; though Repentance has indeed a balm that can do all that is needful, and if God give it and accept his gift, much may be done, but otherwise Vulnus nunquam in cicatricem venict, and the reason is, the humours that poison the wound are not rectified, sweetened or diverted, but there is a continual flux of them to the malade part which is harmed thereby, and still continued a wound. For as it followeth. Maximè dum recolit acerbitatem poenarum miseri sic afflicti. Indeed this is God's terror by which he gores and batters wicked men, and by the pelts and ramms of which he forces open the recesses of their fancied content, and galls them in their tender parts; so that they have their torture ever before, because ever within them: This was evident in judas, who when he remembered 'twas a Master that treacherously he had betrayed, and an innocent blood that he had contracted to shed, how raving and perplexed is he? so that the hands, that told the silver, tied the halter by which he hanged himself: Fox. Acts & Monuments. p. 2112. Famous to this purpose is the story of Olivier, Chancellor to Henry the Second of France, a fierce man he was and had condemned certain Protestant Gentlemen for taking Arms against the House of Guise, being instigated thereunto by the Cardinal of Lorraine, sick the Chancellor fell, and troubled in Conscience, casting forth many sighs for his unrighteous sentence, at last on a sudden he skreeked out with a lamentable cry, saying, O Cardinal thou wilt make us all be damned. The Consideration of which makes good men wary not to be Instruments of Injury and Cruelty. Scutum reliquissa praecipuum flagitium, nec ant sacris adesse aut concilium inire ignominioso fas. Tacit. Do Morib. Germanor. Whatever a Soldier parts with he should not with his Arms, but if he have by cowardice lost them, he ought with Cato's Son to enter the thickest strength and menacing'st storm of the Enemy to recover them: and so a good Christian, whatever he be forced from, should not be from his integrity, and from a calm and peaceable Conscience, which they cannot have that are delighted in envy, malice, and mischief to all but their own party. Remember this all ye that prefer this world before your Consciences, and to please a passion break out against Innocence, who care not who sink so ye swim, nor who is your footstool so you mount the Bucephalus' of your Ambition; Remember this ye that ride Post, and switch and spur to reach the Babel's of your Contrivance, though the Cry of the oppressed, and the Groans of the famished poor be in the stone mortar land materials of your Superstructure; Not, O unhappy men, your Counsel but God's shall stand; Sir Garret Tryers found it so; Acts & Monuments. p. 2108. he, for a Graveship promised him by the Spanish Regent, undertook the destruction of the Protestant Professors in Flanders, but God struck him with such a blow as left him dead in his bed as he was just entering upon it, which, methinks, should make men study in all their advantages and actions, moderation and temper to express their worth by; which john of Austria not kenning, in eight hours caused the death of 14000. Citizens of Antwerp, who were put to the Sword, and above 3000. Anno 1576. Dinothus lib. ●. De bello civili, p. 208, 209. perished in endeavouring escape, together with the loss of the City to the value of three Millions, besides all the wars and cruelties on the Belgic Provinces which were merely in hate to the Natives, and to introduce the Inquisition there contrary to the Laws of the Country. For when all the pother they that are fierceest have made comes to the moment of death, than they will be forced to say to their fiercenesses, I have no pleasure in them; then the memory of one good deed done charitably and piously, will be more refectional than all their superb huffs and ranting pitilessnesses: yea in this world's account 'twill appear in the issue most prudence to be mild and kind, where men may do it without Injury to Justice and Order. 'Twas a very memorable moderation the Venetians expressed to the Zaratins who had seven times revolted from the Venetians, Shute's History of Venice. p. 195. and in all those revolts been reduced by sharp and terrible wars; yet for all that did not the State raze or sack the City, though delivered unto their mercy, but put a new Governor into it, and the chief Authors of the seventh Rebellion were for ever banished the City; this was the Method of that wise State: Dinothus lib. 3. De bello Belgico civili. p. 194. of a good temper was that famous Requisinius, one of the valiant and noble Governors of the King of Spain's in the low Countries, who coming thither found it all in flame, yet He, though a valiant and expert Soldier, was a lever of peace, grave rather than severe, and more studied the public settlement than his own glory; this made some airy persons detract from him: but God so honoured his bravery of mind, that he ever had the better of all his opposites; and moderately used the advantages he had to shame their enmity and not to ruin them for it. This was the praise of that Grandee, and the contrary had not only lost him the lustre of that glory, but engaged him in that internal torture, that the memory of truculent and barbarous actions infelicitate their actors by, whose conscience is never healed but continually terrifies them, maximè dum recolit acerbitatem panarum, etc. CHAP. XXIII. Praetereà, si ex contractibus, illatisve injuriis, vel haereditatis titulo, jus accreverit homini agendi in judicio, si testes non fuerint, vel si qui fuerint moriantur, succumbet ipse agens in causa sua, nisi jus suum probare valcas inevitabilibus conjecturis, quod facere crebro non contingit. etc. HEre the Chancellor offers something in seeming extenuation of the Proceedings of the Civil Law in Cases of Contract, Reparation of Injury, or Title of Inheritance, which are three chief Subjects on which the justice of any National Law ought to work; and the main Argument he brings hereto is, the necessary presence and testimony of Witnesses to the maintenance of those Actions and the recovery of right by them, which he would make, as it may happen, defective to that end that Laws are made. Ius unicuique tribuere. This is the sum of this Chapter, which I shall no further write upon, then to show that in these Cases Witnesses are required, and without them, by that Law, no Action lies so as to be recovered upon it. Ex Contractibus.] Contracts are the first of the Ternary, and matters of capaciousness they prove, and in the ordinary notion we account them those Accords and Agreements of men upon which Actions for non-performance of them valuably arise; Inventa sunt pacta & conventiones ut alium obligemus ad dandum vel faciendum quippiam. Tholossan. lib. 21. c. 7.1. Lib. 21. c. 8. p. 407. Bracton lib. 3. c. 1. Erant hamque Actiones praescriptae verborum agendi formulae pro natura cujusque negotii, say the Civilians, hence is it that because man is a sociable creature and lives in the light of his reason, turning and winding things to his politic accommodation, which is the Principle of contract, the Laws of Nations allow him his jus prosequendi in judicio quod sibi deb●tur, which if he rightly manage and punctually observes, he cannot fail of the Law's equity in them. These Contracts then, to discourse at large of, would be the work of a life, for there is no end of them since they take in not only those of Merchandise, but even of Oeconomy and Martialness; hence is the Agreement of two to be man and wise called Contract of Marriage, of Master and Servant, a Contract for service and wages: yea the Military art hath its Contracts too, as appears by those mutualities of accord that were ever between the Soldiers and their Leaders, to which the Apostle is thought, and that not improbably, to allude in those words, I bear in my body, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the marks of the Lord jesus, which Phrase is borrowed, as I suppose, from those military Compacts that were of old, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. AErius Medicus apud Lipsium. De Militia Romana, lib. 1. p. 45. when Captains put on their Soldier's faces or hands, their Brands or Stamps of dignoscence, and without this they were no lawful Soldiers: so to this day all Soldiers either are entertained by Indenture, or entry on the Bandroll, and have the Colours of their Regiment as the Badge of their Contract with their Chieftain to do him service according to the Laws of War, Bracton lib. 3. De Actionibus. c. 2. and the performance of his promised pay; for reciprocation is absolutely necessary in Contracts, and where the persons that contract are not fit and proper, Non valet donatio nisi tam dantis quam acciptentis concurrat mutuus consensus & voluntas unda enim donatio & pactio non obligant, nec faciunt aliquem jure debitorem. Idem lib. 2. c. 5. lib. 3. c. 2. Contracts are insignificant, but if such they be as they ought, they are actionable to procure the performance of them, and not to fulfil them is to do injuriously; and that the Text says the Law does allow an Action for: ●o are the words, not only si ex Contractibus, but illatisve Injuriis.] Illatis●e Injuris.] So the old and true Text is, the later, illasisve Injuriis, is corrupt; for the Chancellour's intent is to show that the Law being ars aqui & boni, looks upon all departure from it as wander, and all measure beside it as Injury, quicquidenim non jure fit injustè fit. Now Injuries within the Text are chiefly those violences and uncharitable Actions which flow from an ill will and a pravity of Principle, which because it appears in some signal violation of social kindness and politic order, Voluntas & propositum distingunt malesicia. Bracton li. 3 c. 2. is made to entitle the Magistrate to not only see the Law executed upon it, but to interpret it a stroke of Malice (though at a distance at him. Bracton lib. 3. c. 4. p. 103. ) And therefore is it that in Teespasses, Assaults, and Batteries, the Declaration is vi & armis, the Trespasser, etc. did do what he did; because injury persisted in, and not satisfied for, is inchoate Rebellion, or a defiance of the Custos Regni & Legum, which aggravates the guilt: so the Romans accounted small offences, which simply were nummarily penal, to become in their repetition capital; and Lipsius gives the reason, Quod talem pravo ingenio censebant & factum ad peccandum fortasse, & contumacia iis visa punienda, & quod quasi per contemptum ludibriumque legis peccares. lib. 5. De Milit. Rom. p. 345. Because thrice to repeat a fault is to reproach the Law of which it is a breach, and to dare it to severity against such a blushless effrontery. By this than it appears, that Injuries are the warps of man, seduced from his primaeva rectitude, and a recess from charity and righteousness, which is the only noble endowment of humane Nature: Quia affectio●●sa nomen imponit operi tuo, & crimen non contrahitur nisi nocendi voluntas intercedas, nec furtum committitur nisi ex affectu furandi. Bracton. lib. 3. cap. 2. the proneness to decline which, through the prevalence of passion regnant in us, and the fruit of Satan's influence on us, whereby our wills, won by him to a delight in unrighteousness, does that to another which is against Justice and that civil right, which God and Nature has vested in men, is that which is termed Injury: to avoid which, Lewis the Hungarian King being come down into Italy with great forces against the State of Venice, (who were so weakened by a Plague that they were forced to declare, Shute's History of Venice. p. 197. That whosoever would come to them, after two years' abode there, should be accounted a Citizen) and being informed of the Act of God, causal of their distress, and applied to with entreaty not to take advantage of it, condescended so far as to promise them, that during their Adversity he would make none attempt against them, which was a great Command of himself; and which had he not done, Syntagm. Juris universi. lib. 38. De Injur●is & Con. he would, in my mind have been injurious: but enough of him and of Injuries, for which there is remedy appointed in all Laws according to right reason as Tholossanus abundantly makes good. Vel Hereditas Titulo.] Haereditas est successio in universum jus quod defunctus antecessor habuit ex quacuoque causa acquisitionis vel successionis eum seisina sua sine, etc. lib. 2. c. 29. p. 62. This is Title of Land, that which is patrimonial and successive, donative or testamental, acquisitive or emptional, of this Bracton treats: this the learned called anciently 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Tholoss. Syntag. Juris lib. 16. c. 5. though since that term is restrained to the Patrimonium Crucifixi, those that are God's Portion, Evangelic Levites, as I may so say, who are there by in their Order understood, but more ordinarily Inheritance; Haereditas] was that which was the Portion of the Children of the defunct Possessor, which were termed Haerdes necessarii, and to whom it came by the Law of the twelve Tables, sive vellent sive nollent: after these the next of the Blood, or such as by Will they would appoint, whereof the Civil Law gives us much Learning every where in the body of it, Tholoss. Syntag. Juris. De acquienda vel amitrenda Haeredit. lib. 46. ●Pandect. and in the Doctors upon it. Now in all these Cases either of Contracts, Injuries, or Inheritance, the Laws Civil requiring lawful Witnesses both for Nature and Number, or such prevalent conjectures as are Tantamounts', do but what, I humbly conceive, is rational, religious, and worthy them, and thereupon I conceive them justifiable in so doing; nor can they well be said deficere in justicia, because they do require that which is for the most part haveable if the Cause be just, and if a just cause once in an Age sink for want of it upon the Act of God who calls the Witnesses away before they have given their testimony, the Law is not to be charged for that it could not provide against, for God is to do with his Creature what he pleases whose he is; but rather the Law is to be justified which wisely provides for Witnesses to be examined in perpetuam rei memoriam: and the Parties, whom the want of Witnesses most prejudices, are to be blamed for omitting the indulged opportunity, the rule of Law being, Currit tempus contra desides & suitemporis contemptores. And if Laws should be branded as defectuous in point of Justice for what thus may happen, no humane Law ever was or ever will be just; for as there may be some high Tides and strong winds that may force a breach upon the best Walls and Mounds of art imaginable, so may there also be some casus omissi which may be too extraordinary for ordinary Rules and Provisions to remedy: nay the Common Law itself will be in most Cases thus defective, since in most, Selden's Notes on cap. 21. Tholoss. Syntag. Juris universi. lib. 47. c. 11. or all Cases, Witnesses are necessary, and that heretofore in the beginning of every Action, and if Witnesses fail before a Trial come, the suit were as good not proceed as fall for want of Proof; so that with favour to my learned Master, the Civil Law in requiring witnesses or inevitable Conjectures, without which it judicially determines no Action, does but what is just; and may be said, unicuique quod suum est tribuere, since that which is not made out by witness or presumptions of equivalency thereunto, is as if it were not at all any thing above a bare allegation; the rule of Law being to proceed to judgement, secundum allegata & probata. And so I end this Chapter. CHAP. XXIV. Reguum Angliae per Comitatus, ut Regnum Franciae per Ballivatus distinguitur, THese words are initial to what is of materiality in this Chapter, and thereupon I begin with them, the preceding Clauses being only matter of form and transitional coherence to maintain the continuity of the discourse; which, though it be very comely, and proper to display the venust proportion of this Creature of the Chancellour's, which he himself could not but love (because 'twas his own, and so like his learned and pious mind wherein it was form, and I cannot but admire for his sake; whom to serve I have herein spent some pains, and through the goodness of God I hope not unprofitably,) yet do I not think those things that are so ordinary as Prefaces and Flowers of Oratory are, fit to seize me from persuance of more ponderous passages, therefore proceed I to these words, Reguum Angliae per Comitatus, etc. Regnum Angliae.] This is the Subject, a noble and Imperial one; but of it because I have written in the Notes on the seventeenth Chapter, and shall further in those on the twenty nineth Chapter, I forbear here: only all men are to know, that England was ever a Monarchy and Imperial Crown, and though in regard of the Community of its Subjects, whose goods in all the latitude of felicity was aimed at by the just Monarches and Laws of it, 2 & 3 E. 6. c. 6. the name Commonwealth has been given it: so Stat. 3 jacob. c. 5.2 & 3 E. 6. c. 21.1 & 2 P. & M. c. 5.21 H. 8. c. 16 yet that Name, Sir Ed. Cook on Little on p. 168. in contradiction to Imperial Crown, Monarchy, State and Kingdom, was never allowed here, May 1649. Scobels Collect. c. 27. p. 30. nor attempted in any Change till the year 1649, when by an Ordinance it was, as far as God permitted that strange Engine to operate, new modelled and named a Commonwealth, or Free State; but as ab Initio non fuit sic, so blessed be God now it is not such in a sense of opposition to its Sovereign, The Author's Prayer. but loyally returned to, and enjoyed by Him: Whom, God preserve long, our Gracious Protector and Great Encourager in virtue; and to Whom, God preserve us Christianly subject and Englishly loyal. Per Comitatus.] This is the Predicate what the Kingdom is in its politic Scheme, to wit, Shire quasi Share Vowel. Descrip. Britt. part. 1. p. 153. a Pack of Shires or Partitions of Government for the more apposite and orderly regulation of them and of the whole Island in them; now the main and superior parts of this Division is called Comitatus, possibly because it contained a Circuit of ground and people which was under the charge, Caesaris Comitatus, of some one that was of its Kings and Masters near Attendants and bosom-friends, Totius Anglia Pagos & Provincias in Comitatus primus omnium commutavit. Ingulphus. Gloss ad vocem Comes. Cambden Division of Britain. who was Companion of his War and of his peace: into this Model of Counties, Alfred is said to cast England about the year 871. and as Dutchies were the Charges of Dukes, and thence took their Names, so Counties of Earls who presided them; it being usual with Antiquity to honour every Dignity with somewhat of trust Martial, or if not with the thing, yet at least with the Name, as Sir Henry Spelman, and Master Cambden with others assure us by most clear Authority. Comitatus then being the name of Offices had various Acceptions, of old it signified the Senatus Imperatoris domesticus, as we may say, The Court of the King's House; after, they were extended to that we call the ¶ 9 H. 3. c. 35.2 & 3 E. ●. c. 25. County Court, which is the Court of the Earl or Count, now the Sheriff who hath the Custody of the County. These Charges are also called Shires from scype the Saxon word, to part or divide, because they are those limits and bounds of ground which our Ancestors, from the Germans, learned to model Government into, for its more secure and expedite carrying on. Cambden's Britannia. Division of Britain. p. 159. Vowel. Descrip. Brit. p. 153. 1 Instit. on Littleton. p. 109. The Number of these of old, saith Mr. Cambden, were accounted by some 34, or 36. but at this day are reckoned at 40. and 13 in Wales settled in Henry the Eight's time, as appears by the Statute 27 H. 8. c. 6. & 34 H. 8. c. 26. though Sir Edward Cook makes 41 Counties and 12 in Wales. And within some of these is every part of England, Ità ut non sit locus in Anglia, qui non sit infracorpus Comitatus.] For because every County is under some Sheriff who has the Custody of it in times of Peace, (as the Come sanciently had In War, and as our Lord-lieutenants at this day seem to have) and who is responsible for every legal judgement to be executed in it; therefore is every place in England under and within the Precinct of some County; yea though a privileged place it be, yet is it within the body of some County, though it may have a special Officer to whom the dispatch of judicial matters belongs. The Consideration of which was the cause that made the Isle of Wight to be declared in the Statute of 4 H. 7. c. 16. to be part of the County of Southampton; for that it being a rich Neck of Land and having many Inhabitants in it, as it might have the Privileges and freedoms, so also should pay the Duties and Service to the Laws that other parts of England doth. So then by all this it appears, that as France was divided into Baylywicks, when, I think, the Capets reigned in France, which is but the same * Cook on Littleton. p. 168. ●. Charge under another name; Ballivus coming from Baillar tradere, committere, and a Bailiff being nothing but a Commissary to execute another's pleasure; in which sense we read of Ballivus Provincialis, Glossar. in verbo Ballivus. Ballivus Franciae, Ballivus Libertatis, Ballivus Burgorum, Ballivus Manerii, and Ballivi Vicecomitis, of which Sir Henry Spelman says, Hoc illud hominum genus est, etc. This is that sort of Bailiffs, that while they torture and catchpole men, do so dishonour the Name of Bailiff, that all the honourable Notion of it is by the Infamy of these Bailiffs Errand disgraced: I say, when we ' read of Bailiffs, I mean Chief Ones, we read but the Name. of the same Office and Officer with our Sheriff, whose Office is termed Balliva most frequently; 1 Instit. on Littleton. p. 61. ●. 168. B. so that the sense of the Text is, As there is in France no place but is under some Baylywick or other, so neither is there in England any place but is within some County or other. Comitatus quoque d●viduntur in Hundreda qua alibi Wapentachia nancupantur. Vowel's. 1. part. Description of England. c. 4. Inter LL. Sancti Edw. c. 32. De Hundredis & Wapentachiis. p. 143. Edit. Twisd. Mr. Selden's Notes on the Text. p. 25. Fleta lib. 2. c. 61. Lib. 1. c. 50. As Counties were Lunches out of the whole Loaf of Land, so Hundreds or Wapentakes are Morsels from them; now though these are differently named, yet are they really the same, for the Laws of Saint Edward revived by the Conqueror say so expressly, Quod Angli vocant Hundredum supra dicti Comitatus (to wit, Warwick, Lincoln, Nottingham, Leicester, and Northampton Shires) vocant Wapentachium; and as Hundreds some called them, because they were the tenth part of a County, in which dwelled Centum Pacis Regiae fidei jussores, (which I rather believe then that random conjecture of Ralph of Chester, who makes the Hundred to be Procinctus centum Villarum,) which is so ridiculous, that the learned ¶ Nescío an Medietas, magni habeniur, qui vel 40. vel 30. numerant, etc. Gloss. in verbo 365.366. Knight says and that truly, that There is no Hundred that he knows in England has 100 Villages in it, no, not one half, many great ones have but 40, or 30, others not 10, some not two, thus he. Concerning Hundreds fee Malmesbury, De Gestis Anglorum, p. 24. Selden's Notes on this Chapter, Tugulphus, p. 495. Cambden. Brit. p. 158. Cook on M. Charta, c. 35. And of Hundredors' to be returned on Juryes the Stat. of 35 H. 8. c. 6.27 Eliz. c. 6. make mention. See Stat. 33. H. 8. c. 10. 4 Carol. c. 7. Brompton Chron. p. 957. Edit. London. Fleta lib. 2. c. 61. Wapentachia.] That this is the same with the former, though otherwise called, as I have written before: Generally this is acknowledged to be derived from wapnu, arma, and tac, tactus est, alluding to that Honoratissimum genus assensus armis laudare, which ¶ Notes on this Chapter. Hoveden. Annal. parte posteri. p. 346. Sumner in Gloss ad verbum Wapentake. Inter Leg. Conq. p. 145. De Hundredis & Wapentachiis. Edit. Twisd. Master Selden quotes from Tacitus, it being usual with them to give Approbation in their Convents Military by touching their Weapons as token of Assent, and joining their utmost Power to assert it. Amongst the Laws of the Conqueror I find this recorded, when any new Governor or Judge of the Wapentake first came to take his Charge, he called together all the chief men within his Bounds, Et descendente eo de equo suo omnes assurgebant ei, ipse verò erecta lancea sua, ab omnibus secundum morem foedus accipiebat, omnes autem quotquot venissent cum lanceis suis ipsius hastam tangebant, & ità se confirmabant per contactum armorum pace palam concessa. Hundreda verò dividuntur per Villas, sub quarum appellatione continentur & Bargi atque Civitates. It should seem Villae were in our Chancellour's time terms of Comprehension not Diminution, else he would not have shrouded under the term of Villae Cities and Burroughs; or at lest Villae were Tantamounts' and equivalent to Burgi & Civitates: This promiscuity of expression the learned Selden gives precedent of, On this Chapter. ss. 10. and all to this purpose, that no place should be exempt from being pars corporis Comitatus; either part of the County in which the City, Ville or Burrough stands, or a County of itself, for rare is it to have any place privileged as Battle-Abbey was, to which the Conqueror gave Grant, Charta Conq. Abbot. De Bello. in Comit. Sussex. Leugam circumquaque adjacentem liberam & quietam ab omni Geldo & Scoto & Hydagio, etc. & omnibus auxiliis & placitis, & querelis, & Shyris & Hundredis: And therefore though Vills, Cities and Burroughs are commonly used one for another, De Gestis Pontific. lib. 4. p. 161. as Malmesbury writing of Claudia or Gloucester, called by the Britain's Airchala, as a City devoted to the memory of Claudius; (of which Seneca makes mention in those words, Barbaros in Britannia cum pro Deo colere, & in honorem ipsius Civitatem edificare) whereas he terms Bristol but Vicus celeberrimus. Lib. De Morte Claudii. Though, I say, these three names were of old confounded in use, yet now adays they are distinct, Cook. Instit. upon Littleton. p. 109. B. Vills being open under Officers of the Crown as parts of the County; Burroughs are particular Governments and Corporations by Prescription or Charter, sending Members to Parliament mostly though not always: but Cities are accounted such as are Shire-Towns, most an end Walled, having Sessions and Courts in them, and a Bishop's Seat; and these, requiring great Circuit and Jurisdiction, may uninjuriously be said to be contained under Vills, which our Text makes capacious as appears by those words. Villarum etenim meta, non muris, aedificiis, aut stratis terminantur sed agrorum ambitibus territoriis magnis, Hamletis quibusdam, etc. Hamletis quibusdam.] A Hamlet is some part, or member of a Ville or Town, so says the Text, Selden notes p. 27. Dyer. fol. 142. Vix est locus aliquis in Angliae qui non infra villarum ambitus contineatur; For, Ham in Saxon signifies a Circuit, or Compass. Whence the word Hemme, for the edge and limit of any Garment; Sir Henry Spelman says, the ancient word Haga, Sire (I think to our Hedge) to signify a Trench, (Hedges being bounds, as Trenches, as Ditches are,) or rather little residencies for security and livelihood; Ham quasi Home, Gloss p. 328. which, because many habitations conjoined eminently are great Towns, are called by names ending in Ham: Buckingham, Walsingham, Notthingham. And Demivills are termed diminutively Hamlets, Gloss p. 330. see the Stat. of 14 E. 1. which I find not Printed, though Sir Henry Spelman mention it. Praeterea in Quolibet Comitatu est officiarius quidam unus, Regis vicecomes appellatus. This Praepositus, or Deputy of the King is here set out by three terms; that of Office Officiarius; That of honour Vicecomes Regis; That of number, unus Officiarius.] This word comes from officium, & the termination Rius being personal, directs to the He that executes it; thus from The-saurus Thesaurarius; from Camera Camerarius; from Registrum Registrarius; from Cancellum Cancellarius; from Praebendum Praebendarius; from Ostium Ostiarius; from janua januarius; from Beneficium Beneficiarius; and so in Infinitum. Quidam Vnus.] Many men, but One Governor, or Principal: God put a Dignity on One; Hear O Israel, the Lord thy God is one. And Reason and Policy has also given the Suffrage to One; 6 Dentr. 4. Vnus in coelo sol, unus in regno rex, Deus est unus & maxim unus, Sanct. Thom. 1 Part. Qu. 11. art. 3 & 4. Deus est unus secundum quod unum convertitur cum ents, non autem quod unum est principium numeri. Idem Eodem loco. una in regione religio is the rule of all Policy: and therefore the Kings of England it should seem by our Chancellors word, appointed to every County one Sheriff; yet till the 8 Eliz. 16. the Statute tells us divers Counties were pared, and had but one Sheriff between them (as I think yet some have) but by that Statute those Counties were parted, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Eusebius Orat. de laudibus Constant. Tom. 1 p. 457. and one Sheriff appointed to each of them, as by the 13 of the same Q. Eliz. c. 22. was appointed to others; Casus in sphara Civit. p. 70. the Nation probably filling more with fit persons, and the charge being better borne for one then two Counties; And because his office was judiciaria dignitas as well as Ministralis, Cook upon Littleton, 1 Part. p. 168. Stat. Lincoln 9 Ed. 2. 4 H. 4. c. 5. and like to that of the Romans Consulage, therefore as the Law committed to this Officer, and required his residence thereupon, so did it not put Pluralities, or supernumerary duties upon him more than those he could reasonably be thought in his (a) 7 R. 2. c. 6. 9 Ed. 2. 4 Ed. 3. c. 9 5 Ed. 3. c. 4. Tholossan. lib. 47. c. 15. Proper Person to perform: Nor did our Kings and their Counsel appoint anyone to this place of Dignity, but such as was proper thereto, Milites vel Armigeros, men of blood, breeding, and estate; And to these one by one in their office has he committed great trust; For, since every man's business is no man's, and many in an office are authors, rather of confusion then orderly action. The Laws of Nature and Nations prefer Oneness in most things before Manyness, as I may so say. And as God by one soul in the body rules all the senses and faculties to a rational and orderly purpose, so does the King in the Law carry on wise and worthy Government in Counties, by this one (though not only) yet chief officer in it: and as the Romans were wont to make their Equity's of select men, Nunc pocunia judices tribuunt, Plin. lib. 37. c. 1. who had their horses appointed them, and were accounted to decline when the conditions and fitnesses of men were more calculated by their purses then minds; Longa pax militem incuriosius legit, Veget de milit. Rom. lib. 2. so is it in any place, and Government a great defect to choose persons to offices, who are not nobly qualified thereunto, it being a rule with me, that the King's Authority is never contemned, Quotiescunque & aliquis militia crediderat offerendum p●atim, de natalibus ipsius & de omnis vita conditione examen habeatur, & ad militiam nullus adspiceret nisi quem penitus liberum aut genere aut vita conditione inquisitio tam causa depreheuderit, lib. 7. Cod. Theodos. Tit. 6. but when it is managed by weak men. And certainly, what the Emperor's Theodosius, Gratian, and Valentinian decreed concerning Soldiers, That no man of mean birth, fordid breeding, ill carriage, poor nature, or of illiterate mind, should be admitted to the noble company of Soldiers; but the best, and every way braveliest accomplished of men, is applicable hereunto, and practised in a great measure by our State, as in the hereafter Treaty hereof will appear. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Hallicarnass, lib. 11. Regis Vice-comes appellatus.] This puts a dignity on the Sheriff, that though he be not as the Roman Legates are by the Historian described to be, whom he terms of all the most honourable and sacred; having the power of an Emperor, and the sanctity of a Priest. Yet may this officer be allowed many, not only grains, but ounces and pounds of honour, for his derivation from the King, by the Count, or Earl of the County, to whom he succeeds; who therefore was called Comes, Cook on Littleton, p. 168. because probably he was either of the blood, or by merit inoculated into the stock of Princely greatness, Ex limitaveis ducibus Comites ordinis primi creavit Constantinas, Comites à principis Comitatu, quod ipsum soleant comitari. Pancirol in notitia Imperii, p. 118. c. 74. to which he was a companion: Now this compartization in command (as I may so say) Time wearing off, and the wisdom of Princes disallowing Great men's rivalry, or potency, to prevent the irruption of it to Princely disturbance, Plin. Epist. 176. has committed this trust to a hand where it is acted less formidably. And this Person or Officer, the Law calls Vicecomes; where vice pro loco accipitur, Lib. 8. c. 46. as Pliny phrases it, so Bos in Aegypto numinis Vice colitur, Epist. 101. lib. 7. Sueton in Nerone, c. 31. that is loco, so Cartias uses vice alicujus solicitus, & Suetonius vice mundi circumagi; which is as much as ad similitudinem mundi, and Livy has pungi aliena vice: so that this Officer being successor to the Earls of Counties, Inter optimas lectissimorum militum turmas neminem è numero serverum dandum esse decernimus, neve ex caupona ductum, vel ex famosarum ministris tabernarum, aut ex coquorum aut pistorum numero, vel etiam eo quem obsequii deformitas militia secernit, nec tracta de ergastulis nomina. Cod. Theodos. Tit. 13. who originally had the charge and Government of the Counties, their Honourable Titles were called by; Is hereupon to be accounted a great Officer, and to be chosen out of the most select band of the Shire-Gentlemen. And such, not only England apprehends them to be, but also some other Country's: For, to this day, in Sweden (*) Albergatus in Thesaur. Politis. Relat. de stain Reg. Suecia, p. 317. every Territory has its Vicecomes qui alter fere prator & qui jus dicit; Above whom is the praefect, Lipsius' lib. 1. de Milit. Rom. p. 44. or Lamem, with us Chief Justice, who rides Circuits, and by these Vicecomites are attended, which probably was the rise of our Circuits and Sheriff from some Northern Ancestry of ours; the Danish Laws (with help of the Saxon) affording us much of Institution, and Law-Method. Qui inter caetera officii sui ministeria, omnia mandata & judicia curiarum regis in Comitatu suo exequenda exequitur. This the Chancellor brings in to the fuller blazoning of the Sheriff's dignity, which is, not only Ministerial, but Magisterial, and judicial as I humbly conceive it in some cases is, and as before the c. 17. of Magna Charta much more was; before which it is probable Sheriffs did arrogate to themselves Pleas of the Crown, by which they being ignorant of the Law, gave ill Judgement in the Case of Man's Life, which is a tender thing, and requires the Learning of the great and Grave Judges to the cognizance and consideration of it: Cook on c. 17. Magna Charta. I say, I humbly conceive there may be some thought that this inconvenience occasioned this bar of the seventeenth Chapter. And, the main drift of the Chancellor is, to represent the Sheriff; as properly the Hands and Feet of Justice, the executor of the Law, that carries its wisdom and Justice to a thorough execution, and vital energiqueness. Hence is it that he has power both in jure & in sero, and has committed to him according to Sir Edward Cook, a threefold custody, vitae justitiae, For, no suit begins, or process is served but by the Sheriff; Vitae legis, he is after long suits, & chargeable ones to make execution; Vitae Reipublicae, he is the principal Consevator of the Peace within the County. Pag. 168. Instit. 1 Part. And thereupon the Text says right, that he is omnia mandata curiarum regis in Comitatu suo exiqui: For, in that he is said mandata curiarum regis exequi, Is employed Execution of the King's Commands, because the King Commands by matter of Record, and Rex praecipit, & lex praecipit are equivalent, as heretofore more at large has been discoursed. And now I seem to have a fair Challenge to write of the Courts of Westminster Hall, which are the Curiae Regis Ordinariae, The honourable Courts and jurisdictions planted in this Kingdom, Speech 1609. p. 534 Institutes of the Juridisdiction of Courts as King James' words are; but Sir Edward Cook writing of them, not to the elaboration of their nature, nor any before him that I know of, warns me to be modest and not to meddle with such intricacies, which I am very easily persuaded to avoid, because I know the learning of them more various then to be abridged as here it must, and mistake so easy, that truly I should be very prodigal of prudence to engage in it; Sir Rob. Forster. Chief Justices. Sir Orland Bridgman. Chief Justices. Sir Hales. Chief Baron. Fleta lib. 2. c. 26, 27. it shall only content me to profess my duty and reverence to the King's Majesty's Courts and to the most Reverend and Learned Chief Justices, with their suitable Companions the Justices in them; to whom, as I can do no less so I will be excused in applying that to their worthy Masterships, In Epist Petro Aegidio, Inter Opera Mori, Impr. Lovan two. 1566 which Paludanus, upon the view of Sir Tho. Moor's Works, wrote to his friend, Nec satis scio majorene cum voluptate an admiratione felicem Britanniam, quae nunc ejusmodi floreat ingeniis, ut cum ipsa possit antiquitate certare. But I proceed. Cujus officium annale est, quo ci post annum in eodem ministrare non licet, nec duobus tunc sequentibus annis, adidem officium reassumetur. Before this, Sheriffdoms were granted for term of life, terms of years, or in Fee, but by the Stat. 14 E. 3. c. 7. it was restrained to one year; 12. E. 4. c. 1. yet, how it come to pass I know not, but sure so it was, that Sheriffs did continue many years in their Offices, and, did many Oppressions to the people and evil Service to the King and his people, 14 E. 3. c. 7● Rastal Statutes large. so are the words of the Statute: therefore by the Stat. 23 H. 6. c. 8. Provision is made against their Enormities, which are called, Many and divers Oppressions to the King's liege people, unduly, evilly, and falsely to serve the King and his people. And hence comes the limitation which our Chancellor terms annale officium, though by the 12 E. 4. c. 1. some relaxation is given, yet still is it annale officium; for the wisdom of our Ancestors looked upon longer time as too great an opportunity for mortal weakness and wickedness to evict: and therefore it anticipated the occasion of such temptation, it being a wise Proverb which we have, Opportunity often makes a Thief; thus was Achan lurched, joshuah. c. 7.21. I saw among the spoils a goodly Babylonish Garment, ane 200 shackles of Silver, and a wedge of Gold of 50 shackles weight; then I coveted them and took them and hid them in the earth. O 'tis a rare thing to be a David and see a Bathsheba and be in love with her, and yet let her rest whose she rightfully is; nor is any sprig in Octavius his Plume more Imperial and matchless then that which was rare in the Caesars, to be perpetuo sanus; to have an Empire and to be so little in love with the greatness of it, as upon serious and moderate thoughts to think of choosing a private life and resigning that is an Argument of supern Magnanimity; which truly if it be thick sown, as I question, yet that it comes up thinn, I question not. And if all the Instances of the danger of opportunities were obliviated, yet in the survival of two, which our own stories do and will mention, the first of which was that of the Protector after R. 3. and that later (O tell it not in Gath, Administrationem eorum (Regnorum Angliae & Galliae) duntaxat mecum duco. jus vero fructumque as proprietatem omnium vestrum haud dubiè publicam, qaem ego animum quo dic habere desiero precor u● superi mihi hoc Regnum, nec vestrum modo, sed vitam quoque ipsam ut indignam qua retineatur, abripiant. Hist. R. 3. per Tho. Morum. Equ. Aur. p. 56. Edit. Lovanii, Anno 1566. declare it not in the streets of Ascalon, lest the uncircumcised rejoice:) That, That, (which by abuse of a gracious Law, and to the destruction of a Gracious King, engaged us in War and Wickedness) would more then enough revive to us the danger of Opportunities. So that all things considered, in as much as the Sheriff is an Officer of great power and trust, and many temptations attend it, yea much evil has been done under the umbrage of it, the wisdom of our Kings in their Parliaments has been great in limiting them as by the prementioned Statutes and as by those further ones, 1 R. 2. c. 11. 6 H. 8. c. 18. they have done; for in that it is lest to be Annale Officium, there is time enough to discover the virtues of fit persons in their service to the King and Country. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Plutarch. Quaest Rom. p. 282. Macrob. 1. Saturnal. c. 14. Capito in Gloss. For a year (which is a time of 12 legal Months, ordinarily said the Measure of the Sun's march through the Zodiac) the Heb. called it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, à mutatione, from its revolution; the Greeks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, because as a Circle it turns into itself: the Learned make many Notions of Annus, they tell us of Annus civilis, naturalis, Annus magnus, and under these of Annus Solstitialis, Isidor. De Originib. p. 248. Lunaris, Embolismus, Bissextilis, jubileus, Olympias; and (a) In Hortensio. Tully sums up all in that great year which contains 125●54 years, but most ordinary is that Lunary year of 30 days, and the Solstice year of 12 Months, Brechaeus ad legem 134. according to which our Law computes and our Chancellor is here, I suppose, to be understood. All Nations then agreed in a year as the mensuration of time, Lib. De verborum signific. p. 311● only they variated in Commencement of this time, ¶ Lib. De Autro Nymph. p. 269. Edit. Holst. Porphyry tells us the Egyptians made Aquarius 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, The Leader of the year, others Cancer; Isid. De Orig. p. 248. Plutarch in Quaestionibus Romanis. p. 268. the Christian account is with january, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Door-Month, because it lets men into a Method of Computation; but many Christian Nations compute the year from March as we (because of the Reigns of our Princes) do with us; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Plutarch. libro praecitato, & post illum. which I can say no more to, then that it seems to follow the Constitution of Romulus, who instituted but ten Months to the year, Alciat. De verboram signific. in legem 98. p. 225. whereof March was the first, january and February being after added by Numa, which makes up our year of 365 days which I humbly conceive to be that time which our Text intends by, Annale Officium. Id licere dicimus quod cuique conceditur. Cic. 5. Tuscul. Quo ci post annum in eodem ministrare non licet.] This is added to show that whatever Administration is beyond the allowance of the Law, has a non licet upon it, and entitles the Actor, not only to the penalty of 200. l. for every year, but to be in misericordia: Now seeing that the Law by Acts of Parliament says, 23 H. 6, 8 Rast. He that is Sheriff shall be in that Office but one year, nor be reassumed to that Office for the next two years after; and this it does on purpose to break off the Officers insolence over the people, and the people's dread of the Officer, after the years expiration he being defunct as to all power, and (unless there be no other sufficient within the said County) acquiesce he ought, Peccaere nemini sicet. Cic. 1. Tuscul. 78.23. H. 6. c 8.1 R. 2. c. 11. ministrare non licet, so are the words of the Statute; and hereupon, when as the under Sheriff of Bristol doubted concerning his capacity to hold the place from year to year, as the under Sheriff of London does, the Statute 6 H. 8. c. 18. did declare, that notwithstanding the Statute of Inhibition he might, 42 E. 3. c. 9 23 H. 6. c. 8. Erasm, in Adag. Chil. 2. Cent. 5. Adag. 61. or else those Statutes being in force he durst not; so well the later Laws remedied the inconveniencies of former times, that the old Proverb, Aeginenses neque tertii neque quarti, may be said of English Sheriffs: no man can ordinarily continue in it any time beyond that of a year, which is time enough for an honest man where such choice of them is, as in England blessed be God there are, and beyond it would be too much time for any that is not worthy to have it. Officiarius iste sic eligitur; Quolibet anno in Crastino Animarum conveniunt in Scaccario, etc. This shows us, that as there is one Officer, so he to be chosen, and so, and so only (ordinarily) as the Statute of 14 E. 2. c. 7. appoints, which our Text is but an enlargement upon. And the first thing that is remarkable, is the Note of time, Greater, Quolibet anno, an annary Officer to be chosen annarily; The lesser or prefixed day of the year, in crastino Animarum. Crastino Animarum.] This was a day set apart upon Papal ends, afore and in our Chancellour's time, but at this day is a Festival by virtue of the Statute of 5 & 6 E. 6. c. 3. which I do not assert to decline Canonical Compliance, or as thinking the Church of England may not harmlessely, as she doth, symbolise in these little externities with the Romish Church where she has any footstep or print of unsuperstitious Antiquity for her Colour or Warrant; but to satisfy the scruple of some tender spirited persons, that they may make more Conscience of contemning Authority herein then hitherto they have, for in that some Saints days and other Festivals are called Holidays, our State does not call them such, For the matter and nature either of the time or day, Note well. nor for any of the Saints sakes, whose memories are had on those days, for so all days and times considered are God's Creatures, and all of like Holiness, but for the nature and condition of those Godly and Holy Works wherewith only God is to be honoured, Religiosum est quod propter sanctitatem aliquam remotum ac sepositu● à nobis est, verbum à relinquendo dictum. Massur. Sabi●us apud Aul. Gell. lib. 4. c. 9 & 10. and the Congregation to be edified, whereunto such times and days are sanctified and hallowed, that is to say, separated from all profane uses, and dedicated and appointed not unto any Saint or Creature, but only unto God and his true Worship, these are the words of the Statute, which shows that pure prudence and piety destinated these to the respect that with us they have, which our Ancestors were not only directed to do by the light (as it were) of nature, which dictated the Commemoration of notable persons and Actions by a more than ordinary solemnity, but also by Example, and Authority of God, Positively commanding it: And therefore there has never been any Nation so rude but has observed it; nor any so Religious but has been awed into the Conformity hereto: which made S. Bernard declare him unworthy of the joy of the Festival, Indignus quippe solenni laetitiae est qui states tum vigiliae abstinentia non observat, Sce●● in Vigil. S. Andreae. in the sacred comfort of it, who does not observe the Injunction of Fasting, in preparation for it. Now, though I know there may be, and is abuse of Holy-days, as of the best things there may, and divers times is: yet do I not thence see any excuse they have that defy Holy-days from this accident; but, methinks it would rather become their greater Zeal, and Knowledge, to Celebrate them so, as to rectify that aberration, and to method and credit the reduction of its eccentricity: For, if great mercies and notable achievements be remembered on these Days, I see no reason but our Customs to Feast, and wear our best Robes, and do every thing most Triumphingly on these Days, are applaudable: The Heathen-Herald taught Clytaemnestra this, when he tells her, That sad looks, and narrow austerities do not become a free-day, which is devoted to the Gods, Petrus Victorius, lib. 28. var lectionum c. 5. ex Aeschylo in Agamemnone. the best of beings: and S. Bernard highly encomiating the Feast of All-Saints, says to his Friends and Auditors, Non ignoratis fratres, etc. Know ye not, that men of the world do on Festivals, Serm. de fecto Omnium Sanctorum. Feast splendidly; and the Higher the Day is, the most dainty fare have they. This shows, that Festivals were ever in account, Bios 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Stobaeus Serm. de avaritia. because they were the relaxations of Life from its constant portadge, imprisonment, and toil; but, concerning the institution, nature, and qualities of this, Tholossanus gives a very great and good account, Lib. 2. Syntagm juris, c. 16. as others also do, whom I shall mention in the Notes on the 35 Chapter. That which I write this for, is, not to magnify Holy-days, as they gratify any Carnal Principle in vain men, which by them is pleasured; or, in any opposition to Tender Spirits, whom some delight to grieve and contradict: God forbid any of these should prevail with Me, who, I hope, have not so learned Christ; but, my Enlargement herein is only to allay (if I might) the animosity that (a) Ord. 1641. c. 81. Scobels Collect. some have against Holy-days, whereof that Omnium Animarum is one: and to show, that Crastino Animarum is therefore set apart (as I suppose) by our Law, to choose this High Officer in, because it supposes, the minds and souls of the Great Men, then to nominate, being lessoned with piety the day before, will have a great tructure of it the morrow; and being convened there, before they have let the severity and honour of the precedent day evaporate, come big of it to the Nomination of this Officer; who, Glossarum ad M. Paris. in verbo Hokeday. by being Elected on this day, gives name to Crastino Animarum; as the massacre of the Danes by the Women did to Quindena Paschae, another Law day. Conveniunt in Scaccario.] This is the place where these Great Ones meet to choose, in the Exchequer, Originally the Court of the Revenue; whereupon Polydore Virgil would have it written Scattarium, from the Germane word Schats, or the Saxon Scacca, thesaurus, impositio, taxatio; Probably it may be so: For, it is the Sea, into which all the Rivers of Public Revenue run; Fleta, lib. 2. c. 25.26. every Sheriff accounts for his Office into it: and therefore, when in Edward the sixths' time, it was found, that the Sheriff of Northumberland for a long time had not accounted for his Office to the Exchequer, as other Sheriffs did, but converted the profits of it to his own use, the Statute of 2 & 3 of that King, c. 34. ordered redress of it; and brought in that out-lying-Deer into the Herd, 4 jinstt. Chapter Exchequer. & 1 Instit. p. 304 B. ex Ochamo, p. 17. making him responsible as others were. Concerning this Court Sir Edward Cook has written of late, as Nigell is said of old to do, who had incomparabilem Scaccarii scientiam & de cadem optime scripsit; of this Court therefore no more. Thirdly, As the Time and the Place, so the Persons Electors are admirable to be noticed, Regis Omnes consiliarii; That is, such of the Lords, 21 H. 8. c. 20. 31 E. 3. c. 9 27 E. 3. c. 26. 1 E. 3. c. 14. 14 E. 3. c. 5. and others of the Privy-Council as will: For, this Omnes is not Necessitatis & coactionis sed capacitatis & juris. All of the King's Council may, Qui propter prndentiae opinionem ad concilia principium suggerenda destinantur. Alberg. Thesaur. Polit. c. 2. p. 2. if they please, and some of them must, and many will; and with them comes the Policy, and Gravity of the Nation. Tam domini Spirituales quam Temporales.] This is added, to show the variety of our Prince's Counsels, which, as they are of things that concern Religion and Policy, so are furnished with men oracular in both Provinces Subjects, divided in Terms, and by Names, of Spiritualty and Temporalty, so says the Stat. 24 H. 8. c. 12. not that physically there is any difference between a Bishop, and Abbot, and a Lay-Baron, for they are alike men, and subject to like infirmities, possible to deceive, and be deceived; and alike are the Votes of their Baronies in Parliament: but, the distinction is, to import a kind of metaphysical difference; as the Clergy Lords Calling being Circa res Sacras; imports, their minds to be in Sacris, Holy men, Having their Conversation in Heaven, whence they look for the Highpriest of this Profession to visit them with an Euge serve bone; These than who are men set apart to God in their Order, and Dignified above, and distinguished from vulgar men in Priesthood, are called Domini Spirituales; not that they pretend the Pedigree of their Honour from Christ jesus: 25 H. 8. c. 20. 1 E. 6. c. ●. 8 Eliz. c. 1. 39 Eliz. c. 1. ●5 Eliz. c. 1. 1 Eliz. c. 1. Cook 5. Rep. de re Eccles. For, they knowing his Kingdom not being (in this sense) of this World, their Prelacy in that sense also is not: but, that by reason of which, they are Spiritual Lords is their Baronies, which they hold jure Ecclesiarum; and by which, the Kings of this Land have erected them as Homadgers to them for such Baronies; and the Law and Custom of the Nation has incorporated them into the Baronage inseparably: whence, though several Ordinances mounted against them for a time, battered them sore; I mean not the Act of 17 Carol. 28. but that of 1646. c. 64. of 1649. c. 53. of 1647. c. 124. c. 94. & 109. of 1648. c. 117. and c. 122. that of 1650. c. 29, 30. yet God has brought them into their wont Right, to the free enjoyments of their lustre, See the Act of Parliament for their Restitution. with all the perquisites of it; which, as they are never to forget, but to make their lives (though not) pillars of Gratitude; for, that has too fixed a name for so fixless a thing, as the life of man (in his best estate) is; much less in old age (which is the state of most of our Reverend Fathers) but burning and shining lights of holiness, and exact conscience; which, when they do, and as Bishop jewel, one of them, once said Heroickly, Can deny their Parts, and their Relations, and their Honours, but the Faith and Truth of Christ they cannot deny. When thus I say the Fathers of the Church do adorn their Order, Preaching frequently, Living holily, and Dying comfortably: There are no oppugners of their credit and greatness; but must-blush at their peevish opposition against them; And such, since to the height of this Character, this Glorious Church of England, from the Reformation, abundantly has had, and I trust has; and ever (I hope) by God's mercy will have: There will be no cause for any ingenious and noble Tongue and Pen to disown it, as it is held Prelacy, for since the honour that is attending on it may, and has been subsidiary to Piety, and may and has contributed much of its lustre to the bedecking thereof, I must be humbly bold to declare, my Prayers shall rather be to God that he would sanctify and preserve in all exemplary Piety and Charity this Order, then to heighten it above, or abate it from, what now it is; for 'tis well where it is, and may God ever supply it with pious and learned Successions; and may they ever continue in the Kings and People's love, as Domini Spirituales. Et Temporales.] Of these I have written in the Notes on the Chapter; and the Titles of both Lords Spiritual and Temporal has been the language of so many Acts of Parliament, and for so long time that to be ignorant of it were to be sottish: for though in many Authors, specially Scripture, Carnalis be opposed to Spiritualis, and Mundanus to Coelestis, and Temporalis to Aeternus, yet in the Rolls of Parliament and Books of their Statutes, Spiritualis and Temporalis are matched. Quam alii omnes justiciarii, omnes.] This is to be pressely taken, All may, but do not, nor are necessaryly to come, but chiefly the two Chief-Justices of the Benches, if they be present, 14 Ed. ●. c. 7. so says the Statute; and though (a) lib. ●. c. 26. & 27. Fleta calls the Barones de Scaccario Justices, and use entitles them to the Power and Honour of Justices or Judges, yet is not our Text content to couch them, but positively says, Omnes Barones de Scaccario; 14 Ed. 3. c. 7. though the Statute prementioned nominates only the Chief-Baron, making him one of the three prime Regent's in this Choice, for the words are, By the Chancellor, Treasurer, and Chief-Baron of the Exchequer, taking to them the Chief-Iustices of the one Bench, and of the other if they be present: see the 33 H. 6. c. 1. where these are also joined. Clericus Rotulorum & quidam alii officiarii.] Because the Officers of Courts were often Clergymen, therefore the term Clericus was given to Officers, 9 E. 2. c. 8. But this great Officer, called here Clericus Rotulorum, and so in the Statute 11 H. 7. c. 725. is, as I think, (and if I err I crave pardon) in later Statutes termed Magister Rotulorum; so in the Satatutes 14 & 15 H. 8. c. 8. 21 H. 8. c. 13. Gard●in des Rolls de nostre cancellary, Veter. M. Charta part. 2. p. 47. B. so says the old Instrument, De forma mittendi extractas ad Scaccarium. Et quidam alii efficiaerii.] Though mention is made of other great Officers of the Realm in the Statute 2 R. 2. c. 5. yet more probably other than these, and perhaps some Chief-Officers of the Exchequer who are necessary to be used, but who our Text-Master means I am not able to resolve, nor is it much material; for the greater Persons being ascertained the less may pass as of less consequence, for that they meet, and by common consent nominate and agree upon the names of certain Gentlemen in every Shire, and them present to the King to prick whom of the presented he please, is the main work, and that the Chancellor says according to the now practice they annally do. Nominant de quolibet Comitatu tres Milites vel Armigeros.] Tres for the Number, Milites vel Armigeros for their Quality. Three is a sacred Number, Tria sunt omnia was a saying of old, not only for that Three charactered the Trinity, according to which the Apostle says, 1 john 5.7. There are three that bear record in Heaven, the Father, the Son, and the Spirit, and these three are one, but because this Number consisting of even and odd contains 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Lib. de animae procreate. E. Timaeo. p. 1017. which are the rise of Plains and referential of the Superficies, as Plutarch's words are; and sure when Plautus calls a Thief, Hominem trium literarum, he intends such a subtlety and reach in him, that he can be even and odd, play the jack alone or in Company; being like Alexis, not this nor that, but having utriusque temperamentum. Lillius Gyrald. in Aenigmat. p. 464. Philo lib. De Profugis. As some other Numbers have been noted extraordinary by Antiquity, as Twelve, Seven, so this Three, not only, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, (alluding to the manners of three Nations whose Names began with Cappa, the Cappadocians, Cretians and Cilicians; or as others, betokening those three men whose Names began with that Letter, Erasm. Adag. Chil. 3. Cent. 6. Adag. 82. Cornelius Sylla, Corn Cynna, and Corn. Lentulus,) or not only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, alluding to a custom of old, for the Judges to allow condemned persons before Execution, being filled with Wine and good Cheer, to speak their minds to three things freely, but also the Notation of three is prefixed to three exoptable things which are called tria saluberrima, To eat so moderately as to rise with a stomach, Chil. 4. Cent. 4. Adag. 64. To comply with reasonable labour and not decline it, To keep Nature's vigour uninjured, these are the three Saluberrima. These are Conceits of the Number Three, but not the reason of our Law, that pitching upon the nomination of three, does it probably as there is plentiful choice, submitting to the King, who is absolute herein, if he find two that are equally worthy and neither of whom he knows how to wave, because he cannot choose both, to choose neither, but take the third to the displeasure and disfavour of neither. Milites vel Armigeros.] These are the Names of the Flower of the less Nobility or Gentry, In my Defence of Arms and Armoury. 9 E. ●. Stat. of Sheriffs. 4 E. 3. c. 9 1 E. 3. c. 4. 14 E. 3. c. 7. 1 R. 2. c. 11. what they Heraldically import I have elsewhere showed, that which they are here expressed for, is to necessitate the Sheriff to be a man remote from the Plebs; no high Shoe or bloudless man as we call men of no extract, but as the Statute of Lincoln requires, He shall have Estate, that is, have sufficient Lands within the Shire to answer the King and his People and not to be in Service: but as Justices of Peace are to be men of the best Reputation, with other wise and learned in the Laws, so in other words says the Statute of 18 E. 1. c. 2. The most worthy in the County; 34 E. 3. c. 1. The most sufficient Knights, Esquires and Gentlemen of the Law; 13 R. 2. c. 7.18. H. 6. c. 11. if such must be Justices of the Peace, then sure much more such should the Sheriff be, who being praefectus Comitatus, aught to have nothing of disparagement upon him, which he will have that has not a fortune to bear up the Port. And hence was it that though by 1 E. 2. men were compellable to take Knighthood that had Estates, yet if any were summoned that had not they were discharged; nor were then any made Knights who were not before made Esquires: therefore Kingston combatant with a French Lord 13 R. 2. being no Gentleman, 2 Instit. p. 595. was, that he might perform it, made an Esquire but no Knight; so careful was the State to preserve the Reputation of great offices, that they designed, none to them that were not of Ability to keep up the Port of them, which because men of breeding and Estate can best do, therefore the Text says, the Persons nominated to be Sheriffs must be Milites vel Armigeros. Quos inter caeteros ejusdem Comitatus ipsi opinantur melioris esse dispositionis & famae. Herein appears, that as they must be Knights and Gentlemen of the County, that (truly I think) primitively was intended resident, dwelling, and abiding there, as the words of the Stat. of 8 H. 6. c. 7.10 H. 6. c. 2. in the Case of Elections to Parliament are; though I know use interprets it, having Estates in the County, which is a kind of fortunary residence. So, as they are to be men of Blood, Birth, and Estate, so, of Fidelity and Intelligence, knowing men in the duty of their Place, and faithful men according to what they know they ought to do; for this I take to be the sense of melioris dispositionis & famae in general, and to this sense incline the words of the Stat. 42 E. 3. c. 4. where men fit to be entrusted with Commissions of Inquiry are called, The most worthy of the Country as well for the King's profit as the Commons, and the 23 H. 6. c. 8. calls him that is to be a Sheriff, a meet and sufficient man. But the specifique sense of melioris dispositionis & famae here, I suppose is, Men of sober and regular life, Men of orderly Conversation, that walk worthy of their places and conspicuities; for so dispositio is ranked with ordo in Columella, Columell. lib. 5. Ep. 101. Epists 45. Quis enim dubitat nihil esse pulchrius in omni ratione vitae dispositione atque ordine; so, disposita hominum vita pro bene constituta, & quae non fluctuatur is in Pliny. Thus we say a man is well disposed when he does keep a good guard upon himself and lives virtuously, Cic pro Muraena. Cic. in Orator. 35. which Tully terms, disponere studia sua ad honorem, when he speaks and lives in print, which is, verba disponere, ut pictores varietatem colorum, disposition here being not so much the intern principle, as that which appears in Conversation, the fruit of it; and that this is the sense, appears from its adjunct or copulation, & famae, which is exegetical of it, for no man can live with credit that does not keep orderly Hours, Hane dispositionem amaenitatemque tectorum late longeque praecedit. Hyppodromus. Plin. lib. 5. ep. 101. orderly Company, and orderly Methods in his Station, as a Christian, as a Gentleman, as a Master, as a Neighbour, all which concentring in a person of worth, makes him as conspicuous for a man, as that house, which has Art, Use, and Pleasure in it, is for a Building. Et ad Officium Vicecomitis Comitatus illius melius dispositos.] Well affixed, for Gentlemen may be well-fortuned, well-affected, well-reported, and not be dispositi ad Officium Vicecomitis, for this Office being an Office of Trust, requires the residence of the Offices thus trusted within the County, that he may be ever at hand selvere debitum; 4 H. 4. c. 5. and this seems to me to in reason exclude outlyers, unless in Case of necessity, when that is admitted which otherwise is not, as in the Statute of 13 E. 1. c. 38. where the Statute says, It shall not extend to great Assizes, in which it behoveth many times Knights to pass not resident in the County, for the scarcity of Knights, for in all Cases of necessity Exemptions are void, 52 H. 3. c. 14. Then it is an Office wherein use of discretion and reason will be frequent, and so it excludes weak and insolid men, for since experience tells us, that this Office calls for wisdom of mind, Momentis quaedam grata & ingrata sunt, Senec. De Beneficiu. c. 12. Lib. 3. Instit. Orat. 8. when to do, and what, and what not; that being sometime true here, which Quintilian in other Cases said, Est utilitatis & in tempore quaestio expedit, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. De Carminibus Homeri. sed non nunc. This, I say, being the Case of Sheriffs in their Office, men that have not their wits about them, and cannot disponere unicuique munus suum, as Tully's phrase is, will be very unfit for it; Cic. De petit. Consul. 14. for it properliest becometh one that is, dispositu, provisuque rerum Civilium peritus, as (a) Lib. 18. Tacitus phrases it: for the Sheriff being the Minister of the Law must answer in his disposition the notion of disposition in Rhetoric, Cic. 1. De Invent. 13. Rerum inventarum in ordine distributione, and thus when he does he is melius, that is legalius & potius dispositus, which in my apprehension excludes letterlesse or unbred men; yea, in as much as the Sheriffwick is an office of action, sickly, decrepit, or other infirm men, are not Melius dispositi, which in the Case of Jury men is expressed, in the Stat. 13 E. 3. c. 38. For the Act of God infirming them, either the office must be done by deputation, or not be done at all: for, personally to perform it, they that cannot ride or move, are not to be expected, so that to be Melius dispositus ud officium Vicecomitis, seems to me to intend a man able and willing, to know and do the duty in the latitude of it; which, only men of wisdom, experience, and activity, personally can execute: But, because that of Clemangis is in some degree applicable here, Non perfectis vivitur hominibus, sed cum iis in quibus praclare agitur si sint simulacra virtutis; and the Law allows the supplement of Under-Sheriffs, who are (I will not say Melius,) but dispositi ad officium: having oftentimes to them, committed by the High-Sheriff, the whole, or part of the exercising and executing of the office of the High-Sheriff; ● herefore less punctuality in these particulars is necessary: For, the Law knowing what dispositions under-Sheriffs are of, has required two Oaths of them before their Execution of their office, see the 27 Eliz. c. 12. which if they shall make conscience of, they shall do well. Ex quibus Rex unum tantum eligit, quem per literas suas patentes constituit Vicecomitem comitatus de quo eligitur pro anno tunc sequente. The Choice of the officer is the Kings, because the office is the Kings; the People and County the Kings; the Law which he is to Execute the Kings; And he calling out the single one, makes him ipso facto ponderous melius dispositus ad officium, and melioris dispositionis & famae; then, to be below the endowments it deserves. Supposing then the Person Pricked, or Elected, out of the three presented, the next and great Expression of the King's pleasure, is, by the signing of Letter-Patents, to which are affixed the Broad-Seal, for his Authorization to be Sheriff of the Particular County, for that year than next following: Officium Cancellarii est Regis sigillum custodire. Fleta lib. 2. c. 29. which Commission, or Letter-Patents, sealed by the Broad-Seal, or Great-Seal in the custody of the Lord Chancellor, completes his Authority as Sheriff. For, no Authority in the King's Dominions is assumeable by any subject, but that which either is warranted by Common, or Statute Law, or prescription, or by the Broad-Seal, Sigillum tantam probet Authoritatem literis quantum vult is qui auctoritatem concedere potest, & proinde si persona sit publica, publica erit ejus sigilli consignatio, Tholossan. lib. 48. cap. 14. Sect. 6. which is so effectual an Authority, that Honours, Offices, Profits, Pardons, all the great things of the Nation pass by it; which was the reason that Edward the First caused both the Charters, of Magna Charta, and Charta de Foresta, to be sent, Stat. 25 Ed. 1. c. 1. under the Great Seal, to all Persons, and Places of Note, there safe to be kept: The Great Seal of the King importing his High goodwill and Pleasure, to have those darling Laws inviolable; yea, for that the Broad-Seal is so lively a Print of Sovereign Majesty, the Statute of 28 E. 1. c. 6. says, There shall no Writ from henceforth, that toucheth the Common Law, go forth under any of the Pettit Seales, but under the Broad-Seal: and the Statute of 25 E. 3. makes the counterfeiting of it Treason. Good reason than has the Sheriff to see that he have the Great-Seal for his Authority, which before he hath the Text suggests. Sed ipse antequam literas illas recipiat, jurabit super Sancta Dei Evangelia inter alia, etc. This shows the wisdom of our Princes, Plowden, Fol. 20. Dyer, Fol. 50. 132. 161. B. Hanes Case. 2 Rep. Fol. 16. Page's Case, 5 Rep. p. 52. B. that before they will Empower any Subject, though never so great and good, by their great Seal to do any thing, they will bring him under an Oath, to do his duty faithfully and conscionably, according to their Royal Intendment, and the Law to that purpose: Now this security antecedent to this possession, the Text terms jurabit super Sancta Dei Evangelia;] which words denote both the Matter of it, Oath; and the Method and way of its Administration, super Sancta Dei Evangelia; Oaths are the sacred bonds that determine all Controversy: Not only God himself is said to swear by himself, and to swear to his People his love to, and care of them: but, the Saints of God, in Holy Writ, confirmed, and assured any truth by oath, 5 Matth. v. 33, 34, 35, 36, 37. from which the Nations learned the Religion of oaths; That as the jews did swear by Heaven and Earth, and by the Temple, and the Gold, by jerusalem, and by their own heads, which our Lord increpates them for prophanating; and after, per caput Regis, & per Legem, sic & sic: so the Heathens had their Rites and Ceremonies in swearing, which obsignated the Majesty of that part of Religion. Tholossanus has collected the several Ceremonies of Nations, Syntagm. Juris universi. lib. 50. per totum. and the security they took to reside in Oaths; and because Oaths principally and properly are made to God, Et lib. 6. c. 14. & multis aliis locis. the Scripture accounts Oaths a part of Holy Worship, and accordingly the later jews did swear by putting their hands upon the Books of the Law, Lib. 2. De Tribus Sectis judaeorum. Tit. De Form. Jurandi. and this Oath only they held valid, saith Drusius, adding, He knows not whether from this example comes the Christians custom of swearing on the Gospels; which the Christian World has embraced ever since Christianity: (in the Gospel's being contained the life, death, and preaching of that jesus who is our Saviour and shall be our Judge, and to whom God the Father has committed all Judgement of whatsoever is done in the flesh, whether it be good or evil.) Now this Book so serious, so sacred, being that upon which the Law of England appoints all men in England Witnesses and Officers to swear, adds to the Emphasis of the Oath, and brings it under a closer tie of Religion then otherwise Oaths would be; Erasm. Adag. Chil. 2. Cent. 9 Adag. 31. Matth. 6. for though Socrates swore by a Dog and a Goose, and others had their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, not only their Oaths that exclude every thought of God from them being Rhodomontadoed to express their internal putidness, yet Christians should either have the Grace, not at all to swear, which is the Letter of Christ's Charge, or when they do swear before the Magistrate, which is their duty to do being required thereto, to swear in judgement, righteousness and truth, that is, secundum as well as super Sancta Dis Evangelia. Quod bene, fideliter, indifferenter exercebit & faciet Officium suum toto anno, illo neque aliquid recipiet colore aut causa Officii sui ab aliquo alio quam à Rege. Vet. M. Charta. part. 2. p. 166. Cook on cap. 35. M. Charta. p. 74. Deus plus delectatur Adverbiis quam Verbis. This Clause contains the sum of his Oath, the form of which according to the Common-Law is set down in the Books, and the Confirmation of it in this double; That he shall do his duty in his Office, benè to God, bonum benè, perform a good office goodlyly, that is, piously; fideliter to the King whose Officer he is, indifferenter to King and people, high and low, rich and poor, according to the Mandates of the Law and the duty of Charity: Benè as a Christian, Fideliter as a Servant, Indifferenter as an honest man; who does what Justice enjoins, unicuique tribuere, this is to be melioris dispositionis & famae then those are that care not what they are or do, so they may live brave and die rich: but this being a backdoor to Integrity, the Common-Law provided against, by that appointment of the Sheriff to take nothing for the exercise of his Office, but of the King, the Master of it whose it is, and whose Servant and Bailiff the Sheriff is, see the Statute 3 E. 1. c. 26. And when the Statute of 23 H. 6. c. 10 confirms the 3 E. 1. c. 26. it adds only some small fees that the Sheriff might take; But after that this Rule of the Common-Law was altered, and that the Sheriff, Coroner, Goaler, and other the King's Ministers, might in some Case take of the Subject; it is not credible what Extortions and Oppressions have thereupon ensued, so dangerous a thing it is to shake or alter any of the Rules or fundamental Points of the Common-Law, which in truth are the main Pillars and Supporters of the Fabric of the Commonwealth, Loco pracitate p. 209. on Stat. Westm. 1. they are the words of Sir Edward Cook; who, as very an Oracle as he was, did not decline this very Authority of our Chancellor in both those parts of his learned Comment quoted in the Margin, but gives him a most noble testimony as in the Notes on the subsequent Chapter shall appear. CHAP. XXV. Quotiescunque contendentes in curiis Regis Angliae, ad exitum placiti super materia facti devenerint, etc. THis Chapter treats of Juries, In his Preface to the 8 Report. which Sir Edward Cook terms The most exact and equal means of producing truth of any in the World; and because, what our Chancellor in this and the following Chapters delivers of them, is said by that Sage, to deserve writing in Letters of Gold, Therefore will I beg of God the Grace, and of men the pardon to endeavour some dilucidation of it analogical to it. Contendentes.] Plaintiffs and Defendants, Actores & Rei, are in all Laws said to contend, not Malitiae, Consestatione facta & statu causae composito prosecedendum est ad probationes. Tholoss. lib. 48. c. 6. Matth. 11.12. sed justitiae causa, not so much from anger and choice as necessity. This phrase Contendentes is used in all Actions of Vehemence, Rivalry and Competition, and it imports not only a preoccupation of that we are carried towards by the velocity of love and rage, which gives wings, and speeds seizure, in which sense our Lord seems to intend those words, the Kingdom of Heaven suffers violence, and the violent take it by force, (faith putting men, while on earth, in a fiducial or second real possession of it) but also a prostration and annihilation of that we strive against, Gen. 13.8. Gal. 5.20. contendere quasi contundere, not only to alarm and storm, but to raze the Walls and Foundations of that we assault, this is the nature of contendere, which, when it is the fruit of uncharitableness, is to be deprecated and avoided; so did Abraham with Lot, Let there be no contention between me and thee, for we are Brethren, for thus it is a fruit of the flesh, displeasing to God and exclusive of Heaven: thus contendentes Christians ought not to be, but as it is the trial of truth before the Minister of God the public Magistrate, in curiis Regis Angliae, so it is lawful and necessary. And therefore the King's Courts are always open for Administration of justice to all persons, and this the Law has wisely done to express its care of Christian Charity and humane Justice: Propter curam locum quoque quo quisque domum Senator confert curiam appellat, lib 2. De vita Pop. Rom. In Aul. Hence Curiae (Varro derives) from curae, and Festus seconds him, Curiae est locus ubi publicas curas agebant; whence Agnus curio in Plautus, a carrion-Lamb, quasi confectus curis, saith Becman: this I note to show how much Magistracy deserves of subjection, that it thus carks and cares for remedy of evils, and appoints Sanctuaries against Violence; and does that not partially and by piece-meales, but fully and to all purposes, ut nullatenus esset defectus justitiae, for all the chief Courts are contemporary, So that no man can say this is elder and that is later of them, Preface to the 8 Report. saith Sir Ed. Cook. Adexitum placiti super materia facti devenerint.] This Exitus placiti is the same with the Civilians causae status compositio, and it is previous, and in potentia proxima to trial. Cook on Littleton. p. 125. Concerning it, see the Notes on the twentieth Chapter, where the materia facti is to be tried by the Jury of twelve men, who are to try the fact, as the Judges, I humbly conceive, are the quastio juris, either upon demurrer, special Verdict, or Exceptions, for cuilibet in sua arte perito est credendum. Now as the Justices are always ready in order to hear causes, so do they of course send out Writs to empannel Juries to serve, for the most part, on those causes, and that concitò, so are the words, Concitò justitiarii per breve Regis scribunt Vicecomiti.] This is according to the rule of the Common-Law to which our Text relates, and which the later Statutes illustrate and make addition to; Cook on Littleton. sect. 234. so says the Statute 35 H. 8. c. 6. And therefore the Text says, the Writs preparatory shall issue forth concitò, because the Law allows time enough to prepare, and abhors surprise; the design of the King's Courts being to promote Justice that it may run down like a mighty stream; therefore Copies of Panels are to be allowed the parties six days before the Sessions of the Justices, 42 E. 3. c. 11. 6 H. 6. c. 2. justitiarii.] Of these I have written before, and shall do in the Notes on c. 51. yet I crave leave to write, that within this word are contained not only the Justices of the Courts at Westminster, On Littleton, p. 263. but also Justices of Assize, so is my authority from Sir Edward Cook. Per breve Regis seribunt Vicecomiti] The Venire Facias issued forth according to the Common-Law, and the Statute 35 H. 8. c. 6. is called Scriptum justitiariorum, because it issues forth of the Office of the Court which they preside in: 2 & 3 E. 6. c. 32 4 & 5 P. & M.c. 7. 27 Eliz. c. 6. This instrument of Authorization to the Sheriff to summon a Jury, is termed Breve, as much as Breviarium, not only in the Common, but even in the Civil Laws, Rationum libri seu nominum & debitorum breviaria nominabantur; Tholoss. Syntagm Iur's, lib. 22. c. 3. Sect. 29. Thus Lampridius tells us Alexander knew all his soldiers so well, Vt in cubiculo haberet Breves & numerum & texapora militantium, Lamprid. in Alexand. that he had the Breves, or Notes nominally of them all; so (a) Flavius Vopis. in Aureliano, Budaeus in Pandect. p. 559. Edit. Basil. A. 1534. Aurelian is said to have Breve nominum; Hence comes the Breves in Ecclesiastical (b) Tholoss. lib. 17. c. 12. Sect. 34. Writers, especially the late Papal ones: Many Breves and Bulls from Rome we have had mentioned in Acts of Parliament, and Historians; Thus it grew in use with Lawyers very anciently here, to call the Summaries of the Cause Briefs, or Breves, and in English Writs, because written; so Bracton, Fleta, and Sir Edward Cook (c) Breve quidem cum sit formatum ad similitudinem Regula juris quia breviter & paucis verbis intentionem pr●fer●ntis exponit & explanat. Bracton lib. 3. fol. 419. discourse at large, of both Original, Judicial, Real, Personal, Mixed; and other Writs, and especially Fitz Herbert in his Natura Brevium, Fleta, lib. 2. c. 12. 1 Institut. p. 73. and the Register, all which point to the knowledge of Writs, as a great piece of Law Learning. Quod ipse venire faciet coram iisdem justitiariis ad certum diem per eos limitatum duodecem probos & legales homines de viceneto, ubi illud factum supponitur. Venire Faciet.] This is to be understood, not compulsive, but declarative: the Sheriff is not by the posse comitatus raised on them to compel them, but by summons to notify to them their return, and to show them the Panel; 42 E. 3. c. 11. 6 H. 6. c. 2. and if any Juror be returned that is not summoned, Cook Instit. 1 P. pag. 158. the Sheriff is finable: 35 H. 8. c. 6. 27 Eliz. c. 6. and, in case the summoned have no just excuse which the Law allows, they lose issues by non-appearance; 5 Eiiz. c. 26. but the Act of God or other just detinue shall excuse them, provided it be made out to, and allowed by the Court. Duodecem probos & legales homines, etc.] See my Notes on the twentieth Chapter, and concerning the number Twelve, see Lorinus in 1 Actor. v. 13. Salmeron 1 Part, Tract. 28. Tom. 4 p. 251, 252. Tostatus in Matth. c. 10 quaest. 24, Brentius Homil in 6. c. Lucae, Spelman Gloss p. 399. where the number 12 is notably instanced in, as esteemable in all Laws, especially when together, with the numbers there is weight in them; For, that is the Import of probos & legales homines.] as much as Sacramentales, men that know, and make conscience of their Oath; Liberi & legales, men that are engaged to no Lord, so as not to use the freedom of their reason, and integrity; nor are lureable by rewards, or pliable through need: but, such as may dispend 40. Shillings by the year, at least of Estate of freehold, out of ancient demesne; so says the Statute 35 H. 8. c, 6. Men that are de vicineto, next Neighbours, most sufficient, and least suspicious; 28 E. 1. c. 9 but all the Learning of those being most elaborately discoursed upon by Sir Edward Cook, Idem loco pracitat●. I forbear writing further here of it. Qui neutram partium sic placitantium ulla affinitate attingunt. Though there be many just exceptions against Jurymen, when summoned, which not only daily practice, Sir Ed. Cook. Sect. 1●4. in Littleton. but good Authors justify; yet the most of them are omitted particularising here, and only this of affinity is alleged, to be a bar to the Sheriff's summons of any who is so related to either party; For, affinity being contracted by Marriage, Cum dua cognationes inter se divisae per nuptias copulantur & altera ad alterius si us accedit, Ind decitur Affinis, J. Cti. and Women being potent Orators with their Husbands, who naturally and wisely indulge their Wives; the Common Law wisely excludes these alliances, left their relation should preponderate their love to justice, and they forget to do right, when so to do, is to wrong (according to the vulgar notion of wrong) their Kinsman: And if this were part of the cause (as I believe it was) of the Statute 8 R. 2. c. 2. that no man of Law should ride Judge of Assize, or Goal-delivery in his own Country or where he dwells, confirmed by 13 H. 4. c. 2. and by the 33 H. 8. c. 24. where the words are, Whereby some jealousy (speaking of some that contrary to the 8 R. 2. had obtained to be Justices in their own Counties) of their affection and favour towards their Kinsmen, Note this. Alliance, and Friends within the said County or Counties where they were born or inhabiting, hath been conceived and had against them by the King's most loving Subjects of the same Countries and Counties. Therefore the Enaction is in the negative, and because Justice ought not to be deferred or denied to any man, nor ought any man to be condemned but by the Laws full trial 9 H. 3. c. 29. that is, by good and true impartial Juries, consisting of men neither indigent, nor biased; for so the Common-Law intends, 4 Instit. p. 68 against which no Judge is to go, 2 E. 3. c. 8. 5 E. 3. c. 9 good cause is there that Juries (without which trials and judgements cannot legally in ordinary be) should be compact of such as may verdict Justice, which they will readyliest do, when they are uninterested as well in point of Alliance as Profit. Ad recognoscendum super Sacramenta.] That Juries are to be sworn before they are empanelled I have heretofore wrote of, what they are to do in these their Gears the word recognoscendum makes forth, Budaeus in Pandect. and that is taken in Authors for aestimare, considerare, to heed and observe so, as to give a clear and sad judgement of the nature of that they recognize; Epist. ad Attic. lib. ●. Tholoss. Syntag. Juris lib. 3. c. 3. ss. 3. so Tully, Literas tuas libenter legi recognovi enim tuam pristinam virtutem, thence dona, amorem, vetera recognoscere is in good Authors frequent to express the lively Characters and great Impression of any thing in the mind, and the value of it. Sipontinus by recognoscere understands, Opus compositum emendandi, aut limandi, aut reprehendendi causa revidere, to review, peruse, and ponder before we pass it, as Pliny says He did four times at least every thing he wrote, and that at some Intervals, and to consider it as if it were more concerned pro Regina justitia & veritate, then pro Domina Phantasia Regina, Decretum recognoscere. Cic. pro Balbo 8. Palam adempto aquo quibus aut probri aliquid aut ignominia inesset. c. 16. so to look narrowly into it, as that we spy every title and cranny of it; thus Suctonius uses the word of Caligula. Equites Remanos severè curioseque nec sine moderatione recognovit: the sense of our Text then is, that the Jury are so to follow the cause with their attention through the whole manage of the Evidence, and after when they are from the Bar by themselves, so to revive and make use of their Memories, Notes, and Observances, that they recoming to the Bar, and being demanded by the Court whether they are all agreed, shall plenarily affirm their Verdict and answer cheerfully by their Foreman what the common Conclusion of them all is. And this the Law calls Verdictum from the presumption it has that those that are judges of it do therein consider the Allegations, Defences, and Proofs, and after poising them give the downright to that side that has truth on it, whether Plaintiff or Defendant, which is the Sum of our Text. Quo adveniente die, Vicecomes returnabit breve praedictum coram eisdem justitiariis, unacum Panello nominum cornndem quos ipse ad hoc summonuit. This is according to the Common Law and the prementioned Statutes upon it seconded by the subsequent ones, 35 H. 8. c. 6. and others; and the tenor of the clause is exegetical of the Law's punctuality. Injury is done which the Law must right, a Complaint or Declaration is entered in the Court, pleaded to, Issue joined, and to complete it a Writ is directed to the Sheriff to summon a Jury of twelve able and honest men to try the matter of fact; the Sheriff observes it, considers, and frames fit men into a Pannell, summons them to the certain Service upon the certain day of the return of the Writ; the Writ with the Pannell he returns to the Court, iisdem justitiariis, from whom he had his Writ to summon, and this brings the cause to trial by twelve, or the failing Jurors to lose their Issues: so exact is the Law that it leavs nothing uncertain, but requires an account of all its Entrusts, Returnabit coram iisdem justitiariis breve praedictum. una cum Panello.] This is a word of art applied to that piece of Parchment which is Table-wise, in figure oblong and narrow, being the diminutive of a Pane, which is large and square Cook. 1. Instit. on Littl. p. 158. B. so Panel is the name of that habiliment which Horsemen use, the Panel of a Saddle, and Pannells of Waindscot, and Panes of Glass are frequently understood by us; probably this name was given to the Parchment from the Tabular figure of it, it being frequent of old to write in Tables or Panes and Pannells of Stone or Wood before Parchment or Paper came in use, yea here in England it was usual heretofore, and yet in some places is, to write in Panes or Tables of Slate. This is the rise of the word, which, as it relates to Jurors, may admit of an Etymology, which though it be not genuine, yet may be harmonious to the sense of the Text. Panel quasi Panall, a word parted between Greek and English, borrowing from Pan the God of Rustics its more frequent use (for Country-yeomen ride most upon Pannells,) and from all, as the twelve in the jury make but one body with one heart to try, and one tongue to deliver judgement on the fact in Issue, that which (according to this) is 'tis legal import, sed hoec obiter & leniter. Sir Ed. Cook Sect 34. in p. 58. Littleton. Quos ad hoc summonuit.] This whole Subject of juries' is so learnedly written on by the prementioned Oracle, that its arrogance almost to endeavour Addition, as 'twill be to little purpose to offer the learned Reader a Repetition; that therefore which I enlarge on is that which by him is omitted, the Grammatical Notation of the word, whence the legal follows. Summoneo is a law word, not of the sense that moneo or admoneo is, for that is the Act of ones equal or friend, and a branch of charity, which the Apostle a 2 Thess. 3.15. directs to, and which (b) Heb. 8.5. Moses observing grew the man he was by it, as it declared the regularity of his soul, which knew obedience became it, not this sense has summonitio barely, Cum in minimo Imperium contenmitur ex omni parte violatur. Regul. but an aggravated one, summonitus quasi submenitus (m being doubled for Euphony and b rejected) admonished under the pains and detriments that the Contempt of the King's Writs and Courts can and will inflict, which though it be not high, yet is enough to punish the purse, Legitimam summonitionem recipere in propria persona uli●unque inventus fu●rit in Comitatu, in quo fuerat res petita, qui quidem si non inveniatur, sufficit, si ad domicilium fiat, dum ●amen alicui de familia manifest fucrit rela●a. Bracton. lib. 5. p. 333. and declare also the displeasure of Authority, even as much as those words, As you will answer the contrary at your Peril: which to avoid as the summons is to be punctual, and that if need be upon Oath, so the Issues lost are certain to be levied, except the Court do alleviate by admitting the Defaulters excuse, as by the Law they may. Quos si veneriut utraque pars recusare poterit, This is done in pure favour to Justice; for, though the Sheriff be a sworn officer, and ought not to return men partially called, but to take them promiscuously, where they topically are (admitting there be sitting men in the hundred to serve, as every where in England diffused there is) yet, lest the Sheriff should by a bribe, which exoculates Justice, or for favour or envy pack a Jury, the Law allows exceptions, and admits a scrutiny of the Pannell, Sir Ed. Cook. ● sect. 234. on Litt. the manner of which I refer to the grave Judge, whom I often herein quote, most highly applauding the wisdom and Justice of the Law, thus to obviate a michief, so out of measure mischieveous, as but for this there would be in all causes, and against all persons. For, were the Sheriff left to a latitude, and what return he makes must serve, though never so tortuous, partial, and impotent, that partiality would be found in Juries that has been found every where, where sidings and pack are to promote parties, and suppress Justice, which, because the Law hates, therefore it allows these checks to all exorbitances, which, had that peevish Melvile in the Presbytery of St. Andrews in Scotland considered, as reasonably he ought, he would not have endeavoured boisterously to carry the Choice of the Minister to the Church of Lockhart, Spotswood Hist. Scotland p. 386. when he had but six only of the Fraternity with him, against Mr. Bachanans side, with which there was of the same body nineteen or twenty, blustering against the Major number (which every where carries it) with that impudence, suffragia sunt ponderanda non numeranda; the pride and injustice of which partiality is so much the more detestable, as it pretended better than it practised. To prevent which, the Text says, Vtraque pars recusare poterit, and that alleging their reason, Dicendo quod Vicecomes panellum illud favorabiliter fecit pro parte altera: viz, de personis minus indifferentibus; concerning this fee Sir Edward Cook on Littleton, p. 156, 157, etc. and to remedy this, Sect. 234. by a sit return, was the Statute of 27 Eliz. c. 6. made; and that Juries excepted against, might not occasion the Causes non Trial, the 4 and 5 Philip and Mary, c. 7. grants a Tales cum Circumstantibus, the great end of the Law being to promote Justice; all proper means thereunto is promoted by the Law, which this being, the Statute was very rightly made, and very worthily continued. Qua exceptio si comperta fuerit vera per Sacramentum duorum hominum de codem panello, ad hoc per justiciarios electorum, mox illud panellum quassabitur. This is the Common Law, in case of exception, which yet is appointed to be approved just, 6 Heb. 16, 17 Deut. 6. by that which is by God's declaration an Oath, the diremption of all controversy: and by the Oath of two; That in the mouth of two or three witnesses every word might be established: Now this the Law does, as well to prevent levity and spleen against the Sheriff, as to repress his partiality and injustice to the cause; since, as if it be an exception on good grounds, it must stand; so if it be not, it must not be allowed for such: therefore the exception must be exceptio, not prolata, but comperta; not alleged, but made good by matter found after enquiry; comperta vera, that's exception indeed, when 'tis not only words, but truth; not furmise, or slander, but reality made out by discovery of the motives and methods of it: and vera per sacramentum; not by the belief or persuasion, but the Oath and veracity; not of one, or all, but of two: nor of any two, but duorum de cadem panello ad hoc per justitiarios electorum; the best and most accomplished of the Panel, whom the Judges suppose least privy, or pliable to partiality, these are to consider the exception: and, if upon the oath they have taken, they judge the exception just and true, Mox panellum illud quassabitur; not only shall the Pannell be shaken, and under a harrass and suspicion, but shall be totally nulled and evacuated. Quashed quasi Ashed, reduced to its first nothing, void, and of no effect. Et justitiarii tuns scribent Coronatoribus quod ipsi novum faciant Panellum. The Sheriff having forfeited his credit once, the Law trusts him no further with the return of the new Pannell, but a Writ issues forth to the Coroner; Coroners were anciently officers of great credit, but time discrediting them, their rate was fain to be raised by the Statute 3 E. 1. c. 10. which says, It is provided, that through all Shires sufficient men shall be chosen to be Coroners of the most wise and discreet Knights, which know, will, and may best attend upon such offices. The office of a Coroner, the Statute 4 E. 1. De Officio Coronatoris. exemplifies, and Fleta, lib, 2. c. 18. but more particularly the Statutes of 28 E. 3. c. 6. 3 H. 7. c. 1. 1 & 2 Philip & Mary 6.13.1 H. 8. c. 7.52 H. 3.24. 28 E. 1. c. 3. 33 H. 8. c. 12. 23 H. 6. c. 11. 2 H. 5. c. 8. And the dignity of this officer appears in that he is the most ancient officer of the Crown, Apud nos Corona officialis pervetustus est ad tuendam pacem & dignitatem regiam, universis praest Capitalis Iustitiarius Baci Regis qui & ideo summus Angliae Coronator habitus est. Spelman in Gloss p. 192. and was wont to be of Knights, and the best men of the County; yea, and the greatest Judge of the Common Law Courts, The Chief Justice of the King's Bench is the chief Coroner of England: Regist. fol. 177. whereas then 'tis said, scribent Coronatoribus. 'tis intended of the Coroners of the Shire, or the Hundred, that they being officers as well as Sheriffs, and under-Sheriffs, 23 H. 6. c. 11. and being men of Estate in the shire, according to the Statute 14 E. 3. c. 8.1. shall make a just and indifferent return of persons, omni exceptione majores, and that is no novum facere panellum; id est return men to serve in it, that fear God, and love truth, and that will do nothing for favour or affection against them: which, it they shall not do, as fall out it may, that corruption may go through the warp and wooff (as men proverbially say) of these officers ministerial, etiam & illud quassabitur. Et tunc justitiarii eligent duos de clericis curiae illius vel alios de codem comitatu, qui in praesentia curiae per corum sacramentum facient indifferens panellum. This is the third remedy of partiality in return of Juries, the Justices may for default fault of the Sheriff and Coroner chose two Clerks of the Court; now Clerks and Clerici have divers acceptations, generally all men literate were thus called, and because Church men were mostly of old such officers, therefore all men that are Bookish are said to be Clerkly. Cap. 24. p. 407. 2. Instit. Thus in the Stat. 2 We stminst. those there called Clerici were of old Magistri Cancellarii, and saith Sir Edward Cook, were associated to the Lord Chancellor: a Lib. 2. c. 13. Eleta calls Clerici, honesti & circumspecti, and in Stat. 13 & 14 H. 8. c. 8. mention is made of the six Clerks of the Chancery, who, because they were Clergy men (1 suppose) and were not marriable according to the Canons, are by that Statute allowed Marriage; so in the 9 E. 2. c. 8. the Clerks of the Exchequer are allowed nonresidence from their Churches (for Clergymen they were) and the reason is given by the Statute, And such things as be thought necessary for the King and the Commonwealth, ought not to be said to be prejudicial to the liberty of the Church. Clerici then in the utmost of the Notion is not meant here, but only for Attendants in the Court, Clerici olim fuerunt legales & brevia dictitarunt, scribebant, signabant, M. Patis. p. 207. Addit. p. 190. who are honest knowing men and will do their duty being sworn and called thereunto. Thus mention is made of Clerks in the Statutes 33 H. 8. c. 24.27 H. 8. c. 11. 2 H. 4. c. 10.34 & 35 H. 8. c. 14. Gloss, ad M. Paris. in verbo Clerici. and many other Statutes, and these notwithstanding the Law couples; not to one of them does it commit the Reformation of antecedent errors in Pannells, Solus omnino est quisine amico est. but to two Clerks the Law commits it, Two, because Two are better the none, less probable to be biased and corrupted; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Euripides in Heracl. vae seli is true even in this sense, for as the Comedian says, That which one hand does is seldom effectually done; our Lord therefore sent out his a Mark. 6.7. Apostles by Two's, that they should comfort and assist one another in the work of their Ministry: as Nature's perfection is made up of two, so the Law's execution (which is the life of it) in this case of Juries, is accomplished per duos Clericos, and therefore Here is provision made for the continual, On Stat. 1 Westmin. c. 47 p. 479. 2 Instit. due, and speedy execution of the Law, saith Sir Edward Cook. This being done and the Panel not being exceptable against, the Law, that abhors corruption, avoids also delay and progression in infinitum, thereupon a proceeding is to trial, and the impanelled come into Court. Sed cum venerint sic impanellati, etc. Still the liberty of exception against the Jury is allowed, and that not vagely as expression of humour or design of protraction may aim at: for the Law being ars aqui & boni hates and declines that, but as the exception is rationally grounded, and as it has a more than ordinary right to carry it to the centre of credit and approbation with the Court. Dicendo quod impanellatus ille est consanguineus.] This is to be understood of kin by the whole blood, ex utroque Parent, and that this nearness may have great influenceon men is clear in the Examples of Melampus to Byas, Zuniger in Theatro v. humana, p. 3342. Lib. 14. c. 2. Anthrop. Fulgosus lib. 5. c. 3. Xerxes to Mas●stes, of Scipio Numantinus to Fabius, of the two Brothers, one in Pompey's Army, the other in Cynna's, which Volateran mentions, of the two Brothers banished whom Falgosus writes of, of Tiberius to Drusus, Commodus to his sister, Leopold Archduke of Austria to his Brother Frederick the Fair, with hundred of others, but above all there are three that I read of most remarkable, The first, jazates King of the Adiabenes, who, though he had four and twenty sons, yet left his Kingdom when he died to his only Brother Monobazes; Fulgosus lib. 5. c. 3. Propter quam rem alsentes ambos Pop. Romanus adiles creavit. Idem codem loco. The second is of Lucullus the Roman Senator, who though much elder than his Brother Marius in love to him would not be a Magistrate, till his Brother came to years to be a Magistrate also; The third is of Antony Corarius and Gabriel Condelmarius Venetians, and Nephews to Gregory the Twelfth, who were so endeared one to the other, that they became Monks in one House, Anthony being called first by his Father to Rome would not go without his Brother Gabriel, Garimbertus lib. 3. De vitis Pontific. nor would he accept the Bishopric of Bononia, till his Brother were Bishop of Sienna, nor would he be Cardinallated, till his Brother had the Cap also, both of them were Legates à latere in the Council of Constanse, at last Gabriel was called to the Popedom by the name of Eugenius the Fourth, when Anthony saw his Brother had given him the slip, he returned to his Cloister at Venice for grief: these and the like Instances of the vehemence of Consanguinity, give the Law occasion to make consanguinity an exception to a Juryman. Vel affinis parti alteri.] This is Kindred by Marriage, of this I have written heretofore, Syntagm. Juris universi, lib. 9 c. 9 see Tholossanus and the many Authors in him, and the Law is exclusive of this because it is such a nearness, Non cogi possunt contra proximos & affines qui proximi Yunt testari, lib. 43, c. 13. ff. 27. that, Those that are next of Kin cannot by the Civil Laws be compelled to witness against one. Vel amicitia quacunque tali sibi conjunctus.] That is, not friendly at large, but intimate and strict, for nescit nomen amicitiae qui metuit, he that has a friend of a jury does not mistrust his inclination to, and endeavour for him and his cause. Indeed Friendship is the potent Magnetic that charms all, Agellius writes a whole Chapter of what a man ought to do for his friend, and Tully penned a whole Book De Amicitia, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Erasm. Adag. Cent. 3. Chil. 1. Adag. 8. and Seneca, Plutarch, Plato, and all Moralists reckon Friendship Inter suprema vitae munera. Friendship the only riches and happiness of life is that which ought to be admired above all, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Plut. lib. De Adulat. & Amici discrim. p. 51. Edit. Paris. for it makes the haver of it more rich than Phoenix the Thief that did by it so great Robberies. Friendship is an union of souls and senses to a through compartization, to become as Blosius was to Gracchus, obsequious in all things, to sympathise in the worst of conditions, to make them partakers of our advantages, to consult them in our straits, Alexand. ab Alexand. lib. 1. cap. 26. to live theirs, yea to die theirs; this is Friendship, to be a Member 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, this is to be a friend, as the Proverb is, more necessary than food or fire; indeed the friendship of Lucilius to Brutus, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Adag. 75. Chil. 2. Cent. 2. of Coelius to Petronius, of Ticinnius to Cassius, are great, examples of cogency to men under the like engagement, and hard it is to extricate Blosius Cumanus from Graechus his obligation on him, Maluit consulatu cadere quam amicum perdere. Plutarch, in Apothegm. Rom. which has him so fast, that he'd burn the Capitol to please his friend. Friendship is such a catch and device of hold fast, that Scipio Africanus would not stand Competitor with Pompey his friend for the greatest Honour. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, &. Plutarch in Amator. p. 758, Edit. Paris. There are few Rutilus' who can withstand their friend's importunity to do injustice, and reply to them, your friendship is not worth keeping if it tempt to unjust things; Nor can the Athenian Cleon be matched in that more than manly self-Mastery, for before he took charge of the Commonwealth, Valer. lib. 6. c. 4. Tanquam quae in administratione Civitatis rectum ac justum institutum emolliat, & transversum agate, Partis secunda, sermo. 1. he called all his friends into one place, and returned them their friendship, quitting all relation to them on that score. All these Examples show the reason why the Law makes intimate Friendship a cause of challenge to a Juryman, because it is apt to enervate Integrity, and to make a man incline to that Scale that his love lodges in, which is the cause that as men of Alliance and Friendship, Pag. 156, 157, 158, 159. I Instit. on Littleton. so of unindiffereny are challengeable: see concerning the latitude of this Sir Ed. Cook in the forementioned place. Sic quoque fiet de omnibus nominibus impanellatorum, quousque duodecim corum jurentur ita indifferentes. While the Jury are swearing, Exceptiors or Challenges, may be made till Twelve, which are the Number of the Jury, 17 Eliz. c. 6. be filled, against whom no challenge has been; these empanelled, (of which four are to be Hundredors') that is, of the same Hundred where the fact was committed, and all of them of the value of 40. s. the cause is tryable and concludable by them: these things the Law requiring is punctually to be pursued, Non observata forma infertur adnullatio actus. Reg. Juris. Adag 55. Cent 2, Chil. 2. not that it hearkens to calumnies impertinent, for in all times there has been experience that ill will seldom speaks true, and partiality delights to make worth Theonino dente rodi, the mischief of which by the effects called Succum loliginis & nigrum salem, is so aspersive that it does cum morsis addere & famae maculam; not that the Law desires hereby to defer the trial of the cause to the injury of justice, for that it abhorts, allowing exceptions no further or freer then to make the Jury indifferent men, who, when they are impanelled to their Number, are recorded, then stabit Panellum,] provided they that are of it be of 40. s. in Lands, Tenements, or Hereditaments, As, Et Quilibet juratorum hujusmodi habtbit terras vel redditus pro Termins vitae Sua ad valorem Annuum 40 s. a H. 5. c. 3. Statute the second. This is added to prevent poverty and necessity, by which men are apt to be taken off by fear and favour from Integrity and Justice; which the Law intends to pronote in Trials by Juries: Now, though in places where Juries are not to this proportion haveable, challengers of Reins deins le guard, were remoras to Trials, the Statute of 7 H. 7. c. 5. took that away in London, but yet, for aught I know, retains in Countries (where Freeholders' of value are numerous) the limitation to men of 40 shillings a year, ●1 E. 1. Stat. de his qui ponondi sunt in assisits. which, though it be but a small fortune now, yet was of old much more considerable: For, silver in the Saxon time at 12 d. an ounce, though it was risen to 20 d. and so continued as * Vorvel's description of England, p. 218. one faith, till Henry the Eighths' time; yet than it was but the third of what it is now; and all things else were but low rated to what now: in the 33 Ed. 3. c. 10. mention is made of 200. Marks per Annum for an Esquires value, and c. 12. of Knights of the same value, and 400 Marks accounted Knights of great Estate; in 36 of the same King c. 8. no man was to give for the hire of a Priest above 66 s. 8 d. a year; and if he had his board, but 26 s. 8 d. in money: but by the 2 H. 5. c. 2. a Parish Priest had 6. l. for his board, apparel, and other necessaries; so stood the rate by this Statute till the 21 jacob. and then c. 8. it was repealed: and 25 E. 3. c. 3. Rust. Stat. Larg. wages of Workmen was very low, a Master Carpenter 2 d. a day, a Master Free-Mason 4 d. other Masons 3 d. Servants 1. d. ½, Tilers 3 d. and their Knaves 1 d. ½; Coverers of Fern and Straw 2 d. and their Knaves 1 d. ½, without Meat or Drink; when in the 15 of H. 6. Wheat was at 6 d. & 8 d. a Quartar, and Barley at 3 d. 4 d. when 20 l. a year was a Justice of Peace his value; 15 H. 6. c. 2. 23 H. 6. c. 6. 18 H. 6. c. 11. (not long before the time our Text was written in) and five Marks per annum a man of values Estate, 22 E. 4. c. 6. and 6 d. 8 d. the price of a Horse; 11 H. 7. c. 13. Not to mention the Prizes of Corn in the Statute 51 H. 3. nor that in E. 1. time, 20 l. a year was a great Estate; Assisa Panis 51 H. 3. and 1 E. 2. Knighthood was to be taken upon it. Not to insist on these, even in the Memory of our Great Grandfather's Charges and Rates are incredibly enhanced, by 4 H. 7. c. 8. 'twas penal to sell the finest Scarlet Cloth in Grain for above 16 s. a yard, and the finest other Cloth for above 11 s.; In the 23 H. 8. c. 7. French Wine was not to be sold above 8 d. a gallon, nor Sack above 12 d. and in the 24 of the same Reign, Confirmed by 7 E. 6. c. 5. c. 3. no man was to take for a pound of Beef, or Pork, above a half penny; of Veal, or Mutton three farthings: and less where sold for less. The manor of Burlew in Cambridge shire containing 200 Acres of Arable, 34 & 35 H. 8.24. 100 Acres Meadow, and 100 Acres of Pasture, was at a Rack rent but at 100 l. a year; When these, and all other things were at the prementioned Rates, which, in a good measure they have been since our Chancellors Writing; forty Shillings a year was somewhat considerable, as a convenient support to life, and a delivery of the Possessor from temptation to perjury, and a determent of him from all kind of unjust and fraudulent demeanour; since upon his offence the Law will take hold of his Estate, which he having, is thereby solvent; And therefore this value of the Jurors probably being a good help to the honesty and honour of Jurors and Juries would do well (if the wisdom of the State think also so, and please to consider it) to be suitably preserved by enhansing the value of Jury men's fortunes, according to the value of Rents, and Prizes now; (40 l. a year being as little for a Freeholder now to have in Estate, as 40 s. then.) And, if ever Justice had need to be provided for, and that in this very point of Juries, Note Well. never more cause that the best men of fortune and breeding should be returned and serve on them, then in this Age, when Forgery is so rise, and Knights of the Post so audacious, and against which there is no so sovereign means of anticipation, as brave and knowing Juries, who neither will slubber over the consideration of the Evidence given them, nor be meal-mouthed to request the Courts Interrogation of such scruples as they are inquisitive about, and judge material to the dilucidation of the Fact they are serving upon the Trial of. Et hic ordo observatur in omnibus actionibus & causis criminalibus, realibus, personalibus, praererquam abi debitum vel damna in personalibus non excedunt quadraginta Markaes' monetoe Anglicae. Hic Ordo observatur.] This is purposely set down to signify the Law's reverence of Order, as that great favourite of God, by which he rules the Commonwealth of this World: Hence is it that the Humane Nature attributes to Order a kind of Divinity, Vbicumque est aliquid principium oportes. quod sit aliquis ordo, quia ordo includit in se modum prioris & posteriorii S. Thom. 1.20. quest. 26. art. 1. not only as it is Essential in God, but as it is quiescentiall of all those disasters and tumults, that but for it would be every where, and in every thing; which the Heathen observing cries out, Confusion and the trouble of settlements is every where mischievous: 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Plutarch, lib. 1. Sympos. Quoest. 2. p. 618. because as the order of Nature is of God, so the order of Reason is from Man, who regulates and disposes his endowment by fit and proper modes of operation and convenience, to both Inferior and Superior purposes, of Politic and Christian Life: Hence is it that not only Order is ascribed to Creation of the World, but to the continuation of every particle, and thing in it; yea, take away Order, and nothing remains but nonentity, or that which is next to it, confusion. What Seneca said of Solitude, is true of Order; Take that away and ill Counsels are busy, Tune mala consilia agitaniur, tune aut aliis aut ipsis futura pericula struunt, tunc cupiditates improbas ordinant, tunc quidquid aut metu aut pudore celabat animus expromit Senec. Epist. 10. than mischief to mankind is Machinated; then evil desires and cover are set on foot: then the minds of men (however before modest) show themselves in all their villainous licentiousness. For if Order be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. as Philo's words are, The consequence and series of things preceding and following; (a) Lib. de Mundi Opificio, p. 6. then without Order no account can be given of any thing, so as to make it appear beauteous and useful: This made Life and Death, Peace and War, Law and Trade, Arts and Sciences, Religion and Policy keep its Order; Yea, of all Orders that concern this World, none more than the Hic Ordo of our Text, which is Ordo of Judgements, for deciding Rights, and punishing Offences. For, though the Romans took care of their Ordines (of which Brissonius gives us a very notable account, Lib. 2. Select. Antiq. Juris. c. 1. and of which too much can hardly be said; the Ceremonies, and extern part of them, Constat foelicem esse Rempublicam quae multis civibus resplendet ornata, nam suut coelum stellis redditur clarum, sis relucent urbes lumine dignitatum, non quia fiat home alter honoribus, sed quia modestior efficitur à que conversationis ordo melior postulatur. Theodorick apud Cassiodor. Varr. lib. 6. Formoe Illust. Vacaniis 11. p. 100 couching the most substantial and consequential nerves and ligaments of Civil Society: according to that of Theodorick That Commonwealth is most happy which does abound with conspicuous Subjects; as the Firmament is illustrious which has the Embossery of glistering Stars; Not that dignity qua such betters men, (for that is only the gift of God, and the work of Virtue) but it renders men more discreet and circumspect, as they are prescribed by it, the most excellent and exemplary Order of life.) I say, though the Romans loved Order, yet the care that the Civil and Common Laws have circa Ordinem judicialem Civilium causarum, Syntag. juris universi. lib. 32, c. 26. as Tholossanus his words are, is most notable, as that immovable method from which there is no recess but with danger and inconvenience; therefore the Text says not hic Ordo suadetur, or hic Ordo observari debet: For, many things are fairly commended by Power, that are not embraced by Practice; and many things ought to be done, that are not accordingly done as they ought: but the words are hic Ordo observatur, as if the Chancellor intended satisfaction of the Prince, and in him of all men: that in all changes and vicissitudes which Crowns are (in Common with all sublunaries) subject to; the same Order yet remains in the midst of them unreversed, all men in this Nation being concerned, how various soever they are in other matters, to carry on this very way and method of Trial, and no other. Praeterquam ubi damna vel debitum in Personalibus non excedunt quadraginta Marcas Monetae Angliae. This is a Salvo to the general Rule: For, the Law proportioning the quality of the Jurymen to the quality of the Matter in Trial, as it requires more Estate in those that try Title of Land, which is called realty; so, less in that which is of lesser value, as personally esteemed. The value of Juries in great causes heretofore has been observed 40 s. per Annum of Freehold out of ancient Demesnes, or what is equivalent to it; and by the 27 Eliz. c. 6. it is advanced to 4t l. Land, because Sheriffs were found to spare at Home the most able and sufficient Freeholders, and to returned poorer and simpler sort, least able to discern the causes in question; and most unable to bear the Charges of Appearance and Attendances in such Cases. For reformation whereof the value of Jurors was enhanced, which though it be not applicable to Corporations where men of such value are not ever to be had, by reason of which there is a Provision in the said Statute; yet is it for the most part, and where it may (as in Hundreds and Counties it may) to be practised: for as the Law compels not to impossibilities, so does it not allow neglects or obstructions to justice, which, as they are occasioned by peremptory Challenges without showing cause, Cook on Littleton, p. 156. B. An Ordinance for Inquests. 33. E.. 1. Anno Dom. 1305. which was the indulgence of the common Law in the King's Case, till by the Statute of 33 Ed. 1. it was otherwise enacted; so does it favour Trials in places where men of such value cannot be had. Like Law because like reason there was for that Enaction in the Statute 21 Ed. 1. for though therein was required that every Juror that passed in trial out of his proper County should have Land to the value of 100 s. at the least; Stat. de his qui ponendi sunt in Assisis, Anno 1293. yet is there a saving of the Law's former requiry of 40. s. Lands, and of such other value in Towns, Cities, and Burroughs as hath been accustomed, which shows, that the aim of the Law is to promote justice, and to prescribe nothing but what is possible and feasible to that end Quia tunc non requiritur quod juratores in Actionibus hujusmodi tantum expendere possunt, faith our Text.] What then may the promiscuity of men try the cause, shall any he that has a face be admitted without challenge or exception? nothing less; For, as the Common Law required men wellto live, as we say, such as having Estates of their own, know what it is to get and keep, and so are likeliest to be sparing of casting away another man's by rash or heedless Verdict; and hazard their own by attaint for Perjury: as I say, the Common Law limited who and who not should be returned; so divers Statutes subsequent to our Text has Enacted, especially in the City of London, where, by reason of the great confluence of People, and Trade, personal actions abound; by the 11 H. 7. c. 21. no person is to be empanelled in the Courts of the said City, except he be of Lands, Tenements, or Goods and Chattels, to the value of forty Mark; and, that for Lands, Tenements, or Actions Personal, wherein the Debt of Damadges amounteth to the sum of forty Mark, or above, no man be Empanelled except he have in Lands, Tenements, Goods and Chattels, to the value of 100 Marks; which the Statute of 4 H. 8. c. 3. seems to make analogous to the 40. s. per annum required of Freeholders in Counties by the Law; and thereupon enables them to do what they can in their condition by the Law: so, that the Law being intent upon Justice, and the equal and impartial conduct of right means to that important end, provides for every circumstance, as well of men as things. And in men, that they shall be of value, properly English: that is, of intrinsique worth, whose Estates shall be valuable, as if they were Bullion, for that is the sense, Monetae Angliae.] England being a Noble Kingdom, whose Sovereign Stamps no Coin but what is Standard; not only made Passable by a 1 Mariae c. 6. 1 & 2 P. & Mary, c. 11 Statute, (for so Power may make Money of Leather or Metal; as the King of Spain frequently doth to be Currant Money) but Passable"" because Gold and Silver; Passed the King's Mint"" and returnable thither with the loss only of Coinage; And this is called the Money of England: 2 H. 4. c. 5 and to preserve this from abasement and undervaluation were the Statutes of 19 H. 7. c. 5.17 R. 2. c. 1. yea, 25 E. 3. c. 12 5 & 6 E. 6. c. 19 on this ground was"" and is adulterating of the King's Coin (b) Counterfeiting Lushburgh. the Currant Money of England made High Treason 25 E. 3. diminishing of it High Treason, 5 Eliz. 11.18 Eliz. c. 1. all which I instance in to explicate the Term Monetae Angliae.] too be indigitative of real value; and applied to the Juror, for that it intends him really worth, pecuniis numeratis, a legal value, which in this Case is left to the Justice's discretion, according to common reputation, and the judgement of wisdom, which is presumed (and that not groundlessly) to be in those Venerable Sages; therefore wisely left to their discretion. Habebunt tamen terram vel redditum, ad valorem competentem, juxta discretionerae jastitiariorum. Habeburt.] That I conceive to be as much as praesumuntur habere; for judgement of discretion is charitable where it knows nothing to the contrary, and Justices when they have no cause, will not seek a cause of doubt against a man where he is reputed to live in fashion and to pay scot and lot as we say. Terram vel redditum,] that is Lands, or Houses called Candle-Rents, or Annuities, or Rent-charges, I suppose, to a proportion of equality to the matter in Issue is corapetens valour, within the Text. And so, I think, the Reverend Justices will declare it, and their judgement must stand; for the Law says, according as the Text quotes it, juxta discretionem justiciariorum.] That is, according to that natural and learned judgement that their Years, Discretio est discernere per Logem justum. Reg. Juris. Study, and Place enables them to and presumes them of; and this is not that vage discretion, in better English Arbitrariness, which Empson, and Dudley obtained to vex the Subjects by in Henry the Sevenths' time, and for which they suffered deservedly; Dr. & Student. c. 52. but the discretion of the justices that the Statutes of 23 H. 8. c. 3.35 H. 8. c. 6. intent, which is the proportion of the qualification to the drift and scope of the Law. Alioquin ipsi minimè jurabuntur, nè per inediam & paupertatem juratorum hujusmodi de facili valeant corrumpi & subornari. This is the reason why the Law requires ability of Estate in Jurors, not that it thinks Poverty inconsistent with Integrity or Wisdom, the endowment of those that have no inheritance besides it; or that it expresses thereby an evil eye to poor men, because God's is not good to them in a fortunary way: nothing less, the Chancellor is of a more pious and prudent Genius then thus to precipitate, for he knew, That a poor man by his wisdom delivered the City; Eccles. 9.15. so the Wiseman has told us, and we may know that many mean estated persons have been very contributive to the good of their Countries, as by name Sarbolla that mean Candiot, who, when Bressia was besieged, and the Venetians knew not what to do to relieve it, made offer to the Senate to undertake the succour of it, which they accepted, and he by his art did bring over Land, and over Mountains and Hills, Shure's History of Venice, p. 360. mighty Vessels from Venice to the Lake which kept Bressia from Delivery; the like did the poor Centurion when Mellito and all the Venetian Gentlemen were surrounded in the Valley of Sabia; Page. 355. these, I say, and thousand such instances would confute the rashness of that position, that men are not to be trusted because they are poor, (for they that are poor in estate may be rich in virtue, and so accomplished to actions of integrity and Heroicisms:) but the intent of the Law is to supersede and undermine that common pest of poverty, Sordidness and illiberality of Spirit, which makes men open handed to receive any thing that is put into it, that may answer a want and supply a need; thus is Perjury imputed to Gifts by Jurors received, so 11 H. 6. c. 4.11 H. 7. c. 21. And that the more sufficient men be of Lands and Tenements, the more unlikely are they to be driven or moved to Perjury by brocage, power, or corruption, they are the words of the Statute of 15 H. 6. c. 5. which is the very same with what is the reason in the Text, Nè per inediam & paupertatem juratorum hujusmodi de facili valeant corrumpi aut subornari, for since necessity has no Law, and hunger breaks through stone Walls, there is no better a prevention to the sordid effects of need, then thus to provide as the Law hath. Livius Drusus was a brave man, Cum pecunia egores multa contra dignitatem feci●. Aurel. Victor. lib. De viris illustribus. so generous and liberal in mind, that, he left nothing unobliged by his bounty, but Heaven and the Sea; yet the Historian says of him, when he grew short of money, he did many things unbeseeming him: and Agur when he begs of God neither poverty nor riches, but food convenient for him, teaches us the danger as well of the lefthand, extreme poverty, as of the right-hand, riches; the one making a man forget God, the other forget a man's self. Et si per tales exceptiones, juratorum nomina in Pannello cancellentur, quod non remantat numeras sufficiens, etc. There is no need of much enlargement herein, for this is but enumerative of what has been heretofore asserted; Juries of twelve sufficient men of the County must be summoned, and before they be arrayed may be challenged. If twelve of the array be not unchallenged by whom the cause may be tried, then must more and more Jury men, omni exceptione majores, be summoned by the Sheriff, according to a Writ directed to him to that end: For there must be no defect in Justice; while the County has solvent men, and those not legally challengeable, there must be returns of them, quod & soepius fieri potest, faith the Text; and that to prevent injustice in the Nation, which then is chargeable on it, when causes hang undetermined: ob defectum juratorum, which to prevent, the Law grants Tales, not only of other persons in the Shire * 35 H. 8. c. 6. Confirm by 2 & 38.6 c. 324 & 5 P & Mary, c. 7. but of the next adjoining Shire-men, if none in the Shire there be fit. So in the Case of attaint, wherein perjury has been committed, as Neighbours may be partial, the Statute of 23 H. 8. c. 3 appoints. Et has est forma, qualiter juratores & veritatis hujusmedi inquisitores eligi debent in curia Regis, similiter & jurari. 'twas hic est Ordo before, and hac est Forma now, both to one purpose, to notify the exactness of the Law to keep itself in a Method, and to walk by Rule: Forms are the prescripts of God in Nature, and of Nature to Polities for avoidance of consuon. The jews, the first People and Polity, had their Forms in all things; in their Sacrifices, Drusius, lib. de tribus Sectis Judzorum. Worship, Dedication, Solemnisation of Festivals, Oaths, Marriadges Tuneralls, making Peace and War, in their Enfranchisements, Jubilees, in every thing. And from them the Nations learned Forms; Tully speaks that with an Orator's confidence and a Good Man's Truth: Pro Quintio 14. jura & formae de omnibus rebus consittutae, and as things had their Forms to distinguish them by; in which sense we read of Forma dicendi, bonestatis, scribendi, Temporum & Reipublica forma, scelerum formae, provinciae forma, & forma edificii, and such like in Authors; So also had persons their Forms. So among the Romans, Aulus Gellius, lib. 3. c. 18. lib. 1. c. 9 there were Forms for every Order of men, which Brissonius tells us of, and no Authors of theirs omit mention more or less of. And these Forms, though we look upon them as accidental things, which may adesse & abesse sine interitu subjects; yet are not to be innovated, or forcibly entered upon without great consideration: Because they couch great mysteries in them, which are necessary to be cherished for the advantage they give to the more essential parts of Truth and Policy: which is the reason that both the Civil, Canon and Common Laws do insist much on Forms. Has est forma says the Text, and so ends this Chapter. Chap. XXVI. juratis demum in forma praedicta, &. THis Chapter begins with an Exegetique Recapitulation of what had passed concerning Juries in the preceding Chapter. For, there the number of a Jury being twelve, and those twelve not trivial, but probi & legales homines; that is, such as are of good Conversation, and Morally Civil, and have besides their Goods, Moneys, Leases, and other less-fixed Subsistences termed Mobilia: Lands, Tenements, and Hereditaments which are called Possessiones à post sedendo; (because they give being to those that come after the present enjoyers, Posideo à potis vel porro sedeo; possessiones sunt agri late patentis publici privatique quos initio no● manucaptione sed quisque ut potuit occupavit atque possidet. Isidor. O. rig. lib. 15. c. 13. being descendible to either Corporal or Testamentary Heirs, and sufficient to conserve them in their condition without dependence or necessity of fortune, which betrays men to by-courses, to the prejudice of Honesty and Justice) I say, the Chancellor having Premised this, Proceeds now to the further Narrative of what such qualified persons are by the Law expected to do, in discharge of that great confidence it has reposed in them; and that he does by Enumeration of several Particulars, wherein their Exactness and Sincerity is required: Concerning which, before I Write further, I think fit to touch shortly upon that Motive to the Law's choice of Men of Fortune for this employment, as is couched in those words, Vnde statum suum ipsi continere poterint.] By which I collect the Judgement of experience resident in the Law, and in the Compilers of it, to be, that all Perjury and unjust Dealing proceeds from a Departure, and Discard of Moderation and Contentment with the Condition God has designed men to bear, and requires them to be patient under. And indeed, there is no account of sin more rational than that which refers it to incontinence: Men derogate from God's Wisdom and Power, and aggrandise themselves beyond what God has fitted them for, and will carry them through; and this makes them steer a course to extremes, which is, seipsos non continere: For, as it is in Valour, there is no excuse admitted by that Person that is willing to fight; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Adag. 62. Cent. 3. Chil. 3. but when all the discouragements imaginable are presented Magnanimity replies as Pompey did Necesse est ut cam, non ut vivam: so is it in Modesty of Mind, nothing will tempt it to go beyond its boundary, or trespass on the Peace of its intern calmeness: It's true, Valour in the best men will tempt to venture hard for the Master-Prizes in this World's Lottery; and hard it is upon mere Worldly grounds to withstand the Irritations and Impulses of their cogent Interest: but, for all this, where God gives Continence of mind, the virtue of that endowment will reply to those fusurrations, Phanorinus did to those that reproached him for flattering Adrian, who loved to be accounted a Learneder Person and Prince than he was; page Car non cedam huic qui triginta habet legiones. Saballicus Tom. 2. Ennead. 7. lib. 4. Why should I not admire and humour him who commands thirty Legions: so says Continence, when Ambition solicits to comply with base and by-ends to gratify sensuality, Cur non cedam buic, etc. Why should I not observe the Command of God and Nature, which learns me to live of a little, and to be sober in keeping myself in mine own Orb: For, while men do, as one told Cleon, Intra suam pelliculam se continere; Adag. 92. Chil. 1. Gent. 6. p. 264. and are desirous of nothing more than they enjoy honestly, and can use temperately, they avoid delight in Riches of Violence, and Honours of Fraud and Usurpation; which Romulus deserved, and had accordingly Renown for: For, though he had the choice of all the 800. Sabin Virgins, yet kept he himself to his own (though old) Wife Herfilia: and though he might take the freedom of high feeding, and Martial Compotations, by the visceration of which Men grow Valiant, and heady, Memoriae traditum est 500 fere annos post Roman conditam nullas rei uxoria neque actiones cautiones in urbe Roma aut in Latio fuisse, A. Gellius, lib. 4. c. 3. beyond Measure and Mercy; yet, the Historian says, he kept himself free from taint: Ego quantum volai bibo, non quantum potui, was the account he gives, and surely 'twas a solid one, and tuitive of Virtue, beyond all curbs beneath effectual Grace. When I read of that Athenian Young Man, who to preserve himself against the lust of Demetrius, cast himself into a Cauldron of boiling water and died: and of that Roman General that refused Presents, and contented himself with a few Roots for his Meal, and them sorily Cooked by his own hand, and cried out, in defiance of the Importunity of his grateful Presenters; Dum his omnibus imperare scio non opus est pecunia vestra. I have no need of your Gold, while I can command my Senses, and they not me, I shall never want that which satisfies the luxury, not necessity of them: I lay, when I read this, and consider the defects and excursions of Christians, I blush to find Christ so often in the Mouth, where he is so much an Alien from the Heart and Life: Men ought to live as they of old did, though they speak daintily, as the Neoteriques do. Vivere diseas moribus praeteritis, l●qui verbis praesentibus, A. Gellius lib. 1. c. 10. Erasm. Chll. 2. Cent. 7. For, no shipwreck is so terrible at Sea, as this wrack to the Soul and Sense of Man is when they are intemperate; Intra statum suum se continere,] is not only to avoid Marsya's Insolence, in Challenging Apollo to Pipe with him, whom when Apollo overcame (as soon he did; for the Presumer was no Musician, but a bravado) he hung him on Pinetree: I say, to be Moderate, and affect nothing beyond our Station, is not only to avoid one, but all Evil, which the contrary prompts to, confirms in, and ruins for: so long as the Registers of Lucifer's Pride, and Corabs Conspiracy, and Absoloms' Rebellion, and Reubens Incest, and Iehu's Murder, and Achans Covertuousness, yea, and of judas his Treachery are in being, and Mention of Holy Writ; the danger of not keeping in one Station, and not compling with God's pleasure, will be lively testimonies against that humour: Intra statum suum se no Continere. 'tis good to remember the Fable of the Crab that left the Sea, and would feed in the Land, where the Wolf met with it and devoured it: the Crab bewailing his condition when, 'twas too late, was told, Being thou wast a Creature of the Sea you should have kept there and not affected the Land, but your trial of Conclusions has concluded your Security. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Adag. 11. Chil. 3. Cent. 5. And when God lets the Reins lie loose, and men have latitudes penal as well as peccant; then, there is no mean for them to rest in, but they go from one wickedness to another, till they be the shame of men and the curse of God: Picenino the Italian General is a notable example of this; Shutes Hist. Venice. p. 133. For, he having defeated Antonini at Novara, resolved revenge on his Enemy by any means he could invent, and effect, he slew great numbers of the Inhabitants of Novara in heat of blood, and those that escaped he Executed by the Common-Hangman, and being at last glutted with blood, and not knowing almost which way to be further vile, he sets to sale young Children, Matrons, and Reverend Priests; And all this he did by not heeding se intrastatum suum continere, which the Law soreseeing, prescribes such valuable proportions of Estate in those that are to serve on Juries, that they by it may se intra statum suum continere: For, if once passion predominate, and men sinfully look abroad, than they court unlawfully, and attempt desperately the accomplishment of it. In Anno 1494. one of the Bishops of St. Andrews did Enshrine the bones of St. Palladius, who first Converted Scotland: This Shrine being Silver was the Eye sore of a Gentleman near Fordon, in the County of Meruis, who when Times were disastrous seized upon the Shrine because it was Silver, and made away with the Relic, but his family soon after decayed, Spotiswood, p. 7. which was probably a Curse of God on his Sacrilege and Profaneness. And so I have done with this passage, Intra statum suum se continere,] because though it be necessary to be inculcated, yet it must not court me to extravagate. Now than I return to what is to be done previous to, and conductive of their service to a just and worthy issue. Totum recordum & processus placiti quod pendet inter parts.] That which I think the Civil Law calls Libellus accusationis, Tholossanus Syntag. juris, lib. 32. c. 7. de Accusatione Solenni. the Common Law calls Recordum; a word from Recordor; the Record being the summary and substance of the Suit or Cause, and therefore the Text says it is appointed to be read as the process of the Cause is here also: Critics make this word a lib. 3. c. 5●. Recordor to be the most Emphatic word that comes from Cor, Valla confounds memini with Recordor, because Records are a kind of immortal memory; Quia per scriptum vecurdatur, quid factum. the Lawyers also call the Entry of things in the Books, or rather Rolls of the Court a Record, and this was called a Roll, because entered on a Parchment that was rolled up: so Statute 9 R. 2. c. 4. but 8 H. 6. c. 12. 'tis called a Record; and a Process, or Record, 14 E. 3. c. 6. 9 H. 5. c. 4. 4 H. 6. c. 3. Ac dilucide exponetur eis exitus placiti.] What the exitus placiti is see the Notes on the twentieth Chapter. That which is phrased here dilucide exponetur, is in sense, the Jury shall hear distinctly in their Mother-Tongue the true sttate of the Contention, abstracted from all those disguises and pretences, that craft and vehemence impose on it; to prevent which the Law appoints, that it shall appear plain and unmysterious: dilucide exponere is as much as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Intra lucere, as I may so say, to search into, and perambulate the bowels of a Cause; yea, 'tis as much as to tell the Jury what Points the concernment of the Cause rests upon. This then, as to do it shortly and pithyly, requires ability, so declares honesty in the doing of it; For, it is almost sine qua non, to Right Judgement: therefore the Text adds, De cujus veritate jurati illi curiam certificabunt,] that is, they shall give their Verdict according to their Evidences and the Righteous Instructions of the Court; both which if they follow they may be said curiam certificare de veritate.] For, the discreet Verdict of the Jury is a Certificate to the Judges, how they find the Cause to be, and accordingly are led to dispose their Verdict upon it. Quibus peractis, utraque partium per se & Consiliarios suos in praesentia Curiae referet & manifestabit omnes & singulas materias & evidentias, quibus eos docere se posse credit veritatem exitus taliter placitati. This remembers the method of Pleading Causes; per se & Consiliarios.] Of old probably men that knew how, and would venture the Cause upon their own Memory and Judgement to manage it, were permitted to Plead their Cause; but laterly it has not been in any degree so: but as the Courts to encourage the Study of the Law, expected Causes before them should be Pleaded and prosecuted by Juridique men; so have all Parties in Suit chose rather to take the cooperation of a man of Law, whose Profession it is to know the Patriall Laws, then to hazard his Cause to save a Fee: And for as much as Counsel and Strength is for the War (not only the Field, but the Court-Warr) and Causes are best defended by the Truth of their Cause, and the prudence of the Parties carriage in it: The Text says, per se & Consiliarios suos in prasentia curiae referet & manifestabit; That is, as the Plea is framed by Counsel, so is the defence or stabilition of it to be made by Counsel, and that vocally, in praesentia Curiae; and this the Text terms refer & manifestare; that is, referendo manifestare: and this insinuates great accomplishments in Counselors; Prudence tempestive referendo; this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is the wisdom of a man exactly to observe, if he would succeed in what he attempts. Counsel that speaks overmuch, and beyond the proportion of the Courts liking, or that interposes when the Court is declaring its Judgement, is not favoured by the Court: therefore a man of Counsel, as he expects not to recall what is past and gone, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Prov. Graec. nor seeks the Rose out of its season, so will he watch, and catch at every opportunity he worthily may to accomplish his purpose. Not that wise men are ever fortunate, or that their Counsel is ever valued; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Epictetus, lib. 4. c. 8. lib. 3. c. 23. Quamdiu videbatur furere Democritus vix recipit Socratem fama. Quamdiu Catonem Civitas ignoravit, respuit, nec Intellexit, dum perdidit. Ep. 79. For Socrates, though the Wisest of men, was obscure and unknown to most of the Age he lived in, as was Epictetus his saying, which Seneca suffragated to in his 39th Epistle: but, though a Wise man does not ever succeed, yet in doing so he does as a Wise man ought, bene consulere; and that no man can, who does not regard the Times and Seasons, the humours and passions of prevalent and potent Parties, and carry himself wisely in all Affairs: Homo virtuti simillimus & per omnia ingenio diis quam hominibus propior, qui nunquam recte fecit ut facere videretur, sed quia aliter non poterat. Patercul. lib. 2. which Cato doing, is by Paterculus Charactered to be liker a God than a Man, who did not virtuous things for applause, or advantage sake, but because he could not bring his divine soul into servility to his brutish sense, nor account anything worthy his reason that did not excite him to justice.. Secondly, As the Counsellor must refer, which implies prudence, so he must manifestare eisdem juratis omnes & singulas materias & evidentias;] and this implies Memory, Art, Elocution: For Manifestare is a word that argues a rescue of any thing from its shade and obfuscation, and a reddition of it apert and visible. This potency of Oratory, and strenuity of Memory and Invention, is that Engine which from the Cannons and Sacars of Language discharges such batteries on the ears of Auditors as makes them intenable against them: which, when Counselors abound in, and by it express the learning of their minds, they prevail in all Causes, and over all Persons they are retained to Plead in, Adeo negligitur Oratoria ab horum temporum dyscolis ut in actionibus eorum faex quo que quotidiani sermonis fada ac pudenda vitia deprehenduntur ut ignorent leges, non teneant senatus consulta, Ius civitatis ultro derideant, sapientia vero studium & praecepta prudentium penitus reformident. Quintill. Dialog. de Oratore, p. 4●5. and before: which being the defect of many men of the Long Robe, makes them so rude in speech, and ingrate to the ears of their Hearers, that nothing seems more defective in them then good words, and a graceful delivery of them; which they that want cannot Manifestare within the Text. For, though they may apprehend Materias & Evidentias, yet if by proper words they cannot Manifestare Materias & Evidentias causae to the Jury, they are short of what they ought; yet further that of the Text referet & manifestabit juratis, etc.] points us out to the double duty of a good Counsellor after hearing of the Record read; First Referet, that is, he shall be a Monitor to the Jury to observe what they have heard: thus (Referendarius Papae is put for the Pope's Remembrancer, or Master of his Requests, to put him in mind what supplicants presented their requests to him) and Manifestabit] to satisfy them that what they have heard in the Record, Pancirol in notitia. was necessary so to be insisted on for the assertion of Right, the cause of their Suit. Omnes materias & evidentias.] That is, all Points of Law in the Case, and all Testimonies in Confirmation of the Fact, which the Law so and so adjudges to be proved; or else materias per evidentias. That is, a good Counsellor will so manifest the Cause full of matter and moment, that he will omit no Evidence that may clear it to be what he explicates it; And this to do is to be as notable a Patron to a Cause as Barbaro the Bressian Governor was to that City of his Charge, Shutes History of Venice, p. 368. which though it were miserably straitened, and the People in it disanimated, yet he kept against the potent assaults of it, by his noble courage and obliging demeanour; being such an Argos in every part of his Government, that he kept up his own Honour and his Master's Interest against the force and rage of those who were enemies to both: Thus, if our Counsellor do, he will not carry a Leaden Sword in a Golden Sheath; that is, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Diogen. in Apothegmat. no Law under his Barr-Gown, evidence no Oratory in his Pleading and defence: but be such an one as will refer & manifestare omnes & singulas materias & evidentias.] Et tunc adducere potest utraque pars eoram iisdem justitiariis & juratis omnes & singulos testes quos pro parte sua ipse producere velit. As before there was an Ordo in the Summoning of the Jury and Arraying them, so here is there an Order expressed in their work, the end for which they were so called and empanelled, Tunc adducere potest: when the Record is read, and the Counsel have evidenced for their Client, than the Witnesses are produced to confirm what points are necessary to be sworn to; That as there is Vtraque pars, and jidem justitiarii, Quid facias in is●o suffragiorum impiorum astuarto deprehensus, dubitas enim illo in momento quo in diaboli ecclesia fueris, omnes angelos prospicere de coelo & singulos donotare, Tertullianus lib. de Spectacul. c. ●7. and jurati, all plurals: so there is to answer these in the plurality of their constitution, Omnes & singuli testes; All, if they can speak to all parts of the Fact, which is rare, every one to what part he can depose. For the Law expects no Witness should evidence any thing but what is just, and known to him: and to the deposition of which it admits him not before he be charged by the Gospels with all fidelity, to utter his knowledge: and, if the Justices do lay the load of God's Power, Omniscience and Mercy, the great discoveries of the Gospels, they do what the Text words by Qui super Sancta Dei Evangelia per justitiarios onerati.] Qui Super Sancta Dei Evangelia per justitiarios Onerati, etc. Why the Gospels are, that upon which men lay their hands when they Swear, I have shown in the precedent Chapter: now, the expression of the Common Law by the mouth of our Chancellor, when Juries are said to be Onerati by it, is to be enquired into; And an Oath upon the Gospel is called a Charge, or Burden, because it presses the Soul to performance of it upon penalty of the Gospel violated, being evidence against the violators, as a heavy weight presses the body down, and fills the Porter with care and fear till he be discharged of it: 1 Zeph. 11. 2 Chron. c. 2. v. 2. Zach. 12. v. 3. This the Hebrews expressed, not by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, nor by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, nor yet by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, though all these words are used to signify Presure: but they expressed it by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a word that is lifted up in its import above other words of the same seeming sense: For this word is used Metaphorically, for any Office, Charge, Numb. 4.15. Zeph. 3.18. Isai. 21.11. or Ministry that is committed to any one; because these entrusts require care and intentness, which makes Nature in those that bear them heavy, and droop: Thus the Prophet's denunciation against People is called their Burden; and Dumah's Charge and Penal Menaceis termed the Burden of Dumah; and thus all care is called a Burden: Cast thy Burden upon the Lord; Psal. 55.22. 1 Pet. 50. v. 7. Terent. And. 5.1. ●. 3. De Nat. Deor. 10. which S. Peter renders, Cast your care upon him for he careth for you: so do the Latins use Onus and Onerare for any thing grievous: Malis onerare aliquom, and Catenis onerare aliquem, Injuriis, maledictis onerare; and Tully Argumentis quamplurimis onerare judicem: and Livy, when he speaks of one that did vehemently commend his friend, Lib. 4. ab urbe 63, lib. 18. writes, he did laudibus illum onerare; and Tacitus, Onerabat paventium curas ordo Mutinensis; these, and thousands such like expressions, show, that to charge a man upon the Gospels, as here, is to lay load upon his soul cogent to his performance: and this the Law purposely does to keep men servile to Justice, that they should not dare to do contrary to it, lest they burden themselves with God's curse and their Conscience's rebuke. Et si necessitas exegerit dividantur testes hujusmodi, donec ipsi deposuerint quicquid velint. This the Common Law and the practice upon it does to prevent combination and injurious Confederacy; for since it may fall out, that Witnesses, like sons of Belial, may agree to depose one and the same falsehood, and by dexterity, helped out by Satan, contrive Testimony to such an harmony, and sameness of Note, that they may, that give it, sing one song, as we say; the Law has given not only the Direction, but the Mandate to undermine this Artifice, by honest policy, dividantur Testes, says the Text, but that only, si necessitas exegerit,] which is the great Regent of the World; which made the Comedian cry out, Necessitas plus posse quam Pietas: for all men do allow Necessity to be of the quorum quarum quorum in all Cases and things, which though it may be pretended by many, who naturally are mutable and politicly are Proteused, as the people of Chios are spotted for versatility by that Proverb, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Adag. 60. Chil. 2. Cent. 2. Not one of Chios by birth, but one of Chios in nature; yet is no further to be the temper of Wisemen, than it is inevitable, sinless, and cogent: in which sense Tully uttered that Aphorism, Tempori cedere, id est, necessitati pare●e semper saptentis habitum est. Cic. 4. Epist. Famil. To give way to Time, that is, Necessity, that carries all down before it, is the part and property of a Wiseman, which Truth, apt to be abused the same Orator qualifies with, * Cic. pro Balbo. Quicquid non licet certe non oportet; and Saint Bernard yet restrains more, in his applications to Pope Eugenius, Certe in Christiana Philosophia non decere nifi quod licet, nec expedire nifi quod & decet & licet, lib. 3. De Consider. Certainly (says he) in Christian Philosophy, and by rule of the Wisdom that is from above, nothing is comely but what is lawful, nothing expedient but that which is comely and lawful; Potest aliquid licere & non expedire, expedire autem quod non licet non potest. S. Aug. De Adult. Conjug. c. 15. and Saint Augustine confirms it, A thing may be lawful which may not be expedient, but expedient that cannot be which is not lawful. Though then Necessity be to be hearkened to, yet it must only be such an one in judicial Affairs, as that is in Martial ones, Vt qui sub vexillo consedebant pugnare debent. Adag. Chil. 1. Cent. 2. adag. 23. cum res ad Triarios rediit, when things are so urgent that there is no avoiding it, but either Witnesses must be heard and examined apart, or else they will out-swear, or rather forswear truth and misguide the Court; when the Justices see they are resolved to carry their design by resolute and agreed deposition, tunc dividantur testes; and yet that only, donec deposuerint ipsi quicquid velint] the Law searches out truth only, and to do that, may examine suspected evidence apart, but that done, and the testimony made, the Witnesses are in statu quo; for the Law ordinarily takes evidence as it's given in open Court, all that will being present, and the Court ask the Witnesses in the hearing and view one of another, and if it do separate Witnesses, and take their testimony severally, 'tis upon jealousy of legerdemain dealing: for as that of Seneca is true, Lib. De Tranquil. c. 1. Serm. 24. Hoc Calciamentum consuit Histiaeus Aristagoras induit. Chil. 3. Cent 4. Adag 42. Aculeos subdunt exempla nobilia, so is it on the contrary, one scabbed sheep infects a whole flock, Conciliant inter se impii inimicissimas amicitias, saith S. Bernard, and if there be one Villain in a pack, he can design what others act, as Darius said of the Ionian defection, Histiaeus, was the Shoemaker though Aristagoras wore the Shoe. Therefore our Law to prevent mischief provides to catch these false Witnesses in a net, dividantur testes,] that so they, being ignorant what each other depose, may by their contradictory depositions invalidate the credit of that they depose, Ita quod dictum unius non docebit aut concitabit eorum alium ad consimiliter testificandum, saith our Text. Quibus consummatis, postquam juratores illi deinde ad eorum libitum, etc. This is only matter of form, and declares the Law's order in Proceedings; every Article of proceeding is by steps and degrees proportionable to the nature of the cause, and the Judgement the Law is expected to give in it. As therefore the Jurors do hear and observe the Record, the Evidence, and the Direction of the Court, so in their retreat to debate and consider of their Verdict, as they are not compelled by the Law to come before they have considered and agreed their Verdict, so are they not favoured in their unreasonable Cunctation; a Verdict must be given before the Jury can be free, 6 Ed. 6. Term. Paschae. Cook 1. Instit. p. 227. Dr. & Student. c. 52. and the Court whose legal Prisoners they are, (for they are in Custodia Ministrorum Curiae,) not allowing them fire, candle, or drink, till they have given up their private Verdict, and after that, when they have all those conveniences, yet they are not discharged, till they have given their Verdict in Court. I say, all this considered, the Law does wisely to allow convenient time to debate, but none to unnecessary delay; and as it keeps them from food and fire, that necessity may drive them to dispatch and agree, so does it keep them under the eye of the Court from conference with any (the Ministers of the Court, being sworn men, servants to the Court, and so in this sense the Court) lest if they were at liberty they might be solicited and bribed by the parties in Contest, to the overthrow of right. And this discovers the exactness of the Law, that it leaves no stone unturned to promote discovery of truth, which when it has found, than it appoints, that those that departed the Court to consider in order to a Verdict, should return orderly with it, reveniet in Curiam saith the Text; Fleta lib. 4. c. 9 De Veredicto Juratorum. and then modo & forma they give their Verdict, and according to that Verdict, justitiarii reddent & formabunt judicium suum,] that is, as I humbly conceive, the Sentence arising from the matter of fact verdicted, the Justices before whom the Verdict is given, supposing the Jury just and untampered with (as the Law concludes them to be when they follow their evidence, and the direction of the Court according to it) do give judgement, Note this. that is, suffer judgement to be entered according to it. And this argues Juries notable promoters of justice in trials of fact, because the Law, which is ars aequi & boni, has appointed that its judgement shall be entered according to the Verdicts of them; which if the Gentlemen and men of Fortune in this Nation do rightly consider, they would be more punctual to serve on Juries than they are. For besides the notable experience it begets in men, and the parts in them it displays; it not only advances distribution of Justice in the Nation, but it facilitates and makes more currant the judgement of the King's Justices in his Courts, since all the burden lies not on them, but the matter of fact passes the Verdict of Juries, compacted of Knights, Gentlemen, and Freeholders, who are considerable men in Counties. Tamen si pars altera contra quam veredictum hujusmodi prolatum est, conqueratur se per illud injustè esse gravatum, persequi tunc potest pars illa versus juratores illos, & versus partem quae obtinuit, breve de attincta. etc. Still the Law by our Text affords remedy against injustice. For though Verdicts are not as the Law of the Medes and Persians irreversible, 52. H. 3. c. 20. 1 E. 3. c. 4. 1 Instit. p. 355.289, etc. yet as Judgements pronounced in the King's Courts they must stand, till they be reversed by Attaint or a Writ of error, 4 H. 4. c. 23. 9 R. 2. c. 3. 31 E. 3. c. 12. 27 Eliz. c. 8. 31 Eliz. c. 1. 5 E. 3. c. 2. 10 E. 3. c. 3. 3 H. 7. c. 10. 27 Eliz. c. 5. 3 jacob. 8. so may the Jury be attainted for their partiality and perjury 3 E. 1. c. 37. 1 E. 3. c. 6. 5 E. 3. c. 6, & 7. 28 E. 3. c. 8. & 34 c. 7. 23 H. 8. c. 3., and so in sundry other Statutes. Breve de attincta.] This is an ancient Writ at the Common Law called a Writ of Attaint, Attinctos quasi victos. Spelman. Gloss. p. 58. because it refers to persons vanquished in judgement, weighed in the balance of Justice and found too light; the word seems to come from ad and tango, attingo, as much as to overtake, Cic. pro Caelio▪ and to guiltily reach, though it be extremis digitis: the word in Orators signifies less than in Lawyers; Attincta & attinctura pro istius modi reatus manifestatione & haereditaria successionis quae per eam sublata est coinquinatione. Spelm. Gloss. p. 58. for the Lawyers make Attaint and Attainder, to be the highest dishonour, Felony, Treason, Perjury; the ancient books call it, Breve de Convictione, that is, a Writ to summon an honest Jury to attaint a perjurious one, Idem eodem loco. p. 294. B. which false Jury, after Conviction and Attaint, contracts a very sore punishment, Glanvil. lib. 2. c. 19 the particulars whereof, collected out of the Antiquities of the Common Law, Sir Edward Cook has furnished me with, the first whereof is, Amittat liberam Legem in perpetuum, that is, let a Juryman, that has contrary to the fear of God, the reverence of the Law, the charity to his Neighbour, and the peace of his own soul, been sordid, and for gain, fear, or love given false Verdict in a cause; let such an one (I say) be out of the Law's protection, as he extruded the Law his affection; let him lose the Law of a Freeman, and become lawless as a Villain: hence, I suppose, the Book 24 E 3. fol. 24. calls this, The villainous judgement, not to reproach the Judgement of the Law, but as to the persons meriting it, who thereby of Freemen become villains. Secondly, As his Person should be out of the Law's favour and protection, so Forisfaciant omnia bona & catalla sua, let his Estate, that consists of Money, Plate, Debts, Leases, Annuities, be forfeit to the King, as a Compensation to the King's Honour for the blot that it has suffered by his perjuriousness. Thirdly, Terrae & Tenementa in manus Domini Regis capiantur,] while he lives, let his real Estate be another's, and not his to enjoy or command. Fourthly, Quod uxores & liberi extra domos ejicerentur,] The innocent Wife and Children that are at home in the House, harmlessly associating each other where their security is, are to be cast forth to the contempt and injury of cold and want; which, how dolorous that condition is, let Haegar's tears speak, who, extruded by her Mistress, Gen. 21.16. Gen. 4.12.14. sat like a forlorn in the open Wilderness; to which perhaps as well as to the punishment of Cain, the Psalmist might allude in that imprecation he Prophetically makes on wicked men, to whom his Person for his piety was an eyesore, Let his Children be Vagabonds and his seed beg their bread, Psal. 109.10. that is, let them be men that have no home, but wander here and there as never out of their way. Fifthly, Domus suae prostrentur,] Letoy not only they and theirs not have being in their own House, but let their own House not be in being, but become a Monument of the confusion that is penal on perjurious falsehood. Sixthly, Arbores suae extirpentur,] Letoy not only the Building and Ornament, Trees the Beauty, Profit and Honour of it cease; and his rich laden Meadows, which filled his Dairy, and stalled his Oxen, and supported his Plough, let them all be ploughed and broken up; and to the compleatment of his punishment, when his Wife, Children, House, Lands, have been sorely harressed, Fleta lib. 1.26. etc. 42. let his Body be imprisoned without Bail or Manisprise, and this touches the Offender to the quick, when he is restrained, and can stir no further than the Bar and Lock of a thick door, or the length of a strong Chain, or the narrow bounds of a loathsome straight Room will permit him, then 'tis misery with a witness. Antiquit. lib. 17. c. 9 Imprisonment is one of the punishments that all Nations inflict on Offenders, and though Caelius Rodiginus tells us of other ends of Prisons than punishments of gross Crimes, yet certainly the chief ends of Prisons was to keep them bound, who would abuse Liberty to injure and ill-principle others. Thus we read of the Cretan Labyrinth, Sabellicus lib. 6. Ennead. 1. Adag. Centur. 1. Chil. 1. Adag. 89. and the Messenians Thesaurus, the Carians Termerio, whence the use of Termeria mala, the Cypriots Ceramon, the Boeotians 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Alex. ab Alexand. lib. 3. c. 5. and the Persians Lethe's, the Attamans' Barathrum and Melita, Cic. in Verrem. Liv. lib. 6. Belli Punici Caelius lib. 17. c. 9 Alex. ab Alex. lib. 2. c. 6. Caelius Rhodig. lib. 17. c. 9 the Spartans' Decas and Carda, the Latomius built by Dionysius the Tyrant of Syracuse, the Roman Sceleratus Campus, their Gemonii Graechus, their Spoliarium, Tullianum Ancon. These, and others such like afflictions on facinorous men, are equalled by this severity of our Law in the imprisonment of perjurious Jurors bodies, which judgement of the Common Law, the Statute of 23 H. 8. c. 3. does mitigate the severity of, and therefore to that I refer the Reader. Nor is the Common Law only so severe in this Case of Perjury, but even all National Laws equal them in severity. Diod. Sicul. p. 69. Edit. Hanoriae. Syntagm. Juris universi. lib. 50. c. 6. Digest. lib. 4. tit. 3. c. Nam Perjurii poena in Marg. p. 523. lib. 3. tit. 2. p. 354. D. in Marg. Tholossanus has to my hand collected the severity of many Nations against Perjury, and the Digest seconds all severity against it; for when (a) Lib. 11. ad Edict. 22. Paulus says, Sufficit Perjurii poena, the Gloss adds, Perjurii poena divina exitium, humana dedecus, which it has out of Tully, that Helluo of Law, Language and Wisdom, lib. 2. De Legibus. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. lib. De Decalogo. p. 756. And therefore is it that an Oath being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, no trivial customary thing, as Philo's words are, but a citation of God to bear witness of it, if it be false it provokes God, because it makes truth itself witness of a lie, is so punished by God and men, as in the subsequent words appear, which are. Virtute cujus si compertum fuerit per sacramentum viginti quatuor hominum, in forma praenotata returnatorum, electorum, & juratorum, qui multo majora habebunt patrimonia quam juratores primi, Quod idem primi juratores falsum fecerunt Sacramentum, etc. Virtute cujus.] That is, Brevis de Attincta; for this is the Warrant for the Sheriff's Summons: For, compertum it cannot be, if not quaesitum; and quaesitum it cannot be, sine mandato Regis, and that can be no otherwise then Brevi de Attincta. So, that if attaints be necessary to punish Perjury in Juries, that punishment must be discovered due to the Fact, by the Fact legally proved, and that the Text says must be by the Oath of sour and twenty men, this is the direction of the Common Law: For, neither in the Statute 11 H. 7. c. 24. or 1 H. 8. c. 11. which are expired: or of 23 H. 8. c. 3. do I find the direction for it other then as by the Common Law; in affirmance of which, so much of the Statute of 23 H. 8. c. 3. as concerns the number and value of the Jury on attaints was made; For, in as much as an attaint, when proved, contracts great infamy and punishment, the Law before it adjudges and inflicts them, expects to be notably satisfied; and this appears from the enhansement of the number of the Jurors to try this, whereas twelve serve in other cases, four and twenty must be in this: and whereas men of the value of 40 s. Freehold, or 4 l. in some cases, here the Law requires that the Jurors shall have every one 20 pounds by the year Freehold, etc. 15 H. 6. c. 5. 18 H. 6. c. 2. and thus stood it when our Text was written, 13 Eliz. c. 25. though the Statute 23 H. 8. c. 3. reduce the quality to 20. Marks, and this confirms that of the Text, Multo majora habebunt patrimonia quam juratores primi.] These then returned, elected, and sworn in due Form of Law, are to inquire whether or no that be true which is suggested; Quod idem primi juratores falsum fecerunt Sacramentum.] In what sense Oaths are termed Sacramenta, Sacramenta militaria apud Romanos. Sueton in Caligula. Turnebus Advers. lib. 27. c. 20. 3 Instit. c. 74. p. 163. I have written in the Notes on the 20. Chapter. That which the Law aims at, is to prevent false Oaths by punishment of those most severely that are guilty of them, That (a) Deut. 17.13. others may hear and fear, and do no more presumptuously. For, the Law having indulged Trial of the Fact to Juries, and the Court charging them to make true enquiry of all things in evidence before them, and not to give Verdict for favour or affection, so help them God, They for favour or affection going maliciously against their evidence, deserve not only infamy, but all the consequent punishments of their seduction: And, although Bracton says favour may be showed quo ad infamiam, yet is there none quo ad poenam redemptionis: for, Lib. 4. Tract. 4. c. 5. p. 299. Homieida perjurus & adulter ni ocyus ad se redierint & compensarint una cum his flagitiosis sceleribus patria exterminantur. Inter L. Canuti. c. 6. p. 108.116. Edit. Twisd. as God is a hater of false Swearers, Zach 8.17. and a swift witness against them, Mal. 3.5. so have ever the Laws of this Land been eager against them: by the Laws of Cnute it was Banishment, and to forfeit his Land: by the Laws of (a) P. 52. c 25. Ethelstan to want Christian Burial: and so by those of St. Edward (b) P. 58. to be as it were unchristianed. And because they that were perjurious were not Oaths-worth, therefore were they never to be believed afterwards: which is in our Texts words, nec aliter recipientur in testimonium veritatis.] for, the reason is by Bracton added, Quia qui semel convictus de perjurio praesumitur quod iterum velit perjurare, Lib. 4 Tract. 4. c. 5. p. 292. according to which the Books are cited by our Judicious Selden, in his Notes on this very Chapter. Et pars quae succubuit in priori placito restituctur ad omnia quae ipse perdidit eccasione ejus. This conveniently follows, for if a Detriment be befallen a man upon false Oath, the evacuation and disproof of that Oath, and the attaint of the person foresworn by it must infer Restitution of that which the improbated Oath occasioned: For, as that of Glanvil in point of the punishment, Lib. 2. c. 19 Dyer fol. 250. is true, Quae poena adeo recte instituta esset ut quoslibet ab illicita praestatione Sacramenti in tali casu coerceat similitudo supplicii; so in point of Restitution, that implies the Nature of the recompense, to have what they lost, and their reasonable costs and damadges: so 23 H. 8. c. 3. confirming 11 H. 7 c. 4. and the same was the Common Law before in point of Restitution, of what was lost by the false Verdict; for so says our Text, Restituitur ad omnia quae ipse perdidit occasione ejus.] Quis tunc igitur, etiamsi immemor salutis animae sua fuerit, non formidine tanta poena & verecundiâ tantae infamiae veritatem non diceret sic juratus, etc. This Clause is inferentiall of what the Chancellor collects from the premised severity of the Law towards violated Faith, and abused Justice; and its interrogative vehemence having the Oratory of a positive negation, minds us, that no man that is wise and worthy will pawn his Soul to fill his Purse, or hazard his Good Name to accept a petty Bribe. For since God would have every man a Caeneus, to be armed with innocence from top to toe, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Adag. 25. Chil. 3. Cent. 4. and in no part or point void of its Muniment, but wholly invulnerable by wilful and notorious sin; Adag. 62. Chil. 4. Cent. 1. No man that will have the hornam messem of Heaven, and obtain his vessel as top full of glory as it can contain, and a good Conscience preserved, will have from the righteous Judge; no man I say, that strives for this, Chil. 2. Cent. 9 Adag. 24. must or dare make his soul a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, sordid to sin and vice, which God abhors, and for which he hath prepared terrors in life, and torments after death. For since the Holy Ghost has told us, Revel. 22. Ephes. 5.5. Rom. 21.27. Psal. 50.23. that without shall be Dogs, and Enchanters, and Whoremongers, and Murderers, and Idolaters, and whosoever loveth and maketh a lie, and into the new jerusalem no unclean thing must enter: but unto him that ordereth his Conversation aright the salvation of God shall be showed, The good and grave Knight here confirms his own and his Readers minds in the belief of this, That no man can be false to the Law and the King in violating his Oath, and injurious to his Neighbour, in parting with his right, which he ought to justify; but he that neither fears God, nor reverenceth Man, he that is Immemor salutis, and cares not whether he sink or swim, as we say, and is desperate, not valuing Reputation, or Personal dishonour, but rest sinè formidine tantae poena, and sinè verecundia tantae infamiae. In that then the Text says Quis enim tametsi immemor salutis suae fuerit;] it points out to us the piety of the Law that Swears us on the Gospel, that we might remember the requiries of the Gospel, to love truth in the inward Man, and to do as we would be done by, as the God of the Gospel exacts from us, and to fear to do the contrary upon the Curses that the violated Gospel threatens upon its violators; so does it mind us that some there are that as they put the evil day far from them, Amos. 6.3. so do they in their actions demean themselves, as unmindful of all those glorious remains that the image of God in them is capable of, and has deposited for them: which profaneness (for it is a vilipendency of a birthright no less noble than Esau's was, and sold no less trifflingly then was his) if it should prevail in a seduced sinner, to promote or give way to, and he throw away his Eternity as a thing of naught, yet is there in the legal censure of this Perjury in Jurymen attainted, somewhat that the Chancellor thinks being more effective of the sense of Man, will more work with him than his Heaven will; For that few understanding aright do not suitably value, but this every ion of Adam can judge of, and will endeavour to avoid disgrace to his Name, and punishment in his Body. For surely, of all things cogent in man, fear is the first and firmest; Primus in orbe Deos fecit timor: and the Prophet, who well knew what the power of mortal passion was, cries out to God to affect his enemies with this one of them, as that which would reduce all the rest to terms; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Aquila reads it: and our Translators after it, Psal. 9.20. Put them in fear O Lord, that the Nations may know they are but men. Fear, O 'tis that which brings men into servility and compliance, which makes Lapide read these words by Pone legislatorem super eos; and Cajetan by pone dominum; and others by Pone jugum vel dominium; because all these, being terrible, cause fear and dread in the objects of their terror and fury, and that our Chancellors expressions may have their allowance of weight, this formido is no transient fear, which does not cadere in v●rum constantem; Cic. 4. Tuscal. 33. Pavidus formididine p●na Virgil. but it is metus permaneus: such as does not only make the heart ache, and the joints to tremble, but such as therefore is such from the prospect it has into all the arcana and dimensions of that which it fears: hence Scaliger derives formida à formis id est spectris; not only for that men by fear take appearances for more than they truly are, Horribiles formidines ex ignorationè rerum existunt, Cic. 1. de Finibus. Isa. 26.9. accordingly to that of the Orator, Horrible fears arise out of the ignorance of things: but because fears soften and cajoule men into obsequiousness. Even God himself prevails mostly on men by fear; When thy judgements are in the World, saith the Prophet, the Inhabitants of the World will learn righteousness. What, no otherways, nor before? will not the love of Christ constrain? no, not the World; the little Flock only are so tender and mouldable: It is the fear of God's Sovereignty that brings the rebel World to crouch. If men do Lityersam cantionem canere, Lib. 4. De rerum vocabulis Cap. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. as julius Pollux his words are, 'tis against their wills: The sense than is, Perjury being so great an offence in the Jurour, and the Law not leaving men to that liberty in point of Oaths, Erasm. Adag. 75. Chil. 3. Cent. 4. that Corcyra left men in other things, according to that Sarcastique adage (a) Cent. 1. Adag. 21. Chil. 4. Lybera Corcyra caca ubi licet; but requiring not only that no Jury man shall be an ambidexter, but if he be such punishing him according to the Statute 5 Ed. 3. c. 10. and the other prementioned Statutes; but also that he be inculpable, and know no party in Judgement, as he will avoid that sore judgement of attaint: the Chancellor does well to urge, that if a man lay aside all Religion and Moral virtue, yet in the bare formido poenae there is enough itself to deter him from provocation of the Law, and procuration of his own punishment according to it; especially when there is verecundia tantae infamiae] added to it. For this offence does not only afflict the person, Fortune and Relations, but bespatters, yea deturpates and dishonours the good Name of any man; and to be infamous Men naturally hate, to be odious and contemptible is the plague-sore of life, which every man shuns: This God himself humbles man by, when he tells him, That he being little lower than the Angels, Psal. 8.5. and crowned with Majesty and Honour, abode net, but became as the beast that perished: For this of suffering diminution is the great Crest-fall to all Manly minds, when men are ranked with the dogs of the flock, they are no company for any but persons of disregard; and to such do they only incline who are infamous. Generosioris arboris statim plantae cum fructu est. Adag. 74. Chil. 1. Cent. 3. Whereas brave and virtuous minds are like generous Trees, that will not only bring forth fruit, and that quickly, but will thrive in no soil that is not generous like themselves: This than the Chancellor considering, arraigns the perjurious person, as not only stupid, in not fearing the punishment of his Crimes, but frantic, in contemning all modesty and care of his report and esteem: Metellus in (a) Vnus quisque debet agere secundum quod sibi ipsis decet. A Gellias lib. 1. c. 6. p. 3. Agellius tells the World, Impetu quodam currere ad mortem commune cum multis; sed deliberare & causat ejus expendere utque senserit ratio vita mortisque consilium suscipere vel-ponere, ingentis est animi. Plin. secundus in Epist. That the brave mind holds himself obliged to do every thing like itself. And if ever any man would have a fair autumn, he must have a tender respect to his spring and solstice; Reputation once lost is not regained but by something stupendious, next door to Hyperhumane, which considered, the Chancellor brings in the dearness of a good name, and the avoidance of the contrary, as pregnant motives to avoid Perjury; If the thoughts of Heaven and bodily freedom would not prevail, yet the care of avoiding disgrace should make a man that is Sworn to do right, fear to forfeit his oath. Et si unus forsan tantus sui honoris prodigus esse non pepercerit, aliqui tamen juratorum tantorum famam suam non negligent, etc. This the Text adds to show, that as one scabbed sheep may be in the flock of a Jury, so in that there may be others sound and good, that infected and seduced one can do no injury to Justice, if the rest or any part of them hold their own: For though that may, in a sense, be true in Juries, which was reproachfully spoken of the discordant Carians, Multitudo Imperatorum Cariam perdidit; Adag. 7. Cent. 7. Chil. 2. yet so long as there is any limb of that body hail, all the others subversions signify nothing: For the Enquiry of the Court is, Are ye all agreed of your Verdict? if any one says no, (holding his own against the others perjurious seduction) the combination comes to naught. So that the Law considering that men here are set inter sacra & saxa, inter malleum & incudem, in acie novaculae, that they have many temptations to conflict with, bids them in this storm 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 put forth their anchor, Cent. 1. Chil. 1.15.16.18. Integrity: and rather expose themselves to the utmost hazard, though it be to be Liberide nudiores then to divide the spoil with the wicked: For, though most men may be Versatiles Artemones, and turn and wind every way as the gust of their advantage drives them; Adag. 9 Chil. 4. Cent. 1. Adag. 23. Chil. 2. Cent. 2. In Anno 1554. Hollingshed, p. 1105. yet a good and well Principled Man will walk sure, and know his footing before he will trust his body and fortune upon it, crying out with him in the Adage, Pedibus ingredior, natare enim non didici: and this to do, and to be fixed to Justice, is Famam suam non negligere, which the Text mentions, and which Sir Nicholas Throgmorton's Jury made good, and have immortality of same for. Neque bona & possessiones taliter distrahipatientur.] This relates to the reward of integrity, security to a man's person and fortune; For, as the Law easily bears down whatever is a perjurious Jurors, and sinks all of him and his in a bottomless contempt, and an irrecoverable loss: which the Text terms bona & possessiones distrahi. Yet, upright and true men non patientur talia, because they do not forfeit their rights by wrong doing: And therefore of all the bladders and supports to Estates, none like those of Justice in an Ancestor, that gives a durable basis to all that's built upon it, and to endeavour to sink it, is (a) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Adag. 32. Chil. 3. Cent. 4. to sink a bottle full of wind: O 'tis a rare custody in the worst time that innocency has, when men walk in the Circle of the Law, they do (b) Adag. 13. Cent. Chil. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 duabus nixus in portis sedere ancoris, and they that seize their fortunes contrary to Equity and Law, are public enemies; For they that suffer for righteousness have the Spirit of glory resting on them: That only being a comfortless suffering which is the fruit of busy-hodiing, and evil-doing against the Laws of men, and the Vicegerent of God. This then being the circumspection of the Law to prevent Perjury in Jurymen, the Chancellor is by me to be considered, not in opposition to the course of other Laws, but as recollecting his precedent arguments for the trial of truth by Juries; as that the Act of God and Nature determine not the remedy of Justice, that Witnesses are not taken hab nab, as we say, Ignoti] such as no body owns, but are their own affirmers; whose condition, life and way men are unsatisfied in, because secret and subdolous; Men never known in their own, nor ever known out of other men's way: nor Conductitii,] bought, and made Witnesses, as Plautus' Fidicina Conductitia was, who played what Tune his Company called for: and Varro calls all works of Pay Conductitiae operae. Epid 6.8. Lib. 1. de Re Rust. 17. Omnia conductor solvit, Ovid 1. Amor. Eleg. 10. No such buyers and sellers of Innocence in the Temple of Juries doth the Law suffer, but overthrows the Tables of these Money-Changers, and all this it does to make way for upright Judgement: Tunc canunt Cygni cum tacebunt Gracculi. For, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. when men are sordidly set on gain, if their houses and estate be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and they have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, heaps of Gold; Chil. 1. Cent. 3. Adag. 34. yet, if they be venal, they will truckle to Perjury, as every Workman that will be well paid, Nemo Iustus esse potest qui mortem, qui dolorem, qui exilium, qui egestatem timet, aut qui ea qua sunt contraria aquitati auteponit. Cic. 1. Offic. learns to humour and please his Imployer and Paymaster: and this the Law looking upon, as the Moth and Canker of Integrity, decries and punishes it, and that with the concurrent acclamation of all honest men; who, because they know not the deceits and lurches of their own hearts, Fides sanctissimum humani pectoris bonum est, nulla necessitate ad fallendum cogitur, nullo corrumpitur praemio; ure (inquit) occide, coede, non prodam, sed quo magis secreta quarit dolor hoc illa altius condam. Senoc. lib. de Const. Sapient. are pleased to have these Mandative Preventions put upon them; For Faith untainted, and Truth pure and defecate, saith Seneca, is the most sacred good thing in the divine soul of man, compellable to evil by no necessity; perswadable by no bribe or leure; resolute against all terror, constant in retaining its innocency: so, that acceptance of rewards being punishable, the Law has done wisely to see, that witnesses be not conductitii, such as either need for want of fortune, and will take for Covetise any gratification to elude justice, and become false. Vagi inconstantes. Vagabundus essusus in voluptates, ac vagabundus semper & ebrius. Senec. lib. de vita Beata. ] These are ill qualities which the Law abhors in Witnesses who under this name are accounted loose persons, though perhaps not such as the Statute 39 Eliz. 17. calls Vagrants, or the 1 jacob. 7. Vagabonds; yet little better, Vagus qui passionem manifesto ostendit, saith Festus. This the Greeks call by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, qui sine negotio, modo huc, modo illuc, inutiliter discurrit, An Erratile and Planetary piece of Manhood carried up and down by the impetuosity of vice to this and that, without settlement in any thing. The Ancients, as they accounted consistence and stability the all, almost, of Virtue and Wisdom, so levity and vagenesse the compliment of all evil and infamy; Tully mentions aliquem vagum & exulem errare, Pro Gluentio. Pro Milone. and aves vagae, errores vagi, and fortuna vaga & volubilis; and in Martial there is, juvencus vagus, and Gressus vagi, Lumina vaga, and Murmura vaga; and Pliny writing of the name of the herb Ambrosia, terms it, Nomen vagum, inconstans, & multis opinionibus obnoxium, by all which the Laws Wisdom is apparent, for therefore does it exclude necessitous persons, or such as have habituated themselves to shift and shark, from all credit, as Witnesses; because Custom has made it a second nature to them, and they cannot but be almost such in all cases, who do apply themselves to be such in any. Aut quorum Conditiones, vel Malitiae ignorantur.] That is, they are so well known to be reputed honest and upright, Si careat suspicione testimonium vel propter personam à qua fertur, quod honesta sit, vel propter causam quod neque lucri, neque gratiae, neque inimicitiae causa sit, admittendus est, Calistratus lib. 4. De Cognitionibus. that, if such they be not, their testimony is abated in the credit, for the Law requires staunch Witnesses, and presumes them such where they are not either convicted or violently presumed, and the Law being so Argus-eyed, and giving liberty to all well-grounded information, and it so importing the adverse party to inform against the Witness, if cause and justice there be for so doing: this considered, occasioned the words, Aut quorum conditiones vel malitiae ignorantur. These are the infamous persons that the Laws exclude Testimony, the allowed ones follow to be touched upon. Vicini sunt Testes, de propriis vivere potentes, famae integrae & opinionis illaesae.] This added to the former perfects the Parallel, there 'twas non ignoti, here vicini sunt; there 'twas non conductitii, here de propriis vivere potentes; there 'twas pauperes, vagi, inconstantes, here 'tis famae integrae, & opinionis illaesa; so that the variation adding to the Emphasis still directs us to our Authors Excellence, which is to render the Law considerate in every particle and point of its Justice; for it aiming at the great end of Government, Right-doing, employs every instance of its power and reason to minister to that; and that it doing, by impeding the contrary as well as by advancing the proper tendencyes thereto, arrives at that compleatness therein, that denominates England the Throne and Centre of Justice; and that not only for the exactness of Witnesses, and impartiality of Juries, but for that the Returners of Juries are not men mercenary, ill to live, but of great fortune, blood and breeding, per officiarium nobilem & indifferentem electi,] and, when served they are to testify their knowledge in a Cause; 'tis not arbitrary, whether they will or will not, but they are fineable if they do not: yea, and as the cause may be, I think, the party that suffers damages by the absence of a Witness legally summoned and served to appear, and not appearing, being well and no act of God impeding him, may bring his Action against such an Absenter, and recover in it against him, which is perhaps the cause that the Text says, Et coram judice venire compulfis] That is, the obstinacy of such absence being penal, both from the King whose Laws are contemned, and to recompense of the party who by it is damnified, the Witnesses may be well said to be coram judice venire compulsi. This then the Law doing, and to that end which is only propitious to Order and National Charity; the conclusion of the Chancellor is to good purpose, Quid ultra vere nihil est, meaning this the Hercules Pillar and the Meta ultimae of all politic prudence and Magistratique care: for, when that is done to further virtue, which the wit of man can devise or carry on, what more can be thought endeavourable then is aimed at in this proceedure; which, how the Laws of England effect, let those judge who consider, Quise non opinari sed scire, non audivisse sed vidisse, non interfuisse, sed egisse dicunt. Cic. ●yo Archia. that such are only allowed to serve on Juries as are fide digni, and are men of Estate, and those to give testimony unto them, Who are not only unblemished, but are positive, and not by hear-say, Witnesses. So tenacious is the Law of its just Spirit, that it abates not one jota of it to gratify any Greatness or Prevalency, but gives this Motto, Fiat justitia & ruat mundus; which Constancy, upon so divine a Basis, displays the rectitude of its Principle, and bespeaks the great reward of honour from God and men. For when men of wavering minds have played all their prizes, and had a venture in every Lottery of Levity and Change, that will be the indelible Mark of a Wiseman, Praebeo me non aliter quam rupes aliqua in vadoso mari destituta, quam fluctus non desinunt, undiquaque moti sunt, verberare, nec ideo aut loco eam movent, aut per tot aetates crebro ineursu suo consumunt. Seneca lib. De beata vita, c. 27. which Seneca commends Socrates for, whom he brings in justifiing himself immovable, notwithstanding popular tumults, as the Rocks are for all the high Seas that dash against them. And therefore though Maro may commend Latinus as he deserved, for being, as he publishes him, Ille velut Pelagi rupes immota resistit; and (a) Agellius lib. 1. c. 23. Papyrius may be cried up as the only Roman. Youth that could keep a Secret, and be constantly resolute against the sieges of love to discover it: Malmesbury Hist. Novel. lib. 2. Though Robert Earl of Gloucester, Manere debet apud nos frater fidei robus immobile, & stabilis, atque inconcussa virtus contra omnes incursus & impetus obl●trantium fluctuum. etc. Sanct. Cyprian. Epist. 7. Son to H. 1. have the praise of our Historians for adhering to a good matter, and being zealous in it: And that Christian Rule in Saint Cyprian should be owned Gospel by us, which is not to be hoped it should in this degenerate Age be, wherein Gold and Greatness are the only Numen; I say, should all these be amassed into one, yet would they not come up to the Laws Constans & perpetua voluntas Ius unicnique tribuendi. And therefore 'tis a good Rule that a wise man, Monarch, and Christian gave us, That the Law was the surest foundation of happiness that any man could rest upon; which when the belief of it evidences itself in practice, will prevail with me to admire the graduates in this Perfection, as Contenders with the Venetian Senate for Mastery in Constancy, of which, truly I think, they gave a matchless Precedent in the case of Carmagniola their General, Shute's History of Venice. p. 334. who, though openly suspected in the Senate, wherein Execution of him was concluded, yet in all the eight Months that passed between their Conclusion and his Execution, though he had many friends in the Senate and some of them poor, who might have received great rewards for discovering his danger to him; none of them discovered it to him, nor did he know of it till it fell fatally upon him; which Justice, to the honour and success of the Senate, argues them, that were Members of it, ambitious rather to honour their Government, then advance themselves; which if we of this Nation would do, we should better deserve than we do, the freedom of such a Law and Government, as we, blessed be God, have constituted. By all than that has been written it appears, that a readier way to justice no man can go, then by those steps that the Law has chalked out. And so I take leave of the Text, and proceed to the following Chapter. CHAP. XXVII. Sed quomodo in criminalibus Leges Angliae scrutantur veritatem, etiam rimare pernecessarium est. HEre the Chancellor, like an exact Master, observes Method to the clear and kindly attainment of his end, which was to endear the Law to the Prince, and the Prince to it; and that upon conviction that it is the most expedite way to govern English men by, and has the best means of discovering offences and providing remedies for them in England, that can possibly be found out: to which end considering, that causes relating to justice are either such as are civil, or criminal, having fully in the two foregoing Chapters treated of civil Actions with their remedies and manner of prosecution, he now comes to Criminals, as they are tried and proceeded against in England by the Common Law or by the Statute Law, which come under the title of Leges Angliae. And this he thinks not only convenient to explorate and detect, sed pervecessarium, as that which unless removed will obstruct his after and more effectual passage; for his Errand being to the Prince, whose soul and reason he would conquer to and confirm in, so just and behooveful a thing both to King and people, as a good opinion of the Law of England is, he judges it pervecessarium thoroughly and absolutely requisite to evidence to the Prince, that the Law is not more defensive of privilege, than Prerogative; nor a stouter Bulwark to civil Rights between man and man, then of the Sovereign's Person, Honour, and Prerogatives, the violation of which endowments of Sovereignty it judges criminal. And that the Chancellors intentness may more illustrate itself, I shall crave leave to touch upon two things in this transitionall clause. 1. The Epithet he gives the Laws Enquest after Criminal Offences, Scrutantur Veritatem: the Greeks express the Verb Scrutor by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Ab 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vel 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Becman, lib. de Orig. Lingua Lat. quod proprie est interrogando aut colloquendo scrutor, elicio, indago: and by this the Chancellor informs us the means and way of discovery of Treasons, Felonies, and Breaches of the Peace, which are all criminals, to wit, by way of Enquiry, Examination, and following offences by a wise and diligent pursuit, while the bruit of them is fresh, and the stinch of them warm and reaking; Not but that the truth of some Facts lie a great while unfound out, because either secret, or not ripe for vengeance in their discovery: But when ever the Law has intelligence of offences and offenders, by the Ministers of Justice, and Officers of the Crown, it eagerly pursues them, and dives into the Nature, Circumstances, and aggravations of them; and this to know is pernecessarium, because it implies zeal to Justice, and gubernative severity; which by prosecuting offenders is tender, and conservative of well doers: and this the Chancellor intends by Scrutantur Veritatem. Secondly, The Chancellors drift in bringing Criminals to be discoursed on is notable, rimare pernecessarium; it should, I think, be rimari, for the Verb is deponent, and has no active, because it is of active signification; the Noun Rima signifies a Cleft, Chap, or Chink, which is not close joined: and by allusion plenus rimarum is by Terence the description of a babbler, who has such wide chinks and chaps in his mouth between his lips, that all secrecies pass through them: Plautus also uses invenire rimam to find excuse, or means to escape, as little Vermin do at the least crevise, or chink. Hence one sense of the Verb Rimor is to cleave, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. John. 5.39. Rimari est quaerere valde, Festus as Timber that is shaken by the wind doth, though the usuallest be to search out narrowly in every corner and cleft; so Claudian uses juga rimari canibus, for to Hunt with Hounds in every corner, to which our Chancellor without doubt has respect: telling the Prince, that as the Law is very exact in its appointment of all things that concern King and Subject, and is defective in no point of regimental prudence; so is it his care to find out apt words to carry his ardent affection to the Laws of England, pleasingly to the Prince's ear, and from thence to his love and affections. Vt in cis plenaric aguita ambarum legum forma, quae earum efficacius latentem revelat veritatem certius agnoscamus. Here the Chancellor intimates to us three things; First, The end and use of good Laws, latentem revelare veritatem. Secondly, The modus, by which Judgement is rightly made, and in what manner the Law does this, that's plenaria agnitione ambarum legum formae. Thirdly, The danger of civil broils to render National Law odious, and foreign Laws amiable; This I collect from the expression of ambarum legum: For our Chancellor would never have so eagerly asserted the Common Law of England, and debacchated against other Laws, had he not seen them probable to be competitors with the Municipe Laws, the love of which exotique Laws probably he perceived, either stealing into the Prince's heart, or whispered into his ear by Adulatorious Foreigners in the time of his Exile. The end and use of good Laws he makes to be latentem revelare veritatem: Truth is the precious Jewel which does latere, and is not come at but with toil and hazard; which made the Pythagoreans say, veritas in puteo: indeed methinks Solomon had some meaning analogick to this, when he bids us get wisdom rather than gold; now both Wisdom and Gold do not lie on the surface, Prov. 16.16. nor are they obvious, but obtained with difficulty. Since therefore her lustre has such damps, and her price is so invisible, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Dyonisius Areopag. apud Stobaeum Serm. 60, 61. the work of us mortals is to prosecute truth so hard, and follow after her so earnestly, that we give no rest to our eyes, nor recreation to our lives, till we apprehend her Dulcis veritas in interiora melodia; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Evagrius apud eundem. This therefore the Chancellor here publishes to be the labour of the Law, Latentem revelare veritatem: to rescue the beauty and virginity of truth from the rape and force of pretended virtue, but real falsehood her antagonist. For, such is the craft of the World's Polycrates', that they do omnem movere lapidem; to bury truth in the heap of fallacies, and to make Justice set up somewhat as a Law, which should bastardise her, and, in stead of her, legitimate that spurious product of villainy, in justice. This makes the Law so exact to try, so vigilant to avoid trapanning, and from this are often delays occasioned, which are real advantages to truth, not (as is supposed) methods purposely studied to enhance gain: For as Mariners, when they have but a bad wind often shift sails, and waft from shore to shore, that they may make some way to their Port, and not lose all progress because they have not a full gale: so are Lawmakers' necessitated to use all means to right Truth, and use all instruments to her clarification, rather than lose one grain or atom of her. For all truth qua such is mysterious, and to be sought after till it be found, if ever it be; and the least dram of it that we attain as the consequence of our acquisition, will be welcome to us; and we shall account ourselves to be recompensed for all our labour by it. The truth then that the Law seeks for here, and having found reveals, is the truth of Fact; that is, whether a Malefactor be so bad as he is suspected, and accused to be: For it sometimes falls out, that the clamour is greater than the offence deserves; and if the punishment should be in haste executed, the Magistrate would be artifex injuriae non opifex justitiae: therefore Policy, that is well advised, cautions that a just assay should be taken of every man and thing, and that such Arts should be practised as may sever the precious from the vile, and the Gold from the dross; and that is done by examinations of Witnesses upon such heads as may best conduce to knowledge of what they understand in the cause: For Laws are intended to settle the rule of equal distribution both of mine and thine, rewards and punishments: and being directed to so useful an end as is the decision of debates by the line and plummet of Truth, what more useful benefit to humane Societies, than Laws? But how shall good Laws be fitted to answer these good ends, or how shall men make use of good Laws to the latitude of these good ends. That the Chancellor resolves in the second place, Plenaria agnitione ambarum legum formae.] For knowledge of the forms which do dare esse, makes a man capable to judge of their fitness and conducibility to those ends. As it is not a trite skill in simples, and a bare book learned speculation that makes a good Physician; but the knowledge of the operation, and the view of them in practice upon Patients that makes an expert practiser: so is it not a light and oscitant touch in the study of Law that makes a man capable to judge of the Law, but an accomplished Mastery of the reason of it, and a coylification of it into one's Mother reason, rectifiing it thereby, that entitles a man to judgement of what the Law is, and is not. For Forms, as they are modelled and fixed to the freehold of the Law, are not purprestures that are destroyable without great inconvenience, but they are so fastened to the main Principles of Polity, that with them they endanger the ruin of Government: For we must reasonably imagine that the setters up of them, wise, (and in their times) worthy men, had solid reason for what they did; and thereupon doing it, we are to conclude there is some inconvenience will ensue that demolition, which was on purpose raised as a Sanctuary to Order: The consideration of which may lead us into the reason, why judgement of Forms, Methods, and Regulations of Government in the World, is not committed usually to young and green-headed men, whose brains are too Mercurial to fix, and too Sultanish to deliberate of things; but to grave and sad men, who are above the levitieses of youth, and beneath the dotages of old age. Byas that wise Lawmaker appointed no man to be Governor of his People till forty years of Age; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. and the reason was, Youth is light and heady, Age is sour and infirm: and the usual saying was, consilia senum hastas esse juvenum; pointing out no doubt at this, that Experience the fruit of years is the season of judgement. And therefore as to the Case in point, he that will judge of whether Law's Proceedings are best, must know the forms of both, which few fully do that are not of years; and spend not their years in study and search into both Laws. Yea, suppose a man had the Law-learning of Volufius Metianus the Master of that renowned Marcus Antoninus, Epist. ad Pollionem. who gives this testimony of him, that he was in legibus interpretandis experientissimus; yet if he be as Volusius was, in iisdem violandis longe magis exercitatus, what is he profited by it? Such a Volusius who asks, whether one thinks there be any Law in the World which he knew not, may be answered as he was, Dic mihi, estne ulla lex in mundo quam praestes & observes? That than which must give a man a right judgement of Laws, will be consideration thoroughly of the Forms, Steps, and Marches by which they move; and how suitable they are to the People, they are to Order: For our Chancellor now speaks to the Prince as solicited by his breeding and conversation abroad, to close with Foreign Laws, under which he saw People Obedient and Loyal, and Countries in peace: when in England where the Common Law had, in pretence, its course, at least where no other Law but the Common Law was admitted, Rebellion prevailed, and Civil Wars continued (a mote or beam in the Prince's eye, which made him look as it were asquint, or unpleasingly on the Common Law, and delightfully on other Laws) the Chancellor Courts him to continue the Common Law his darling, though the other Law had some, yea much respect, as, in its kind, it was worthy to have of him. Si reus quispiam de Felonia aut Proditione in Anglia rettatus crimen suum coram judicibus dedicat. Concerning Treason and Felony somewhat hath been written heretofore, yet this Chapter being purposely designed by our Text to the treaty of it, I crave leave to add further what I humbly conceive pertinent to this place. Reus de Felonia aut Proditione] This refers to the two great capital Offences punishable by Law; Felony] which anciently was the offence of the Vassal against his Lord, Very Felons and Thiefs, words of Stat. 8 Eliz. c. 4. perhaps for little Thefts and slight of hand, whence it may be that sore on the finger called a Fellen may come: since, Felony was punished with forfeiture of the Estate and Goods of the person offending, which though they were redeemable by Mere and Mergild, Spelman Gloss: in voce. yet now are not; for Henry the First made Theft, the most ordinary Felony, punishable with death: and though the Common Law brought off Felons by their books, yet since many Statutes, (a) 8 Eliz c. 4. 1 Jac. 8.12. 25 H. 8. c. 6. 32 H. 8. c. 3. 5 Eliz. 17.4 & 5 P. & M. c. 4 2 & 3 E. 6. c. 2. 5 Eliz. c. 5. 19 Eliz. c. 7. 5 Eliz. c. 20. 39 Eliz. c. 9 23 H. 8. c. 1. 32 H. 8. c. 3. 5 & 6 E. 6. c. 9, & 10. 27 Eliz. c. 2. 1 E. 6. c. 12. taking away Clergy, leave Felony to the punishment of hanging the body and forfeiture of the Estate. The crime of Felony is a grievous one, and to call a man Felon, is to entitle him to all the opprobry and danger imaginable. At this day than Felony is the great brand of every offence against the Peace, Crown, and Dignity of our Sovereign Lord the King; for, all Treason, though it be more in the punishment, Stamford. Pleas of the Crown. Cook 3. part. Instit. Pleas of the Crown. & on Littl. p. 391. Spelman in Gloss. yet it has in it felleum animum which makes the atrocity of it. To discourse of Felony at large is needless, since both Stamford, Sir Edw. Cook, and others have abundantly done it, therefore I refer the Reader to them. Vel proditione.] This in the latitude of it signifies any falseness, but chiefly that which concerns the Magistrate, and his charge, to deliver up whom or which into the enemy's hand is capital by all Laws. Lib. 35. Syntag. Juris universi: Tholossanus gives us an account of all Nation's abhorrency of it, and severity against it: but this proditio here is alta proditio, or laesa Majestas; which being an offence against the great God, through the King, who is Deus post primum secundus, and is Solo deo Minor, the Minister of God for our good, and the dispenser of the power of God to the foecundation of Order; the Laws of England makes capital, as in the Notes on the 22 Chapter I have shown; Only as in all Cases, not the accusation but proof makes the guilt; so is it here, and thereupon in order to proof, the offender, or presumed so to be, is called by our Text Rettatus. In Anglia Rettatus.] I confess, at the first view of this I thought it was a fault in the Copy, and that Rettatus should have been Rectatus; the word used in the Statute De Bigamis, Cap. 5.2 Instit. p. 273. 2 Instit. p. 285. Quando de felonia rectati fuerunt: but when I considered the word had another sense there, than this must have here, I searched to find the proper notation of it, and found it to signify Arrested, or Accused, so Gents rettes de Felony Stat. 1. Westminst. c. 15. Pag. 250. so in the Statute Marlbridge, c. 28. Si clericus aliquis pro crimine aliquo vel retto quod ad Coronam pestineat arrestatus fuerit; and so Westminst. 1. c. 2. Pur view est ensement que quant Clerk est pur rette de Felony; Pag. 163. and so c. 15. Gents' rettes de Felony: and methinks rettatus may come as well from raptatus as from the other Etymologies, Accusations and Arrests for Treason being things of violence, the party that is guilty of them being not willingly apprehended for them. Crimen suum coram judicibus dedicit.] If the Felony be confessed, than the Trial in form of Law is needless: but if he do dedicere; that is, deny it, and stand upon his integrity as not guilty, than it must be tried modo & forma; which the Law therefore provides for, because it meets with few offenders that take the Prophet's advice, to confess their sins, and give glory to God: for they are so far from that, that they have contrived a Proverb, in bar of that ingenuity, Confess and be hanged. The Law therefore thinking fit to search into all offences of this nature, as intolerable, provides for the Trial, as well as the apprehension and detection of it, which is, by empannelling of a Jury to try it. Mox Vicecomes comitatus ubi facinus illud comissum est, venire faciet coram eisdem judicibus viginti quatuor probos & legales homines, etc. This Jury is but to consist of twelve, but the summons is to be of double as many, that there may be room for exception: and this the Law does to prevent all surprise, especially in Treason, which being a heinous guilt, and having a heavy doom; all the Justice that can be done in favorem vitae & relationum, is herein showed: These then good men and true, Stat. de his qui ponendi sunt in assessis. of the Neighbourhood, as in actions real and personal, returned, having in Estate 5.1. a year in Lands and Rents, as appoints the Statute 21 E. 1. appearing in Court, the Fact is Triable: If the Prisoner interpose not by challenge of them, or some of them, which the Law allows him to do, Rettatus ille eos calumpniare potest, etc.] says the Text. Et insuper in favorem vitae calumpniare potest triginta quinque homines quos ipse maxime formidat. This shows not only that an offender may challenge, but also why, and how many he may disable to serve against him: The freedom that the Law allows him is calumni●re, which we translate challenge; and so our Historians use the word as well as our Lawyers: Quanquam perante Dominum Baldwinus Frevil, idem officium calumniasset sed minime obtinuisset, p. 195. so Walsingham uses it when relating the famous Coronation of Richard the second, and the pretence the Lord Frevil had to be Champion to the King: and the men he may disable are such of the Return as he does Maxim formidare; that is, Spelman Gloss in verbo Calumnia, p. 116. such as he fears, as well for their Justice and Impartiality as for their Enmity: Resolution of the Judges in the Case of Sir Walter Raleigh, 1 Instit. p. 156. B. (For a Traitor has as great spite against Loyalty in the Jury as any thing else) and this he may do to the number of 35. not to three full Juries, for then there may be a Progressio in infinitum, and no Trial easily be, but to as many as may be within three whole Juries, that the Law may be known to favour life, and avoid cruelty. 'tis true, I know by the 22 H. 8. c. 14. these peremptory challenges were reduced to twenty, confirmed by 28 of the same King c. 1.; and by the 32 H. 8. c. 3. made perpetual: but the Statute of 1 & 2 P. & M. restoring the Trial by the Common Law, offenders are indulged challenge peremptory to 35. as the Text says, Qui ad ejus calumpniam cancellabuntur in panello, etc. Licet ipse nullam causam assignare sciat, etc. Quis enim tunc mori possit inique in Anglia pro Crimine, cum tot juvamina habere ille poterit ob favorem vitae suae. This the Chancellor infers to show the Prince how much the Laws permit to the favour of life, even in those Cases wherein the Law is most provoked; and the Quis inique mori possit in Anglia, etc.] Is not to be expounded as if it were a challenge to the bitterest foe to our Laws, to instance in one that injuriously had died, or to boast of no naeve or Scarr in the administration of Justice, nothing less: For this Livia (a) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dictum de Livia Erasm. Adag. 39 Chil. 1. Cent. 7. of our Law may be in some things too speedy to be justified to her own Augustus. Some instances will not be denied to be produceable, wherein there may have been more haste then good speed: there may be such an offender as many Freeholders in a Shire, condemning in the Sessions of their own judgements, and that upon perhaps a bruit, or mistake; may in persuance of that prepossession verdict guilty in Trial upon him: And there may be Iniqua Tempora, wherein such bloody Usurpers as Richard the third, and such Parasites as Sir George Rutliff his creature domineering. Many may ●nique mori in England, Ingenii magni, malignus, sermone rudis habitu rusticus, ad quaelibet-atrocia facinora suscipienda princeps, ab omni aut erga homines misericordia aut erg● superos reverentia alienissimus. Tho. Morus Cancellar, in R. 3 vita p. 52. Impross. Lovanii. these Times and things have been elder and later in England, therefore the Chancellors Quis tunc, etc. is not rigidly and absolutely to be taken, as if it imported an affirmation, excluding all instance to the contrary: but it is interpretable as an inference of prudence which from means judges of ends; & so we must apprehend the Chancellor, to intend that thorough the punctuality required by Law to the Trial of Causes, there is as much as art and conscience can contrive to extrude corruption, and to favour preservation of Right, Life, and reputation: And that if the sins of the Nation have not provoked God to give up the Subjects to Irreligion and falseness, there is safety to all that's dear to an Englishman in his Trial, nor does often any good thing that is his suffer by them; yea, if Juries be but knowing, honest, and resolute, nothing of injury can judicially be done in England, and, especially in Case of Life: and, when in such Times and Cases things have been hand-over-head injuriously carried, Times of better temper and Restitution have reversed the judgements, Hollingshed. p. 339. Cook. 4. Part Instit. Chap. Parliament. Act of 13 of the King Entitled an Act for Preservation of His Majesty's Person and Government against Treasonable, Seditious practices and attempts. See the Act Entitled an Act for the Attainder of several persons guilty of the horrid Murder of his late Sacred Majesty King Charles the first. Anno 12. Car. 2. confirmed by 13 of our most gracious King. and dishonoured the practices of them: so did the Nation do by the Murder of Thomas the good Duke of Lancaster, who was not put to death per legem terrae; and therefore was declared unlawfully Proceeded against, by Parliament. And so, though our eyes saw, and the hearts of Wise and Worthy men in the Nation mourned for, the extrajudicial Proceedings of High Courts ●f justice, and Courts Martial, as they were called; wherein not only many of the Loyal and brave spirited Lords, Knights, Gentlemen and Commons of England were Sentenced, and by Order of it Executed: yea, and what is ever to be riveted into the abhorrence of an Englishman, the Sacred and Divine Person of our then Wise and Pious Sovereign King CHARLES the first; forced within the Power, and Martyred by the violence of that execrable Usurpation: though, I say, this Nation has had such Monstrous impieties acted in it, yet has it obtained from God the Mercy and Opportunity of Nationally disclaiming, and Nobly abhorring the Sacrilege and Truculency of it: yea, and to perpetuate the Antipathy of the Nation against it, has by Act of Parliament, not only censured it, but set apart the 30th. of january: (If any such day ought, as but for that Dedication to Penance, it ought not to be allowed in the Month for ever after) to be a Day of Humiliation, Nigro Carbonè notandus, and of expiation for that Nefarious Fact; which I will no further censure because the Sentence of Law has passed on it: I return then to what follows. Mallem revera viginti facinorosos mortem piet●te evadere, quam unum justum injusté condemnari. This vehemence of our Chancellours well becomes his pious and divine soul; which knew, that to err on the right hand, by too much lenity, was safer, then to err on the left by too much rigour: And as I am bound to believe that his afflictions had brought God and him into intimacy, so does he in his actions resolve to follow God in all the actions of Judicature his Providence shall interest him: And hence it is, that as God's delight is Mercy, Isay. 28.21. and judgement is declared by him to be his strange work; so does our Chancellor here profess his alienation from injustice, and that if he must be a Judge he had rather rid the World of many Miscreants, then be accessary to the oppression of one Righteous Person unrighteously adjudged to death by him. And good reason he had thus to prefix his Mallem to that truth, because not only the righteous man is better than his neighbour, Prov. 12.26. and the best is to be preserved; and the destruction of one good man is afflictive to God, according to that of the Psalmist, Precious in the eyes of the Lord is the death of his saints: Psal. 116.15. but also as one good and just man may be more worth than a World of dissolute (and God Damn Me) sinners; so is the testimony of God himself, who, Gen. 6. v. 12. when he looked upon the Earth, and beheld it was corrupt, for all flesh had corrupted his way upon the earth: yet in the seventh Chapter v. 1. God says to, and of Noah, Thee only have I seen righteous before me in this Generation: and as for the sake of this just man, God reserved some men alive, who were with him in the Ark, so for the unjust cruelty of the jewish Nation against that Holy One, and that just One our Lord jesus, whom they barbarously and with high contempt crucified, did God bring the fierce and puissant Roman upon them, who rifled the Temple, sacked the City, carried away the Nation captive, and determined the account of jews and judaism all the World over. These examples tell us, there is reason for the Chancellors Mallet; nor are the instances only in Scripture, whence the prepollency of one to many may be confirmed, but in other Authors also. Aristides is represented to us so just, that the Grecian Judges would prefer his word to many other men's oaths: and Socrates so matchlesly wise and exemplary, that after his Countrymen put him (the eye and soul of Greece) to death, they never did any brave action either at home or abroad; but dwindled away, Vnus ille vir ipse consul Rempublicam sustinuit. Livius lib. 2. as if God revenged in their infamy the death of that Heroic. Among the Romans there is honour done Fabius Coeso, as the only conservator of the Government. And Quintinus Coeso, Vnus impetus trilunitios popularesque procellas sustinuit. lib. 3. by opposing the Agragrian Law, is counted a Patriot more worth than all the Plebs. So Fabius Cunctator; these and such like are famous above many. And if one worthy man whose Justice has the oriency of a Carbuncle, and glisters in the night of degeneration, to the dislustre and eclipse of those whose interests in the domineering follies of Ages make them dark as Hell, and dismal as those subterraneous labyrinths that the fiends of Satan retreat to: If thus, I say, one just person may be corrective of a multitudes exorbitancy, and reduce them from the evil of their ways; good reason is there for this choice of our Chancellor, in desiring rather to pardon twenty evil doers, then punish unjustly with death one just man. Since in the one he contributes time (if God will give grace) to their Repentance, who by living longer may live better: Psal. 51. but in the other he draws innocent blood upon himself, which David deprecates, Deliver me from bloodguiltiness, O God, thou God of my salvation. In hoc equidem processu nihil est crudele, nihil inhumanum, nec laedi poterit Innocens in corpore aut membris suis. As the guilty being impeached cannot (salvis legibus) go unpunished, so cannot the innocent be charged in his body, or any member of it; for the Law of England is a merciful Law, and says, disclaimingly as to cruelty, as Perseus in a like nature did, Neque enim mihi cornua fibra: for the Law has nothing of the Adamant, Flint, Steel, which are said Cornu in pectore gestare; satire. Prim●. but it is composed of sweetness where it may allure, and of pity even when it is forced to correct: and he is not a true Judge of this Law who condemns offenders without remorse for their sin, and obduration the cause of it: Nor are our Punishments, Racks, Torments, Making up between Walls alive, inhuman Butcheries, such as in other Nations are wont; those cruelties are no methods of our Law: If the offence be light, suitable to it is the punishment: if criminal, than death: and if men deserve neither, by judgement of their Peers, innocent they are: and as such cannot suffer in their whole, or any part of their body; For as no man can be put to death but secundum legem terrae; Cook 1 Instit. p. 126, 127, etc. so not lose any limb nisi per legem terrae: For Mayhem is an offence against the Law, and actionable, unless where the loss of a Member is permitted by Act of Parliament: For, though of old the privities of men for Adultery, and their eyes and hands for Theft were avitable; yet since Christianity, and the more illuminate times of it, loss of members of the body has been allowed, but in very few Cases, as in striking a Judge in executing his office, or any other man in the face of the Court, the Court sitting: and losing of ears in case of Cheating and Forgery. So that considering that punishments are upon such just grounds, and that no person has permission in England, through the greatness of his power, to oppress any man, nor may any man justly dread Calumniam Inimicorum; because (non torquebitur ille ad arbitrium ipsorum) but they can no otherwise be revenged of him (except perjuriously and murderously, which the Law will severely punish them for) than the Law allows, and the guilt deserves: since, I say, the Law of England is so tuitive of the Estate, Stat. 3. H. ●. c. 1●. Life, and Member of men, as it (to the admiration and acclamation of all our neighbour Nations) is known and confessed to be. The Chancellors inference is most true, Sub hac lege vivere quietum & securum est; And so with a Prayer to the Prince to choose (upon these things premised, and the reason of them weighed) whether either the foreign or patrial Laws he will best approve and adhere to, he concludes this Chapter. CHAP. XXVIII. Cui Princeps. Arduum ambiguumve Cancellarie, non conspicio, etc. THis Chapter personates the Prince, as ingeniously suppled by the Chancellors application and reason, into a plenary concession of his Allegations, and a subjection to the prevalence of his learned Arguments: and as the several passages in it proclaim the Prince generously ductile, Sunt quidam it● natura muneribus in iisdem habiles, ita ornati, ut non nati, sed ab aliquo Deo ficti vid●rentur. Cie. lib. De clar. Oratoribus. (for I make no question but the penning of it is exploratory of his addiction, and rather historically true then parasitically fancied) so the account he is personated to give, is amply Masculine in the vigour of its reason; for as the Chancellor did not present him, Rebus palestrae & olei, as light things are called by Tully, but with the great things of the Law, and grave Arguments to work upon his judgement and affections, to love and follow it, so the Prince did not show himself morosum titubantemque to such wise offerings; for that had been to browbeat his age, and to dishearten his loyalty. Yea if such unsetledness of humour caused the desultory satire, when invited in time of Frost and Snow into the Country Swains house, seeing his Host blow his hands before there was a fire for cold, Valebis, neque enim mihi ratio est cum ejusmodi homine haber● hospitium common. and when there was a fire for heat, to cry out to the Swain, Farewell Sir, I'll have nothing to do with them that are of so uneven a temper; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Adag. Chil. 1. Cent. 8. Adag. 30. I say, if this Owl (as it were) of the Desert could not away with hot and cold out of the same mo●th, much less could the good and loyal Chancellor have borne the peevishness and obstinacy of youthy greatness, if it could have deserted its native Majesty so far as to have showed any thing unlike love, gratitude, and resignation to his constant duty, unshaken loyalty, and matchless learning expressed towards him in his education and travel; but the goodness of the Prince was such, that he was resolved never to try the patience of his Chancellor by doing any thing of contradiction to him: and therefore he is brought in here (as I believe he truly carried himself) gently yielding to what is insinuated to him, and protesting aversation to morosity or waveringnesse in the choice of that he commends to him; for every man desires to live long, and see good days; and this to obtain is to be secure, to live a safe life secura quasi secutura mala rescindere, to dock all reversional pretenders to annoyance, Et pro hac suspicione constitutum est, ne quis extraneum hospitetur nisi de clara die, ne● permittat eum recedere nisi declarata die. Bracton lib. ●. De Corona c. 18. p. 137. Chil. 3. c. 15. p. 134. and that by a fine and recovery of obedience to that Law which provides muniment for such a darling as life, and security in it, is. And this the Law of England yielding all the Subjects under it, by preventing all occasions and improvements of malice, and by allowing refuges to those that are prosecuted by it, to wit, innocent persons, who may in the King's Courts, and by the King's Subjects, Ad accusationem hujus criminis admittitur quilibet de populo liber homo & servus, etc. dum tamen sit is ille qui accusat integra fama, & non criminosus quia criminosi ab omni accusatione repelluntur, Bracton lib. 3. De Corona. c. 3. fol. 11●. Juries, in trial of the Causes be preserved and quitted; since it is not the fair plea, nor the numerous evidence that the Law is seduced by, but the justice of the cause made out by clear and honest Witnesses, omni exceptione Majores, that it is led by; when, I say, in this happy consistency, it regards the body of man, that little Digest of Omnipotency, wherein there is a perfect correspondency to the Method of our English Polity, In uno homine, velut in Archive quodam celeberrimo, perfectio●●s & proprietates, creaturarum reponerentur, quorumque ipse & complementum esset, & thesaurus velu● omnium uberrimus, sic Luscinias cantu, Elephantos memoria, prudentia. Simi●s gesticulatione, canes sagacitate. etc. Aldrovand●s, Ornith. lib. 11. p. 639. the Heart Sovereign, the Brain Chancellor, the Faculties Peers, the Blood Laws, the Veins and Arteries Officers of ministerial destribution; the Parts and Members the Commoners in this Commonwealth; and all congregated in the Parliament of the Body: when I humbly conceive all these are orderly preserved secure from laesion and confusion by the Laws, not only of our civil society, but national function; and with these, the Goods and Fortunes which are appendent to these. There is great reason to acknowledge the Laws of England the most deserving Darlings of Englishmen: Let me be free, I care not who knows this English Humour in me, I value the English cooking of Diet, making of clothes, Note this. way of House-keeping, friendliness of greeting, fidelity of word, steddyness in counsel, zeal in Religion, boldness in the field, and matchless administration of Justice beyond any of these of foreign Extract, and I hope I write herein more Majorum, and if I err, 'tis ex amore Patriae, Cui deesse (to use the Historians words) aliis turpe, Camillo nefas esset. And so I conclude this Chapter under pardon of my Text-Master for writing no more; and, of the enamourated with foreign things and Customs, for writing so much; and if this little be to be vile in their eyes, I shall venture to be yet more vile, in those Chapters that particularly are explorative of the Laws and Modes of that Country where our Chancellor was then an Exile; yet no otherwise or further than becomes a modest and generous Ingenuity, and the necessary vindication of my Native Country, and her Customs, Laws, and Sovereign (to whose Honour I am an humble Valect) doth require of, and I hope will take kindly from me. CHAP. XXIX. Cancellarius. juvenis recessisti Princeps, ab Anglia, quo tibi ignota est dispositio terrae illius, etc. HEre the Chancellor minds the Prince of the necessity his youth has to be instructed in the Country of England, who is to judge of the Laws of England; for in as much as the wisdom of Legislators is seen in conforming Laws to the nature of the people they are to regulate, and the Laws of England being thus suited to it and the Subjects of it, the right judgement of those Laws will best be presumed to be, where the best knowledge of the Country, where they rule, is had. Now that not being possible to be in the Prince, whom the fury of what the Chancellor thought Rebellion, drove away; the good Man, who had long been a man of Law and Prudence, applies himself to supply that to him, which the force of his Father's Extruder denied him to be accomplished with. juvenis recessisti] This Youth is one of the six Ages of life, Linwood lib. 1. De sacra unctione, p. 18. B. K. adultus in Gloss. being the time from 28 to 40. for these Ages learned men thus destribute, 1. Infancy, from the birth to 7 years old; 2. Childhood, from thence to 14; 3. Adolescentia or the adultage, thence to 25 or 28; 4. Youth, thence to 40; 5. Age, thence to 70; Old age, quod n●llo annorum termino finitur, and this they call the ultimate part of old age, & terminatur in morte. Amongst these Ages, Youth, by reason of which the Prince is termed juvenis, juvenis à juvando, quod ea aetas maxima sit apta ad laborem tolerandum. is the sturdy and pleasant part of life, that which has evaded the Meridian of Adolescency, and grows towards the Afternoon of age; A jurisconsultis juvenes dicuntur, qui adolescentium excesserunt aetatem quoad incipiant inter Seniores reputari. Plin. lib. 7. c. 56. this was amongst the Romans the Military age, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and Ulpian the Scholiast upon Demosthenes tells us, there was a Law among the Athenians that men only should go to war from 18 to 40. which though (a) Incipientem pubertatem ad dilectum v●cari, lib. 1. c. 4. Lipsius' lib. 1. p. 12.17. seems to confirm, yet Lipsius denies or at least suspects, because the Gracchian Law was, which was direct against so young admissions; Lex à quinquagessimo anno militem non cogit. Senec. De Brev. vitae. c. ult. and if consideration be had to those passages in great Authors, that 50 years old was the boundary of men's warring; and that 30 years' service was the utmost time the Romans required men to, Fabius Instit. lib. 9 Liv. lib. 42. as Sigonius, Tacitus, Sallust, and many other Authors agree: then about 20 years of age must this youth for War begin, Lipsius' lib. 1. De Millt. Rom. p. 1●. though I know Tubero in Agellius affirms the time from 17. but I dispute not this, that which I am to urge is, that in some time from 17 or 18 our Prince here was, when he left England, or else our Chancellor would not have said, juvenis recessisti, and that it was then when perhaps the gaities of life did so engage him, Quemadmodum in minore corporis habitu potest homo esse perfectus, ●sic & in minore temporis modo potest esse vita perfecta, Senec. Epist. 93. that he was not for love to them at leisure to consider the more consequent parts of intellectual accomplishment. For, though it cannot be denied but that some there have been of rare perfections, young in years, as I have heretofore showed, and as further I might in the examples of (a) Tholoss. lib. 17. c. 6. c. 18. & lib. 18. c. 2.18. Daniel, Solomon, josiah, Damas' that famous Magnesian Bishop, of whom St. Ignatius writes honourably, and Timothy the Bishop of Ephesus, whose youth St. Paul gives a glorious testimony to, as that which was exemplary, and not to be contemned but imitated; yet for the most part it is otherwise: men do sero sapere; not ponder and gravely weigh things till they have great abatements of passion, and advances of calmness, which is the reason that Seneca, a great lover of the florid and sparkling times of life; Complectamur illum & am●mus, plena est voluptatis si illa scias uti, Quam dulce est cupiditates fugasse ac reliquisse. Epist. 12. & sic Ep. 6●. yet gives his vote for Age, That men ought to bless God for it, as that which affords the one only comfort, if we know how to use it; which considered, the Chancellor minds the Prince, that in regard he came away so early from England, before he thoroughly understood it, he should bethink himself what he did before he banish the English Laws his love, juvenis recessisti. Recessisti.] Mannerlily and softly expressed; that which after-Ages would call force, the Chancellor calls leaving England: the Chancellor knew nothing more unpleasing to Princes then to be compelled, Shutes History Venice, p. 334. and therefore though compelled he was (for he would not sure have left this Land had there not been danger in staying in it, where another was more in favour than he, and in Power then his Father,) yet though on these terms he betook himself to France, in hope to find a Sanctuary, which some Princes have not found; though the Marquis of Mont-Ferrat did among the Venetians: whom when he was beaten out of his Country, they so courteously entertained, that he was, in the return of his Country to him, unwilling to leave Venice: I say, though this Phoenix courtesy was his happiness, yet no Prince has cause to hope for it: and therefore this Prince may reasonably be thought unwilling enough to go, but when he was there, bravely bore this misfortune, as his attendant and wise instructor here expresses it in this word Recessisti. Ab Anglia Recessisti.] Concerning England something I have wrote on the 17th & 24th Chapters, yet am bold to add what follows: Recessisti here imports not the choice of the Prince, but a fate upon him; such an one, as though he bear because he must, yet he delighted in no more, Plin. lib. 3. c. 23. 1 De Remed. Amor. 400. then great Spirits do to retreat, Recedere quasi retro cedere: which because it is mostly a token of worsting, has some term of diminution affixed to it. Turpiter victa Venus saepe recessit is Ovid's. Thus when a man changes his condition of life, and being ashamed as it were, or forced by necessity of Affairs to seek somewhat better than he at present has, De statu dignitatis recedere Cic▪ Attic. lib. 1.15.3. he is said Recedere à conditione, à persona, à statu; and Tully uses recedere ab usitata consuetudine, and recedere ab officio for non facere officium: Cic. pro Quintio 3. Offic. 34. This considered, the Chancellors words here argue no more desire in the Prince to depart England and take refuge in France, Vivet eni● vivetque semper atque etiam latius in memoria hominum & sermone versabitur, postquam ab oculis recessit, Plin. Ep. 15. than men do when they die which is to recede life; not because they think death better, but because life can no longer be enjoyed. For, alas, what was it not that is desirable to get and hold, which he parted not with in parting with England? a Country one of the best and largest of the Islands of the known World; Brompton in regno Cantiae, p. 728. Edit. Lond. the glory of Britain: called England from Angela the daughter of a certain Saxon Duke, who Ruling it, and loving her, called his Government after her name. Anciently it was called Albion, after Britain; famous it has been in antiquity for its fertility: Bochartus Geograph. sacrae, p. 729. Onocritus the Athenian Philosopher, whom Tatian and Clemens Alexandrinus think was Author of those Poems ascribed to Orpheus, relates it to have so fruitful a soil, Vt Cereris sedem ibi fuisse videatur, furnished also it has been thought of old, Lib. 1. c. 39 and is yet, with those accommodations which toaled hither the Phoenicians to us, and with the Lead and Tinn that they came to fetch returned us Learning and Arts, (many Greek Philosophers coming hither in their floats,) and calling Silly, a part of this Island 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Cassiterides; yea so happily situated is it, that it seems to be the Eden of the World, subject to no extremes, either of vehement heat or violent cold; so that it is no Carrhamitis, or house of death, as Northern Countries are, that hardly ever see day, or feel warmth; nor is it in the Centre of the Sun, or under its direct perpendicular; but temperated with heat and cold intermixed, that it may truly be called Regnum Dei, a place that God has peculiarly blessed with all comforts for life, Water, Flesh, Fish, Herbs, Fruits, for medicine and delight, abounding in Cattle of labour, profit, chase, but none of prey, furnished with goodly Cities, famous Churches, religious Houses, charitable Hospitals, noble Seats and large Parks about them, Ex Alfr. Rhevalensi. beyond most, or all Christendom in so small a Circuit, which made Charles the Great call it the Storehouse and Granary of the whole Western World, and Henry of Huntingdon begin his History with its praises, calling it Beatissima Insularum, after whom a Poet says thus, Anglia terrarum decus, & flos finitimarum Est contenta sui felicitate boni, Externas gentes consumptis rebus egentes Cum fames laedit, recreate & reficit; Commoda terra satis, mirandae fertilitatis Prosperitate viget cum bona pacis habet. Which I thus English, Blessed England, Europe's Crown, in neighbours eye 'twixt groundless envy had and admiration, To wants of whom thy store's a granary, And yields abundance to the famished Nation: Ah fertile soil, Ah earthly Paradise, Where life's delights abound, where dainties flow, On which Jehovah's mercy sets such price By peace preventeth plenty's overthrow. It is famous for its ancient reception of Christianity from joseph of Arimathea, Simon Zelotes, Cambden's Remains. &c which was here propagated before the year 200. Four Englishmen converted eight Nations of Europe to Christ, Winfred the Devonshire-man converted the Germans, Saxons, Franconians, Hassians, and Thuringeans; Wilbred the Northern-man the Freisians and Hollanders; Nicho. Breakspear of Middlesex the Norwegians; and Tho. of Walden the Lithuanians. It is famous for pious Princes, of whom it hath had more than any Nation, besides the Kings of it are anointed, 5. Rep▪ De Iur● Regis. Eccles. p. 16. and hence are capable of spiritual Jurisdiction, according to that of our Law Term Hilarii, 33 E. 3. Reges sacrosancto oleo uncti sunt spiritualis jurisdictionis capaces. It's Crown had and hath very large Territories, for besides Ireland they have commanded from the Isles of Orkney unto the Pyrene Mountains. It's famous for its beauties and features, Cambden's Remains. p. 4. no Nation affording men and women so generally handsome and proper as it doth, which made Goropius say, Angli quasi angle, quia omnes caperent sui admiratione, what the Poet said of Chios, taking its name from Chione, signifiing white and clear, may be said of her, — Quae diutissima forma, Mille procis placuit.— Who being of a specious hue, A thousand Captives to her drew. It is famous for its valour, its Inhabitants being Lions of courage and generosity, equally brave both on Horseback and on foot, with Sword, Target, or Bow and Arrow, or on Sea, where it has ever appeared with Navies, not so numerous and rude as Due●●ius the Roman led against Carthage, Vowell's description of England. p. 200. which were growing on the Stub and sailing on the Sea in 55 days; or those 220 tall Ships led against Hieron, which bare leaf and sail in 45 days; nor like the Ships Scipio led in the 2 Carthage Wars, which were felled in the Wood and floating on the Sea in six Weeks; nor were they 700 in number, as Polybius says the Romans lost in one fight that number when the Carthaginians accosted them; but with tall brave warlike Ships, of vast Bulk, great strength, laden with Robinet, Falconet, Falcon minion, Sacre, demi Culveriin, Culveriin, demi Canon, Canon, E Canon, Basilisk which carry shot from 1 to 60 pound Bullet, and were manned by great quantities of men. It's famous for its wealth, hence called by some of the Pope's puteus inexhaustus, and had it not been so, M. Paris. p. 890.948. their avarice had drawn it long since dry, and the days of H. 3. so vainly and prodigally expensive had undone it. It's famous for its learning, there being no Nation to which it leads not the dance, its Clergy have ever been pious and learned to a Miracle, and Arts have hence had great Founders and Benefactors, here were born Alexand. Halensis Aquinas his Master, Scotus the subtle, Bradwardine the profound, Ockham the invincible, Bede the venerable, and Burley the perspicuous. It's famous, renowned and envied for its Common Law, and peculiar privilege from the Injuries of great men, and depredation on property, the people of it being no Villains but Freemen, and the Laws being not arbitrary, but settled and fixed, and not alterable without consent of King, Lords, and Commons in full and free Parliament assembled. This, This was the fair Paradise of beauty and bravery, from which this noble young Prince, notwithstanding his Father's present and his own probable future right, was forced; — Quis talia fando Temperet à lachrymis.— and from which, all things considered, he could not but be unwillingly driven, since if he knew so well what England was as he might have done had he longer stayed in it, and learned more experience from the prospect into it, he would account it the Phoenix of Lands and Laws: so, in short intends the Chancellor to represent it in those comprehensive words, Quas si agnoveris, & caeterarum regionum emolumenta qualitatesque eisdem comparaveris, non admirareris ea quibus jam agitatur animus tuus. Anglia sane tam fertilis est quod quantitate ad quantitatem comparata, ipsa caeteras omnes quasi regiones exsuperat ubertate fructuum. This is the first instance of the excellency of England, Fertility of soil and Plenty of fruits; for though he could have instanced that it was Ethnique and barbarous, that the Inhabitants were a kind of Cannibals, and without God in the World, & sub hoc malo Lemnio látuisset Anglia, Chil. 1. Cent. 8. Adag. 27. if God had not rescued us; yet he reserves that for a fitter place, and comes in first with that instance of the goodness of a Land, plenty, which the Holy Ghost, in Canaan's case flowing with Milk and Honey, calls the glory of a Land; and as the sterility of a Land is the curse of the Inhabitants, A fruitful Land turns he into a barren Wilderness for the iniquity of those that dwell therein; Psal. 107.34. so an unctuous and fruitful Land is the blessing of any people: now this fruitfulness men usually impute to three causes, supra, intra, extra, God's blessing above in making the Clouds to drop fatness, and giving rain and fruitful seasons; Intra, in the depth and fatness of the Womb and Soil which receives not the dew and seed in vain, but nourishes and gives it rooting and extension; Extra, in man's endeavour of labour and ingenuity to improve what God has endowed to the reasonable latitude of its capacity: In all these, and whatever can rationally be couched under them, England is fertilis regio. 1. The mercy of God has seated it under a calm and temperate Heaven; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Adag. Chil. 2. Cent. 2. Adag. 99 'tis to Britain what Alabanda was to the Carians, The most fortunate Island: For it has neither extremity of heat or cold, but a mixture of both, to keep the constitutions of its Inhabitants interpendent to the extremes, either of remissness or intentness; And this temperature working upon the People, Laws, Customs, every thing of it, renders it Beatissima Insularum: and we of England may say gratulatorily to God in the Psalmists words, Non taliter fecit omni genti, For had he not distinguished us from other Nations as he has, Leones non omnes sunt ejusdem temperamenti; qui montes inc●lunt minus habent caloris & ferocia & vicis●im quanto plus os●ive participant tanto sunt calidiores & audaciores veluti colentes desertum Angua qui totius Africa sunt tru●ulentissimi. Aldrovand. lib. de quadrupe. p. 10. we might have been as savage in Manners as we ethnically were, and out-beasted the beasts of afric, than whom the men there are little better: For as all beasts of the same kind are not alike in all places, but some Lions are more mild (such as live on mountains) not having that fury of heat in them which the desert Lions in Africa have, as Aldrovandus instructs me, so is their difference of men according to the temperaments of their constitutions, which are regulated by the airs and climates under which they are born, bred, and live; and therefore God having suited the Air, Earth, Men, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Homerus apud Erasm. Adag. 22. Chil. 1. Cent. 2. Laws, all to each other, and made them all fruitful of encouragement, riches, liberty, there is just cause to bless God for his mercy, that is the main ingredient to our National and Personal fertility: 'tis God's Word of Sovereignty that impregnates the Earth, and makes it bring forth seed to the sour, and bread to him that eateth: that increases the breed of cattle, and blesses the increase of our Flocks. For, though we in this Land have no Mines of Gold and Silver, no Quarries of Diamonds, no Beds of Pearls, no Wombs of Spices; yet we have Treasuries of Lead and Tin, Lodges of Wool and Hides, Magazines of Clothing and Drapery, Nurseries of cattle; and we have blessed be God, Noble Marchant-Men, who ship out Native, and return for them Foreign Commodities, and this makes England an Indies, a Spain, an Italy, a Germany, full of the Wealth of Sea and Land: This is the source of Fertility, supra, and in the Psalmists words, Psal. 144.15. Blessed are the People that are in such a case, yea blessed are they that have the Lord for their God; And I pray God the Mercies God has showed us of this Nation do not make things Mandrabuli more succedere; that is, not make us do by our benefactor as Mandrabulus did by juno, Mandrabuli more res succedunt, Adag. 58. Cent. 2. Chil. 1. Deur. 32.6. whom the first year he offered a golden sheep to, the second year one of silver, the third one of brass: God forbid that we should so requite the Lord, O foolish people and unwise! God ●orbid when he has not been a barren wilderness to us, we should abuse our mercies to his dishonour. Secondly, As the fertilitas coeli is the blessing of England, so fertilitas soli is that with which the Nation of England is happy in also, Plus apud Campanos unguenti quam apud Cateros olei fit. Adag. 45. Cent. 2. Chil. ●. Our Land is another Campania, all marrow and fatness; There is no Shire or Angle of its compass but has much of fruitfulness in it: See Doctor Ridley's View of Civil and Ecclesiastical Laws, p. 174. Here there is Corn, there Grass, in one part Wood, in another Mines, on this quarter grows Timber for building, on that cattle feed for increase; In this there are no deserts, no unimproved grounds to speak of, but every part as it is fitted for some specific purpose, so is by the Inhabitants well and wisely improved to the end it is most correspondent to, by reason of which there is not much bad land in England, as in other Nations: For England for the Seacoasts and middle part of it is all fertile, and (as it were) for the most part deep soiled, either fit for Gardning, Feeding, Ploughing, or else Wood-land; and were there no other argument of its good soil then that it nourishes so many Inhabitants, and that so affluently, in so little a Tract, and gives its Inhabitants such succulent nutriment, that makes them of bold, brave, warlike; daring and manly courages, that no Nation does pleasingly face, or willingly abide Battle with them: yet, even this alone were an argument of a rich soil. For that patch which brings forth much in a little, must needs have the potentiality of much in it: And when to it the benefit of Navigation is considered, what it has of Native growth more than it consumes, it exporting fetches in return what foreign Commodity it wants. So that, what with its own fertility, and Trade, (Blessed be God,) it has Breasts enough to succle its numerous brats at; and if we be sequacious of our good King, whose extremities have taught him experience and sagacity to direct Trade, as well as to lead Forces, and Administer Justice; for he is Ex utroque Caesar: I believe we shall carry the staple of Trade and make our maritime force comfortable to those in amity, and formidable to the rest in enmity with us. For if England had not been the Granary of the western World, if it were not the Phoenix Kingdom, if it were not Tanquam inter stellas luna minores, neither the Romans of old, nor the Picts, Saxons, Danes, Normans, Spaniards, had invaded us, had we been a hungry, vast, and improlifick Soil, and nothing would have grown without much cost, labour, and hardship, no Nation would have been eager after us: but when every conquering slave that could not live in his own Country but miserably, lives here bravely, and with ease; this made those attempts on us, which some times were repulsed, but when prevailing, took the season of the Nations dissension, and the Nations dissociation into Parties. So that God having indulged the Land of England with a brave Soil, nobly planted, pleasantly watered, inhabited by Lords, Knights, Gentlemen and Yeomen, with Artificers, Labourers, and Common people in abundance: though this nineteen years here has been a fierce Civil War, in which funest Battles have been fought, and multitudes of men of all ranks, ages, and artifices; yet is there almost little sign of a War, no want of men, no visible depopulation; so fruitful has God made this time of Captivity, that though many of the wealthy Subjects have been beggared and diminished, especially such as had personal and portable estates, yet Foreigners went not away with the spoil of it, the Nation still kept it, it is but transferred from men to men; England yet, blessed be God, holds its own. And therefore if it please God to give us, that are Natives, duty to our superiors, and love to one another, the ruin of England by these Wars may yet be its making; For there is a third way of Fertility, and that is Man's industry, which is in the effect a nemo scit; for it brings impossible things to pass: This industry, O! it can almost do any thing, it has (as it were) removed Mountains, or at least made ways through them, so did Caesar over the Alps, and Alexander in his voyage to the Indies: it has dried up and diverted Seas and navigable Torrents: it has erected Hecatombs and Pyramids from little atoms of principal materials; it has made glass malleable, instructed in all Arts, Languages, Sciences, Professions: found out the use of Simples and their Compositions; of Metals, and their digestion; of Minerals and their use; of Peace, Warr, Justice, Religion: nothing has been too hard for the industry of man to cope with and conquer. Yea, so far has it usurped upon God's peculiar, that it has found out many secrets: and if Archimedes did not delude himself, could move the Centre of the Earth if it might fix its Engine. Now though I do not believe industry can do all that's boasted of it, yet I do advisedly conclude, that in the industry of man there is such a latent power and life of actuation, that it comes near the verg of miraculous: thus have men devised engines of battery and Military use, whereby the strongest Castles are surprised and won, and which seconded by diligence can do every thing: and hereupon have sundry noble achievements and notable been performed; yea industry has form politics, and founded Empires; Vt ingenium adhiberetur ad turrim. M. Paris. p. 301. l. 57 hinc machinam reticulum vel aliquod hujusmodi vocamus an Engine, Gloss. ad M. Paris in verbo Ingenium. and the Roman one, so vast in circumference, so venerable in its edicts, so formidable in its Armies, so consultive in its Senate, so fruitful in wise men, so conservative of itself, so victorious over the Universe, was but the industry of a Romulus, a Numa, etc. of those numinated Heroes that succeeded them: so successful have men's industries been, that they have grown by it like fishes that have had no equals to feed on the nutriment of vast seas but themselves, and to whom alone the lesser fishes have been preys. And if man's industry have besides all this tamed Lions, Panthers, and Tigers; charmed Serpents, enamoured Dolphins, civilised Barbarians, reformed debauches; nay even joined, as julius Caesar dreamt he had done, the Empires of heaven and earth; it may well be a notable improvement to fertility of soil; if it have discovered the globe of earth, and the path of safety and knowledge in the undiscernible waters, reducing all ports and Nations to such points of the compass as the compass directs the Mariner by steering to reach, and to know what latitude he is in, and what degree he must make too; if it have subjected the seas Leviathans, and the earth's Behemoths: yea, leured the Eagles of loftiness, Towering Bajazets, and warlike Belisariuses into cages of restraint, and straits of nullity; If it put life into dying and almost extinguished interests, and them recalled to life, and as it were after their interment, suscitated them to their wont or improved glory, t●●n is it a thing to be encouraged in all, which is the reason that all Governments have encouraged industry, as that which has a Cornucopia attending it, & that which is most seen in the trade of our late Monarches Reigns, & has been most productive of the wealth of England of any thing else, for by reason of it we have Europe in a fort in England: Now every waste ground is built upon, every incult and overgrown field tilled; every bog dreigned; many parks by the owners converted from parks of pleasure to mines of revenue (though I am no friend to disparking, where men's fortunes will bear, and their Children be provided for without them) and all this by the industry of man, finding supports therefrom for the increase of people and charges of living, which good and frugal minds consider, and therefore to it submit; so that add to home-Industry foreign Trade, (which is but the former diversified, and by the Changes too and fro, incredibly advantageous to the Nation) and there can be no fertility thought of in a Land but England has, which God preserve to us and make us worthy of it; yea, and may they ever be accounted Enemies to all that is good in the Nation, that do bear ill will to the Industry of it, for they do, Taurum tollere qui Vitulum sustulerint, as the Adage is. Though therefore much might be spoken of the furtherances of Fertility from addition of Compost to the soil, M. Paris. in viti● p. 155. 7 R. 2. c. 4. or quickening it by Marle, Chalk, Earth, Salt, Rags, Horn, Leather, Shaving, and all overflowings, with restings, and lying fallow, and equal to them all folding of Sheep, the breed and profit of which has enriched many Families to a proportion like that Corinthian Cydon, Semper aliquis in Cydonis domo. Adag. 15. Cent. 2. Chil. 2. who was so full and free▪ that he kept open house all the year long; as also by substraction, when the succulency of the Mother may be such that it trifles the child in her Womb, who is not able to take it off▪ rank Soils parching up, through inordinate heat and height of nutriment, the Grain that is sowed in it, or at least running it up all into blade and straw without ear or berry: Or lastly by Diversion, when it has been worn out by one Grain or burden, employ it to another purpose, that being prudent in ordering grounds, which is so in greater matters, all things not being alike practicable in all times, but change in those lesser things being convenient to avoid evils, as Augustus did, who in following Scipio Numantinus▪ in whose time Praetorian Cohorts were set up for defence of his person, De Militia Romana, lib. 2. p. 60 which after, from being Firmamentum Imperii, became in Lipsius his words, Pestis Imperii; I say, though on all these there might be profitable enlargement, yet I contract myself, not to disserve my Country, whose Glory I am ever willing to advance in prayer, and practise: but to return to the Chancellors position, that comparing England Acre for Acre with any other, it gives place for fruitfulness to no Country; Politic. lib. 6. Cassan. Catalogue. Glrr. Mundi. p 468. nay, in that it hath those seven endowments which the Philosopher makes the glory of a Land, 1. Nobility of Vegetables. 2. Wholesome fountains and fruitful Rivers. 3. A benign influence of the Sun. 4. Abundance of conveniencies of cattle and other things to the use of man. 5. Pleasantness of situation in the Landscape of it, having Woods, Rivers, Springs, Meadows, enterwoven. 6. Plenty of healthful victuals and fruits: and 7. Temperateness of Air and Climate. It may I humbly think in these and the foregoing respects be accounted fellow to any Country in the world; and this the Chancellor intends at least when he says it does, Ceteras omnes quasi regiones exsuperat ubertate fructuum,] and adds, Etiam suum ultro ipsa profert vix industria hominis concitata, which I take not to be altogether Hyperbolic to show his pathoes to his Native Country, which probably he loved better carendo quam f●uendo, but to have such a truth in it, as, candidly expounded, directs the Reader to the true estimate of England, which in no Corner, and in no Hill almost of it, no not in Wales or Cornwall, the driest and steelest parts of it, is void of herbage, but carries a green Coat upon it, which breeds and raises young cattle of all sorts; and by reason of which not the peasantry (as France terms them) but the Yeomanry and Farmers, as we in England call Country Occupiers of Land, are the happiest of any Swains in the World; for whereas in other Lands they are shoelesse, spoonlesse, dishlesse, except accommodated with wooden ware, which is the highest of their furniture, those poor Labourers being the prime and nobler Beasts, labouring to make themselves miserable, and their Lords luxuriant, and to them merciless. These with us in England (and blessed be God and the Law for it) while they continue to know themselves and their betters, Note this & be thankful. the Nobility and Gentry rejoice to see it; the Yeoman and Country Corydon is a great Proprietor of Land (Freehold, and Socage Tenure of Inheritance) served in Plate, attended with Servants, clothed in the best Cloth and Silks, trimmed with silver and gold, full of money in his purse, and ready upon all occasions to lend on Bond, or lay out on Purchase; yea, generous to his Wife, Children, and Family, who eat and drink in great plenty and variety; yea many Yeomen are so grateful to God and the Gentry, under whom they have grown rich and lived happily, that they breed their sons to Learning and Callings of Worship, and having well-bred and well-portioned their Daughters, married them into generous families, and unto men whose Merits make their way to Honour and Eminency; and all this while the Yeoman labours little bodily, but looks over his servants, and by prudent ordering the ways of his family and husbandry, attains great advances in fortune: and I think it may very truly be said, that mostly by this means the Yeoman does live more free from care, and give his Children better Portions than the younger brother Gentry, and this he does by God's blessing on his labour from the soil and the fruits of the ground; the fertility whereof, to the proportion of the Chancellour's Expression, is hence in a good degree confirmed, and I think by no judicious man will be, in such degree, denied. Nam agri ejus, campi, saltus, & nemora, tanta faecunditate germina ebulliunt, ut inculta illa, sape plus commodi afferunt possessoribus suis quam arata, licet fertilissima ipsa sunt segetum, & bladorum. Having before in general commended the fertility of the Nation, he makes good the lustre of the whole by the dignity of the particulars which complete it. Brechaeus ad leg. 27. p. 77. de verb. signific. De Agro, aratione, & aratoribus, lege Turnebum. Adversar. lib. 1. ●. 6. Becman. De ling. Latina. Varro lib. 4. Elegant. Agri ejus] Donatus and Varro derive Ager ab agendo, quia in illo multa aguntur; the Learned largely take it for any neighbouring Territory to great Cities, thus Ager Campanus, Leontinus and the like is read in Authors; but strictly they take it for that place in the Country wherein Country men live and do Country Affairs; and therefore they derive from Ager, peragro, peregre, and peregrinus, as one qui multos agros pererrat. The Latins make Ager fourfold, Seminalis, Consitivus, Pasenus, and Floriger, or Restibilis & Novalis; our Law-language calls open common fields Agri, and men that live in remote places with little Neighbourhood Agrestes: thus in Deeds and Conveyances, arable Lands in the fields is understood for the common fields, where no man's particular right is enclosed though bounded. Campi] Valla terms Campus Planities' terra amplae & grandis, ideo spatiosae plate● arcave, Vnde Roma Campus Mortius. Caesar. 3. Bell. Civil. 144. campi nomen acceperunt, and hence is it that Geographers when they describe any Country that is plain and open, Siculi circum aut Hippodromum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vocabant, à flexu quadrigarum quae ibi certabant. Becman in verbo. call it campestris Regio, I take this word Campus as Lipsius does Promotus and Promotio for a pure Roman word, and as that is given to one that is famous ob strenua facta multasque cades, so is this term Campus proper to vast and roomy places, where there is convenience to stir and act business; Fields to fight in are called Camps hence, because the men in them are not couped up, but can fight with numbers and in variety of figures. Saltus] The Translator renders this Groves, and some think, how probably I say not, in these occult places they did in Ethnique times celebrate Idolatry, and in that were merrily mad in dancing and capering, not only to show their joy to serve their Idol, but to sacrifice their Activity to the worship of it: hence the Scripture tells us of Idols in the Groves, and David's dancing before the Ark in the sight of Israel, may be thought to show, 1 King. 15.13. & 16.33. that though he were a King, 1 Chr. 15. yet he would express as much of Exultation and Activity to the service of the true God, as the Worshippers of Idols did to their false ones: but this is too high a Capre from the truth of the word's notation, Saltus densior silva & invia, quod ibi arbores saliant in quo pasci & astuare pecudes solent. Valla lib. 4. Et Brechaeus ad Leg. 30. p. 87. de verb. signifi●. Saltus est ubi sylva & pastiones sunt, Ca jus Aelius, lib. 2. signifi●. Saltus is a Lawn in a Park or Forest, wherein Beasts of Venery and Chase do shade and repose themselves, and from thence, because Hares and Hearts are salient Creatures and the inhabitants of Woods and Groves, the Woods and Groves are called Saltus; thus Ovid uses apti saltus Venatoribus, and Virgil magnos canibus circundare saltus, Saltus pro magna possessione magnum agri modum conjunctarum quatuor Centuriarum in agris divisis appellari Saltus. Varro De re Rustic. lib. 1. c. 16. Turneb. Advers. lib. 26. c. 9 Idem. lib. 3. c. 22. p. 99 Alciat. in Leg. 30. p. ●6. de verborum signific. and thus Saltus signifies a great Tract of ground, where there is scope enough for the nimble foot of those beasts of chase; Livy tells us of saltus Pyrenaeus and saltus Grajus, here our Text calls the Coverts and Lawns of Deer, cubile & lustrum eorum, as Pliny's words are, lib. 8. c. 32. Saltus, as much as Philosophers mean by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Et Nemora] These Festus calls, Sylvas amaenass, where cattle feed in the shade, free from the heat of the Sun, or biting of the Breezes that in the heat sting and disquiet them; Cic. in Attic. lib. 15.322. 6 Aeneid. 128.132. Lib. 1. De Divinat. 185. and they are called Nemora from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pasco, because they afford pleasure to the eye in the greenness, and food to the creature who feeds upon the gripe of them; Authors ascribe pleasure to them, Virgil, Fortunatorum nemorum amaena vireta odoratum lauri nemus; Tully says much of these in those words, Nemora & sylvae multos commovent; and the Romans when they called that place which they consecrated in the Aricine Territory to Diana, Nemus, are thought to do no dishonour to the word. Our Law accounts Nemora Woods the Treasuries of Timber, and though true it be that feeding under them is not sweet where Timber over-shadows it; Sir Francis Barrington's Case. Cook lib. 8. p. 138. 1 Jac. 21. 1 Eliz. 15. 23 Eliz. c. 5. yet the Law does take special care to preserve Timber, that is, such wood as is fit for building of Houses and Shipping, and as the Common Law makes the unseasonable and unreasonable felling of it, waist, so do sundry Statutes for bid it, or at least express how, and how not, 'tis to be felled, so Stat. 35 H. 8. c. 17. made perpetual by 13 Eliz. c. 25. And in regard of the late liberty of destroying and wasting the lusty Timber of this Nation, there may (I humbly think) be very further useful Prohibitions and Penalties on Offenders added for the future, for our Ships are our Walls, and of our well-grown, and sturdy Ironsided Oak are our Ships made; and if they be wanting, and wanting they will be if Providence be not the better Steward, what shall become of our Trade abroad and our Security at home: but because Rome was not built in a day, nor is a Reformation in the true Law-sense effectable presently; it becomes me to be silent any further than to remember those that have Power and Opportunity, that this is of no less consequence than other things, which in former times have been made, as is this, penal to misuse them; Aspe-wood was in H. 6. time used for Shafts, the Statute of 4 E. 4. c. 9 permits Patten-makers only to make Pattens of such Asp as was not fit for Shafts; English Horses were Felony to be delivered into Scotland, 32 H. 8. c. 6. 1 E. 6. c. 5. 5 Eliz. c. 19 Bell-mettal, or Brass to cast Ordinance not to be transported, 2 & 3 E. 6. c. 37. Sheep not to be carried out of England, 8 Eliz. c. 3. Corn not to be transported but upon some cases, 13 Eliz. c. 13. confirmed by 21 jacob. 28. & 3 Carol. c. 4. Leather not to be transported 18 Eliz. c. 9 Timber not to be consumed by new Iron-Mills, 27 Eliz. 19 and why (God and good men forgive my zeal to England's Navy) should it not be made almost Treason to sell Timber for shipping to Foreiners, or to build shipping here, and abroad to sell them to such, as either actually are, or upon any reason of State may be the Nations Enemies. But this is a Digression, for which I both do penance in myself, and crave pardon of my betters, whose wisdom I do praise God for, and humbly submit to, not arrogantly censure I return then to the Text-Master's meaning, that is, to the praise of England's fruitfulness, even in the herbage under the shades of trees, and growths of Timber, which he says does not only keep cattle alive, life and soul together, as we say, but nourish them to a rankness and lusty increase of flesh, insomuch that the profit of their feeding equals the proceed of tillage, all charges considered; for though these Groves should be fertilissima frugum & bladorum, which they reasonably cannot be expected to be, which lie in the shade and under the dripp; yet so great is the charge of the plough, and so little that of feeding, that there is not in the conclusion much difference; yea, I believe as great Estates have been gotten by Timber and grazing, as by Tillage, though the Law affords great privilege to Tillage, and generally (I think) all Covenants made against Tillage are void, Fleta lib. 2. c. 77. and several Laws have been made in favour of Tillage, that of 4 H. 7. c. 19 6 H. 8. c. 5. 7 H. 8. c. 1. and others, though expired and repealed by 39 Eliz. c. 1. and 21 jacob. c. 28. but the Common Law favours ploughing as the way and means to procure bread, the staff of life, and to nourish cattle for the service of man and portage of commodities: and therefore when in H. 1. or H. 2. times Tillage was much decayed, Mr. Fabian Philip's Tenors p. 5● I read that great numbers of Husbandmen came to the King's Courts, offering up their Plough shears to him in token of their Calling ceased, and they undone, which was occasioned by Lords and great men's turning their Demesnes, Woods, Forests, and arable Grounds into Pasture, and a very good effect followed it; for many good Laws came in use which encouraged Husbandry, and when the Stat. 12 R. 2. c. 5. was repealed by 5 Eliz. 4. & 21 jac. 28. 'twas not to dishonour and dishearten ploughing, but to release those that had geniuses to higher things than the plough from the rigour of the Statute; since many men may be of a calling for some years, who after may be fitter for other things than it: in as much then as that Statute tied those that were in the calling of Husbandry for twelve years not to alter, it was by the 5 Eliz. c. 4. (as to that) repealed: but still the patronage of Husbandry is in the Law, 1 Instit. p. 85. 2 Instit. p. 860. the Stat. Merton. 4. which highly favours it, and that in consideration of six disadvantages that accompany the abatement of Husbandry: First Idleness. Secondly Depopulation. Thirdly Decay of one of the greatest Commodities of the Realm. Fourthly, The destruction of Churches and the Service of God. Fifthly, Injury to Patrons and their Clerks, Gods Ministers. Sixthly, The defence of the Land against foreign enemies enfeebled, the bodies of husbandmen being strong for Warr. These and sundry other reasons are the cause our Law favours husbandry, and so do all Laws and Nations: Tempore Agriculturae nullo pacto agricolae debent molestari; Cod. de Agricult & Cens. lib. 11. L. Colonus nunquam. yea, special Laws contra juris rationem, are there to exempt husbandmen, and (a) Mutua caede grassantur, agricolis nulla in re nocent, sed intactos relin●uunt tanquam communis utilitatis ministros neque hostium agros urunt neque arbores caedunt. 3. Antiq. Diodorus Siculus reports, that the Indians before the Trojan War, Luc. the ●enna lib. 1. c. eodem. did use to War without any injury to them: Cass. Catal. Gl. M. p. 43●. and Philo in his Book purposely written of it, sets forth the useful and excellent benefits of it; and Patricius says plainly▪ Unless men will grow too dainty to be of that sex, and will invade the delicacy of females, they ought not to hold themselves too good to be husbandmen, for it is a course of life becoming the most excellent minds, and persons of greatest gallantry have delighted in it: All which, Instit. Reipubls. lib. 3. Titulo secundo. and much more, might be said in commendation of it, if need were so to do, Pancirol in notitia Imperii de Magistr. Municipal. c. 9 but when it commends itself, as it so much does to our bodies, in bringing us bread, and flesh, to our purses, in filling them with money, to our glory, in manning ships and camps. There needs no more to be added then the suffrage of King Solomon, who in the person of the Preacher says, The profit of the earth is for all: The King himself is served by the field. Eccles. 5 9 And therefore when the Chancellor tells us, England has Nemora segetum & bladorum fertilissima, he says much to the pleasure and plenty of all estates: Sedges proprie fruges eorum seminum ex quibus conficitur panis Valla. lib. 4. For, in that the fields are fertilissima segetum, he means there is bread enough, because Corn plenty; For Sedges is that grain that is ground for bread. Plin. lib. 1●. c. 17. Et Bladorum.] Which is a synonomus word; ●loss ad M. Paris. in verbo Bladae. Bled in the French being thought by mutation of l for r, to be Bred our word, which the Latins call Panis from the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉: because it is the all of life, Men in distress calling for Bread Bread for the Lords sake; and hence this word Bladum is taken, as Sedges, for all grain that is makeable into bread, and used as such to be eaten; Not only Wheat and Rye distinct, or together called Mesling Bladum Hybernagium, but for all; as well the former as Barley and Oats, Fleta, lib. 2. c. 82. de exitibus Grangiarum. of which bread usually is made: And may be extended also to Beans and Pease, of which for need bread may be made. Item notandum quod sub nomine Herbagii non continetur Glans, Bracton lib. 4. p. 226. Though, I know, Bracton excludes them from Herbage, or Blade, making them Swine's food, not Man's: For as the best tempered piece of steel is called a Sword blade; and the keenest mettled Man a notable blade; so the best Herbage of the Ground is called here Blade: and of this England is said to be most fertile. Includuntur quoque in terra illa pasturarum arva fossatis & saepibus. The Riches of England's Land is much occasioned by Enclosure, not of Commons, for truly I question whether that be not within the Curse, of removing the ancient bounds, Deut. 27.17. and grinding the face of the Poor, for whom I persuade myself only the piety of our Princes, and the charity of their subjects (the quondam proprietors under them, left them free) but of men's distinct estates, which no one but themselves had common in: For where any had right to enclose without their consent, and leaving them a fit proportion, Cook on Stat. Merton. 2 Instit. p. ●●. was forbidden by the Common Law, and confirmed by the Statute Merton. 20 H. 3. c. 4. & 13 E. 1. c. 49. which, though it gave leave for great men to approve against their Tenants where they left them sufficient common of pasture, yet did not enable them to enclose as they pleased; for if they leave not sufficient Common in the residue, the Commoner may break down the whole enclosure (saith Sir Edward Cook) because it standeth upon his ground, Idem loco praecitato. which is his Common: the same Law of preserving Tenants Right, as indulging Lords in point of enclosure is reserved by the 3 & 4 of E. 6. c. 3. and by the 43 Eliz. c. 11. Persons undertaking to dreyne Marshes, and keep them dry, must be by approvement made between the Lords and Commoners of those Marshes and the undertakers: and when Burwell in King James' time did Winn and Inn the Marshes of Lesnes and Faunts in Kent, that were drowned, he was fain to agree with the Lords and owners of the same surrounded grounds before he could do it; so says the Statute 4 jacob. 8. & c. 13. These all show that the Texts Includuntur is not Enclosure of Power only, but of Law; of right rather than might: And this so done enhanses the common profit of the Nation, and the particular profit of the owner; because it makes dry and lean grounds well fenced and fat. Pasturarum arva.] That is, by having cost bestowed on them (which when they lie open the owners will not) to become lusty and succulent, and by being delivered from the constant harrass of the plough, which rips up the heart of them (for arva comes from aratrum, Quia in arvis osserebantur Festus. Varro lib. 1. de Re Rust. c. 29. whence ambervales hostiae, because offered for the fields, our Harvest quasi arvi festum and their arvi-pendium) become walks for feeding of Kine and Beefs: For that which Varro calls Arvum agrum necdum satum, our Chancellor terms Pasturarum arvum; Lib. 4. fol. 222. ●eeding, or Pasture grounds: so Bracton uses the word, Est enim communia in eo quod dicitur pastura de omni quod edi poterit vel pasci. Fossis & sapibus.] Hedge and Ditch is the word of our Law and instruments of conveyance, which some Books call defensa, M. Paris. 143. in vita Sancti Albani. l. 11. and we at this day in some places, Fences; which, as every owner is bound by Law to keep, so, being sufficient to break through them, and lay open any man's ground is a Trespass, and an Action lies for it: the Statute of 1 Mar. Sess. 2. c. 12. made the casting down, or digging the Pales, Hedges, Ditches, or other enclosure of any Park, or other enclosed ground, by the number of twelve or above to be Felony; but the 1 Eliz. 16. limited it only to the Queen's life, and until the end of the Parliament than next following, but the Trespass still remains for breaking Fence, Hedge, or Ditch, the conveniences of which Mures or Enclosures to pastures the preamble to the 4 jacob. 11. incomparably sets forth; and the 7 jacob. c. 13. as to parks, Lipsius' Poliorchet lib. 3. Dialog. 5. p. 166, 167. makes penal; For as Walls and Fences Military are reckoned Inter sacra, and they had their Fosse interiores & exteriores, within, and without to keep the Enemy from assault, and when he had got the wall, to keep him, yet at distance by the Inn-ditch, Vallo vel fossa circundare Gloss M. Paris. in verbo Parca. so did the wisdom of antiquity to keep cattle safe from prey of beasts and thiefs, secure them by Enclosures fenced and ditched, which is the signification of the word Park, from the French Parquer, to enclose. Desuper arboribus plantatis quibus muniuntur à procellis, & aestu solis eorum greges & armentae. As mostly the hedges are of quick which keeps the fence thick, and the bank strong, so in the quick are planted Trees of all sorts, but chiefly those that bear a great leaf, and give a good shade, Timber Trees, Oak, Elm, Ash, and though sometimes Apple, Arbour est generale nomen & appelationo ejus vites quoque & hederas. etc. continetur Jurisconsulti. Pare, Crabb, as in Hereford and Worcester shire and in Kent the Garden of England (yea Sparsim every where) yet generally the other, because of the lop-wood, whereof Stakes, Gates, and other things may be made, as well as the cattle defended by the shade of them. Planta de arboribus dicitur ea quae transferendae gratia vel de arboribus rapta, vel ex seminibus est orta, Servius in 2 Georg▪ These Trees, they are not said nasci, but plantari; (for thorns and briers are the Earth's aborigines) Trees are planted with the art of the hand and care of the eye, yea, and to the comfort of the heart of the planter: Jerem. 2.21. Psal. 1. Thus the good man is likened to a Tree planted by the rivers of waters, his goodness is from his plantation▪ Isay. 5. a noble vine he is because God made him a noble vine. Thus God is said to plant his Church for a vineyard, wherein his Ordinances produce liquor of life to penitent and prostrate sinners, and that upon this ground that he hath planted it to that end, Isay. 61.1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7. To bind up the broken heart, and to speak peace unto the Captives. Whereas then our Text says, arboribus plantatis] it means Trees purposely set to answer the owner's end, in the Hedges ornament, the Cattles umbrage, and the Lops' profit. Quibus muniuntur à procellis & aestu solis eorum greges & armenta. This shows the end for which Culturage had this care and defence raised about it; as the Ships that carry rich Merchandise have Guns aboard to defend their lading; and Castles that have the Commands of Countries, have all military habiliments to preserve and carry on their designs and interests; so the field having its riches, Corn and cattle, has not only Hedges and Ditches to prevent Beasts forage and Swine's rooting, but Trees shelter for the cattle against heat and cold. Greges & armenta] These words comprehend small and great cattle, the Gregary Creatures are properly Sheep and Goats; these are the flocks to which our Lord alludes in those words, Luk 12.32. Fear not little flock, meaning these, who are commanded to be mild, passive, and tender spirited: the Armenta are such as are called Majora animalia quae arationi destinuntur, such as are Cows, Oxen, Asses, Deer, and Swine, are said also to be in Herds, Matth. ●. The evil Spirit went into the Herd of Swine: Now both these sorts, though they have pelts well covered with wool and hair, yet are sensible of extremes either of heat or cold; and because the oppression of nature by either hinders the frolickness and vivacity of them, whence the thriving and fattening of them comes, therefore experience prepares remedies for both those inconveniencies, which the Text calls Muniuntur,] a term applied to any defence: Instrumenta sua Monachis nullatenus ostendere voluerunt, id est, ait Glossator, scripta sua authentica chartae donationum, & evidentiae Munimonta vocantur. Gloss. in M. Paris. in verbo Munim. & in Hist. p. 311. in some Authors, Letters credential, or Certificates, whereby men unknown are testified to be what they are, are called Munimenta; Sipontinus says, munire is as much as fortificare, praeparare, 'tis to adorn and furnish them against the time of need and trial, for as bare Walls make giddy Housewives, so open fields without shelter makes but lean and thriftless cattle, that look as a man, In vita Agricolae. Praesidiis, custodiis, vigiliisque coloniam munire. Cic. 1. In Catil. 3. that would be resolute, does in Tacitus his words, contra pudorem se munire, and as brave Commanders do secure their charges by Watches and Guards obstructive to the treacherous enemy; and as innocence endeavours Muniri & ornari bonorum omnium praesidio, as (a) Pro Flacco. 80. Tully's words are, and as bodies alive are (b) De Senect. 47. Munita contra avium morsum, whose Carcases when they are dead they worry and snap at, so are cattle great and small, by shades from wind and heat preserved, and this shelter is termed Munimentum. Valla in Raudens. A Procellis] This is vehementior venti impetus sed non durans, most an end in the Sea rather than on Land, a cold blast we call it, because it carries all down before it, and shatters all that is near it; a Tempest, which, because of the terror and havoc it makes, Lib. 3.106. is by Silius called immanis, by Seneca, insana, tristis, by Catullus, turbida, whence not only the violation of peace by insurrection is termed Procellae, 3 Argonaut. Lib 8. Belli Punici. but all things of terror expressed by it, Aequor procellosum in Valerius, and Venti procellosi in Livy, yea Nati procellosi in Ovid, all to show the unpleasing nature of cold and bleak Airs; A 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 notans levitatem. Scalig. lib. 1. Poetic. c. 22. Procella vis ventorum cum pluvia ab ●o quod omnia procellat. Servius. which therefore are called Procellae, from Celes that nimble Courser, who flew like the wind, and denotes such a sharp blast, as not only makes the Beasts to quake, but wets them to the skin with the rain that accompanies it. Et astu Solis] as Trees are defences from cold winds, so from sultry heats and accession of Vermin which vex and bite the cattle, for as digestion is fortified by an equal proportion of heat and moisture, so the temperament of cold and heat in weather is contributive to the feeding of cattle; and therefore as in hot Country's men in the day keep their Houses and take their Serenatoes and refreshments by the umbrages they make to shelter them from the fury of the heat, so do provident Husbands prepare for Cattles conveniencies to cool them, by interposing some natural or artificial defences from the Sun, for the heat of the Sun does not only parch the Hide and Skin, but exhales the natural heat and disperits cattle, which is the reason that our Text speaks of Trees planted not only to defend cattle from the cold storms, but also from the Sun's heat. Ipsaeque Pasturae ut plurimum irrigatae sunt, quo infra earum claustra reclusa animalia, custodia non egent per diem nec per noctem. These are the feeding grounds, wherein the Milch Kine for Daries, and the Oxen and cattle that are for the Shambles, feed; and as they are called Pasturae à pascendo, so in other books * Librata terrae continet quatuor bovatas (id est, Oxgangs) terra unaquaeque bovata tredecim acres continet; & librata continet quinginti duo acres. Gloss. ad M. Taris. In verbo librata. Oxgangs, these, as they are rich and from the spring of the ground, afford a good gripe; so are they fitted with springs or standing ponds of water, which are as necessary to make cattle thrive as the grass they by't or the hard meat they chew; for as meat goes down with men like chopped hay (as we say) when they have not drink to it, so is it with cattle thriftless diet, where the throat of them is not cooled, and the passage cleansed by water; this Element, of all, is that which cattle rejoice in, and the residence of them is by the waters; God when he planted Eden, made it Rivery, it had limpid streams issuing from it in abundance; and the Patriarches, when they seated themselves for Accommodation of their cattle, respected waters as the great convenience of their employment; in Gen. 26. we read of the waters of Gerer, and the Herdsmen contending with Iacob's Herdsmen; Agri aquaerum irrigatione aut pluviae carentes, nullos fructus cultoribus praestant. Lucas, De Penna. c. De fundis rei privatae, Tit. 11. in Exod. 2.16, 17. of Iethroes Daughters, and the servants that watered their Father's cattle, and wherever in Scripture pasture is mentioned, water is spoken off, or at least presumed near: Ex agris irrigaetis bis in anno fructus praecipiuntur. Papinianus apud Cassau. Catal. Gloss M. P. 589. and the Text here calls this accommodation of water, Irrigatio, irrigatae sunt Pasturae, where irregare is as much as adaequare, quasi aquas in agrum aut hortum per rigationem deducere, thus Tully (a) Cic. ●. De Nat. Deorum. Plautus Epid. 3.18. uses the word waters in plenty, as Nilus overflows Egypt; Authors use this word to signify number, thus Plautus says of one, he was homo irrigatus plagis, and (b) Lib. 2. c. 6. Pliny expressing cruelty, sanguine irrigari, and Seneca, genae irrigantur assiduo roar; and irrigua aquarum are those lanches by which waters are let into Grounds to overflow and fertilise them, Iniqua aquarum, loca per quae aqua rivos producit ad irrigandum. Plinius lib. 6. c. 26. & lib. 5. c. 4. so that these being in grounds, answer the requiries of cattle, both to cool them within, and make their food go down cleaverly with them, yet it saves them the labour to be driven to water, Signum autem binignitatis pastoris est, quod greges nori diffugerit, Fleta lib. 2. c. 79. which wastes the body of cattle, and often chafes them; besides by reason of this the charge of looking after them is lessened, for, they being able to water themselves when they have a mind to it, a little looking to them once a day is all they require; yea by reason of both the ditch, hedge, and water, they need no watch, or at least less than without them they would. Nam ibi non sunt Lupi] The Wolf is a terrible creature, heretofore frequent in England, or rather in Wales, Vowell's Description of England, p. 225. where Edgar, a Prince of happy power, is said to lay on the Welsh a charge of 300. Wolf-skins a year, in token of Tribute and Dependence; to the performance of which, he gave liberty to the Welsh to chase them into any part of England. They are a kind of wild dog, savage and crafty, enemies to sheep and all creatures of mansuetude; in relation to which freity of nature, they have the Characters of acres, avidi, asperes, cruenti, and by reason of these, the flocks of England and they, were never Cater-cofins, as we say: but the love of the Nation to the sheep preponderating, the Wolf went to the pot, In l●queo lupui. Adag. which is the reason that Wolves are destroyed. The savageness therefore of this creature, as it caused the eracing of them here, so did it make them abhorred every where; the Adage insinuated enough of the fatality of the nature of this beast where a Victor, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Chil. 3. Cent. 4. Ad. 94. Before a Precipice, behind Wolves: and therefore, though our flocks in England have not Shepherds so fierce as those of Agla, who will with their Crook and Sling pursue a Lion and make him leave his prey, which gave rise to the Adage, which is called a man of fear and faint-heartedness; Timidior Leonae Aglae, Si le● ovem vel agnum furantur apprehensi baculo vel lapide fugientibus Leonibus timorem incutiat. Aldrovandus lib. 4. the quadrup. digit Ovipar. p. 8.9. yet our sheep are secure from this, that with us there are no Wolves; And he that seeks Wolves here must (a) Cent. 4. Chil. 1. Adag. 81. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, make account to seek what he shall never find: for so safe are our flocks, that unless they straggle, or are for corporal food, or to make money of, stolen, they will be forthcoming. Vrsi nec leones.] As no Wolves, so no Bears nor Lions; those beasts are in the extreme parts of the World: Bears in the Northern climates, Lions in Asia and afric; Non in Anglia quanquam in Europa in plaga septrionali Ulyss. Aldrov. lib. ●. p. 122. Quadrup. Ovip. some have said we have had, though no Lions, yet Bears breeding in England; but Gesner denies it: though in the Northern parts of Europe he allow some to have been, yet not in England. Linschotten descript. India's, p. 76. But we have had Wolves in Sheep's clothing, Bears and Lions in men's shapes; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In Persid. we have had a Generation in it, who, like the Caffares of Mosambick, filed their teeth, as sharp as needles, to bite asunder the Gordian Knot of Government, so that of late that of Aeschylus is true of England, Ha● tantas viri virtutes, ingentia vitia aequabant, inhumana crudelitas, perfidia plusqua●● punica, nihil veri, nihil sancti, nullius dei metus, nullus jusjurandum nulla religio, Livius lib. 1. de Hanaibale. Here was a fountain of all evil opened: and though our flocks in the field have been safe from wild beasts, yet not the Flocks in the Church from Scism and Heresy; nor the Flocks of humble and innocent Subjects from violence, oppression, and what not, that was clamourous to God for Vengeance, and to Men for patience and prayers: No Age of England ever knew such truculent spirits in manhood as there have been lately amongst us, whom God deliver all peaceable subjects from: but I return to the Text. Quare de nocte eves eorum incustoditae in campis recumbunt in caulis & ovidibus.] The Law watches the Sheep from the Stealer, whose act is Felony and Death; the terror of which, if it keep the Thief off, the flock feeds quiet. For, though the night be the season of prey, Surgent de nocte latron. Virgil. because they that are wicked, are wicked in the night; yet the night is secure even to the sheep in England: The sheep of all creatures is a harmless creature, that for a beast, which the Dove is for a bird; And it has no forecast for itself, which Aristophanes notes, in that he calls the life of a simple negligent person 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉: yet the sheep is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, In Pluto. Budaeus lib. de Asse●, Et ejus partibus lib. 4. p. 175. a Golden Fleece, a rich and profitable creature, his flesh good for diet, his wool for clothing, his fat for tallow, his horns and hoofs for soil; and this beast has this quality, that he will wander and straggle, if he be not kept; and though he have 〈◊〉 force to repel danger, yet has no foresight to avoid it. Therefore the use is, to keep the sheep in the fields, In caulis & ovilibus; That is, in such pens and prisons, that they shall not straggle in the night, and be taken up as nigh-ramblers are. Caulae.] Is a repository for sheep, where they were kept safe from injury, a kind of den, or underground lodge, wherein (before the finding out the use of building aboveground) they lodged them. Servius terms them Munimenta & septa ovium; and generally any refuge of security to sheep is called Caula. In 9 Aeneid. Ovile.] Is the same under another name, properly this was a place in the Campus Martius, figured like the penns of sheep, open lattesses, in which the Romans stood, and through which gave their suffrages; Livius dec. 3. lib. 6. Citatis Centuriae Senioribus datum secreto in ovili cum his colloquendi tempus. Brechaus ad legem 198. the verb significatione. 'twas concerning choice of a Consul to make Head against Hannibal. Ordinarily the Ovile is Stabulum ubi Oves stabulantur. Quibus Impinguantur Terrae eorum.] The folds and pens are not only the security of the sheep from stray, but the fertility of the ground, which their dung adds to, and invigorates: For as the sheep-walks are most in those Countries that are Champaign and arid, so are the grounds helped against their natural sterility, by those foldings of sheep, the soil of which is not only very succulent and productive of Corn and Grass, but avoids great charge, which otherways those remote grounds and barren would occasion. So good and wise is God in the work of Nature and Providence, that he has appointed every thing its station, and given a compensation to every defect, and an alloy to every redundancy. Deep and fat soils, that need no soiling from sheep, are not proper for breed of them, though for raising the bodies of sheep they may be; therefore the breed is in hungry and lean grounds, where the Cornfields are madefyed by their foldings. Vnde homines Patriae illius vix operis sudore gravantur] This is only to be understood candidly, that England is no iron flinty Soil, lying under the perpendicular of the curse, Briers and Thorns only to bring forth; but it is a full and free soil, on which the tiler lives as easily, and from whence he has as comfortable support for himself and his family, as any Nation in the world yields its inhabitants; and because the feeding of cattle is more advanced by prudence and care, then by toil and labour, our Text says, the Country man, vix judore gravatur, that is, his flocks yield him profit when he stands still and lies down by them as they feed: but this is not the condition only of Countrymen, their lives are divided between the Plough and the Flock; some there are that in some places wholly stock their grounds with flocks, but alas this Land has not many parts of it so fitted to it, but that even there are many Ploughs jogging also. It's true indeed, I believe England is the richest in flocks for number and goodness of any Island in the world, and men we have had, whom reports have made incredibly rich in Sheep, as that Ancestor of the Lord Spencer, whom same speaks (as is pretended, but with what truth I affirm not) to be by Record in the Tower richer in cattle than job; and that L. Cheyncy owner of one of the Islands in Kent, either Sheppey or Thanet, who being in France, and laying a wager with the then King of France of 100000. l. and when the King asked whether he was able to pay it if he lost it, he replied, That his Sheep's tails in the Isle should pay for it, and reported they are to have been of that value. I say, these and other instances may be produced of men very rich in sheep, but that thence England should be made only a sheepwalk, and the ground rendered such, as yields fruits and profits without labour, is more a noble Character of the Chancellour's love to his native Country, then that which can be made strictly good; that it is a brave soil, and that sheep abound in it, is true, so is the assertion, that men are as soon made rich by the standing of sheep, as by any thing, but that sheep are gold to all, and that all parts of the Land are proper for sheep, is not inferrable hence; though truly I think (but ever with submission to better judgements) that breeding sheep, and tending flocks is not only a gainful, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Philo in lib. De Josepho, p. 526. but a very divine Patriarchal course of life, and those that follow it have in a kind opportunity Spiritu vivere: for besides that the care of flocks is in Philo's words The Tyrociny to State-Government, and that the mind is exercised more in intellectual acts then corporal ones, gives the opportunity to meditate and dwell more at home then other Callings permit: thus jacob is said To go out and meditate in the field, which probably was to read and contemplate while his flocks fed, whereas in the occupation of the Plough, no longer is there thrift then the Plough joggs; whereupon the Statute of 1 R. 3. c. 1. calls Handicrafts, easy Occupations, and going to plough and cart, Budaeus lib. De Asa, & ejus partibus, lib. 5. p. 261, laborious Occupations; for though in such soils as Babylon and the Sybarites Country, there be 100, 200, 300 for one, as Pliny tells us; or truer 30, 60, and some 100 fold, which our Lord alluded to in that 13 Matth. 8. yet in most Countries there being tougher soils and less increases, the toils of Husbandmen are great, and their ways and manner of life scant, narrow, and full of hardship, which makes the poorer sort of people, born and bred to misery, take to that, as the calling which is most suitable to their mean birth, breeding, and spirits, for by hard labour, constant tug, and incessant vigilance, they do 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, rifle the monuments of nature's riches, Chil. 1. Cent. 9 Adag. 12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Eurypid. in Hecuba, Adag. 78. Chil. 1. Cent. 8. for the gain that arises by the crop on her, which when they attain, they have what they expect in compensation of their diligence and charge, when as in the pastoral life there is not that pain and trouble required. Whereas then the Fathers of old, and our forefathers are said by our Text, Spirita magis vivere, and greges malle pascere quam animi quietem agriculturae solicitudine turbare; our Chancellor is to be understood, that England was ever very rich in sheep, by reason of which, our Clothing is the worthiest and richest commodity of this Kingdom; 2 Instit. c. 25. ad finem. And divide our Native Commodities exported into ten parts, and that (saith Sir Edward Cook) which comes from the sheep's back is nine parts, in value of the ten, and setteth great numbers of people on work; which considered, as Pests and Rots of sheep are a great chastisement of God, pastors autem expedit habere discretos & vigiles & benignos ne oves per iras suas t●rqueantur. Sed ut pacifice in laetitia suas depascant pasturas. Fleta lib. 2. c. 79. so are all things that depreciate the wools and clothing of our Nation to be cautioned against: by 11 E. 3.2. none were to wear any cloth but such as is made in England: and c. 3. no clothes made beyond the seas were to be brought into the King's dominions; but this being thought hard, was by 24 H. 8. c. 13. in part repealed, and by 1 jacob. 25. in general words; by the 31 E. 3. c. 8. the weight, goodness, and sale-place of wools is appointed, confirmed by 13 R. 2. c. 9 8 H. 6. c. 22. 3 E. 4. c. 1. 23 H. 8. c. 17. 13 Eliz. 25. yea, and when the Florentines and other Natives came into England, and made clothes of Ray, there was by the 2 E. 3. c. 14. the Measure and Assizes of them set down, which was repealed by 5 & 6 E. 6. c. 6. but yet the more precise goodness of later and more usual clothing specified; and by 4 E. 4. c. 1. the length and breadth of clothes made to be sold, is limited; and no clothes wrought beyond the sea are to be brought into this Land: And since Henry the eighths' time, when the new Drapery was brought in, more Acts have been made for wool and clothing then ever before. From all which I collect the great concernment of the sheep, and proceed of them to this Nation, which is the cause, that the Chancellor supposes men that have so much leisure, as the sheep-Masters of England have, whom their flocks make rich, without their constant corporal labour, more probable to abound in exercises of their minds and understandings, than other people, that are more harrassed, and so are less masters of reason: thereupon he says, as it follows, Ex quibus homines regionis illius magis redduntur dispositi ad discernendum in causis quae magni sunt examinis, quam sunt viri qui telluris operibus inhabitants, ex ruris familiaritate mentis contrahunt ruditatem. This illation seems to have some weight in it, for though the temperature of the air do contribute much to men's complexions and constitutions, and thence to their virtues and vices; by reason of which the Greeks are termed light; the Africans inconstant; the Germans strong and valiant; Cassan. Catal. Gl. Mundi, p 473. the Italians grave; the Spaniards proud; the French fiery, and so onward. Though, I say, the mild climates producing, by moderate influences, temperate and wise minds in men, may, in a good sense be accounted the external cause of men's fitness here with us in this moderate Zone for Judicial affairs; yet can it not be denied but that Education and ingenuity of calling, wherein men have leisure, and helps to polish their minds, is a very notable furtherance to intellectual plenitude: And hereupon this land having so much of advantage reflecting on the Inhabitants of it, from its plenty, and the ease of many gainful callings in it, Olympiod Excerpt. p. 854. Edit. Sylbur. gii. may well be called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Herodotus words are, a most blessed Island; the men whereof, as of a Country blessed by God, Country from Contrada the Italian word; so Emperor Frederick in his Epistle to our H. 3. M. Paris. p. 357. Contrada tota descendit inde usque ad Joppen, id est Regio ait Gloss. are not dull Greeks, rude Arabs, riotous Muscovites, fiery Goths, barbarous Vandals, gluttonous Danes, no nor light airy Braves, but sober, staunch, resolute, apprehensive men; fit for the field, for the Court, in peace and war, jest and earnest, ferious and trite things: and by reason of this advantage of their Mother-aire, and the attendants on it, they are in our Chancellors sense Native Statesmen and Justicers, Eam sententiam sic ad unguem servant hujus temporis homine ut hominis vocabulo videatur indignus qui non qua ratione suis consuler● commodis noverit, Erasm. ad Adag. 21. Chil. 1. Cent. 6. having a kind of constitutionall judiciousness in them, resulting from the liberty of their Laws, and the enfranchisement and heroising of their spirits thereby; And that not only in that single act of selfe-preservation (which men of Anaexarchus his temper, who was Philosophorum omnium adulatorum abjectissimus, thrive by, when such as Calisthenes, though they have ten thousand times the merits of those flatterers, are ruined by plaindealing) not only, I say, are English men wise in that of promoting their own particular interests, but in rebus magni exanimis; such as are trial of life and estate, actions of promise and contract, projects of combination and forgery; the cryptick and hellish secrecies of Treason, Rebellion, Murder: These, though buried as it were under ground, doth the sagacity of an English Jury follow, and pursue to their subterraneous caves, and un-litter those kennels of villainy and mines of poison and rancour that are brewing in them: and this they do, by an ingenuity and natural endowment, which the Text terms in them, magis apti & dispositi; which, though I do not believe, in the Astrologers sense, is by pure influence of the Stars and energy of conception, yet I may think arises from some benignity and largess of God, according to the receptivity of the soul, and the concurrents of other appointments, which, I think, is the sense of those that hold unam animam in naturalibus esse alia excellentiorem & perfectio●em; though perhaps it do thwart the opinion of St. Thomas Hales, and others, who determine animas esse aequales. For, since we see there is in the souls of men degrees of ingeny, Cass. cattle Gl. Mundi. p. 475. whence it should come but from a prelation of endowment, Anima secundum ordinem naturae non perfertur alteri amina, S. Thom. Part. 1. qu. 64. art. 4. I am not able to determine, nor do I determine any thing, but leave it sub judice, only in that our Text says, Anima quanto nobilior est tanto plures potentias operationis & organa habet, part. 1. qu. 30. art. 2. Magis apti & dispositi, it asserts a priority in some to others, and this consists much in a fitness of the body to the soul; For, as a Gun unevenly boared, and not cleverly mounted, will shoot at random, though it have the best powder and marksman imaginable; prick out the rarest notes to a Songster, yet if his voice be naught, the Music will not be delightful; lead men never so pvissantly, yet if the men lead do not follow on, no battle is well fought, or day bravely got; so let the soul be never so divine and wise, Anima non impeditur à suo corpore ut est perfectibile ab ea, sed ut habetis aliquid repugnans animae, S. Thom. Part. 1. quest. 75. art. 3. yet if the body mated to it be dull and stupid, the incorrespondency will destroy all the precellency that is not answered by the other part of the choir, which is the harmony of body and soul. So that by apti and dispositi the Chancellor intends the fitness and towardliness of men to great employments, Ex omnibus Latinis verbis hujus verbi vim vel maxime putavi. Cic. 2. de claris Oratorib. Aptus est qui convenienter alicui rei junctus est (saith Tully) and Virgil, Axem stellis ardentibus aptum: Critics account this verbal very large in its signification, Qui aut tempus quid postulet non videt, aut plura loquitur aut se ostentat, aut eorum quibus cum est vel dignitatis vel commodi rationem non habet, aut denique in aliquo genere, aut inconcinnus, aut multus est, is Ineptus dicitur, Advers. lib. 18. c. 9 comprehendere vinculo they called apere; and Muret, in giving the description of its contrary ineptus sets aptus amply forth; He that sees not what the present time requires to be done, or he that is impertinent in saying or doing what were better unspoken or undone, forfeiting his credit with those judicious persons, who are witnesses of what he says and does, he is ineptus, a fond man: Therefore in all good Authors the word aptus being the avoidance of the prementioned extreme, is used to significantly express any thing; so (a) Cic. in Coelio, 1 Offic. de Opt. Genere Orato. 2 De Nat. Deorum. Lib. 2. c. 12. Lib. 12. c. 7. Tully applies it to Cat●, of whom he writes, Nulla aptior persona quae de illa aetate loqueretur; that is, accommedatior & convenientior: None more proper for that work than he that was so grave a man. So Apta compositio membrorum, apta & cohaerentia, apta verba ad Latinorum consuetudinem, Aptae ad stabilitatem commissurae & adactus finiendos accommodatae; so Aptus esse & decere; so Celsus has Aptus curationi aeger; and Pliny, His aptus alicui rei; and Quintilian, Animi apti; yea, all Author's equae aptae, colour aptus, tempus aptum, verba apta joco, umbra apta pastoribus, apta arma, and therefore 'tis well here matched with dispositi:] As in other Authors, Aptum & ratione dispositum; and dispositi in turmas; Cic. pro Roscio, lib. 18. lib. 35. So Livy terms wise Counsels Disposita in omnem fortunam consilia: and Pliny calls Sabinus, liberalis vir, subtilis, dispositus, acer, disertus. By all which the Chancellor applying apti to his Countrymen, makes them not men whose heads are in their heels, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Adag. 18. Cent. 2. Chil. 2. and when they are driven to straits, cry out bemoaningly, as he in Aristophanes did, that his mind was shut up within his skin, and could not appear to do him credit without the memento of a lash: no such dull figures of manhood as deserve the taunt Plautus gives the servants of his time, Vivos homines mortui incursant boves. Plautus de loris quibus caeduntur servi, qua facti fuere è coriis bovalibus, Erasm. Adag. 18. Chil. 2. Cent. 2. Dead beasts chastise living men; no such inelegantiores Lebethriis, as the (a) Adag. 48. Cent. 6. Chil. 1. Adage has it, are the Freeholders of England; God be praised they do not labour under that mentis ruditas which other common people (whose spirits are suppressed, and their breed mean, because of the tenuity of their conditions) are unhappy in, and contemptible for; but as God has given us of this Nation a pleasant Land, a free Law, and a plenary discovery of his Gospel, so has he endowed the Nation with that tillage and culture of breeding, which has polished all the rudeness of their minds into a smooth and amiable oriency; so that if we do not sin against our light, and provoke God to intenebrate us, there are mercies enough upon the Nation and the people, to force from our Neighbours the confession, Deut. 28. v. 13. That God has made us the head and not the tail, and that 'tis not only better with us than we deserve, but then with any our Neighbours: And I never fear any Reverter of us to this, Isa. 6.10. Isa. 6●. 17. that is here called, rudet as mentis, till we wilfully shut our eyes against the light, and harden our hearts against God's fear, which if ever this Nation should be guilty of, we may again, as the Angles, Picts, and British did before Christianity, mentis rudìtate gravari. 'Tis a dangerous thing to give way to reigning sins, either in a Nation or person; in the History of France there is a notable story of Fredegund the fair Wife of Chilperick, History of France. p. 30. who suffering herself to be courted by Landri de la Tower, at last grew so enamoured of him, that she was impatient to be without him; Chilperick riding one day a hunting, went up, just as he was going, into his wife's Chamber to compliment her, and finding her combing her head, being behind her, tapped her most softly upon her head with his rod, she thinking Chilperick had been gone, and it had been Landri, replied, A good Knight should always strike before and not behind, the King understood the meaning and went sorrowful away; but she, finding herself overshot in her tongue, plotted her Husband's death, which her Paramour and she brought to pass, and a miserable Woman she became. But this rudeness of mind not being the unhappiness here meant, but a Progression of misery beyond it, I prosecute no further, but return to the Text. Regio etiam illa it à respersa, refertáque est possessoribus terrarum & agrorum, quod in ea, villula tam parva reperiri non poterit, in qua non est Miles, Armiger, vel Pater famelias, qualis ibidem Franclaine vulgariter nuncupant. By this the Chancellor persists in the commendatory description of England, as from the fertility of its soil, so from the plenty and splendour of its inhabitants; for whereas amongst the Romans and Germans their Villa were only Granges and Sheepcoats, Budaeus in Pandectus, p. 166. Edit. Vascos. where their Drudges kept cattle, tended Vines, and sowed Grain to furnish the great men that dwelled in Cities of concourse, pleasure, and business; whereas the Country seats were mopish and dull, rude and uncompt, and men used them more for profit and necessity than pleasure and choice, in England every corner is so thwackd with inhabitants, and so orderly disposed, that 'tis not only possible to find men of office and honour in every Ville, but impossible almost to find any Ville without them, there is such plenty of them as if the Land were sown with them, so that one would think they could not live each by other, and so are they verging each upon other, that Corn, thrust down in a bushel, packs not closer to make the weight of the bushel more, than they do. The Chancellor looks upon England as a Land of Tissue, Ager proscissus ad serendas seg●tes arvum dicitur, plantatus autem & consitus arboribus, aut vineis vinetum nominatur, adificatus vero villa est. Brechaeus ad leg. 27. lib. De signific. verborum. so embroidered with Nobility, Gentry, and Land-owners, that the ground is by them over-laid, and the lustre of it occult; here metal upon metal argues the richness of the bearing, for the mettle of the ground causing metal in the purse of the Possessor, makes every Villula bear a Knight or Esquire, Lazius lib 12 c. 6. p. 1073 or Master of some freehold. In duodecem tabulis legum nostrarum nusquom nominetur villa. Plin. lib. 19 c. 4. So that the name Villa being Roman (not so eminent as the Law of the twelve Tables) the Roman sense of Villa is yet unforgotten, though somewhat advanced by time and transplantation; amongst them their Villa was ¶ Lazius lib. 12. c. 6. p. 1073. domus extra urbem adificata cum omnibus aedificiis, quae non pecora solum armentaque recipere possent, sed etiam omnis generis artifices & familiam, to which Varro lib. 1. De re Rust. and Pliny accord. * Villam tripartito distribuit partem unam urbanum, rusticam alteram & terti am fructuariam Columella, lib. 1. c. 6. Varro says it is so called Villa, Quod in ea convehantur fructus & evehantur cum veneunt, and hence comes the word way quasi veha, the passage on which Carts go too and fro: this was called Pagus also from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fons, because it was usually in loco paludato, for that neither man nor beast thriving without water, ancient Granges and Daries were commonly seated low, where the defences from storms are most, Budaeus in pandect, p. 166. Edit. Vascos. and supplies of water and rich grounds best. The Roman Authors make three properties of a Villa; 1. That it contain room for the Master and Lord, that's as our Mansion-houses, or Ha●●●nights, as we call them, were or Berries, or Places. Praetoria, such were Cicero's Tusculum and Ac●handus the son of CaFirmianum, from whence our term Farm perhaps may come, or Budaeus●●emies ●●emies (Ala in anum, on these the Romans bestowed great costs, Ampla & operosa Praetoria gra●● Band, Augustus; Villas videlicet quasdam elegantius & sumptuosius extructas, saith Suetonius▪ and of Caligula, In 〈◊〉 Spartianu● Hadriano. In extructionibus Praetoriorum atque Villaerum omni post habita ratione, nihil tam efficere concupiscebat, quaem quod effici posse rogaretur; and of Hadrian 'tis written, Tiburtinam villam mirifice ex aedificavit, ita ut in ea, & Provinciarum & locorum celeberrima nomina inscriberet, Lycaeum, Academiam, Prytanaeum, Canopum, Paecilem, Tempe vocaret, as desiring by sight of their names, to be put in mind to contract the single rarities of them all into the Ornament of his Country Seat, and as it were, Palace of pleasure. 2. The second Appendix to a Roman Villa was Humiliores ac potius casae quam domus in quibus pecora erant, Alciat. in 211. leg. p. 459. De verb. signific. Epist. lib. 12. ad Attic. & familia servique habita, aut qui opera faciebant rustica, to which Cic. alludes, when writing to his friend, he calls this, Villula sordida & valde pusilla, of this Varro lib. 2. c. 9 De re Rust. so Horat. 2 Serm. Si vacuum tepido caepisset Villula tecto. And from this part of the Villa arises the word Villains, who were Omnes Villae adscripti & coloniari conditioni addicti, these were ever to be at their charges and never to be off their labours, unless in their Lord's service, or to tend his cattle or commands. 3. The third part of their Village is pars fructuaria, their storehouses or granaries, Alciat. ad leg. 198. lib. De verb. signif. Brechaeus ad leg. 198. lib. De verb. signif. Fornerius ad leg. 198. lib. De verb. signif. in which they repose and stow all their fruits that from the ground they gathered, for the Husbandman or Swain was but to labour to sow, Lib 7. Rei Rustic. reap, and bring in or gather the fruits, when once that was done, the Lords disposed of them, to which Columella refers, Nec tamen instituendo villicam domesticarum rerum villico remittimus curam, sed tantum modo laborem ejus, adjutrice data levamus. These were the three parts constituent of a Villa, and these every Villula, Manzo sive Mansio, Italis est quantitas terra quae sufficit duobus bobus in anno ad laborandum. Papias Glossator. or Mansion-house in England has; the Manor or Lords repose, the Farm-house or Baylywick, where the Bailie and hinds are, and the cattle both oxen and horses with the Dary is kept, and the Barns and Granaries where the fruits lie, Vadianus Jurisconsultus in Origin. dicit esse villam cum pradio Ecclesiae annexam & servitio seculari liberam, vid● plura in Gloss. ad. M. Paris. in verbo Mansus. and out of which they are by the Bailiff delivered by tale, either to the officers of the house for their respective expenses, or to Market for exchange of money, wherewith to buy other necessaries for the Lord and his family, and to defray the wages of his menial servants and day-labourers, together with his sports, travels, and other pecuniary disburstments: yea, so has time bettered these rude and thin-carcassed Cottages, from what they originally were, that from being clamped with clay and headed with heath, neither capable to keep out wind or rain, they are now generally well built and notably covered; yea, often adorned luxuriantly, and that to encourage the Tenant to pray for his Lord, and the servant to labour truly for his bountiful Master, under whom he lives in comfort and plenty. So that our Chancellor in this clause highly extols the opulency and pregnancy of England's Treasury, which is not only many in Inhabitants, but mighty in wealth and abounding in conveniencies, not only of life, but for State, distinction and ornament, that, as England is the Phoenix Nation, so every Villula and hemm-breadth of it is so digested, that it seems to be a little Commonwealth, a Model of the National Government. For whether the Romans here placing their Colonies in the British Towns, and having their Villae in the Country, or whether from a Native British Origen I know not; no Villa (I mean not in the large sense which equals it with Pagus, vicus, arbs, but in a restrained sense, for a Neighbourhood or small conjuncture of houses) but has a system of politic Government in it, the Civil Magistrate, the Lord of the Soil, who has from the Crown, or other great Lord (who from the Crown holds it) Dominium Soli, all Regalities and Perquisites, or such of them as the King excepts not to his own use; such are Jurisdiction and profit of Courts for trials of offences capital, criminal, or at least Trespasses and Actions within the Manor, Escheats upon Felonies, or other Accidents, Custody of Infants and Lunatics, power of passing Estates and admitting Tenants, Reliefs upon death, Hunting, Hawking, Fishing, and the like: The Church-Magistrate, the Parson, Vicar, or Rector of the Church, who has, sub Episcopo, curam animarum, and lives de proprio, the Church-Glebe, and the Tithes and Church-book profits, for which he is by the Law to reside, and to preach, instruct, reprove, and inspect the people, that They perish not for want of knowledge and faith, which comes by hearing the word, which he is constantly on Lords days, and other days if need be, to preach, and that their knowledge may be sweetened to them in the blood of Christ, which he is to offer to such of them as present themselves for knowing and worthy receivers at the Lords Table, and he knows not notoriously ignorant and scandalous in their lives. The Officers both Civil and Ecclesiastical; Constables, and Headboroughs to keep the peace, and to prevent frays and unneighbourly fudes, and to secure offenders to public justice, and to lead men, if need be, to defend themselves against unlawful Assaulters, and predatorious insurrections against them; and the Churchwardens and Sidemen to see the fabric of the Church kept decently, and to receive and pay the incomes and expenses of it, and to answer for it in all cases wherein it shall come in question, who, together with the Overseers of the poor, take care for persons impotent, sick, poor, aged, Orphans, and other objects of charity, that God be not provoked by neglect of them to deny his blessings to the fruits of the ground, and revenues of the Parishioners, nor the Religion and Polity, under which those poor souls are bred and live, be evil spoken of, as inoperative, dead and lifeless as to works of charity to men, as well as piety to God. Now because this resemblance of the National Government in every Seignory collated a dignity and ray of Grandeur to those Lords and Gentlemen, whom the Kings of this Land (from whom all Lands and Jurisdictions originally moved) dignified and privileged by Chartar, to reward their service, or encourage their loyalty for the future; therefore the Chancellor does not content himself to write, that many such Knights, Esquires, and Freeholders there are, but terms England in all parts, and in every Villa, respersa refertaque, words that signify plenty which way soever we look. Cic. 7. verr. Respersa] Respergere is as much as circum circa spargere, thus Tully uses it, Quum Praetoris nequissimi inertissimique oculos praedonum remi respergerent; and Sanguine respergere dextram is in Catullus, Argon. 59.46. lib. 6. c. 2. Pro Roscio Americ. Ad Qu. Fratrem. lib. 2.16. and Mero respergere tergora is Columella's phrase, so juvenis respersus caede fraterna in Catullus, and Manus respersae sanguine in Cicero; and Pliny notably tells us, that the flighs of birds go in numbers, respersu pinnarum, or pennarum hostem obcoecantes; and Referta] the other word, is a word of accumulation, noting plenty, stuffed as full as full can be; so Cicero to his brother owns the receipt of his Letters, 1 Academ. 5. Verr. together with Caesar's also, refertis omni officio diligentia & suavitate, and in other places he mates plenus and locuples with refertus, which sets forth the Chancellors meaning, to show that England is a Land close-packed with Inhabitants, so wedged together, that a man would wonder how they set their horses together, especially when they are so potent and rich, not only as they are Possessores terrarum, (for so in a large sense Occupiers or Farmers of Land are, during the terms of which demised to them they are paying their rents and performing the annexed Conditions possessers of the Lands so demised) but as they are Possessores proprio jure, en son proper droit; as only those are whom he expresses by those words, Miles, Armiger, Paterfamilias. Miles] Of this I have written in the notes on the 22. Chapter. That which I add here, is, that the Chancellor means not this in the large sense, as every soldier is capable of the title, but as only Honorarily it is understood, as they are Dignities, Electi Milites & Primicerii qui primi inceris scribebantur, Deuces Exercituum. Gloss. ad M. Paris. in verbo Primicerii. bestowed by the Sovereign on men Dilecti & electi as they were, not only the choice for vigour of body, being Florentioris aetatis, but as they were men of fortune and interest, who were fit to be Senators for Counsel, Seminarium Sena●orum equestrem esse lo●um. Noldenus De Statu Nobil. 60.62. as well as Champions for conduct; and hence of old called Ritters, that is, Servatores or Saviour's, eo quod virtute & fortitudine servent patriam; Besoldus De Nob. & Comit. Imperi●. By reason of which, what donaries, largesses, and privileges these Equites or Milites had, Lipsius, De Militia Rom. p. 26. the Roman stories every where tell us, especially learned Lipsius, who spares no cost of time and judgement to illustrate their Militia, and all the parts and premiums of it: These Knights, as we call them, were then very honourable, the Carians called them Alabandi, from Alabandus the son of Careus, who obtained, on horseback, a famous victory for them over their enemies (Ala in their Tongue signifying a Battle, and Banda Victory) whence probably our term Band, for a company of warlike men; and the national standing Forces in M. Paris, Civilium communiarum legiones, are called Trained Bands: and the Germans, in part our Ancestors, Adag 99 Chil. 2. Cent. 2. were wont to call Antiquae nobilitatis principem praepotentem Banderum, which might be Seir (though with some alteration, as the badge of time) to the word Bannerer, and Banneret, a degree of Knighthood more eminent than the Bachelor, though that being done ictu gladii, seems the more natively military, and catholickly honoured: much here then might be said of Knights, as that they ought to have those six qualifications which Casanaeus from Acursius mentions, Catal. Gl. Mundi, p. 327. Digest. lib. 4. tit. 6. Miles periculi Com. p. 859. that they are to be men of fortune; and that none but such aught to be in their places to Parliament, 1 H. 5. c. 3. 8 H. 6. c. 7. 2 H. 5. c. 4. Patent 38. E. 3. to serve Coroners, or on Assizes, as Proto-Jury-men. That none were compellable to Knighthood when the Law was such, Multi de Militibus universitatis regni qui s● volunt. Bacchalaureos' appellari sunt contriti M. Paris de justis apud Brackley, Temps H. 3. p. 768. Lege Gloss. in M. Paris in verbo Baccalau●ei. but those who were Claro loco nati, or Gentilhommes de estate, and had 20 l. a year; nor to Just and perform Manly actions, but such as either were actually such, or stood Candidates upon their Emeriting such to be: These who by service, (a) 2 Instit. p. 595. tenure, fortune, courage, were able and willing to serve their King and Country: of these I could write much, but the incomparable M. Selden has prevented me herein, and so has Sir William Segar, and others, whom I refer the Reader to, as also to the Statute of H. 1. c. 11. which Sir E●●ard Cook writes of, on the Statute 1 E. 2. De Militibus; For, this honour, however in times of Peace, 'tis given to reward riches honestly gotten, and learning industriously acquired: yet, in the native rise of it is purely a brat of the field, and the fruit and reward of hardship in, and victory after the encounter with an enemy. And those chains and neck-jewels which Knights and their Ladies, as an honour, defluent on them (Vxor fulget radiis mariti) wear, as tokens of respect, were at first remunerations of valour, and that as it were by direction of the light of Nature; For even among the Caffares, Lindshotten Hist. East India's. or black People of Mosambick, nothing is accounted so honourable as to kill enemies in battle, and every man they took and killed they dismembered of his Virilia, and after they had dried them, to preserve them from putrefaction, than they carry them to their King, and before him spit those out of their mouths at his feet, who commands them to be gathered up, and given to them again, and ever after they are accounted as Knights; and these privities they string, and wear as Collars of SS. at public Feasts, Marriages, and Meetings: yea their wives wear them as Carcanets of Jewels. The consideration of all which amounts to the honour of our Chancellors reason, in alleging England to be a rich Country, and the Freeholders' of it fit for matters, Magni examinis, because they are men of blood, wealth, and honour, and no Ville but has such in it, the chief whereof are Milites. Armiger.] This originally was a title of service, by standard-bearing to Lords, and great Cheiftains, and thereupon in some Books Armigeri & servientes are joined; so, when the French King understood that our Henry the third would assault him in Poict●w, Erat numeras militum eleganter ad unguem armatorum quatuor milia absque undique adventantibus, Armigerorum autem & servientium ac Balistarum numerus ad viginti millia numerabantur, M Paris. p. 584▪ he prepared a great Army of Knights, notably prepared, and of Esquires and Attendants to the number of 20000. these were called also Scutiferi, and (a) Idem. p. 791. signiferi (so Robert De Veer is termed Signifer Gulielmi Longaespathae) also Primicerii and (b) B. p. 69●. l. 22. Balcaniferi; yea, men of this rank and title have not only been accounted brothers in Arms to Princes, but taken to be husbands in Arms to Queens, 2 Instit. p. 50. and yet not been disparaged; so was Owen aep Theodore to Katherine, once Queen Dowager of England, and when she was so, maintained an action as Queen of England: so our Law and national civility accounted ever highly of these, because they were men of great valour and merit, My good friend M. Fabian Philip's, in his disc. of Capite Tenors. p. 23. which was not only the reason that Lands held in Serjeantry have been to find two Esquires to go in the King's Vanguard upon occasion of war with the Welsh, as a grave Author informs me, but that men in times of trouble purchased these, their friends and confederates as leaders, Rast. Stat Larg. and daring to defend them by puissance and force, so I collect from Statute 1 R. 2. c. 7. which says, Because that divers people of small garrison of Land, Rent, or other possessions, do make great retinue of People, as well Esquires as of others, in many parts of the Realm. So at this day no man is charged with light-horse (which is a Gentleman's service) but such as are in account Esquires, and are fellows to those whom the Statutes of 1 H. 5. c. 1. 8 H. 6. c. 7. 2 H. 5. c. 4. 13 Eliz. c. 19 intends. And though before Henry the fourth's time men were not distinguishable but by their Forinsecum servitium; yet the 1 H. 5. c. 5. appointing additions to ascertain men otherwise doubtful, Sir Edward Cook 2 justit. On the Statute addition p. 665. Titles came in use, and this of Esquire, before the time of our Chancellors writing; concerning the degrees, privileges, and other curiosities of them, the former authorities about Knighthood referred to, are proper to be in them consulted, only these are the numerous part of the men of fortune, blood, and breeding, in the Nation, and the second degree of the minor Nobility, comprehending in it, under the notion of Gentlemen, Knights and Esquires. Paterfamilias.] This word does not denote one, a servant or substitute, Manerii Ballivus, domus dominica Custos, & Domesticus Famulus, as M. Paris calls some; M. Paris. p. 855. no, nor the Major Domus or Vice-Master; nor yet a Farmer (as Firma and Firmarius used in our old Authors, Gloss ad M. Paris. in verbo vice dominus. M. Paris. p. 56.258. understand them: and as the Romans called their Coloni and Pagani, of which (a) Pro domo sua Tully, (b) Lib. 12. c. 6. Lazius, and others write) but Paterfamilias imports one (c) Brechaeus ad Leg. 46. p. 130. de verb. signific. & in leg. 195. Qui sui juris est, nullique addictus mancipio, called the Father of the Family; Non quod familiam sed jus familiae habet, as the Lawyers say: This we in England anciently called the Good Man; And the old Dames in my memory were wont to call their husbands, my Good Man: later times more gentilized, discard that name from all mouths, but those that are plebeian, and though it be enunciative of Franklaynes; that is, free-liers, and owners of Land, in which sense Swain●-Mete is the name of the Conventus libere tenentium, according to the old Custom or Law, M. Paris. p. 206. Gloss ad M. Paris. in verbo Swain. Ex quibus Robertus Knolls ex paupere mediocrique valerio mox factus ductor [Regii exercitius] ad diuìtias usque regales excrevit ibidem. Walsingham in E. 3. p. 166. Swaine-metum teneatur ter in anno; yet is it now not much set by, though from this condition of them, there are many now grown into Families, now called Franklin, who are men in the County of Middl. and other parts Magnis ditati possessionibus, which the Text expresseth to set out this Paterfamilias by, And this is an argument of much wealth; For therefore he that is the Paterfamilias here, is counted ditatus, because he has possessiones, not like those Ascriptitii, which were a sort of Husbandmen, that bound themselves by Indenture to till the ground, promising not to depart till their manumission, nor as possessors of the one only Farm, or Mansion they live in, but many farms and portions of lands they demise to others, and those not only in their own County, wherein they live, and in which they are members, but in other shires, and not only Copyhold, which is a badge of villainage, but free-holds: Gloss in M. Paris Verb. Ascriptitii. yea, and those not only Tenancies, but even capital Messages, and chief Manors, by reason whereof they are drawn sometimes to bear Offices in foreign Conunties upon extraordinary occasion, Agri cultores & fossores vinearum non de bent eligi in consuls, ubi est copia aliorum sapientum, Jacob. Rebuffus lib. 1. cap. de Agricolis. and have opportunity to place their children apart, when their age and their Parent's pleasure is they should Marry, or be bestowed in a course of life, to live upon what by their fatherly gift is become their own; And as many possessions in number, so large in their extent, noble in their royalty, and rich in their revenue: For of this race of men who were and are but plain Good Man, and john, and Thomas, many in Kent, and Middlesex especially, besides sparsim in every several County have been men of Knight's estate, who could dispend many hundreds a year, and yet put up to raise Daughters portions; yea, so ambitious are many of them to be Gentlemen, that they by plentiful living obtain the courtesy of being called Master, and written Gentleman; and their posterities by being bred to Learning and Law, either in Universities, or Inns of Chancery and Court, turn perfect sparks, and listed gallants, companions to Knights and Esquires, and often adopted into those orders: And from this source, which is no ignoble one, have risen many of the now flourishing Gentry; For the gain of callings, whether Clerkly or Civicall, has preserved and augmented estates, when the state and thristless laziness of the old English Gentleman has sold them, and servants; by proving themselves laborious and provident Bees; have entered by purchase upon their Master's hives and their honey too. For besides the good pleasure of God who has decreed revolutions in families as well as Governments, and variations in the parts as well as in the whole of the world, there is a cancre even in time which eats out the lustre and puts out the light of the brightest family, whom few ages see obsolete and vanished, and another in place of it; and there are periodique vices which Varlets and Bigots in families have, by which Ancestors Graves, Corpse, Monuments, Royalties, and Seats are transferred from them to others, whose humours are more retentive, and veins less vain and riotous. And this is the cause why God ought only to be eyed in the desired fortunation of families; for no humane wit, providence, or adjunct whatsoever can preserve against this moth; or promote against this depression, nor can the brightest star that arises in the firmament of a family, shine to any durable illustricity, if it be denied the rays of power and mercy to adjuvate and continue it; yea most an end it is seen, that as blazing stars are portentous presages of changes in States, so are notable wits and polite persons (sparkling remarkably in families) proems to the temporary if not total eclipse of them, for either they suddenly die re infecta (not reaping what they have sown, nor having past the last round of the ladder of greatness) or else they neither leave no heirs of their name, or such as are no honour to their names. And therefore though the counsel of God be secret, and no man can presage what, and when, Ab Aymaro de Valence-comite, Pembrochiae qui fuit unus de assessoribus & judicibus super mortem, T. de Lancastria usque ad istum Johannem de Hasting, nullus unquam comes Pembrochiae patrem suum vidit, sed nec pater filii visione latatus est; Walsingham in R. 2. p. 376. Edit. Lond. and why, and by whom this family shall be made or marred, yet all wise men know, that there have been, are, and ever will be floods and ebbs in families, and men there will be in them who are made for the rise and fall of many in them; some crown what others curse, some purchase, others profusely squander, some are blest with Marriages apparently rich, and succedaneously more rich, and they live to have issue by them, and those Inheritors; others marry upon hopes, and their abortion mutilates them even to a necessitous condition; some cast away themselves, not caring whom they join to, and their desperate Voyage; judged Shipwreck, proves a conquest of Peru; or springing of a Mine of gold and treasure; the sum of all is to trust God, and design things with virtue and moderate wisdom, not relying too much on the arm of flesh, and the event is mostly better then when so much of man's policy and wisdom predominates, for God's counsel will stand, and most an end he sets his wisdom to defeat ours which is not also his: they seldom reckon of successes aright that reckon without their Host (as with reverence) the Proverb is, they do, that take not God into their thoughts, counsels, and actions; nay it is often the judgement of men to be blinded by delusion, and deafened through pride and passion against the counsel that propitiates and tenders (if followed) safety to them. In the Irish Chronicle, in Sir john Perot's Deputyship; Vowel. p. 170. there is a notable story, there was an engagement against the Obrins, who had betaken themselves to a Wood, and there lay hid ready to entertain the English valour which would come out there to assault them, jaques Wingfield a brave Commander, and experienced, had two Nephews, Sir Peter, and Captain George Carew, who were hot upon the service, and by all means would enter the Wood upon the Irish, jaques would not let them, but Sir Peter would no nay but in he must go, slighting his Uncle's counsel, and Captain George would have gone in also but that his Uncle forcibly hindered him, saying, I will not lose you both at once, Sir Peter was presently taken and slain; but I recall myself to my Text, which thus follows. Nec non libere tenentes alii, & valecti plurimi suis Patrimoniis sufficientes, ad faciendam juratam in forma pernotata. This is added to show, that over and above Knights, Esquires, and reputed Gentlemen, (whom the courtesy of the Nation favours with that appellation for their wealth's sake, they being Magnis ditati possessionibus;) there are others of fortune and solid substance Socagers and Copy-holders', who are fit to serve on Juries, having Lands and Landsworth to the value of the highest requiry; and this shows the general wealth of England, that it is not cooped up in a few great men's hands, who share out to themselves the delicate parts of the National dainties, leaving bare bones to the meaner people, and rendering their ingenuity fruitless to them, but spread abroad to all orders and degrees of men, so as every one has his encouragement, and may perform his duty in turns; and, by being capable hereof, endeavours by all good means to discipline, train, and institute himself thereto. Now as before our Text explicated the noble parts of this Nation's anatomy, so now writes he his observations on the other, though less eminent, yet as useful parts of the body politic; and these he terms libere tenentes and valecti] the former freeholders' without doubt were opposed to Villains, Cook upon Littleton. lib. 1. p 43. B. such as held their Lands in base Tenure, and base services; therefore being ad natum domini, and subject to his passions, either of lust, rage, or reward, now this not being the condition of all Country men, but some (either by hardiness making conditions with Conquerors to enjoy their rights, or purchasing their darling liberty out of the Talons of victorious seisers of them; rested free in their persons, relations, lands, and acquirements, paying only Quitrents, or other inconsiderable annual acknowledgements, as owning their Lord's Seignory, The King, Lords, and great men did ever reserve the Sectas Curia, though they made gift of Lands in Frankelmaigne; therefore the Bishops and Clergy owned this, Item ratione hujusmodi possessionum, the King and other men might compel Episcopos, Pralatos, Religiosus, & Rectores Ecclesiarum facere sectas ad Curiam Laicalem. M. Paris in Additamentis, p. 202. Vbi secta est servitius, quam tenentes debent Domino suo & Curia ejus. Gloss. in Textum annexum. and yet their own freedom, which if distrained from them, or they compelled to any service or payment not due by the condition and compact of their Tenure, nor customary in the Manor, than had they remedy against the Lord by Bill in Chancery, as he had by seizure, in case they broke truce and were Trespassers upon him) continuing free, their Tenure was called Land of Inheritance and Free-socage, which yet owes some suits and service to the Lord it is held of, and may pay also a Quitrent, and as it may happen a Fine at every alienation of 10. s. or some such small matter, yet that certain and not at the will of the Lord; and these Tenants are called Barons, and from them the Courtbaron is denominated; yea, the Tenure of these is so estimable in Law (being of old date and upon grand consideration) that they are a kind of Cheque-mates to the Lord, because without them, in some cases, he cannot dispose of matters in his Manor, not but that the Lords and Freeholders' estates are for the most part distinct and cognizable each from other, See Littleton. Sect. 187. & Sir Ed. Cook on him, lib. 2. but because the conjunction of both, in cases of enclosures of Commons, and division of Wastes, and other such like things, as depends upon the Courtbaron, is necessary: and methinks this complication of things in a harmony commends highly the prudence of Antiquity, in that it made such a dependence as occasioned correspondence and communication between the head and foot, the hand and heart, the better to keep the end of God in man's creation, inviolate, that man should serve God, in serving these common ends that unite minds under his supreme Government Dominion and Conduct, and the delegations of it to Magistrates. Et Valecti plurimi, etc.] These I suppose are men of less note, and not so free, for though, when our Chancellor wrote, there was no Slavery or Villeinage in England, for those were antiquated in R. 2. time; yet there were seeming badges and prints of that deformity, which yet in H. 6. time, and to this day some mistakingly judge to scar the face of freedom, and those they take to be them which our Law calls Yeomen, see Stat. 16 R. 2. c. 4. & 20 R. 2. c. 2. These are the next order to Gentlemen, termed Yeomen quasi young men, as some think, or from Gemen or Yemen in the Saxon signifying a Commoner; so that of old these were men of no rank above servants, though Valet in the French imports quasi va lez son maistre, Burgasaticum] terras Colonerum, vel Burgorum, & Ingenuoram, Heritage's en roiture, Closs ad M. Paris. Garciones, id est, Pedites, & sequentoes Equos, quos vulgus expertum est pessimos esse ribaldoes, M. Paris, p. 698, 208, 522.355. thence the word wallet [pera viatoria] the bearers of this as some called them Valets or Varlets, others called them Gartions, though of old it was a title of better repute, for all young persons though Gentlemen, if not Knights, and under eighteen years old, were called Valets in France, as we called them Bachelors in England, hence Valet de Chambre, a Title of Honour to the King; but Francis the First of France, perceiving those that attended him to be no better than Roturiers (our Yeomen) introduced Gentlemen of the Chamber, though yet in the King's Palace here the Officer Yeoman remains, Stat. 33. H. 8. c. 12. yet in subserviency to the Gentlemen-Officers; so are Grooms another Court word, in French Valet, or Varlet; so that the Texts Valecti or Valetti are such of the Commoners of Countries, who hold not their Land sub nomine Culvertagii & perpetua Servitutis, M. Paris, p. 234. but having been Servants or Tenants to great men, have either, pro bono servitio impenso vel impendendo, had Land given them, or by industry and thrift (blessed by God) been purchasers of Land in see to them and their heirs, and that in such sort for the quality, and in such proportion for the value, that the Law requires Jury men to be of, as before in the Chapter of Juries I have showed; that they may be said to be Sufficientes ad faciendam juratam in forma praenotata. Sunt namque Valecti diversi in Regione illa, qui plusquam sexcenta scuta per annum expendere possunt, quo juratae superius descriptae sepissime in Regione illa fiunt. This is added to show that Juries are peculiar to England, because Countrymen of estate are only in England, in the several Hundreds of the Counties of it; now though it be usual for men of the Plough to be and abide up and down in the Country in Nations abroad, yet only with us are they men of estate, and allowed, as such, to be judicial Members of Juries, and fit they should be Judges of fact on other men's estates; because they have estates of their own, and so knowing what an estate is, are presumed to be more intent upon, and considerate about their Verdict in their Neighbour's case. And this is the reason that not only the Law requires they shall have solid and solvent estates, but accordingly such in very deed they have, most of them to a very convenient proportion, but some, and that not a few, qui plusquam sexcenta Scuta expendere possent. Scuta] are French Crowns, so called I think from the Shield of the Arms of France, that they have on one side of them; there are three sorts of them, Escusol, the best Crown now made having a star on one side; Escu coronne, the next less by a sous than the former; and Escu veil the old Crown, worth 7. s. 2. d. Sterling; of the former Crowns I take our Chancellor to mean, and according to that his computation of 600 yearly, valuing a Crown at 4. s. 6. d. comes to about 130. l. English a year, which in our Chancellors time when silver was at 20. d. an ounce, comes to almost 400. l. a year now, which though it be a great Estate, is no more than many in every County of these true Yeomen, gentilized only by the courtesy of the Nation, have with advantage, and many to double the value; now these Churls (not hungerstarved like the Peasants of France, nor cowed down like the Boors in Germany, but keeping free houses, and being full of riches and plenty) are the persons whom the Text mentions, not only as men of possessions, but as by them possessions fitted to serve on Juries with Knights and Espuires. Presertim in ingentibus causis, de Militibus, Armigeris, & aliis quorum possessiones in universo excedunt duo millia Scutorum per annum. This is subjoined to make good what before has been shown in the Chapter of Juries, that Jury men were chosen of different worth, Lib. 2. c. 13.14. 15. Duodecim Milites gladio cinctos electi in Assisa de consensu partium litigantium, hanc Assisam solenniorem ob magnam & specialem aliquam causam indictam. Gloss. apud M. Paris. in verb. Assissiam. according to the different value and nature of the cause they were to serve upon; in case of life and title of land, great Assizes, none but Knights were summoned and served in Glanvil's time▪ and after, and in our Chancellors time, though Esquires and great Yeomen under the name of alii did serve on them, yet those had Possessiones, and those to the value of a Knight's estate, towards 400, or 500 l. a year, as now things go; for I compute the Crown which we call a French Crown, though the Translator reckons it much less in words, but not in truth, for he renders 2000 Scuta by 500 Marks English in his time, which is full as much and more than 600 pounds sterling now. Quare cogitari nequit tales subornari posse, vel perjurari velle, nedum ob timorem Dei, sed & ob honorem suum conservandum, & vituperium damnum quoque inde consecutivum evitandum etiam ne eorum haeredes ipsorum laedantur infamia. The Premises considered, and the Members of Juries being affluent men (above the exigences and pressures of life, which follicite men often, and sometimes, yea too too often prevail with them, to exchange a good conscience for a transient accommodation) and being also such as disdain to slain their honours, infamize their posterities, endanger their fortunes; and displease God the righteous Judge, who delights in truth in the inward man; and being such as those in whom the posse and velle of integrity is upon no ordinary terms presumed to be: How, I say, these things well weighed, can by the wit of men and Governments, any more probable way be excogitated to preserve Justice and right Trial than England by Juries has, I cannot conceive? For, surely there cannot be any thing cohibitive and repellent of temptation, if the fear of God and shame amongst men be not prevalent to the formidation of, and the abstinence from it. First, Obtimorem dei.] For that being the beginning of wisdom, is that which lays the groundwork for all the after-superstructure; Fear of God keeps the soul stiff girt against all temptations, intent upon duty, vigilant over its affections, exact in charitable distributions: Fear of God is a complex virtue, that has omnis religionis & boni rationem in it; 'Tis that which adapts a man to every command without dispute, to avoid every thing prohibited without seeking evasions, and attempting dispensation for non-performance, to observe every voice of God, either in his Word, by his Spirit, or of his Rod, and to follow the dictations of it: 'Tis that which searches the souls sesters, quickens its dim prospect, sharpens its devoute appetite, nimbles its obsequious foot, elevates its active hands, invigorates the whole man, to be what God will have him, and suffer what he has preappointed for him: And therefore Solomen who was an incarnate Lucifer, and knew experimentally, and through practice, what wisdom was, initiates it from the fear of the Lord, because that directs a man to make God the aim, centre, and achme of his wisdom, and to be wise for his soul and eternity, both concerned and advanced by God's glory, which his fear propagates; and therefore though heathens determine wisdom by knowledge of Men, Creatures, Books, Arts, and Politic Practics upon them, though they are excited to good, and deterred from evil, by rewards and punishments, which bribe them to either one or other; yet the best prescript is, to take and leave, as Gods fear principles and excites us; Fear God and keep his Commandments, Eccles. 12.13. for this is the whole duty of man: Fear God, and that will make us keep his Commandments, which are not grievous to his fearers, but paths of pleasure and peace: And fear God, by keeping his Commandments, for that is the best indication of our fear, and all his Commandments, for that testifies our internal sincerity; yea, and Fear God and keep his Commandments, for 'tis 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the whole duty of man: Though not wholly the duty of man, for Angels and Saints fear, yea Devils fear God, and 'tis their duty so to do, as well as man's; But 'tis the whole duty of man: because, whatever God requires of renovated man, whatever he accepts as the reparation of lapsed Nature, through the Interposition of Christ, who fortifies the soul in his fear, and out-brazens it against its Worldly confronts to a persistency, is couched in this fear; This do O holy soul and live a Saint, and die and ever after live an Angel. So then, the fear of God being such a curb, as heretofore in this Book in the notes on the fourth Chapter I have showed it is to all good men, in the examples of Abraham, Moses, joseph, job, jeremiah, David, Paul; the Primitive Martyrs, and all the Seraphic comprehenders, and Militant Heroics, who keep themselves unspotted of the world, and meddle not with that abominable thing that God hates, ea ratione, because he hates it, and because it makes them unlike him; whom their piety endeavours to assimilate, it must needs work upon precise pious souls proprie & quarto modo, and restrain others of moral and civil principles, by way of proportion, and as resulting from that surviving awe of God that is left upon their souls intemerate, and so it is amulettick. For, if the fear of man, whose power is only temporary, and terrible to the outward parts, the subject of its violence and dirily is such, that it forces him to do or not do against the eddy and propension of his genius and affection: How much more shall the fear of an immortal God (ruling in the soul by a golden sceptre of love, and impending over the soul, erring from him by perfidy and elective degeneration, clouds of fire and brimstone; and those eternally to be suffering in, without any possibility of reprieve, relaxation, or discharge) preporiderate it to do what he commands, and decline what he forbids, ob timorem dei. Secondly, Honorem suum conservandum,] That's another stimulation to integrity, and a disanimation to perjury and prostitution of conscience; And this is so suasive with mortals, that they will part with life rather than with that they account honour: though some will do as the old doting and unfortunate Captain did, who rendered a City of the King of Spain's to his enemy, Mariana in Hist Hispan. to save his head; but the King told him, Perdista mi villa y guardasté la barba cana. Sir, You have rendered my Town to save your white beard, which you shall be no gainer by: Thus sometimes it is, and usually ask Hector's what the chief Article in the Creed of Gallantry is, and they will quote Honour & vita aque passu ambularent; this is the Diana of this Worlds Ephesians, this the Image that came down from their jupiter; such gods in the likeness of men they venerate: and what assaults this they execute, and are quickly in arms against; and by this zeal to their imaginary eminence (which consists chiefly in opinion and popular suffrage, and has its systoles, and diastoles, as the age's humour is, more or less, quicker, or less smart) they think themselves safe in point of honour and reputation: Now the wit of man cannot contrive, should it be intent on the exploration many ages a more durable and certain way of stabilizing that, than Justice, the ready way to a good name, the great Idol that men fall down before sinlesly: Tholoss. Syntag. juris universi, lib. 31. c. 29. Sect. 4. Annotat. in Pandect, p. 199. Edit. Vascos. Luter. 1556 in Folio. A good name, saith Solomon, is as a precious ointment; This the learned render by Existimatio, which is something extra aestimationem, without, beyond, and above esteem; Dignitatis illaesae status legibus & moribus comprobatus, as the Civilians call it: and Budaus, when he says, estimation is the consideration and porpension of any thing, adds, Existimatio judicium & arbitratus: therefore though some do calculate it to the proportion of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Fama, yet he makes it more according to the computation of (a) Lib. 11. c. 4. A Gellius, whose words are Fama ex vulgi judicio nascitur sed existimatum hominem esse qui in primis censetur; that is, Inter bonos & graves: For, both esteem and reproach or infamy, follows the account of such, and such best rule the exchange of both; And therefore when the Text writes of Ob honorem suum conservandum added to the former, Tholoss. lib. 32. c. 11. Sect. 5. & lib. 38. c. 2. Sect. 3. Natura perennis fontis est gloria vena laudabilis nam sicut ille sluendo non expenditur sic nec ista celebri sermone siccatur, Alathar. apud Cassi●d. variar lib. 8. Ep. 21. Cypriano Patritio. one would think our Master had produced arguments cogent enough, yet lest the fear of Religion, and of men's undervaluations should not take men off from injurious courses, but they should persist to accumalate advantages to themselves by the gain of unrighteousness, the Chancellor adds, Damnum quoque consequunturum evitandum; which what that is, the Notes on the 26th Chapter sets forth: yet as here the instance of it is introduced, it appears to be that argument, which like the deep base drounds and prevails over all the other Notes of arguments. For, many atheistick minds make nothing of God, (he not being in all their thoughts, they put the evil day of his terror, and visitation of them far off; drolling away the severe impressions and softenings of conscience, with resolved wickedness, and Hectorean bravadoes) and the good thoughts and reports of men they set light by, so they may add a cubit to their fortunary stature: they can make takes to the Queen of heaven, and adore the Planetary Deities, that have profitable and pleasant aspects on them: they care not whose places they usurp, whose children they exheridate, whose reputation they prostitute, whose estate they defraud, whose right they suppress, whose bread they eat; To these that of Alatharick in Cassiodore is not applicable, who, writing to Cyprian the Senator, says, Merito tibi prolixior aetas optatur inqua fama semper robustior invenitur. Let men censure them as they will, they will make much of one, and a fat sorrow (they cry) is better than a lean one, rather would they be envied then pitied; Populus me sibilat, at domi ipse mihi plaudo, cry they, for these against such like quezinesses prescribe, and proclaim themselves ●●●noh, they care not for same, 'tis but air and prattle of people, and that they value rot; but when the Laws of Government, fine and imprison, when all they have must to pot for the offence against the King, in wilful violation of his Laws, and that in the odious way of perjury, and that in the case of a false Juryman, Then, than men look about them, and are afraid to be in deed what in affection they perhaps are, because they have wherewith, and must lose that from themselves, and in a good part from their posterities; This keeps them within compass, Ad evitandum secuturum damnum, they will keep honest; 2 Sam. c. 23. For, though they scruple not with David, the water of B●h●ehem; because it is the price of blood, but have consciences so large, that through the wide arch, and into the bottomless hell of them, vessels of never so great burden with masts and sails; sins with colours flying, and Effronteries neighing, may pass currently and without boggle; yet ruin of estate their punishment, more terrifies them then God's curse and Heaven's loss: And this the Law knowing, urges them by it, not only sub timore & infamia curtelagii & perpetuae servitatis, as Henry the third did summon his subjects against the French; but as King john did his Nobles, M. Paris. p. 233.234. as they would keep their estates, and prevent being nething, Rex milites Anglos ut ad obsidionem veniant jubet nisi veline sub nomine nething quod latine nequam sovat recìnseri M. Paris. p. 15. Nething lucifica unde nigh nunc Night. Gloss. ad M. Paris. in verbo. next degree to nothing, by forfeit of their estates: All which considered, the prudence of the Law in deterring men from these sinful engagements, to the injury of man and displeasure of God, is very remarkable. And hereupon the Chancellors inference is very good and material; Taliter (fili Regis) disposita, inhabitataque non sunt aliqua alia mundi regna.] Which he adds, not to depreciate other Countries which are also great instances of divine bounty and power, but to raise his own Country's reputation, and his Country men's gratitude: If God has made us like Capernaum, lifted up to heaven; If he has given us the purity of Religion, the prerogative of being Governed by our own Lords, our Kings, and their and our own Laws; the freedom of sitting under our own Vines, and enjoying our good things in peace; If he have caused a cessation of leading into Captivity, and complaining in our streets; Non taliter disposita inhabitataque sunt alia mundi regna in this sense; but in that we have Trials of life and fortune by Juries, good men of estate, and true in disposition, standing stiff to the rule of Justice, and inclinable neither to the fear of Power, love of gain, or by as of malice; but such, as if they had a mind to be villainous, dare not for fear of shame and ruin to their persons, fortunes, and posterities: This, Libera quia nihil iniquias venali justitia plena quia justitia non debet claudirare celeris quia dilatio est quedam negatio, Cooks 2 Instit. p. 56. This, that there is in England, justice free neither bought nor sold; full, not curtayled or partial; speedy, not tedious and uncertain; occasions the Non taliter disposita here, etc. For surely, as the Coin of England is, 2 Instit. p. 741. 9 E. 3. c. 1. 2 R. 2.2. 2 H. 4.6. 19 H. 7.5. 5 H 4.9. 13 H. 4.6. 3 H. 5.1. 8 H. 5.2. 9 H. 5.11. 2 H. 6.6.9.12. 17 E. 41. 1 R. 3.9. 3 H. 7.8. 4 H. 7.2. 19 H. 7.5. 3 H. 2.1. 7 E 6.6. 18. Eliz. 1. of any in the world, the most to the intrinsic value of what the Money goes for (the Kings of England having passed many Laws, in all times, for the custody of it from devirgination: and (a) Howes Chronicle, p. 912. King james of blessed memory, notwithstanding them, caused a search to be made into the Coin, and a Jury to be summoned of brave men to try it, and came himself in Person to see the Assay made of it) I say, as our Coin is the best, so is our Justice the best, in that just Assay of it, which Juries of Knights, Esquires, and other Freeholders' of England's several Counties make, in causes upon which they are summoned to serve. And the reason why this is a peculiar happiness to Englishmen, is, because England only has Persons of these ranks, dispersed in every County; so it follows. Nam licet in eyes sunt viri magnae potentiae magnarum opum & possessionum, non tamen corum unus prope moratur ad alterum ut in Anglia commorantur viri, nec tanta ut ibi haereditatorum est copia & possidentium terras. No doubt but every Country has its blessing; some in Soil and Fruits, some in Beasts and Birds, some in Metals and Oars, some in Men of all personal Accomplishments, others Great in Power, Purse and Command; yet England, our Chancellor thinks, has some advantadge above them all: because, as our Hemisphere has no extremities of Wether; nor our Seas any Leviathans of Fish; nor our Land Behemoths of Beasts; so our Land no men Giants of greatness, to whom all their Neighbourhoods are but crumbs and morsels for their ingurgitation: England being an Island, every thing in it is framed by the mercy of God, and the wisdom of Government, to a general good; and to such a method of improvement as is most dilate, and least oppressive: Abroad in the Continent, Great men, as it were, live alone in the Earth; their vast uninhabited Territories their Titles swell with, give them room to Lord it so over their vassals, that they shrivel their spirits into a non-ingenuity, and leave thereby mighty Tracts of ground untilled; as thinking it toil enough to get Meat and Drink, with a few ragged Clothes for their Lord, who takes them, and all they have for his propriety, and rewards them with nothing but severe Laws from him, and hard lives under him, such as these Viri magnae potentiae magnarum opum & possessionum, Rolinus Cancellarius ducis Burgundiae, multas domos ●excellentissimas construi secit, & suis posteris viginti quinque villas, in quibus erant castra amplissima & superba cum viginti quinquae millibus, lib. Turoneasum redditus annui reliquit, Cassan. Catal. Gl. Mundi, p. 585. are there abroad in France, Germany, and all Countries; yea in England we have had such great persons of power and estate, as did (in a sort) stand upon terms with Princes, Lupus Earl of Chester, the Lords in King John's time mentioned by * Isti communes conjurati & confaederati Stephanum Cantuariensem Archiepiscop. Capitalem consentaneum habuerunt. p. 254. Paris, Hugh Bigot E. of Bungey, who in the time of H. 3. is said to utter that Rhyme, If I were in my Castle at Bungey, Upon the water of Waveny, I would not set a button by the King of Cockney. R. Bigot Earl of Norfolk, Vowell's Description of England, p. 195. Hypodeig. Neustriae, p. 487. Mr. Nab. filips of Capire Tenors p. 11, & 128. Marshal of England; Bohun E. of Hereford and Essex, Constable of England; and Gilbert de Clare E. of Chester, the Earls of Oxford, and Arundel, the Duke of Norfolk, and others later have been men of great power and fortune; to this day we have some such in England, but yet they are lessened by the Law's encouragement to industry, and the blessing of God on frugality and gaining courses of life, which steal upon the luxuriant idle lives of great men, and undermines their fortunes by its thrift which often purchases them: and this makes England (though not nutritive of Great men like the Asian Grandees, or the Germane Dukes and Electoral Bishops, or the Italian Signors, Dukes, and Princes, who all are Masters of Castles and Armies, and upon displeasure will call their lieges to their defence; Ligeancia obligatio Vasalli erga Dominum, ut servitium debitum ei praestandum obedientia, & pro eo stet contra omnes nunc soli Regi agnoscimus, M. Paris. p. 845. Temp. E. 1. when in England all men, as well great as small, rich as poor, are bound to the peace, and must not armedly dispute with their Prince, as Leoline Prince of Wales traitorously did, and for it lost his life and Government, and as all Traitors since have done to their deserved ruin) produce what is more conspicuous in the Nation, An universal wealth and courage, diffused among the people of all Counties; who, though they live near one another, yet do thrive, entertain, negotiate, marry one with another, and mostly are not Malvicines each to other, Gloss. M. Paris. ad verb. Malvicine. or do act the part of Mangonells, slinging the stones of envy and destruction each at other, but as fair guests about Prince Arthur's round Table sit merry in their respective seats, bearing their proportions of service to their Countries, Athenaeus in despnosophist. lib. 4. c. 13. p. 293. according to their Sovereign's pleasure and the Law's requiry. The sum of all is this, there may be some absoluter and more supreme great men in other Countries, because they keep their Tenants slaves, when ours are free, and make them drudges and beggars, when ours have easy lives and rich purses under their Lords, who let them good pennyworths and rejoice in their increase under them: but the Chancellor says, there is not in any Country, though much bigger than England, Tanta haereditatorum copia, such a harvest and plenty of Socagers, Freeholders, and men of value, 1 Instit. ou Littleton. p. 6. In re modica non est copia, Jul. Scalig. in Theophr. lib. De Plantis. who have whereof to leave to their Heirs, and Executors after them (for Copia come à con & open, plenty of any thing, copia quasi coopia, as medicum quasi medium) so that in this copia haereditatorum, the Chancellor intends men of value in Lands or Landsworth (for the equivalence is as much within the intent of the Text as the thing in kind) to be as it were thick-sowed up and down England, and thick come up; which facilitates the Bailiffs labour in every Hundred, to summon his Jury upon all occasions. Vix enim in Villa una Regionum aliarum reperiri poterit vir unus, Patrimonio sufficiens ut in juratis. 'Twas in the precedent clause the Chancellour's assertion of his Country England, Haec tamen veluti in laudem patrii soli non [tantum] ex animi judicio, sed amoris indulgentia prodidit, Ciuverius Antiq. lib. 1. p. 29. De Bodino laudante Gallos'. that it was so packed and stuffed with lauded and estated men, that in it so small a Ville or Thorp cannot be found, wherein dwelleth not a Knight, Esquire, or some Freeholder of good Lands, or all of them, I may add, and that almost every where; but here, when he parallels other Countries, he says, vix enim in villa una, scarce can there in a Ville be found one of ability to be a Juryman, that is, worth 40. s. 5. l. or 20. l. a year, the reason not being because the soil of other Countries is not so fertile, or the natural ingenuity of other Country men less than ours, but only from the oppression of the Great men that suck all the nutriment from them; and as Pikes in a river prey upon the lesser fishes, Plebs pene Servorum habetur loco, qua per se nihil audes, & nulli ad hibetur consilio. Caesar De Gallis, Com. lib. 6. and by the continual drip of their amazing Greatness, upon which they dare not cast one confident look, they become poor-spirited, lazy, and incogitative to progg, and ingenuously improve their lives of labour; for let them advance what they can, 'tis but to add heaps to their Lord, not a grain falls to their grist, miserable they are and ever must be: This, This, is that which not only arraigns their Lords of less generosity than the Lions of afric have, De Quadcuped. lib. 1. p. 11. if Aldrovandus from Aelian do not misled me (who when they in hard weather come to the Cottages of the Moors in the Deserts, Dedecet is quadrupedum animantium Regem ad tuguriolum meum alimenti causa accedere, tua interest per montes proficisci ad capiendos cervos, & alia hujus generis animantia Leonino victui competenies, quibus verbis Leo, quasi decantatus, oculis in ter●am defixis. afflicto animo discedit, Aldrov. lib. 1. De Quadrup. p. 11. and knock at the door, when the poor woman, keeping the door shut, answers them in the Moors language which they understand, 'Tis your part, as King of the beasts, to take your prey upon beasts which are proper for your food, and not to come to seek relief at my poor Cottage, where I am so far from plenty, whereof to relieve beasts, that I have not enough to feed me and my family; these words do so charm the Lion; that he departs ashamed, as sensible he has done an act disgraceful to him: This I say is reported to be the generosity of that creature, who abhors to oppress poverty) when as the great men abroad do nothing else but infelicitate the lives of their Peasants, Boors, and Villains, by hard exactions from them, and straight allowances to them; and by this keep them so narrow-spirited, Chil. 1. Cent. 6. Adag. 93. that they know not what it is pennas nido majores extendere, and if any of them act above the sphere of vulgarity, 'tis by the sufflation of a miracle, or something which I can reckon no less than it; so was Chongius from a dull Smith kindled into a bravery to become the place and power of Cham of Tartary, and to behave himself in it bravely against the Turks; so did that young Sicilian, who, when the Venetian General was in distress, offered to fire Ottoman's Navy, which he did, and when he was taken, being asked by Ottoman what moved him to do it, bravely replied, that He had done it to hinder the common enemy of Christendom, Shute's History of Venice. p. 466. and that this attempt would be much more glorious if he might as easily run his sword through his body, as he had set fire on his Galleys; though these and such like examples there may be of mean persons, low bred, and lowly living, who having these Towers and altitudes in their minds, look upon the Valleys below them as too mean for their delight, yet the major part being accustomed to nothing but toil and poverty, Adag. 94. Cent. 6 Chil. 1. do not in suum ipsorum sinum inspuere, but content themselves to know nothing more than they ought, and desire nothing beyond what they have: this makes those vast Countries, where men magna potentiae, & magnarum opum, & possessionum are, to be barren of middle men, who amount to the value of Jurymen, That one overgrown Giant starves all his Neighbourhood, whom his Magnitude suffers only to be Pigmies. Nam raro ibidem, aliqui praeter nobiles reperiuntur possessores agrorum, aliorumque immobilium, extra civitates & muratas villas. 'Tis not nunquam but raro, not said by our Text that abroad there are none out of Cities and Towns, men of estate and estates worth (Possessores agrorum aliorúmque immobilium) but seldom or but few such: Such an one is Rara avis in terris nigroque simillima cygno; One of a City and two of a Tribe, as the Scripture phrase is to express paucity, the great Privileges and Possessions are reserved for the Nobles, who being the braver Sparks, have the glitter of estates to dazzle the eyes of their humble Valets by. This is purposely subjoined to show the value foreign Laws put upon Nobility of race, and to these only is indulged to be owners of Castles and Countries, and Offices of honour and renown; Si Rustisus emat frudum nobile, non sit nobilis, Cass. Catal. Gl. Mundi. p. 312. for though in Cities and Corporations men of Trade and Arts have Estates in Burgages, and are great Bankers, full of plenty and riches to live, and bestow their Children by; yet the Lands that lie in the Country are Granges and Husbandries, appertaining to Lords, Knights, and Gentlemen, who are called Nobiles a la mode de France, and to whom the occupiers and dwellers in and upon them are but servants: and therefore these that are so great Masters of all that's conspicuous and desirable in life, aught to consider, that (as Philo excellently, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc.) Nobility is not only measured by blood and descent from Ancestors of Prowess, Lib. De Nobilitate, p. 904.905.906, etc. but by personal virtue and deeds of merit in him that claims it, which, if a man want, though he have all the lustre of successional glory, and be of a family, Tater his fascibus praefuit sed & frater eadem resplenduit claritate; Ipsa quodam modo dignitas in stemmatibus vestris larem posuit & domesticum factum est publicum decus Alathar. Opil●oni apud Cassiod. variar lib. 6. Ep. 16. whom honour itself has been entailed to, and concentred in, as in its element; yet no true Nobility is thence devolved on a degenerous successor: King Alatharicus writing to Opilion, tells him, What a sparkling Ancestry he broke out from, and how uniform the virtues of his brother were to those of his father; that Nobility seemed to make his family her hive, and to hatch all her noble brood in his Relations: Origo ipsa jam gloria est●lans nobilitati connuscitur, idem vobis est dignitatis quod vita principium, Var. lib. 3. Ep. 6. Yet, when all is thus by him expressed, he concludes; That though Honour and life be contemporary to them, yet if virtue be not also concomitant, there is a great abatement of the superexcellency of it. Though therefore Nobility be a rare advantage to every ascent and conspicuity of life, Magna abundantia laudis est in penurba Reipublica vel mediocria munera mer●●sse Alathar. S●natui Ep. 41. Var. lib. 5. yet is it chiefly and only in the account of God and wise men so, when it designs and acts service to God and men, in promoting his glory and their good: For this to do, Hujus mali causa est nobilium institutum, qui res consentantas & mutua ope nixas, generis claritatem literarumque peritian collidi inter se & di●●entire putant, quo errore factum est ut disciplina olim ingenua appellatae ad plebem jamdiu transierint non tantum à nobilibus sed etiam O mores perditos) à sacricolis repudiatae, ne non generosus esse & lantus, antistitum ordo prasulumque putaretur, lib. 1. de Ass p. 24. Edit. Vascos. is to excel, Nobiles esse quasi noscibiles, to carry the badge of their honour on their actions; which is more Pompous and Magnificent than trains of Lackeys, and volleys of Oaths, Then contempt of studies, and of lives of employment and gainful subsistence, which are so abominated by the great and gaious youth, that they deride those that are votaries to diligence in them, as ignoble spirits, and by wholly waving them, leave them to such as will intend them; which Budans sadly bemoans in France, and others may as sadly in England: wherein truly nothing is thought noble but what comes too near idleness and prodigality, (a) In Pandect, p. 49. & 91. contempt of Religion, and breach of promise, which God knows are so far from being gentle and noble, that they are immoralities which vitiate the fair portraitures of mercy in those advancements of men to greatness by God, whose vassals they are, and to whom they must be responsible: But the best remedy of this is, to pray God to turn the hearts of men from libertinism to a severer life, Note this well. by which honour will have more prevalence then by any other engine: For, 'tis not the coruscation of an Ancestor, or the vapour of a Title, or the plenty of a Revenue that Nobilitates men, but the wisdom of the mind and action seconding these, that makes a conspicuity and veneration by reason of them; And this the Treaters on Honours and Nobility, put the stress of their arguments in defence of it upon, since riches and force are nobilities, which beasts have in common with men; but reason and sagacity is that which only is that endowment which Men and Angels have: and that because they are made to be the daily Attendants and Courtiers in ordinary before God. Though therefore I concur with the excellent discourses of Bartholus, Cliothovius, Bonus de Curtili, Lucas de Penna, Lundolphus, Pogins Florentinus, and others, who have acclamated Nobility not more elegantly than so Prinecly a subject requires; Though I allow of that heroic principle, N●bilitas est dignitas proveniens à coruscatione clari sanguinis, à parentibus originem sumens & in liberos legitimos per carnem continnata [jurisconsulti.] to stand upon the honour of our Ancestors and family, yet still I like the association of virtue in a divine sense with it; which by making a man acceptable to God (as Bartholus his words are, Apud deum iste nobilis est quem deus sua gratia gratum sibi fecit) makes him also honourable amongst men, Nihil in ea laudabo nisi quod propriam est, & eo nobilius quod ex opibus & nobilitate, facta est. paupertate & humilitate nobilior Epist ad Principem virginem. which St. jerom applying to Marcelia, made her truly noble in his testimony of her: other Nobility abstracted from this, is Nobility reversed, turned topsy-turvy; like that the Father imputes to Helvidius the heretic, History Venice. p. 105. of whom he says, Nobilis factus es eo scelere, 'tis Nobility in the sense; Lais the Courtesan is called Nobilis scortae, and the place where the Romans had the overthrow said to be Nobilis ille clade Romana locus est: And the best fruit it produces will be but like that mistaken bravery of mind, Vnde melius nobilitati collegam quaerimus quam de vena nobilium, qui se promittat abhorrere moribus, quam refugit sanguine vilitatem Nathar. Agapeto Ep. 41. Cassiod. var. lib. 1. which that vain Lombard expressed, whom the Venetian Senate decreeing whatever he demanded, as a recompense for his art, in setting up the three wonderful pillars in that City, he requested only the sanction, That it might be lawful for all dice-players, and card-players, to play and cheat betwixt those pillars, without any fear of punishment: This, I say, will be the sequel of such gallantry, when as that Nobility that is mingled with piety and prudence, refuses and abhors commerce with that vice, which alloyes the dignity of descent by the ignobility of action: By all which it appears, that as Nobility has preferreney to plebeity, so it is exalted in the positivity of such degrees of heroicism as makes Nobles transcend Vulgars' in virtues Divine, Civil, and Politic; To be Noble for Wisdom, as was Solomon; for Meekness, as was Moses; for Patience, as was job: to dim and eclipse ordinary excellencies, as Alexander, Aristotle, Antoninus, Caesar, Scipio, Quid enim gener●sius quam tot literarum proceres habuisse majores Al●th sonatui Var. lib. 6. Ep. 1. & lib. 2. Ep. 15. Tully, Metellus did their contemporaries. Not only to be lineally descended from Nobles, but to be noble in thought, word, and deed; such as these are the true 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, whom justinian calls his Nobles; not only from the shields in which their Ancestors were effigiated, but from the notable conduct, and un-tainted loyalty that their deportments in the trusts credited to them, discover of them; and to such Nobiles as these too much cannot be attributed: too great portions of Nations be given, because they are of men in Nations the best, 'tis fit they should be best accommodated; virtue is a valuable consideration for any purchase of favour and fortune, and by reason of the impression of this on the first blazing stars in Families, did Nobility descend to posterity, and with Nobility great patrimonies to support it in a decent and becoming Equipage; for Honour without Estate is like a stomach without Meat, a very great and unpleasing burden. Therefore wise Governments have ever exalted those to Nobility, who either have had ample fortunes, or virtues attractive of such, ingenuity and diligence being magnetic of them; which, though it be not ever employed in gross and corporally laborious courses of life, yet if it be in callings, that equally merit of Governments, aught to be suitably rewarded by them: And hereupon, as Peace and Warr are the two poles on which the world of Government turns, as the common sort of Arts-men and Labourers do follow those professions of Peace; foe the Nobles and Gentry do engage in courses of Chivalry, especially in France, where the Cavalry is made up of them, and that is the strength and glory of that Kingdom: For the Infantry being so kept under, by their indigent and suppressed lives, are not so considerable as ours are, whose spirits being boayed up by the freedom of the Laws, Pedites ut bellicosi & fortes evadant, opus est ut in conditione aliqua non servili aut inopi sed libera & copiosa degant, itaque si quod regnum & status in nobiles generosos potissimum excrescat, Agricola antem & aratores loco tantum & conditione operariorum inserviunt, aut sorte Tuguriastri meri existant, qui pro mendicis tecto coapertis haberi possint, equitatu certe pollere possit, sed peditaru mini●●, Dom Baconus Cancellar, in Hist. H. 7. p. 45. Edit. Lat. vouchsafing them that plenty and accommodation that their labour and parsimony acquires to them; they are bold and brave spirited in the field, and as ready to encounter their King and Country's foes, as they were to bear the brunt of heat and cold, early and late, wet and dry, in their Country employment. And this is the reason that the Commoners of England being landed, are so subsidiary to their Princes and Laws in all kinds of aid and duty, because they have whereon to keep up their own spirits, and to breed their servants and sons to manly and lusty exercises, from which as their train, they ascend to ambitions of rivalry with men of generous birth, and often have more of prowess in their minds then great born and bred men have, for though the Nobles and Gentry with us have the great Royalties and Demesnes, the vast estates and revenues, the lofty and towering Woods, the bottomless and rich Mines, yet the Yeoman and his fellows have very much riches in money, land, yea and Royalties too in every Shire. And therefore though it is the French Crown's interest to keep the Commoner poor, and the Noblesse their Cavalry may eat him up, and he not dare to begrudg their hard dealing, but crouch and cringe to their Greatness, as thinking his answallowed down Carcase happiness and privilege enough for him to have; yet the English Commoner is on better terms, live he in what part of England he will, as remote from Neighbours as he can, yet the Law is his Buckler, and the Nations justice so just a Guardian to him and his, that he (following his honest vocation, and serving God, his Prince, and Country according to the Laws) need fear no man further, than the fear of prudence and civility obliges inferiors to be disposed to their superiors: for though the Law and Custom of the Nation exclude High shoes from services of Honour and Command, such as are Deputy Lieutenantships, Justiceships of the peace, Memberships to Parliament, from being Captains of Trained Bands, personal service to Princes at Coronation, (I mean near their body, according to the nature of some Tenors, and sundry other things of the like nature;) yet do they not stand outlawed and excommunicate from being rich in land and money, free in house-keeping and clothing, but are what the Commoners of France are not, Possessores agrerum aliorumque immobilium. Nobiles quoque ibidem Pasturarum copiam non habent.] Ridley, view Laws Ecclesiastical & Civil. p. 95, 96. Though the Nobles, who are there all those that we call Knights, Esquires, and Gentlemen (for as by the Civil Law there is no Title beneath Knights, the rest going under the name of people, so in France there are only two degrees, the Nobles and the Commons) though the Nobles, I say, have all the Country Seats and Demesnes, yet are their Seats not furnished with pasture, grazing, and Meadow-Demesnes, as ours here are; for Pasturarum copiam non habent] and the reason is, not only because France is much a Hilly Country, but also because its fields are champaign and vast, far from improvement by Enclosure, an enemy to Horsemen, who love to find or lay all in Common, plain before them; besides it being an Inland Country is not so irrigated by sweet and silver Rivers, which overflowing the banks fertilise the conterminating Lands by their Inundation, as other Countries which lie lower and being deep and flat, are accommodated by: and therefore because the Nobles have not such Granges and Farms whose Creslow grounds feed sturdy Oxen, succulent milch Cowes, deep fleeced Sheep, and stall them also with their sweet-sented hay in Winter, whereby their houses are provided for with all Substantials to Hospitality; and of the Supernumeraries sold, buy other additions to that excellent and royal Entertainments of Families, which is peculiarly the glory of England. The French Nobles, while themselves and their retinues with their military treatment, when their Army is in motion for the three or four hot Months of the year, and the rest they live at home, plentifully for their own persons and children, but all their retinue is at board-wages; for since they have not pasture in plenty, nor must not husband things warily, as men do, that make the most (as we say) of their own, pinch they must some way to bring their revenue and expenses to be Cater-cousins, for that Principle of mistake runs through the warp and wouf of Greatness. Those callings and courses of life that relate to Learning, Corporations, or Agriculture, do not Statui nobili convenire, so is the Text, Vineas colere aut aratro manus imponere statui non convenit:] Which, though it were received here of old, when the Civil Wars of the Nation made Soldiers the best Trumpets, and ruffed off the board of honour all the stakes of wealth and place, according to that clause in the Statute of Merton. c. 7. which forbids that Wards should be married Villanis, séu Burgensibus, nè disparagentur, yet now is altogether obsoleted; Peace the Mother of Arts and Mistress of Riches bringing in those into the bed of honour, whose fortunes and merits, dignifyed by the Sovereign's favour, vouchsafed admission to: so that though in France a Nobleman's estate, though small, may not be inched out by setting his sons, or overlooking himself the occupation and improvement of it, because it is below his Greatness so to do, yet with us nothing is more usual, no, nor more commendable (due regard being had to moderation in the degree, and consideration of the Farmer, whose calling this chiefly is) then so to do; for though we do not Manus arratro apponere, & vine as colere, which are the employments of perfect Colones, yet to inspect those that thus do, and to order what, and see accordingly that they do, is the employment of many Gentlemen, who yet keep Bailiffs, and notwithstanding find it necessary to cast an eye into their offices; nor ought any man how great in birth, breeding, and fortune soever, disdain the knowledge and care of the Plough, Aranti Concinnato viator attulit dictaturam, Serranam invenere serentem oblati honores, lege exempla apud Cass. Catal. Gloriae Mundi, p. 434. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Strabo lib. 7. & lib. 4. Agriculturae non student majorque pars victus corum lacte, caseo, & carne consistit, Caesar de Antiq. Germanis, Com. lib. 4. who considers his Progenitors in time and virtue taken from it to the highest Achievements; the Romans took many brave Citizens from the Plough to be their Generals; and the Families of Lentulus and Cicero took their names from their employments in the Country; and though the Germans our Ancestors did not much dote on Tillage, but rather on Forage, which is the reason that Historians note them to abhor it as unmanly, and to commit it to their women, or to those poor spirits whom they call Burii, probably the Swains that drudged in the Farm, Cluverius Antiq. lib. 1. p. 132 which we call yet in some places a Berry; yet is Tillage a very useful employment and very creditable, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Strabo de Britannis, lib. 4. Nihil agricultura melius, nihil uberius, nihil adulcius, nihil libero homine dignius, lib. 1. Offic. & lib. 1. De Senect. which besides the Authoritìes heretofore in this Chapter and on this argument quoted, is confirmable from that of Tully, who, though an Orator by knowledge and profession, so applauds it, that he gives it the utmost courtesy of his eloquent munificence, Nihil agricultura melius, etc. Nothing is more profitable and useful than Husbandry, nothing sweeter and more worthy a free-spirited man then to employ his time and mind in and about it. And therefore for Nobles (as France calls all that are not the common people) to think Tillage or Vine-dressing, I mean, In omni Gallia corum hominum qui aliquo sunt numero atque honore, duo sunt genera, nam plebs penè servorum habetur loco, qui per se nihil audet, & nulli adhibetur consilio. Caesar. Comment. lib. 6. overlooking the drudgers in them, not statui suo convenire, is more from a huff of pride than the reason of prudence in them, for no man ought to count that Calling slavery that brings in penny-savoury; and that it does when it inches out the shortness of rent-fortunes to more capacious purposes. Nor are Punctilios nationally to be stood upon, where they are not credited and supported by some fortunary Grandeurs: and therefore since necessity is the Lord-Marshal that determines decency, and what is comportable with all men's estates under it, it is prudence to submit to that which is most for convenience, and has the directest tendency to preservation and increase; which, Industry having the suffrage of Nations for, encourages Nations and Princes to reward estates with Honours, and account those Honours best supported that are well underlayed with Revenues. And thus as the Venetians, Florentines, and we do account Merchandise not beneath a Gentleman, so did not Lewis the Twelfth, that wise and worthy Prince, who privileged the Citizens of certain great Cities to hold noble Tenors, which is contrary to the Law of France, and gives the reason, Cass. Catal. Gl. Mundi, p. 314. Barthol. Caepolus Tract. De Imperat milibus eligendis, In verbo Nobilitatis. quia istae Civitatis habent jura Nobilitatis, for since those places do benefit the Crown, good reason they should be benefited with honour from the Crown; which yet the French do not generally receive for a rule, for Cassanaeus one of that Country says, Apud nos Gallos', nobiles ut plurimum habitant in rure, & ibi rejecta omni mercatura, cult●i agrorum (saltem non multum opulenti) & rusticanae rei per familiam vacant, etc. which is not contrary to what the Text says, for the Gallants do attend the Army of the King, and what time they are at home they do not think any inspection over their Revenues, which consists of Vineyards and Tillage, suitable to their state, because their whole intentness is upon the Army, in which they are brave and live freely, commanding whatever they please and come to, and when they are from that, on hunting; and this humour was in a great measure here till the wars (between the Houses of York and Lancaster determining in H. 7.) ceased; for then the Gentry and Youth, not having whereon martially to busy their minds, fell to such callings of industry, as throne by peace: thus came the younger sons of noble and generous families to Corporations, as Apprentices to Trades, and to Inns of Courts, and Chancery, and other callings of gain to their future decent subsistence, and the Commonalty fell to tillage and manual labours, to busy and support the multitudes of which, the great men of England, who had depopulated Farms, which brought infrequentiam & diminutionem populi & per consequentiam Oppidorum, Dom Baconus Cancellar. in● Hist. H. 7. p. 44. Lat. Ecclesiarum, decimarum & similium, as the noble Historians words are, were fain to be enjoined to restore Husbandry, hereupon by the Statute of 4 H. 7. c. 19 there was a penalty for decaying houses of Husbandry, or not laying convenient Land for the maintenance of the same, which Statute though it were repealed by the 39 Eliz. c. 1. yet by c. 2. arable Land made Pasture, since 1 Eliz. was again to be converted to Tillage, and what is arable was not to be converted to pasture, which good provision for the Plough, the main engine of all our chief support for life (bread) brought Husbandry in request, Magnam partem fundi Regni Agricolis, & mediae sortis hominibus mancipabat, & perpetuabat. Idem sodem. and with it riches, plenty, and civility of manners. And hence by the blessing of God comes it to pass that our Yeomen, who are the strength of the Nation and the best foot-soldiers in the World, are so much encouraged and in so good plight both in purse and courage; and hence comes Justice to flow so currently in Juries by the substantialness of these who are numerous in them; which I am the longer upon, to show the vanity of disdaining honest and gaining callings, and preferring an idleness of sin, shift, and want, before lives of business and profit, as the reward and compensation of them. Let the Nobles of France stand upon honour in this matter, the Gentry of England find too fatally the unhappy fruit of idle children and relations, and knowing Industry in Husbandry, Trades, Note this. and Professions of Learning, blessed by God with heigths of Attainment, equal to, and sometimes much transcending their family's honour and estate, do now freely, and further I hope will dispose their children to them: for as there is no toil like to that of idleness, so no pleasure better returned with peace and plenty then that of honest callings. To return then to our Chancellor; this being premised to introduce the parallel of England 〈◊〉 appeals to the Lawyers on of Juries, his conclusion is, that because Juries, where 〈◊〉 at him, and exhibits multum remoti; nor to be had in Countries where men are poor, 〈◊〉 his words and lieu required: It follows, that since alone England abounds with 〈◊〉 the conqualified men, and so near together as Jurymen ought to be, who do 〈◊〉 agnoscere ratione vicinitatis, Justice by their verdict, in matters of fact, is only haved able in England; which I so far admire, that I think if it be kept up in the honour of it, as I hope our Masters the Judges will see it shall, we in England shall avoid that too true Character, that the French Chancellor gives his Country, Haec Eunomiâ gallia non regitun, etc. By this good law France is not governed. In which there is great indulgence to vice, Vt modessissimo cuique & innocentia praedito jus suum obtinere plerumque non liceat, aut certe in illis meandris forensibus harere, in labyrinthosis dilationum similus consenescere, veteratorias pragmatiorum imposturas plurima judicum fastidia fastusque quorundam perpeti, mille iudignitates devorare necesse sit, Budaeus in Pandect. p. 45. Edit. Vascosam in folio. and rare rewards to virtue; where to blemish men of worth and wisdom is so frequent; where recoveries of right by suit is so dubious, that modest and good men were better lose their right, and be quiet, then seek the recovery of it, with so much trouble, and so little certainty of obtaining it: Thus the Chancellor, whose words I modestly translate, that I may not offend many of our Gallants, who are so Frenchisied, that they despise every thing almost that is English: Though therefore no man can deny to France that which God has made it remarkable for, Terra est frumenti praecipue & pabali ferax & aemaena lucis immanibus. Pompon. Maela lib. 3. de siiu orbis, p. 7. Edit. Steph. that it has an excellent air, plenty of corn and food, furniture of men and arts, quick and commodious, that it is the rising sun that looks to be adored; yet do I not join with Blondus, Langolius, Bonandus, Textor, and Cassanaeus in their Hyperbolicks, when they make that Prophecy of the 2 Daniel 44. where God is said to set up a Kingdom that never shall be destroyed; Nec potest sane aliud esse praesiguratum praeter illud, Cassan. Catal. Gl. Mudi. p. 554. Textor in Epithetis. and the Kingdom shall not be left to other People, but it shall break to pieces and consume all those Kingdoms: to be meant of France; which for greatness of virtue, probity of manners, counsel, prudence, civility joined with piety, and military skill is inferior to no Nation in the world. Though, I say, I should grant to France much of this, yet there is yet an addition, to be wished it, which a learned Frenchman made long ago, (a) Budaeus Cancellar. lib. 4. the ass & ejus partibus. Catal. G. Mundi p. 578. O beatam futuram Galliam si tam contigisset heros habere frugi, quam bonos habere solet; yea, and for all this, though it were granted to be so happy, Vt hic Palladem cum Baccho certare videretur, as Cassanaeus his words are: yet in the Justice of its Trials, 'twould (under favour of all the prealleged Characters) come beneath England; For here the poorest subject cannot be injured in his goods, or body, but he has remedy by a Jury of twelve men, and the like for his life; for cast he must be by them, or die he cannot: when as there is not a Marshal (if Marshal Byron be to be believed, and why he should not I know not) can be free from being accounted, and condemned, as a Traitor, by the single testimony of one, though a base person, as he alleged La Fin to be, who had bewitched him by the potency of a charm, History France in H. 4. p. 1043, 1049. and an image of wax, which deluded him into a belief he should be King of France; but from such seductions, delusions, accusers, laws and ends, good Lord deliver us: And so I end this Chapter. CHAP. XXX. Tunc Princeps. Comparationes odiosas esse licet dixerimus, etc. THis whole Chapter is but introductionall, of the Prince replying to the insinuations of the Chancellor, concerning the Justice of Juries, and the possibility of having them in England above other Country's; To which, though the Prince is produced, mildly answering, yet in that is there much strenuity expressed, in refracting those hightnings that the Chancellors love to his Common Laws Languaged itself by. Now, though the Prince waves comparisons, as engines, rather to advance humour, provoke passion, and manifest pride, then to dilucidate truth, and to lay open the candidates to a true judgement: yet, in that he keeps to a modest assertion of the Civil Law, and states its Regency and Authority in the Continent, whereof France is a part; though he allows the Common Law the same favour in this Island, he does but right without inconvenience to either Laws, and the contenders for them, since all the zeal and fervour that men passionately appear in to the averrment of their darlings, is but that squib of wit, which, though it soars high, and blazes in the firmament of popular admiration, evaporates and dissolves in a crack and issue of nothing but smoke and stench; for God that made nothing in vain, but has given every living thing not only breathe but pabulary subsistence for its continuation, and a providence of support to make that by his benediction effectual to that end; that same great and good God, directing Neighbourhoods to join into Cities, Counties, and Kingdoms, and to be governed by Rules and Laws of prudence and order, has no doubt fitted every thing, not Laws excepted, to every Country, and every Country to the Laws his wisdom in the humane nature appointed for them; and the Laws of one Nation will universally no more fit another, than all clothes will fit one body, or one bodies proportion fit every bodies: In the common Principles, Laws in civilised Nations all agree, though in the particulars they differ, as clothes made all of one shape for men's bodies do in the more or less of them; and as that is the best suit of clothes that best sets forth, and most accommodates the body with warmth, agility, and defence against injury, so is that the best Law for any Nation, that most promotes its peace, piety, and wealth, and impedes the cankers and subversions of them; which since the Civil Law does abroad (and for aught I know deserves in that regard that character which a learned Professor of it gives, That if all the Rules, Maxims, Constitutions, and Laws of all other people and Countries were put together, Dr. Ridley in his view of the Civil and Canon Law. p. 3. I except none (saith he) save the Laws of the Hebrews which came immediately from God, they are not comparable to the Law of the Romans, neither in wisdom nor equity, neither in gravity nor in sufficiency, thus largely he;) yet notwithstanding all this (which truly, being taken pro confesso, is very much for the honour of those Laws) the Common Law of England has that specific energy and adaption to the Land of England, as no Law in the world hath or can have: The Author's wish. And I pray God I and mine, and all the true men of England, may live and die in the love and under the obedience of it, and of the Protectors of it, Kings; and their Counselors, Parliaments. And so I end this Chapter. CHAP. XXXI. Sed licet non infime Cancellarie, nos delectet forma, qua Leges Angliae in contentionibus revelant veritatem, etc. IN this Chapter the Prince is personated as scrupling the goodness and lawfulness of Juries, by reason of the seeming opposition the constitution of them has to the Law of God; for the Prince, supposing that God in Deut. 17.6. settled the decision of matters upon the mouth of two or three Witnesses, does exclude all determinations of judicial causes from any interest in them, but what is of the nature of that constitution, which the Prince says was a proof according to the Law of nature and reason, and not a temporary Law in the ceremoniality of it, determining with the Jewish Polity, which the Schools call Vetus Lex figurae vel umbrae; and therefore our Lord, who was the dissolution of whatever was not moral, but by his coming abrogated, confirms this to the Pharisees in john 8.17. and Grotius says, that this was so generally received that it became proverbial, Caterum Lex ista Mosis proprie ad facti controversium pertinens, in Proverbium transiit, ita ut de rebus aliis usurpatur, Grotius in Matth. 18.16. and so he takes the meaning of john 8.17. & 2 Cor. 13.1. yea, because the weight of proofs shall not be scanted and want its full advantage, the Holy Ghost adds two or three Witnesses, not thereby only to exclude one, Hoc dicit ne pasiim sed cum discretione ad judicium mortis procedatur, in quo compescitur malitia invidorum, Hugo Cardin. in Deut. 17.16. but to take in a third for down weight if need be▪ and this is the reason undoubtedly why the Laws of Nations, and our Law chiefly, though they allow two Witnesses, good and staunch, proof enough, Sub testimonio trium peribit omnis malus, & salvabitur omnis bonus; Patris scilicet Filsi & Sp. Sancti sit peccatoris condemnatio erit sub testimonio cordis, oris, operis, Hugo Card. in loc. yet they look upon three as the fuller evidence; as in Company the more the merrier, so in Evidences the more Witnesses, the more unquestionable the truth of their evidence; and therefore our Lord does not plead Prerogative, As he was the truth, and aught to be believed upon his own assertion, but he appeals to the Lawyers themselves, who were his great opposites, and critically carped at him, and exhibits himself forinsecally to them, as one that ought to be credited, because his words and works had the testimony of God by miracle; and of their consciences, by the conviction of them upon what he said and did: and therefore he says, having approved himself according to the method of their own Law, from the appointment of their own Lawgiver Moses, not to believe his words thus attested, was not only to contemn Moses, but to proclaim their enmity and malice against him, who, by testimony Juridick, was affirmed to be the true God-man he asserted himself to be: This is the Prince's objection, that in as much as God had set down the way of condemnation to be by two or three Witnesses; and Christ the new Lawgiver confirmed this, and subjected himself to the manner of trial concerning the truth of his Doctrine and Divinity; Huit legi contraire est legi divinae refragare: that is, to prescribe another method then what God has set, is to wander from God's appointment, and to contradict the wisdom of God the Father in the positivity of his appointment, Matth. 13.14. and of the judge of quick and dead, who approves it; yea, 'tis to set up mortal weakness against immortal Power, Goodness, Wisdom, and Sovereignty, which is Treason against the Sovereign of our souls: Nemo enim potest melius aut aliud fundamentum ponere quam posuit dominus, saith the Prince in our Text; and upon this doubt, not narrowly or pusilly raised, but breaking forth from reason and piety regnant in him, and evidencing itself in the proposal of its arrest to his gravity, who is able, ready, and willing to enlarge it, by his resolution of the difficulty does he apply to the Chancellor; this is the sum of this one and thirtieth Chapter. CHAP. XXXII. Chancellarius, Non his quibus turbaris Princeps contrariantur leges Angliae licet aliter quo dammodo in dubiis ipsae eliciunt veritatem. HEre the Chancellor endeavours answer of the personated Prince his expectation, and that in the solution of those doubts which he in the precedent Chapter raised, to the discharge of which undertaking he applies himself not with the levis armatura of words, light in their nature, and cheap to utter, for then his reply had been like that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, or Swallows nest, 2 Chil. 2 Cent. Adag. 2, p. 437. wherein the Poets tell us there is great noise, but no music no such hailshot does he from the birding-piece of a bombaste-Oratory discharge on the Prince's reason rampired up, and in a kind of civil hostility against him, with no such mean and trifling lime twiggs does he hope to catch this bird of Paradise with: but, knowing him to have a Kingly reason, and to answer in a soulary plenitude his Majestic birth, and corporal sanctity, pours forth upon him a volley of solid reason and judicious gravity; by the force of which cannon-shot, so artlily leveled, he doubts not but to batter the breast-works raised against him, and to gain those Towers of opposition, from whence these artillery on him played; And the better to effect this, he yields to the Prince in that which is the groundwork of this scruple, that what God has appointed as a moral and fixed rule is irremoveable; and to wave it, or wander from it is contraire divinae legi, Contraire vel contradicere, Glanvill lib. 10. c. 1●. to rebel against the Divine Sovereignty, which is the highest sacrilege: This he grants; yet does he hold his own, in denying the Prince's inference: For, though the Old Law does appoint, that in the month of two or three Witnesses every word shall be established; Lex nova nihil determinat circa catemonialia vel judicialia nes pracipit alia moralia quam lex vetus 1.2. St. Thom. Quest. 308. at. 2. yet does it not take away all prudent improvement of that prescription to the end of its institution, but under the latitude of that remedy admit whatever after experience shall discover necessary, to obviate after villainy the defeat of God's intention in that prescript, Lex vetus erat bona quia cons●nabat rationi, reprimendo concapiscentius, sed erat im perfecta quia non poterat sufficienter ad finem inducere. St. Thom. 1. Secanda Qu. 38. art. 1. to which undoubtedly that Law of Moses was too short in the letter, as in other things it is supposed to be; And therefore as the New Law being (as the Schools term it) Lex veritatis; supplied that in the main things that concerned the grace of men and the glory of God, to which its promulgation is the rule and line, so does the Laws of national prudence conform to the Mosaic Norm in the Moral and Natural rules of it, though they may alter and vary in some explanatory methods, Lex vetus dissert a league naturali non ut ab ea penitus aliena sed ut aliquid ei superaddens, S. Thom. 1.2. q. 89. art. 2. or additions of circumstance adapted to time and men; the liberty whereof may be conceived indulged to Government, by the Magna Charta of Christian liberty, to those notable and noble ends of carrying on order and Justice in the World: And, of this nature is the addition of Juries in England unto the two or three witnesses, which our Law does not do actu dominii, as if it arrogated a power of antiquation in the point of witnesses (for the Law does every thing by witnesses; where witnesses can be had that are fide digni, which the Laws of God and all Nations enjoin:) but it adds to witnesses, Juries; nutu prudentiae & sub ratione majoris certitudinis, who upon their oaths and consciences are to Judge whether they think the depositions are true, and the witnesses creditable in that they have averred: For, as in bonds, the security men have by sureties bound with the prime debtor, does not make the payment of the debt less, but more sure: so in matters of witness, Juries empanelled to hear and verdict a cause in Trial, does not depreciate and abate the justice of decisions by witnesses, but enhanse the reputation, and imply the more credit and conscience in them. And hence I humbly conceive the Law of England may, on good grounds, be argued a very pious and just Law, in that it takes all advantages to promote Justice, the great solder of civil societies; and that not only by witnesses, Deut. 17.6. c. 19.15. which God prescribes signally, but also from that honour he does witnesses, by terming himself by that Name: job. 16.16. Mal. 2.14. and by terming his holy Spirit the witness; and his holy Apostles witnesses: all which proving his approbation of witnesses, concludes the Law's wisdom and justifiableness in allowing witnesses, and without them (where to be had) ordinarily doing nothing. But yet, hence is there no ground to conclude that the addition of Juries is supererogative; and not only more than needs must, but a sinful supplement to that which is already perfect; which suspicion the Chancellor takes off in those words, Non contrariantur licet aliter quodammodo ipsae in dubiis eliciant veritatem:] which is as much as if in other words I humbly conceive his sense had uttered; That, though there be a variation of the method in some adjuncts to it, yet no aberration from the end, discovery of Justice: For, as the intent of God was not the precise letter (sit hence then the number, In ore duorum vel Trium] Bona fama, jus testimonii moribus Hebrais non habent amentes, pueri ante annum tredecim, fures etiam post restitutionem qui de alea victuant, publicani qui plus áquo exigunt, caprarii & si qui alii ea factitant, qua verberibus digna sunt, Rejici etiam possint qui valde propinqui au● familiáres aut inimici sunt partium alteri, Grot. in c. 17. Deut. 6. two or three witnesses, how false or sordid soever, must have been his appointment, without any limitation, which being the destruction of Justice, cannot be the sanction of the great Justicer, who is Summum jus sine aliqua injuriae macula; and being contrary to his will in other places of his Law; would imply contradiction, which is odious to God) so, to keep to two or three witnesses, where they presumed to be true may be otherwise, and not to admit that which may discover them to be otherwise, as Juries (added to them) in the trial of a cause and judgement on it may, is not against the Tenor of the Enaction of God, in the main intent and drift of it; for that being the discovery of truth, and the delivery of Right from all Combination against it, is pursued and attained in this way of Trial by witnesses and Juries. Not that the Law wholly rests on Juries, and decides nothing by witnesses without them; 18 H. 3. Coram rege inter Wakeling de Stoke & W. de la Guildhall. St Francigena appellaverit Anglum de perjurio, furio, homicidio, aut Rane, quod dicitur aperta rapina, quae negari non poteris Anglus se defendat per quod melius voluerit aut judicio Ferri candentis vel duello. Leg. Guil. 1. p. 177. Edit. Twisd. Brompton in W. 1. p. 982. For, that in certain Cases it does, as hereafter in its proper place shall be showed; but because the Law introduced Juries, First, to clear truth more against falsehood and conspiracy then otherwise it could be: For were witnesses only taken, that might pass for currant which is adulterate, as in that notable record cited by Mr. Selden on this Text, in the Bishop of Salisburies' Court at Sunning, whereof the Entry is Willielmus producit soctam suam & ipsi quos producit per se discordantes sunt in multis & in tempore & in aliis circumstantiis, etc. Wakelinus producit sectam qui concordati sunt in omnibus & per omnia, & dicunt omnes quos ipse producit pro se, which shows the use of Juries to judge whether of the parties witnesses are most creditable, and accordingly to verdict the matter: another use of Juries also there is to prevent the incertainty of judging integrity, and it's contrary by dubious events, wherein God is not ever pleased to evidence his pleasure to the determination of right, but leaves them to the empire of second causes, from the conclusion of which there is nothing peremptorily collectable, such as were trial by Ordeal of fire, which was in use tempore of the Conqueror, or by Duel, Combat, and Battle, Glanvil lib. 14. c. 1. of which Glanvil speaks in those words, Per Duellum potest placitum terminari, which was antiquated in Henry the Seconds time, when Glanvil, treating of the Great Assize brought in place of it, says, Ex aequitate maxime prodita est legalis institutio. Idem lib. 2. c. 19 Ius enim quod post multas & longas dilationes vix evincitur per duellum, per beneficium istius constitutionis commodius & acceleratius expeditur, Spelman in verb. Duelli, Oloss. so that Juries coming in and antiquating these, there is patefaction by them to more certain justice then otherways was; all which well weighed amounts to the Chancellors position, that Juries with Witnesses do not contradict the divine constitution, licet aliter quodammodo in dubiis eliciunt veritatem. Quid duorum hominum testimonio obest Lex illa generalis Concilii, qua cavetur, etc. This the Chancellor produces to prove that even the Canonists and Popes with their Councils, that cry up the Civil and Canon Laws and the proceedings of them by two or three Witnesses, and will not away with Juries, because they pretend their institution is besides the rule and appointment of God in the prealleged Scriptures, and the proceedings of Nations according to it; yet even they are by our Chancellor instanced in, as proceeding by other Methods then two or three Witnesses. And the particular case of their variation is in that about testimony against Cardinals to make them criminous; for these Cardinals created, whether by Pope Eugenius the Fourth, or Pontian, or Sylvester, were held the Religionis deuces & antistites, in the Roman Church of great authority, Creaturae Papae, solo Papae minores, Cardines à quo motus ostii firmatur in claudendo, Tholoss. Syntagm. Juris. lib. 15 c. 4. Binius ad fin. Tom. ●. Concilior. p. 1027. In Summis majoris Antonii, part. 3. lib 2. c. z. De Electione & Potestate Cardinalium. Et Tit. 21. c. 1. De Statu Cardinalium & Legatorum. Cardinals debent osse Dei amici singulares per vitae perfectionem, ut sicut praecellunt alios dignitate, ita excellunt in sanctitate, ff. 1. quantum, etc. Rubeus lib. 1. Rational. Divinor. Offic. c. 55. Impress. Venet. Aurel. Arcad. Charis. lib. Singul. de Offic. Praf. Pratorio. & aperiendo, etc. Cardinals from Cardo an Hinge, because as the hinge moves the door to and fro, so do these the affairs of the Church, and as the heart guides the man, so do these the Mystery of the Church and State of Christendom; these then so magnificent Prelates were at first but few in number, and of eminent parts and perfections, which made them worthily venerable; after, when they being found useful to the interest of the Pope, they grew more and mightier, and the Pope made what number and whom he would, which made his Holiness so strong in the carriage of affairs, that he left almost no room for temporal Princes, but all was swayed by him and his Creatures; yet for all his power and pretences, though the Cardinals were incardinated and let into the Papacy so Lib. 1. Ceremon. Ecclesiastic. p. 44. dexterously that there was no injuring them without injury to his Holiness, Ritnum Eccles. lib. 1. sect. 8. sub Leone 10. Papa. Baronius Tom. 5. p. 346. Albergat. Discurs. Polit. p. 386, 388. Cassander, p. 139. De Officio Missae. in Pope Honorius' time they were all by the Emperor Isaacius banished, and so abject, ut non fuisset qui resistere debuisset de clero; for though their institution was good to carry on the amity of the Greek and Latin Church, and to gratify the Greeks, the (a) Tom. 8. Concil. p. 1027. Chalcondylas, lib. 1. De rebus Turc. two first Cardinals Bessarion and Isidore of Sarmatia being Greeks, and so I think were (b) Tom. 8. p. 651. all the Cardinals some time after; yet when the Popes made no bones (as we say) of the Council Canons, Binius, To. 8. p. 66. Ius Pontificium. c. Prasulum. 2. q. 5. but multiplied their number, debased their nature by choosing not for birth, parts, and piety, but for vice, craft, and policy, contrary to the first Ecumenical Council of Basil, then, with his Italians whom he mostly Cardinalated, did he introduce that magnificent Grandeur, which as it arrogates pre-eminence over Princes, so in time becomes a check to his Holiness. So that now he that can accomplish the Cardinalitial favour, Cardinals, filii primi gradus dicuntur, Tholoss. lib. 15. c. 4. sf. 2. Cum summi Pontificis sedes vacat, in interregno sacro sanctum Cardinalium Collegium Rempublicam christianam regit, rerumque difficaltati consulit, donec Pontifex creatus. Tholoss. loco sodem, ff. 16. and to be highest in the Suffrage of the Conclave, is not only likely but sure to be Pope; and therefore as they can curb and (in a sort) awe the Pope, so does he claw them to make them his Vassals. These, These, are the Purpurata Mancipia, that as Legates à latere, and Conciliarii pro capite, do enrich his Holiness, and for these scarlet Sons are the Canons of the Council, here in the Text mentioned, made; though I confess I can find no Council (but perhaps 'tis my ignorance, for which I crave pardon) where 12 only is admitted for proof against a Cardinal: Binius Tom. 1., Concil. p. 315. & 318. for in the second Council of Rome, under Pope Sylvester the Second, it was decreed (as much and more contrary to God's constitution of two or three Witnesses then Juries are) that a Presbyter-Cardinal was not to be condemned of crime under 44. Witnesses, a Deacon-Cardinal under 36. & summus Praesul, that is, a Cardinal, not under 72. Witnesses, which Canon was undoubtedly overborne by the Pope and his Cardinals, on purpose to make proof against and condemnation of Cardinals, impossible, or not ordinarily feasible; for in what deed of darkness and subtlety (wherein their Eminencies are often parties) will such Politicoes as they, Spelman. Gloss. in verb. Cardinal. be so public as to admit 72 Witnesses against them; and since without that number they cannot be convict, they are as good as pardoned, that is, not fully accused so as to be punished by degradation, be they never so enormous and scandalous: thus Pope john the Ninth when a Cardinal, was Gallant, as we call it now, in better English Stallion, to the famous Roman Courtesan, who ruling Rome gratified her humble servant with first the Bishopric of Bononia, than Ravenna, and at last the Popedom, which Aventine thinks gave rise to the story of Pope joan, this john being Papasyed by a woman, Aventinus lib. 4. Hist. Boiorum. and so called the Woman-Pope; thus the than Pope's Holiness in Anno 1364, accused six Cardinals to have conspired his death, and went so far as to almost degrade them for it, which if true, 'twas Murder before God, but alas by the artifices of the Conclave and their adherents, the sentence was said not to be passed legally and with good conscience and consideration of the Church's honour, and therefore it was not prosecuted. By all which it appears, that the Church, which the Prince acknowledged the Pope his Cardinals and Councils to be, (appointing otherwise in this case then the word of God does in the prealleged Authorities of Scripture set down) doth as much seem to go above and besides Scripture as the Law of England does in case of Juries; since they, added to Witnesses two or three, do only corroborate truth and make it less capable to be deluded and prevaricated with, then upon the single account of Witnesses and their depositions, it might in probability be: and this I conceive to be the intendment of our Text in alleging this Canon concerning Cardinals, wherein the rule of God in Deut. 17. is in the Letter of it departed from, and yet without the Prince's scruple, which the Chancellor insinuates to dissolve this his scruple in the case of Juries upon no less if not a more rational and equitable account. And therefore as this sanction of the Church concerning Cardinals, which the Prince (according to the Religion of our Chancellour's time) thought unerrable, was not by him concluded sinful, because an addition of a greater number to that of two or three, and all to promote right (as was pretended) to truth, relating to those Praesulary Eminencies; so ought not the annexing of twelve Jurymen to the evidence, which is to the same end of evincing right and subverting its contrary, Quanto magis ponderat in judiciis plurium idoneorum testium fides, quam unius tantum, tanto tutiore aquitate nititur ista constitutio, quam duellum. Cum enim ex unius jurati testimonio procedit duellum, duodecim ad minus legalium hominum exigit ista constitutio jur amenta, Clanvil. lib. 2. c. 7. to be excepted against, but admitted as that which tends to the design of God in that judicial Constitution: and hereupon our Texts inference is most rational, if two or three worthy men confirming a testimony make it irrefragable, and not to be ordinarily impeached, much more a greater number, Quia plus semper continet in se quod est minus. Supererogationis meritum promittebatur stabulario, si plusquam duos quos recepit denarios ipse in vulnerati Curationem erogasset. This is relative to the story of the merciful Samaritan, Luke 10. who did not only come to the distressed and wounded man (when the Priests and Levites, who saw his misery, turned the deaf ear to his moans, and the pitiless eye to his sad misfortune (for the Text says, They passed by on the one side,) but bound up his wounds, putting in oil and wine to purge and heal them, and set him on his own beast, and brought him to an Inn, and took care of him; and to complete his courtesy, on the Morrow when he departed, he took out two pence and gave them to the Host, and said unto him, take care of him, and whatsoever thou spendest more, when I come again I will repay thee, v. 35. This whatsoever thou spendest more is termed Meritum supererogationis; for, because there might be a necessity to carry on the kindness to the distressed person further than the Samaritan could then see, or perhaps was then (being on his Journey and having no more than would barely defray his own charge) convenient for him to moneyly supply, he promises compensation for, when he comes again, that is, upon notice of it; now this the Chancellor makes use of to clear the necessity, that supplements be (by after prudence and experience made) to those things, which at their first stabilition could not be conceived of, or provided for; and this is the reason why more than two or three Witnesses are permitted by the Civil and Canon Law in certain cases, Numerus supplet quod in fide deficit, Digest. lib. 22. Tit. 5. ff. Numerus p. 3087. & lib. 22. Tit. 5. c. 21. Lotinus Deut. 17.6. Tatrinaceus de Testibus, dist. 61. num. 42. & seq. See Mr. Selden's Notes on c. 21. of our Text. as well as Juries of twelve added to two or three by the Common Law, as in the Notes of the 26. Chapter I have at large discovered. And therefore though the Law of England join Juries to Witnesses in causes where Juries are to be had, and is therefore justifiable, yet does it not suffer causes to fall by reason of the invalidity of testimonies where Juries cannot be had, but proceeds in those * 9 Rep. Abbot of Strata Marcella's Case, p. 30. cases secundum rationem, and jure Gentium, for so it follows. Nisi quae supra altum mare, extra corpus cujuslibet comitatus Regni illius fiant, quae postmodum in placito corum Admiralto Angliae deducantur, per testes illa juxta Legum Angliae sanctiones probari debent. Here the Chancellor makes good his assertion in the 24. Chapter, Itu ut non sit locus in Anglia, qui non sit infra corpus Comi●atus; for being to speak of Maritime matters and cases that are in debate about Contracts beyond the Sea, or Wrecks and Administrations of justice upon the Sea, he refers them to a particular Jurisdiction exempt from the ordinary Courts of Justice, to wit, the Court of Admiralty, and gives the reason, because the original of the cause was from the Sea, which is extra corpus cujuslibet Comitatus, and because every cause regularly aught to be tried in the Country where began, unless by a Certiorari it be removed to a higher Tribunal, he shows, how the fact being upon the high Sea, and so our of any County, aught to have and so hath a particular Judge to determine it, which is the Lord Admiral: The Court of which is not left to proceed how it pleases, but in the prosecution towards sentence must pronounce secundum allegata & probata, for so his words are, Quae postmodum in placito coram Admirallo Angliae deducantur, per Testes illa juxta Legum Angliae sanctiones probari debent. For the first, what Altum Mare in this case is, This, I humbly conceive, is thus phrased, not to ●lead into the vast consideration of it, but to resolve the Jurisdiction hereby intended; for Mure is called by the Learned altum, in regard it is Hellno aquarum, and in common opinion, bottomless. The Learned have been full of dispores about it, and they say, that the Sea is the moist and liquid part of the Universe, which they therefore term 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Lib. De Mundo c. 3. as the Philosopher's words are. Seas, the Ancients called the circumvallation of earth, or the girdle of its loins, which blessed it with moisture to help on fructification, with passage to further Civility and Trade. The Ancients speak variously of Seas, the great Secretary of Nature calls the Sea, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which is what Moses calls the Sea in Gen 1.10. 2 Meterolog. c. 8. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the gathering together of waters, and that not a bare gathering together; for though the Hebrews have above twenty words to signify that, yet they express this gathering not by the general word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which signifies all kinds of gathering together, but by a special word importing a gathering together by Statute and good warrant, by a Law of establishment, by a sanction of power not to be controlled, and Decree not to be reversed; by which God is said to set bounds to the Sea, beyond which its surly Waves shall not pass: such a collection of waters as of Lines in the Circle, all which concentre in the Sea and make a Mass of waters. And though all Seas are waters, yet all waters are not Sea, for waters are particulars, Sea general, waters are in propriety, Sea qua such is nullius in bonis, Mes appiert per l' opinion de Bracton & Britton auxi, que flòtsam jetsam & ●agan cy long come ils sont in au sur le mere n' appent all Roy, mes occupanti conseduntur, Constable's Case, 5 Rep. p. 108. Grotius de jur. Belli & Pacis, lib. 2. p 134, 135. but in occupancy; yea when the Roman Empire was expanded over almost the whole world, 'twas said to them not unaptly, Mare liberum esse, non Romanorum, yet there are Authorities of impropriating Seas; waters may rise and fall, as the springs that feed them or the reins that fall into them; the Sea, properly so called, is neither added to, nor substracted from; for it is the Sphere of liquidity, and is not in its true notion exhaustible, unless God miraculously dry it up or add thereto by opening the fountains of the deep, as in the Deluge. Indeed particular Arms and Toes of Sea by bordering on Land may through the narrowness of passage swell and augment their depth, because the great quantity of moisture in the Channel not being voidable, must needs, while it is in passage raise its bulk, for all bodies must have place, but the Sea is vast and so capacious that it ordinary is what it is, and though it gives yet receives nothing from the Land but what the Land returns of its own: 2 meteorology. c. 1, & 2. and therefore although some have ascribed Originals by way of Fountain or Spring to the Sea, yet the Philosopher wholly refutes that, and concludes, that Sea is the source of all waters, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and that all Rivers empty themselves into the Sea, as into their great Resolution and Vessel of capacity. Now the Sea being so vast a body of waters that the Earth seems to be but an island in it, Gen. 1.2. and being called by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, an Abyss of waters, as God is an Abyss of mercy, as I take the allusion to be, Abyssus ad Abyssum invocat, The Abyss of misery calling to the Abyss of mercy, Psal. 42. The Sea, I say, so vast, may well be called Altum in this sense, though this be not altogether the sense of the Chancellor; for he here makes altum Mare to be that which being extra regnum, is exempt from the ordinary Jurisdiction of Law, which it would not be, were it infra corpus Comitatus; for where altum Mare is, See our learned Mr. Selden in his Notes on this Chapter. 2 H. 3.9 H. 3 15 H. 3. Vide Rotul. 12 E. 3. ●Instit. p. 144. 1 Instit. p. 260. B. there is the power of the Common Law, as to trial of causes, determined: every man that is upon the Sea of England is within the Allegiance of the King the Sovereign, notwithstanding that Sea be altum Mare; but yet trial of all causes that are super altum Mare shall be, by the particular Jurisdiction of the Admiralty, determined, as appears by sundry Parliament Rolls; whereby the Jurisdiction of that Court is very ancient, and as is plain by the Laws of Oleron, which R. 1. made when he was there in France, returning from the Holy Land, and is every where confirmed in Law-books. Altum Mare then is the proper Region of the Admiral's Jurisdiction, as appears not only from the common consent of books, and the concurrent allowance of time, but also by divers Statutes declaring the power of the Admiral, as 13 R. 2. c. 5. 15 R. 2. c. 3. 2 H. 4.6.11. 5 Eliz. 5. all which do limit the Admiral to the high Sea, and exclude his Jurisdiction over any cause that is infra corpus Comitatus; for in that case the Law gives restitution, 4 Instit. 138, 139, & seq. 2 R. 2. fol. 12. Stamford. Pleas Crown, fol. 151. Dyer, p. 159. as appears in sundry cases, Hibernici sunt sub Admirallo Angliae de re facta super altum Mare; the Libel in the Admiralty Court makes the cause to commence, Sur le haut mere, & infra jurisdictionem del' Admiralty; and so the learned Chief Justice Cook understands our Text here, for rehearsing the very passage we are discoursing upon, he says, Which proveth by express words that the jurisdiction of the Admiral is confined to the high Sea, 4 Instit. p. 141. which is not within any County of the Realm. Now than the question is, what is Altum Mare? for that must determine the Corpus Comitatus; since whatever is not altum Mare is infra corpus Comitatus, and subject to the Common Law and Justice of the Nation. Now altum Mare is thought to be where one can see no Land on the other side of that he stands; 2 E. 2. Tit. Coron. 399. for in such case where a man may see from one Land to another, he is said to be infra corpus Comitatus, and the Coroner shall exercise his office, and the Country take knowledge of it, and the Trial shall be by a Jury of twelve men and not by the Admiral, because the cause grows not super altum mare: and generally where the water doth flow and reflow it is within the body of the County, as appears in the Abbot of (a) 43 E. 3. Ramsey's case, and b 17 Eliz. Diggs his Case in Scaccario. Stamford p. 51. Pleas Crown. Cook, 3. part. Instit. fol. 112. Chap. of Piracy. Diggs his case; and if a man be slain upon any Arm of the Sea, where he may see Land on both sides, the Coroner shall inquire of this Murder and not the Admiral: and yet there is a good Authority for a divisum Imperium (as it were) between the Common Law and the Admiralty; for though the low-water-mark be infra corpus Comitatus at the reflow, 5. Report, p. 107. Sir Henry Constable's Case. and for causes thence arising determinable by the Common Law, yet when the Sea is full, the Admiral hath Jurisdiction super aquam, as long as the Sea flows. The Power then of the Admiral is super altum mare only, unless by special commission it be enlarged, as by 28 H. 8.6.15. it is; and the Jurisdiction very ancient, not only since, but before the Conquest: for that the Monarches of Britain had command of their Seas, commonly called the Narrow Seas, is confirmed by ancient Records, not only of King Edgar, who is said, Quatuour Maria vindicare; and of Edward the third, who in Rotul. Scotiae of 10 Regni sui, says thus, Nos advertentes quod progenitares nostri Reges Angliae Domini Maris Anglicani circumquaque & etiam defensores; but also from sundry other reasons and authorities, See in Sir Henry Constable's Case, 5 Rep. p. 108. 'tis resolved by the Court, Que le Roy avera Flotsam jetsam & lagan comme est avantdir per sen prerogative comment que ils sont in du sur le mere; and the reason there is, Car le mere est del' ligeance del Roy & parcel de son corone d' Angleterro. cleared in the learned Seldens Mare Claus●m: And if they had such command of the Seas, was it not fit they should depute Guardians of their Power, which they called Admirals, yea, and they did; and most an end more than one at a time for the Nation: For (saith Sir Edward Cook) the wisdom of those days would not trust one man with so great a charge, Page 145. Part 4. This great Officer of Admiral was in the Saxons time called Aen mere all, Tholoss Syntagm. lib. 47. c. 26.9. over all the Sea: Praefectus maris sive Architbalassus; and the Office called Custodia Maritima Angliae; the Latin Admirallus most derive from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, à salsugine quod in salso Mari suum exercet imperium: but the best derivation of the word seems to be that the learned Sir Henry Spelman mentions, Ex Anabi●i & Graci connubio, ab Arabico amir, & Graco 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quasi praefectus Marinus; and the Knight likes this well, first, for that Homer calls Neptune 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as ruler of the Sea; and it was usual in aula orientalis imperii, to have words bilinguis bujusce modi compositionis; and that the word Admirallus and Amireus is used for one in great trust, appears from sundry authorities by him laboriously quoted; so that both the Admiralty and the Admiral have been in good esteem and of great jurisdiction, not only from Edward the third's time, as some have thought, because then the Court of Admiralty had its solemnity of proceedings but from Richard the first's time, in which and for long since there were Admirals of the West, East, and Northern Coasts, and of the floats in the Mouth of the Thames; but Admirals of England there were none as I think (but under correction ever) till the tenth of Richard the second; Spelmans Gloss, p 16.17. when Richard Fitz-Alan the younger Earl of Arundel and Surrey was created Admirallus Angliae. The Admiral's Jurisdiction is then super altum mare, and that because that cannot be intra corpus comitatus, Spelman in Gloss in voce Admiral. and so not triable by a Jury de vicinetto; now the high Sea is said to be extra corpus comitatus, because the Counties are the Kings as part of his Dominions, so are the narrow Seas, but this altum mare in the large notion is said to be mare liberum, nullius in benis: but God's Common, in which all creatures claim share, and have the privilege and convenience, God's blessing and their own industry by help thereof occasion to them, this is the effect of the record quoted in (a) Non est aliquis qui inde privilegium habere possit, Rex non magis quam privata persona, propter incertum rei eventum; to quod constare non possit, ad quam regionem sunt applicanda. Sir Ed. Cooks 5. Rep. Sir Henry Constable's Case; and hence it is, that because they are the pretensions of all Nations that descend into them, they are to be accounted of by the Laws of Nations, and the offences done upon them, for aught I know, punishable by those Laws, which the Admiral being Judge of, proceeds accordingly by; And this represents the Admiral to be a very Commander and Prince of Power, whose command is not only over the boldest and desperatest mettled men in the Nation, but over those that often commit great outrages far off, and yet are accountable for them when they come home; so great is the Admiral's Power, that the whole Sea-Regiment, next under the King and his Laws, Spelman in Gloss. loco pracitat. Seldens Mare Clausum. Vult me Pompeius esse, quem tota hoec Maritima ora habent, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 speculatorem & custodem. Sic Ep. ad Attic. In majori dignitate constituti sunt Deuces & Principes militum, apud nos vulgo dicitur Conestabilis, Cassanaus. Catal. p 33. Admiralius Gallica primum vox fuit, & dignitas latissime deinde a variis populis usurpata pro ille illustri prafecto, cui maris imperium & littorum, a rege conereditum est, qui classes & navalia. is his; which is the reason that Antiquity delegated this power to Peers of fidelity and prudence: Thus Tully in this place was called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Bishop of the Sea-Coast; and Forcatulus tells us, France highly sets by this Officer, and gives him a large proportion of power, and requires a suitable measure of care in him, which justifies the Monarches of England in committing this trust to great Peers, and noble heroics. And may the honour of it ever be blest with such a Guardian as it now (thanks be to God, and our most gracious Sovereign) has, in the Noble and illustrious Prince James, Duke of York, the most August Lord Admiral of England, whose Grace I beseech God long to preserve in health and happiness. Per testes illa juxta legum Angliae Sanctiones probari debent.] I take this proof of facts Triable before the Admiral, to be in this place intended according to the Civil Laws, which is, by witnesses, fide digui, oculati testes; For such were, 3 Instit. p. 112. I think, within the Sanctiones legum Angliae, when our Chancellor wrote; but since many inconveniences happening (as I learn from the Preamble the Statutes of the 27 H. 8. c. 4. & 28 c. 15.) Piracies and Outrages committed on the Sea, See resolute. of the judges, Temp. Eliz. Regin. 3 Instit. p. 112. 4 Instit. p. 147. Title Court of the Commission. c. 23. are to be tried by witnesses with a Jury, and this by special Commission to the Admiral from the King, wherein some of the Judges of the Realm are ever Commissioners, and the Trial is to be according to the course of the Laws of England, directed by the Statutes. Consimiliter quoque soram Constabulario & Mariscallo Angliae fieri solitum est de facto quod in Regno alio actum est. As some men's affairs living in Counties, and others sailing on the Seas, occasion their converse each with other, and so their Trespass one against the other, and against the Law, Abbot Strata Marcella's Case 9 Rep. p. 30, 31. which appoints decisions of these Controversies according to the respective natures of them; so are their injuries done to men in foreign parts, which ought to have, and accordingly have appointed Trials and Punishments for them: and these are tryable before the Lord Constable and Marshal of England, which I take (but if I err I humbly beg pardon) not to be only the Marshal mentioned in some Statutes under the notion of Marshal of the King's house, 5 E. 3 c. 2.10 E. 3. c. 3. 28 E. 1. c. 3. 13 R. 2. c. 3. & in other Statutes. because the Statute of 13 R. 2. c. 3. limits the bounds of that to twelve Miles of the King's lodging: but the Constable and Marshal within the Text I take to be a more splendid person, the latitude of whose power is rather to be admired and dreaded then described; Spelman. in Gloss. in voc. Constabularii. Hertog. & Hertug. Cluverius lib. 1. Antiq. German. c. 48. Erant & alia Potistates & Dignitates per Provincias & Patrias universas, etc. Quadratus Heteroches apud Anglos vorabantur, scilicet Barones nobiles, & insignes Sapientes, & fideles, & animosi. Latiné vero dicebantur Ductores Exercitus; apud Gallos' capitales Constabularil vel Mareschalli Exerci●us, Inter Leges Ed. Confess. p. 147. Edit. Twisdensi. for though at first it was according to the Etymology of the two Saxon words Con and Stall, as much as Conservator Stabuli, or Comes Stabuli, (my Authority is the Learned Knight;) yet after it became much more honourable, as being applied to the Leaders of Armies, whom the Saxons styled Heterochii, who were the chief men of the Precincts and Countries where they resided; And the * Feron au Catalogue des grands maistres de France, Tholoff. Syntagm. lib. 6. c. 8. ff. 6. French so account of the Constable and Marshals of France, as of the great Officers and Peers of France: with us the office of Constable-ship is very ancient, as old as the Conqueror, who made, whether Walter Earl of Gloucester, or William Son of Osborn Earl of Hereford, E. Constable is uncertain, but one of them is agreed to be; in Fitz-Empress Mawds time, Miles Son to the E. of Hereford was Constable of England, Flor. Wigorn. in Anno 1138. and so continued to King Stephen's time; of this family of Bohuns were successively numbered ten Constables of England, Spelm. Gloss. p. 184. nine of which were Humphryes, who had the office by Tenure of Inheritance; Selden Notes on this Chap. p. 37. from them it descended to the Lines of the Staffords and Dukes of Buckingham, Dyer. p. 285. as Heirs general to them, till by the opinion of all the Judges 11 Eliz. it was lawfuly descended (as Sir Edward Cook instructs me) to that Edward Duke of Buckingham, 4 Instit. p. 127. who was attainted of Treason, 13 H. 8, and came to the Crown by forfeiture, and since that time I think it hath (in regard of the amplitude of the power) not been granted in Fee to any Subject, but by Commission for a day or two upon trial of a Peer, or such like extraordinary matter; and when it was resolved 25 of the Queen, that an appeal d●●lye in the case of Doughty, whose head Sir Francis Drake struck off, and that it was cryable before the Oonstable, the Queen would not make a Constable, 1 Instit. on Littleton. p. 74. & ideo dormivit appellum. The consideration of this Officer in the magnitude of his Authority, makes the Law very punctual to bond it, that it transgress not to oppress Subjects under the colour of Justice towards them; 28 E; 1. c. 3. Fleta lib. 2. c. 3. Le Case del Marshalsea, 10 Rep. 4 Instit. p. 123. therefore, when as this, which anciently had moderate bounds, exceeded them, the Statute of the 13 R. 2. c. 2, & 3. bounded it not only to limits of place but of Jurisdiction, so says the 1 H. 4. c. 14. All the Appeals to be made of things done within the Realm shall be tried and determined by the good Laws of the Realm, and all the Appeals to be made of things done out of the Realm shall be tried and determined before the Constable and Marshal of England, Cook. 3. Instit. c. 7. p. 48. c. Pramunire p. 120. & seq. they are the words of that Statute; from whence I collect, that the Common Law had always a jealousy of all power that was not conservative of the Subjects safety, but might bring him ad aliud examen than the known usual Common Laws. And therefore our Sir Edward Cook, speaking of the Lord High Steward the Marescallus here, Fleta lib. 2. c. 4. & 5. De Officio Mariscalli Forinseri, de Officio Mariscalli tempore Pacis. 4 Instit. c. 71. for though they are two names, and some will have them two Offices, the Constable in Warr and the Marshal in peace; yet in as much as they are in the Statutes put copulatively, I take them to be (as the L. Keeper's and L. Chancellour's authority are declared to be one in 5 Eliz. c. 18.) but Synonomous. See concerning these things Sir Edward Cook in his Notes on the Court of Chivalry, where much notable learning in this matter is produced. The judgement of Parliament in Good Thomas E. of Lancaster's Case put to death by Martial-Law, 3 Instit. p. 52, 53. Note this judgement. 39 E. 3. declared unlawful by the Parliament of 14 E 4 is notable, which Sir Edward Cook recites in the Chapter of Murder, to show what Courts Martial are, when Common Law Courts sit, Honor. Military & Civil, lib 3. c. 17. 4 Instit p. 125. Spelman. Gloss. p. 119. Walsingham in R. 2. p. 245. and Westminster-hall is open: see more of the Marshal and Constable in Sir William Segar, and those other Authorities quoted in the Margin, which, if there were need of it, I could extend to an infinity of similar Quotations. Etiam & in Curiis quarundam libertatum in Anglia, ubi per Legem mercatoriam proceditur, probant per restes contractus inter Mercatores extra Regnum factos. As the former cases do show the Common Law in cases of necessity to admit witnesses according to which they judge, which Mr. Solden has particularised in his notes on the 21. See the Case of Abbot Strata Marcelia, 9 Rep. p. 30, 31. Cook 1 Instit. p. 11. B. Chapter of our Author, and our Author himself has herein by the former instances made good, so is this another case in which the same method to Judgement is allowed; and this is called Lex mereatoria, and comprehended under Lex terre: for this Land being opportune to the Sea, and of no great circuit (though it be one of the noblest and capaciousest of Islands) is concerned to promote Trade as that Bridge which makes a passage to it over the vast Seas to the utmost Nations inhabiting their Coasts, and not only vents to them native Commodities, but takes from them in exchange their growths, and by the proceed of them not only acquires wealth, and increaseth the Navy, but accommodates the Nation with all things necessary for the universal compleatness of natural and politic life; which zeal of the Nation to Trade has notably appeared from the Reigns of H. 3. to this day, in which descent there have been above 120 Acts of Parliament relating to Trade; Yea, all Acts, Note this. that have been derogatory thereto, have been ever noted in this Nation to be short lived. These Courts then here in our Text are, as the learned Selden instructs me, Selden on the Text. such as the Law of the Staple, called so, because they were places which held and stayed Trade and Merchants, as a Staple doth a Lock and thereby a door; for though before the Conquest Merchants had liberty of egress and regress for certain time, Mercatorum Navigia vel inimicorum quidem quacunque ex alto nulles jactata tempestatibus in Portum aliquem invehemur, tranquilla pace fruuntor. Inter Leg. Ethelst. so not only the Laws of Ethelstan but Alfred, as the Mirror relates, permitted 40 days and not above, which the 30. Chapter of Magna Charta confirms; yet after Staples of Trade erected, limiting Trade to certain places and times, Merchants grew discontented and Trade fell, till by the 2 E. 3. c. 9 all Staples were determined according to the great Charter, and Merchants set at liberty to go and come with their Merchandises when they saw fit, until they be forbidden: the Motives to the Constitutions of Staples are set down in the Preamble to the Statute of 27 E. 3. c. 1. To prevent the damage which hath notoriously come as well to us (they are the King's in Statute-words) and to the great men, Stat. 2. Anno 1353. as to our people of our Realm of England, and of our Lands of Wales and Ireland, etc. To the honour of God, and in relief of our Realm and Lands aforesaid, etc. and cap. 2. As encouragement is given to Merchants to bring in Commodities, so assurance of safety to them and theirs, with such festine remedy, as the nature of their being strangers, and from home, requires; according to the Law of the Staple and not the Common Law, which celerity of Justice contributed much to Trade, so d●d also the laying open of all Ports to land Merchandise at; for though native commodities are to be brought to certain places and to none other, as all Tynn was to be shipped forth at the Port of Dartmouth, till 15 R. 2. c. 8. which repealed that 14 of the same Reign c. 7. so also that till the 21 jacob, 28. which repealed the 15 R. 2. c. 8. that limitation stood good; so all goods brought into the River of Tyne is to be unladen at Newcastle, the 21 H. 8. c. 18. all Wools, etc. to be brought to the Staple, 27 E 3. c. 2.2 H. 5. c. 6.2 R. 2. c. 3.2 H. 6. c. 4. which though they are row determined, yet were long in force, but yet the Staple-Law stands good; and as the Statute of 3 H. 7. c. 7. gives liberty to land Merchandise at any Port, entering them in the King's Books, paying his Customs, and such Merchandises not being prohibited; so does it allow safety and speedy Justice to all Traders concerned in them, Item propter personas qui celerem habere debent justitiam; sicut sint Mercatores quibus exhile●ur iustitia Pepoudrons, lib. 5. de Brevi de recto, p. 334. & lib. 1. de exceptionibus, p. 444. and that by the Law Merchant, which Bracton terms Celeris justitia, and which is indulged them as they are common instruments of advantage, and in lieu of the same kindness Natives have in their Countries; as also for the reason of Religion, which Bracton mentions, Propter privilegium & favorem Cruce signatorum, quorum negotia maturitatem desiderant & instantiam: and as the Law is in the Staple for Merchants Aliens, and is in all Nations of the World, Cum commercia hominum maxima utilitatis sint & facilis esse expeditio deboat, placuit negotiatoribus praeponi proprios judices, & fere apud omnes gentes, cum & juris gentium commercia sunt. Tholossan. Syntagm. juris lib. 47. c. 37. Sect. 1. wherein in causes of Trade there are proper Judges; so is it on the Land for Natives in Fairs, wherein Courts of Pipouders are, which are established in Fairs and Markets by Common Law and ancient Charters, confirmed by the 2 E. 3. c. 15. & 5 E. 3. c. 5. which under Fairs couches this as the Justice in them; but the 17 E. 4. c. 2. is punctual in the Court of Pipouders, the Plaintiff must swear that the contract was made in the time and jurisdiction of the same Fair, 4 Instit. c. 60. which done, there is justice to be had de hora in horam, as fast as the dust can fall from the foot it adheres to, that is, smartly and speedily: From hence the words he came with a powder, and i'll pay you with a powder, Pipoudens, this Court is a Court of Record confirmed by sundry Statutes, as in (a) Cook's sixth Report. Gentlemen and Gregory's Cases is set forth, and the rules of it are such as Bartholus mentions, Nota quod in curia mercatorum debet judicari de aquo & bono omissis juris solennitatibus, hoc est, non inspectis apicabus. qui veritatem negotii non tangunt. lib. 29. Sect. Tit. mandati vel contra. to be equity and right, omitting the niceties and traverses of craft, which do not concern the truth of the matter in question, but give relief to fraud, according to which the Statute of 43 Eliz. c. 12. proceeds in the Trials of assurance by policy, which Law is thought very beneficial to avoid differences and suits, which without it would be tedious, chargeable, and detrimental to Trade; For, surely the greatest controversies that arise, is by ignorance of right reason, and resolution to oppose it, in favour to ourselves, or displeasure to others, the contrary to which Tully commends, as the glory of Servius Sulpitius, above all the men he knew or ever read of; Neque enim ille magis jurisconsultus quam justitta fuit; it aque quae proficiscebantur a legibus & a jure cevils semper ad facilitatem aquitatemque referebat; neque constituere litium actiones malebat quam controversias tollere. 9 Philip. for he was not so much a critical lawyer, who applied himself to tie knots and raise scruples, to intricate and clog causes with dark and abstruse disputes; but, as a man of conscience be accommodated all causes and cases to equity and conscience, being willing to end more causes than continue them in debate. This regard to equity and speed of Justice, is the cause why our Text says, the Law Merchant for contracts beyond the Seas is allowed; For the rule being ordinarily that actions must be tried in the County where the cause of them lay, and by freemen of that County, who are in Law accounted the vicineto, and this not being possible in cases commencing extra regnum where no County or Visne of English men is, yet necessary that some trial should be, the Law admits what proof can be, and therefore witnesses, Probant per testes contractus, etc. saith our Text; and therefore as the Lex Rhodia which Vivian comments upon, was most reasonable, To wit, that if a ship in a storm did exonerate itself of some goods to save the rest and the lives of the men, Si levanda navis gratia jactus mercium factus sit, omnium contributione sarciatur, Quod pro omnibus datum est. Digest lib. 14. Tit. 2. de lege Rhodia. that there should be an average, and all the goods should be contributive to the loss of those goods cast overboard, because they were an expiation as it were for the whole secured. So say I of this proceeding of the Common-Law, 'tis most just; for that it takes the best course that can be to decide differences, and when it cannot do what it would, In necessitatibus nemo liberalis existit. Reg. Jur. Bartolus apud digest. lib. 23. tit. 2. p. 2118. yet is excused for just in doing the utmost it can to express Justice, for that rule of Bartolus is most true, Necessity takes away freedom. Similiter si charta in qua testes nominantur deducatur in curia regis, processus tunc fiet erga testes illos, etc. This is another case, in which evidence by witness sans Juries is allowed; for, since the Norman Conquest, that scriptum obsignatum, which the Romans called Symbolum, Tabula (whence Tablina in Pliny, Plin. lib. 35. Budaeus in Pandect. Reliq. p. 243. Edit. Vascos. for the place where Deeds and Records were kept, which we call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, or Archivum,) Epistola, Testamentum, Chirographum they forsooth must let in Charta, in our English a Deed. This was ever subscribed with witnesses, not such as we now use, any that first comes, but the best men of the County, Chirographorum confectionem Anglicanam, qua antea usque ad Edwardi Regis tempora fidelium praesentium subscriptionibus cum crucibus aureis absque sacris signaculis firma fuerunt, Normanni condemnantes, Chirographas Chartas vocabant. & chartarum firmitarem cum cerae impressione per uniassuinsque speciale sigillum sub insullatione trium vel quatuor testium astantium conficere constitnebant Ingulphus Abb. Crowl. in Histor. Edit. Savell. and neighbourhood; and that in perpetuam rei memoriam, to preserve the credit of it alive, even when the witnesses are dead; men of quality being probably known either by their hands or signets, which they affixed to their testimony. Now these, if they came in question, if the parties were alive to prove them, were by them proved; but, if they were of old date, and free from suspicion, upon production of them they were allowed (every man being as it were a witness for reverend and unspotted antiquity:) In these and such like cases the Law allows, and accepts of proof by witnesses; but where the causes are referrable to a proper County, and a Jury of the neighbour can be had, Per testes solum lex ipsa nunquam litem dirimit, saith the Chancellor, adding the reason, because it is the most excellent form; Et remotior à corruptionis periculo, as our Text is, concerning the excellency of the trial by Juries, which this Chapter proceeds to treat of, see the Notes on the 25th and 26th Chapters, wherein truly I have written my thoughts of Juries, not, I hope, passionately, but with that gravity which becomes a sober Author, considering that legal Juries are not made up of simple men, of which scarce four of the twelve understand the Evidence; so that it may seem rather to be a matter of superfluity then of good policy, to refer a matter to their verdict, when, as they say, no other thing then as the judge taught them before; Stultum enim est id facere per plura quod fieri potest per pauciora, Doctor Ridley in his View of the Civil and Ecclesiastical Law. p. 184. (as the words of a more learned than (in that) wise man's were) but Juries are, and aught to be made of men of worth and prudence, and when such, they are the readiest way to right judgement of fact of any in the world; and the mos patriae and ancient trial of England being established by these, no wise and worthy man's mouth is to be opened against them: the Rule of Law being, Reg. jur. as heretofore quoted, Neminem oportet esse legibus sapientiorem. O quam horrendum & detestabile discrimen saepe accidit ex forma per depositionem testium procedendi. Concerning this see the Notes on the one and twentieth Chapter, whereby appeareth what dangers may come, and yet justifies in those Lands, where this is the way of trial, that to be not only tolerable but necessary; For God having in all Nations stirred up brave spirits to affect Rule, and subjecting to them the less generous ones, gives them so excited, prudence to compile Laws suitable to reason and civil convenience, and to perfect such endeavours as they discover in the use, the fitness or unfitness of them, It must be thought and concluded that Laws being suited to People, and People to Laws, the change of them with introduction of others, would be altogether as inconvenient for, and nauseous to them, as high food is to a swain, or course diet to a Courtier; the consideration whereof prompts wise men to applaud the carrying on of Government in all places by the Topique Laws, which ever are the best for those places and persons they were fitted for, and have been prosperously governed by. Nun si quis clandestinum contrahat Matrimonium, & postea coram testibus mulierem aliam ipse affidaverit, cum tadem consummare Matrimonium arctabitur in foro contentioso, & postea in poenitentiali foro judicabitur ipse concumbere cum prima si debite requiratur, & poenitere debet qu●ties exactione proprìa concubuerit cum secunda, licet in utroque foro judex fuerit homo unus & idem. This the Chancellor brings afresh, as a Cannon, that by its shot of reason, will (as he thinks) through and through the credit of deposition by witnesses, and lay it low in the opinion of wise men; to wit, that Witnesses may make that good in the Law which is not such in conscience; and want of Witnesses, that void in Law which in conscience stands good before God, who judges righteous judgement, and who considers things as they are, and not as they appear. And this our Text refers to the case of Marriage, the most excellent, Note this. social, and free life imaginable (perfect Virginity and calm Chastity, much professed but rarely attained, only excepted.) This Marriage is called Matrimonium, because it of old was the Act of the will and affections, fixing parties upon each other in a constant and faithful bond of love, cohabitation, and communication of all things each to other. Ne quis in Matrimonis vinculo indissolubili. fraud deciperetur, Alex. ab Alex. lib. 1. c. 19 Alexander ab Alex. tell us that the Temple Virilis Fortunae was the place whether all women repaired that would stand to be chosen, and there they stood naked, that every one might see they had no imperfection, but were such indeed as their choosers took them to be: but from the beginning it was not so; for the purer ages, though they allowed candidation, yea, and as it were candida veste, the fairest carrying usually the Market away: yet there was much sobriety and modest kindness expressed each to other, and these parties were called Pater and Materfamilias', as much as those that though they had not yet coupled, yet did intend a Race of Nature's improvement from them. For though there have been some who debase Materfamilias' to justa Pellex, yet Antiquity in the stream of it did not; for Sulpitius, the Oracle of Lawyers, Sulpitius, Eam qua in manum convenerat, in manu mancipeoque mariti esse dixit, idj est, justam esse Matremfamilias; camque Concubinam, qua cum viro hujusmodi uxoris consuevisses, justam pellicem esse. Budaeus in Pandect. prior. p. 27. B. Edit. Vascos. Idonei vacum antiquarum enarratores tradiderunt Matronam dictam esse proprie, qua in Matrimonium cum viro convenisset, quod in Matrimonio maneret, etiamse sibi liberi nondum nati forent, dictumque esse ita à matris nomine non adepto jam, sed cum spe & omine mox adipiscendo. A. Gellius lib. 12. c. 6. makes a vast difference, as much as between a lawful Wife and a Mistress of pleasure: and therefore the more reserved Authors called these by the grave and venerated name of Matrons; and thus Agellius affirms her to be accounted a Matron, who was solemnly joined in Marriage with a man, in his hand as publicly owning her, and one that with him continued, although yet there were no issue between them, but they in hope and in persuance of it cohabited and communicated each with other: and Budaus confirms it, as all I think must do, that write truth. Hence is it that not only the Church has this definition of Marriage in her forms of solemnisation, and in her Canons concerning it: but the Laws of Nations do affirm the nature of it to a Vnisoniety, as appears in the (a) Lib. 1. Regul. Digest. lib. 2. Tit. De ritu Nuptiar., p. 2106. Digest; and as they had their (b) Digest. lib. 23. Tit. 1. De Sponsalibus. Sponsiones, (it being a custom of old to promise before Marriage, and to have some interstitiary time from their consent to their Marriage, which we at this day call, fairly promised or contracted:) so did they express every thing of more than ordinary solemnity by something nuptial; the Heathens had their rit●s Matrimoniales, which their Priests performed; Lege Zuingerum in Theatro. à p. 3317. ad p. ●3338. they had their dies Nuptiales, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Eve to, the day of, and the day after the Marriage, and these they called Dies Nuptiarum legitimi; they had their Locus sacer, and their Astantes Testes, their Ornatus Nuptialis, their Invocationes & Hymnos Nuptiales, their Munera & Canae Nuptiales, all things in the Paradoe of our times, only Christianity has sanctified them by this transplantation of them into a more sacred Soil. This is the nature of the thing spoken of in the Text, Marriage, of which enough; because I have written of it in the Notes on the 21 Chapter: But the adjunct to it is that which makes the stir here, Clandestinum Matrimonium,] such as we call, Stolen Marriages, De die & in fancy Ecclesiae celebrentur. Lindwood. lib. 4, De Sponsalibus p. 147. & p. 149. Gratian. Decret. part. 2, caus. 30, qu. 5. per totum fol. 1573. Tholoss. Syntag. Juris, lib. 9 c. 5. ss. 9 when persons either non sui juris do marry, or when they that are sui juris do not canonicè nubere; this the Canonists say is sundry ways so made, 1. When it is done without Witnesses. 2. When without all solemnity, hand over head, as we say. 3. When no publication of the Banes has been, and when parents' consents has not been had. These, the practices of lucifugous persons, the Laws of all Religion and Society decla●● against, not as it is an Act of the will and affection for ferruminating two hearts into one, and making up such a comfort as has all the Notes of delight and consent in it; for so no doubt 'tis consentaneous to nature, and approved by the God of nature, by whose donation, the powers of their compact express themselves: but as the Act has an appearance of evil in it, and is abused by evil persons, who by it live in scandal and are causal of breach of charity in them that censure them as sinners in their association, Tholoss. Syntag. Juris universi. lib. 9 c. 5. ss. 12. which in itself may be, nay is, before God, lawful, consent only being in soro Dei of the form of Marriage; these, together with the Marriages of Priests, who mostly were guilty of this keeping their Marriages close to avoid loss of preferment, knowing that, if their Marriages could be proved by witnesses or instruments, their children would be legitimate, Ridley, View of the Canon and Civil Law, p. 208. Lib. 7. Come. Lib. De Senect. caused the Canons of the Church to be most planted to the battery of this. And in the time of Gregory the Ninth, Canons were made damnative of it; for so far as any thing is clandestine, so far has it been thought suspicious and uningenuous: so Caesar accounts Clandestina Concilia, and Tully, Clandestinum Colloquium cum host, so Clandestinum foedus in * Lib. 4. Livy, and Motus clandestini in Lucretius. Yea our Law does not allow clandestine Marriage, but disavows the posterity of it; for that Marriage that the Law of England allows, 32 H. 8. c. 38. is open and authoritative Marriage, In the face of the Church, Abbott Strat. Marcell. Case 10. Rep. Ridley, View of the Laws p. 200. 201. Glanvil. lib. 7 c. 1. Reg. Juris. by a lawful Minister, and according to the office and form for it appointed, of which the Bishop can take notice, and certify whether loyal accouple or not, and in which case only the issue, quoad Legem Terrae, will be lawful. To this Marriage then, as Inheritance to the issue, so dower to the Wife is allowed, and all other Matrimonial Privileges, which are denied in clandestine Marriages, because the Church and Magistrate judges not the accultis sed apertis; Glanvil. lib, 7 c. 1. Reg. Juris. for non observata forma infertur adnullatio actus, as the rule (I have heretofore quoted) is, which I the rather note, because stolen Matches and libidinous Actings under the Palliadoe and Umbrage of clandestine Marriages, has been charged on our * Gentem Anglorum spretis legalibus connubiis adulterando & luxuriando Sodomitici Gentis foedam duxisse vitam, Bonifacius Epise. Mentz in Epist. apud Antoninum, Tit. 14. c. 2. ss. Nation long ago, (but I hope better of us now.) For though it be too true that Marriage was never under so little practical reverence as now it is (the more is the pity and the shame,) it being fashionable to desert the company of their own to attend (as Gallants and Mistresses) on others Husbands and Wives: yet, God be thanked, Marriage that is honourable amongst all men, is the Sanctuary to which all modesty beneath perfect Virginity, betakes itself; and though the sinful liberty of many Gallants may break in upon the severity of his bond, yet on the gravest and greatest part of the Nation, that of St. Jerome, charged on the ¶ Nitio uxores proprias non halet, lib. 1. Adu. Jovinianum. Scots, is not chargeable. Every man may, and many men do drink of the water of their own Spring, Omnium fere qui ad Septentrionem & ortum habitant, soli umca uxore conte ti initio fuere, Sabellicus Ennead. 6. lib. 2. so far is the Saxon humour yet undecocted in us, that we are for Wives, and but for one at a time neither. For though the jews, Chaldees, Greeks, Romans, and other Nations had many, yea, Zuinger's Theatr. vit●. humanae, vol. 20. lib. 2. p. 3317, ad 3326. though wise King Solomon was fascinated by this curiosity, which laid load on his deathbed repentance; yet with us in England the Law has been to have only one wife at one time, though the Statute of 1 jac. c. 11. first made it felony without Clergy. And this respect that the Law has ever had to Marriage, is the reason that clandestine Marriage has been decried, as that which evil persons have pretended to credit lechery; and good persons, though they did it upon weighty reasons as to the world, and warrantable as before God, yet did not avoid that censure, which no humour or prudence, as they account this act of theirs, could countervail. Better a thousand times not marry at all then privately, then to one that dares not, or will not be known of it. 'Tis a slavery which no ingenious mind can content itself to be under, because it is subject to be upbraided, and dares not justify its loyalty. Upon all which considered, the Chancellour's mind is now to be learned, and that is, that where the Law judges only by witnesses, that being proved which is less, as promise of Marriage before witness, shall oblige; when the greater (Marriage) being clandestine and secret, though lawful and firm before God, may be condemned, and one and the same man, by one and the same Judge, compelled to performance with the one, and suffer penance for performance with the other, Eorum appelat Quintilianus in quo judicia publica exercebantur. though that in different Tribunals, called Fora because the Judges sat in the Market places which were the most conspicuous and tenacious places, Budxus in Pandect. in p, 35, 67, 269. and because thither people applied, the seats of Justice are called Fora. For as penance may be enjoined in ¶ Glanvil. lib. 10. c. 12. Quia Ecclesia non po●est judicare de his qua latent, & ideo si de clam contractis nuptiis coram judice Ecclesiastico agatur, cam dubium illi sit non interveniente Ecclesiastica solennitate an fuerat factum Matrimonium, non potest compellere servare illud. Tholoss. Syntag. lib. 9 c. 5. De Personis & ritu Nuptia●um. Curia Charitatis, which is the Forum poenitentiale he●e, for paying the wife her due benevolence, according to the rule of the Apostle in 1 Corinth. seven. 3. (she that is clandestinely married, not being in the eye of the Church and Law the wife but a woman that lives pleasurably, and so sinfully with him, because not solemnly married to him) so may he that has promised be enjoined to make good his promise in foro contentioso, that is, by action of the Case to the person to whom he is affidated, notwithstanding he is married privately to the first, because the second promised has a damage by the bruit of being promised, and looseth her opportunity with another, and the Man that couples with the Woman he is clandestinely married to, shall be enjoined penance for his effeminacy with her (who, though in truth his own wife) yet in repute is but his woman. Which considered, the Chancellor urges this effect of witnesses upon the positivity of their Oaths (which cannot be softened by consideration of circumstances which in case of a Jury would be probably in some sort allowed) to be very hard, O quam horrendum & detestabile diserimen, as his words are, which are an emphatic ejaculation, arguing admiration and vehemence, as if he considered a man thus straightened, as not knowing what to do, which way to take, but to be perplexed, as the Leviathan is described in job, so it follows. Nun in hoc casu ut in Job perplexi sunt testiculi Leviathan; Prob pudor vere perplexi sunt. This passage out of job. is in Chap. 40. v. 17. spoken of the Behemoth of the Land, the Elephant, Behemoth Elephantem intelligunt omnes Hebraei. Grot. in locum. the words are, He moveth his tail like a Cedar, the sin●wes of his stones are wrapped together, which words, though there be some that apply to the Leviathan, or Whale, yet the stream of learned men understand the Elephant, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Creature which cannot be chased without danger and hazard to his hunters. Now this beast, though the largest and most robust of all Creatures, and therefore a Ad invincibile robur prastandum supra omnia animantia reliqua, in Loc. Aldrovandas de Quadrup. à p. 440. ad p. 450. Pelican says, the Ramification of his testicles is purposely expressed to set forth his invincible strength above all creatures'; Since the nerves so plashed and entertwined each in other, do confirm and fix the strength of the part in which they are thus complicated; this beast, Testes habet non foris conspicuos sed intus circa renes conditos, Plinius de Elephanto. I say, is said to be perplexed, the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifying a nerve, by R. David on 48 Esay 4● is rendered by virga ferrea, because the nerves are in Cervice, and makes the body like a pillar of iron or brass, solid and durable, (a) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Verere, formidare. especially when nerves are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nervi testiculorum, the nerves of those parts which are most guarded by us, because most to be feared in their hurt-taking; Nervi intricati sunt, nam nervos intus absconditos habet, Grot in Loc. ex Arist. lib. 12. de Gen. Animal. Aldrov. de Quadruped. p. 430.431. and therefore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ramifioated, thickened and strengthened by their reticulation: This than I conceive to be the sense of the words, though God had made the Elephant of such strength even in his tenderest parts, yet such a strait is he sometimes upon hunting, or other exigent brought to, that his strength fails him, and he grows cold in the nest of his heat, and weak in the element and sphere of his strength; which applied to the instance in the Text, makes good the purpose of our Chancellor, that the various effects of actions, as they are proved by witness or not, may distract men of great wit and courage, so that they may not know which way to turn themselves; but as people in fears and transports, are sorely angariated, Pro pudor vere perplexi,] as the Texts words are: For, as between two stools, we say, a man gets a fall, so between these two rivals, for a man's company, the man looseth himself, in an uncouth despair and dissatisfaction, which of the ways to take, and women to apply to. And this the Chancellor charges on the proceeding by witness, as causal of the confusion and uncertainty, Ligula modus magicus frequens apud Gallos', quo excellentia Matrimonia solvantur, & conjugale vinculum à deo institutum labefactatur; & tamen hoc agere non tantum perditorum hominum est, sed virorum bonorum & honestarum foeminarum, nec putant hoc tam enormi facinore deum offendi, quod id impune patrant omnes & doceant. Boissardus, lib. de divinat. but whether so or not, I determine not, since arguments from accidents to Subjects do not follow always, For though I know there be no such Magic Girdle in our Law, as Boissardus says amongst the French is usual, and approved to dissolve Marriages, by incapacitating the parties to act their kindnesses each to other, which is a perplexity, which every unhappy sufferer cries Prob pudor upon; yet, in as much as possible it is, that witnesses credited overmuch by Juries, may drive a matter to this fatal issue, I will not peremptorily say, that 'tis impossible, though I may safely say, 'tis improbable any such thing should, and, I think, without precedent, that Tale malum aut diserimen in casu aliquo evenire possit, etiamsi Leviathan ipse ca generare nitatur, as the words of the Text are; And so with a recollection of what has passed, and an application of the reason of them to the credit of the Common Law in this method of Juries, he concludes the Chapter, gratulating the Laws as victorious after all the eclipses and scrutinies, prejudice in some, and disaffection in others put upon them, notwithstanding all which they do, Tanto magis clarescere, quanto cisdem tu amplius reluctaris, as his conclusive words are. CHAP. XXXIII. Princeps, Video, inquit, & cas inter totius orbis jura, in casu quo jam sudâsti praefulgere, considero in Legibus suis minimè delectatos, etc. THis Chapter is purely transitional, and framed, by the liberty of Dialogue, to accommodate the continuity of the discourse; and to introduce the Chancellor, not so much imperiously commanding (for that had not well become him though the Nonages of Princes levelly them also to their Tutour's temporary and disciplinary Sovereignty) as sweetly following the Prince with such tuition as might occasion his Questions, and such solidity as by answer might resolve them. Now, as in Comparisons there cannot be a total and complete correspondence, but in some of the four feet they move upon, they are defective and untunable; so in Discourses Dialogique, there is not a direct and strict verity of History and Fact in every part of the questionary and to be resolved part, because that (like Chancery-Bills) being form to discover, is composed of such generals, as in the answer to them, will comprehend the matter aimed at to be resolved. For, as Rivers by circumambiency and circularity of current and channel bring themselves to their Centre, and the Rider on them to his Port; so do Questions vagely, if with strength of art proposed, promise proper resolution to what is most material and of consequence in them. And hereupon, though I am apt to believe the Prince might answer in the love of his heart and satisfaction of his judgement this personation here, in those words; Video, & cas inter totius Orbis jura in casu quo tu sudâsti praefulgere;] yet do I, under favour of our Text-Master, much doubt his privity to the next clause, Considero tamen Progenitorum meorum, etc.] because (as I shall in the next Chapter make appear) I know not whom of the Kings of England he could intend here; for none of them do I ever remember, so little concerned in their own stability as to part with the Municipe Common Law, the firmest Bond of Sovereignty and Subjection next Religion, according to which it is framed, and which, in all the severity of it, it affirms; nor is it (were there any truth in the story of such mistake) usual for, or commendable in Princes, to mention their Predecessors with dishonour, as truly this is, not to be delighted in their own, but enamoured with foreign Laws. This, I say, being the Subject of this Chapter, and so only the Prince's, as by it he is personated in the order of the Dialogue, courts me to no long stay on the consideration of it, but serves me for a Pass to the following Chapter, in the Notes on which the fuller display of these matters will appear. Satagentes proiude Leges Civiles ad Angliae Regimen inducere, & Patrias Leges repudiare fuisse conatos. Master Selden on these words confesses, He understands not the Prince, and his reason is, because the Chancellor here, speaking in the person of the Prince, tells of some of his Progenitors, who, admiring the Civil Laws, endeavoured extrusion of the Laws of the Land, commonly used, and always approved best for this Nation: and what Kings (saith he) of England ever desired the Laws of Rome? As intimating, that no precedent can be brought for this averment. But, with leave of that learned Gentleman, I think, if due consideration be had to the form of speech, 'twill not be strange, that he should put a question at large to receive an answer in point: For the Chancellor, being desirous to take occasion to speak of both Laws, and of the conveniencies and inconveniencies of those to good Government and Order, and coveting a just provocation to bring them in view with reproach, who endeavoured to remove the ancient bounds, and to take off the dishonour from Kings, the faults of whose Ministers are accounted to them, most an end to their disadvantage, and sometimes to the endangering of their Governments, brings the Prince in, laying a heavy charge against those he complains of, that so, in the answer the truth may be the more transparent. And therefore the words are not to be taken de facto, as if any Kings had so done; but de more Prudentis, who, desiring to make way for this design, does it by assertions, which are not only postulative of, but important to be answered. For suggestions, that seem in their first appearance wild and eccentrique, in their just examen cause notable defences and discoveries of matchless advantage, it being in resolutions depending upon Question, as in things that men seek for and would find, they must seek as well where they are not as where they are; so the depth of wisdom is often arrived to, when questions are made not seemingly conducing to it: and we often find what we most expect, from that design or essay that we least confide in. As for any that endeavoured to undermine the good Laws of England by Foreign and Imperial Laws, they were not of the Race of Kings; (for they are as much honoured, secured, and dignified by the Laws of England, as by any other Law: and Government is as much carried on, in the point of Justice, under the English Laws as any, insomuch that King james, who was born and bred under the distribution of the Civil Law, and was of great years, experience, and learning in the Laws of Nations, says, as heretofore I have quoted him, Speech at Whitehall, Anno 1607. p. 512. Of his Works. Notwithstanding that he thinks he is able to prove it, that the grounds of the Common Law of England are the best of any Law in the World either Civil or Municipal, and the fittest for this people, thus He; Kings and Princes of wisdom and moderation, preferring old and approved Laws and Customs beyond new conclusions and models.) But those that were for novity, and either appeared vain or vile persons, such as had new projects to rule towards, or thought Laws but like Rattles, of no solid import to the honour of a Nation, Non tam comites Regni, quam hostes Publici, De Nugis Cur. l. 8. c. 21. as Sarisburiensis terms some evil Counselors in his time; such were Alexander Archbishop of York, Robert de Vere Deputy of Ireland, Michael de la Pool Earl of Suffolk, Robert Tresilian Chief Justice, who, in the Parliament 11 R. 2. were by the King and Lords in Parliament protested against, for endeavouring such a subversion of the Laws as this the Chancellor treats of; see the judgement thereon in Mr. Selden on Fortescue, See Sir Ed. Cooks Preface to the 8. Report. Lib. 8. c. 22. usque ad finem. Edi●. 1595. Lugdun. Batavorum. c. 32. p. 41. There is an Account in Roger Bacon, that King Stephen made an Edict against the Laws of Italy, which Sarisburiensis, a man of great place and authority both with the King and the Pope, says, Was only to indict the Canon Law; for he mentions it as an offence to the Church, his words are these, Alios vidi qui libros Legis deputant igni, nec scindere verentur, si in manus eorum Iura pervenirent aut Canon's; and he goes on, Tempore Regis Stephani à Regno jussae sunt Leges Romanae, quas in Britanniam domus venerabilis Patris Theobaldi Britanniarum Primatis asciverat; ne quis etiam libros retineret edicto Regio prohibitum est, & Vicario nostro indictum silentium, sed Deo faciente eo magis virtus Legis invaluit, quo eam amplius nitebatur impietas infirmare, so Herald In Cap. 33. p. 45. Indeed, saith the learned Selden, in Archbishop Theobald's time both the Canons and Civil Law began to be published; and its like enough, that going from Bec in Normandy (where he was Abbot) to Rome for his Pall, he might bring those Law's home with him; and it should seem the then Pope took this so heavily, that he by a Legate severely increpated him, and told him, as I have it from William Malmsbury, Non debere illum, qui se Christi fidei subjectum meminisset, indignari, si a ministris Christi ad satisfactionem vocatus esset, tanti reatus conscius, quantum nostra Saecula nunquam vidissent, In Novella lib. 2. p. 104. Edit, London. and he adds, that he seems in a kind ungrateful in thus doing, Ex debito etiam oportere ut Ecclesiae faveret, cujus sinu exceptus non manu militum in Regnum promotus fuisset. But Stephen, for all their big words, despised the Canons, and commanded none of the Clergy to use them, or go to Rome to appeal, Quia si quis contra voluntatem suam & Regni dignitatem ab Anglia quoquam iret, difficilis ei fortasse reditus esset, they were the words of Alberic de Ver. the King's Lawyer or Justice, Pag. 104. as I find them before quoted. Horum revera consilium vehementer admiror.] And well he may, for the Laws of England make England not a popular State, but an August Monarchy; not dependant on Pope, or People, but on God: not elective, but successive, and by constant recognition settled and declared it so; not subject to absorptions, as the salique Law of France, which cuts off daughters and their issue, but as rightfully successive in the line of descent, whether Male or Female, married or single, of an other Nation or our own; right to the Crown takes away all imperfections: no King is an alien, a minor, an idiot; he that is such is every way accomplished, worthy our duty and prayers. That adage had significancy, Quicquid coronatum videris, etiamsi bos sit, adorato; so that all things considered, and the Common and Statute Law being so subsidiary to the Crown, and subsisting it upon such a basis, as nothing but Treason, Treachery, Perjury, and national defection can endanger or subvert, I clearly am of the mind, that the Counsel, that shall disparage the Laws that yield such aid to the being, subsistence and glory of Regality, should be attained; For 'tis against reason that such a Zimri should have peace who thus endeavours to abuse his Master, by dishonouring his Master's Mistress, the Law. But in all times some sycophants have bepestered the ears of greatness, and susurrated pernicious Principles into it, which has, by God's just vengeance, been the ruin of the givers of such ill advice; of this number were Empson and Dudley, who, contrary to the ancient way of trying men per legem terrae, upon a bare information, without Trial by twelve men, obtained an Act of Parliament of 11 H. 7. c. 3. to be impowered to determine all offences, against the Statutes made, and not repealed: This unjust and injurious act (they are Sir Edward Cooks words, not mine) by the forged, 2 Instit. p. 51. feigned, and crafty informations of them, brought great damage and wrongful vexation; and the ill success hereof, and the fearful ends of those two oppressors should deter others from committing the like, and should admonish Parliaments, that in stead of this ordinary and precious trial Per legem terrae, they bring not in absolute and partial trials by discretion, so says verbatim Sir Edward Cook. For 'tis fit that those that attempt to subvert and enervate the King's Laws, Cooks 2 Instit. p. 51. Regist. p. 64. should, according to the old writ, Ad capiendum impugnatores juris Regis, be carried ad Goalam de Newgate, which is lex terrae, by process of Law, in this case, to take a man without answer or summons, and the reason is, Merito beneficium legis amittit qui legem ipsam subvertere int●ndit; and I wish all that will not take warning by their miscarriage may far as they did: For, as the Laws have hitherto seen their desire upon their enemies, and by their judgement sent them to their Execution, Sir Ed. Cook 2 Instit. p. 53. so, I hope, for hereafter they shall: and so the Prince ends this three and thirtieth Chapter. CHAP. XXXIV. Cancellarius. Non admiraris Princeps si causam hujus conaminis ment solicita pertractares, etc. Audisti namque superius, quomodo inter leges civiles praecipuae sententia est maxima illa quae sic canit, quod principi placuit legis habe● vigorem, etc. THis Chapter openeth the cause why the Prince expected to be answered by him, according to his scruple pre-recited; And for what concerns the rule of the Civil Law, Quod Principi placuit, etc. I shall refer the Reader to the Notes on the ninth Chapter, The Author's desire in this Book. where, as in every other part of this Book I have endeavoured (by God's grace conducting me) to demean myself as a sober Author, a sincere Subject, an humble Christian, and an honest English Man ought to do, of that then I have nothing to add, but to pray in David's words, Give thy judgements, O Lord, unto the King, and thy righteousness unto the King's son: And then, when the King by this Royal Donation is redeemed from error in judgement, there will be no terror in the rule, Quod principi placivit legis habet vigorem; For, than he will not judge upon his own advice, but with advice of Counselors, and in the capacity of a Regal Encathedration, attended with sage and prudent men of all ranks and ages, which makes it Placitum non merae voluntatis & arbitrii, sed rationis, consilii, justitiae, as all the Doctors agree this clause of their Law to import; and thus sensing it, as it on the one hand waves the confusion of popular suffrages, the candidates to which do cringe and crouch to their voters; In usu fuit reipublicae officia consensu & suffragio populi dispensare, & hoc elevatione manuum; unde à Graecis 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vocantur qui in rescriptis imperatoris Theodosii & Valentini Creatores appellantur cum vulgo creditores, Cujacius apud Petreium in notis ad Philonis librum de officio judicis. and being their creatures are apt to tempt them to partiality, to gratify their importunate cravings, which was the inconvenience in the popular Government of Rome,) so does it also relate to the absolute and unlimited wills of Princes, over whom, though Authoritatively and with Magistery none have power within their Dominions, but only God, whose their Life, Breath, Thrones, Power, and Souls are, and who with them can do what he please; yet in these the voice of wisdom advocating, the love of benevolence conjuring, and the reason of policy advising, all transactions by advice and serious consideration (separate and abstract from passion, and the bewitching transports of it) do but declare them great to good purposes, and not advantage Princes beyond what's virtuous and safe for them to assume, and for their Subjects to submit to. For so (a) Leges namque Anglorum licet non scriptas leges appellari non videtur absurdum, cum hoc ipsum lex sit quod principi placet & le gis habet vigorem, eas scilicet quas super dubiis in consilio definiendis Procerum quidem consilio, & principis accedente authoritate constat esse promulgatas. Glanvil. in Prologue. of't. Tractat. de leg. & Consuetud. Angl. Glanvill, who wrote in Henry the second's time, (a happy Reign under a most pious Prince, under whom Justice so flourished, that no man durst be unjust, or contumacious against the Laws;) I say, this King, who ruled so potently, because he seconded his power with virtue, did so demean himself under the liberty of this Maxim of grandeur, that (a) Glanvill, one of his Judges, allows this, Quod principi placuit, etc. not to be contrary to the Common Law of England, when associated with the Council of his wise men, His Peers and Commons in Parliament. For, as in the sense of the Kings giving life to the preparations and advices of both the Houses, it is said, a Parliament can do everything, it being the ultimum sapientiae, 4 Instit. c. 1. p. 3. of which no dishonourable or defectuous thing ought to be imagined; so in the sense of the two Houses counselling the King to pass a Law, and he accordingly assenting, Quod Principi placuit may become an English Law, without any entrenchment on lenity, or the Subject's liberty, both which are then only endangered, when they are beleaguered with Power and Passion, in the High-noon of which, reason is as at Midnight dark and inorient. So long then as God persuades the Prince to moderation, Qua quidem de causa Moses Rogues istos ac principes quasi corporales quosdam Deos su● nomine constituit qui in Rep. regenda & moderanda vicariam ei operam praestant. Hopperus, lib. de Instit. Principum. Verum ac proprium boni principis munus est dei imaginem & similitudinem ut geren●, suorum commoderum oblitus, in unius Reipublicae verum ac solidum bonum cedat. Hopper. loco eodem. and keeps his eyes intent on his dependence on him, whose vicarage his mortal divinity is, the greatness of his power will not provoke him to extend it beyond the line of prudence and piety; but so to use the prerogative and participation with supernity that he hath, that it may appear he only resolves it into the glory of his institutor, and end of his institution; which is not only the voice of Scripture in the assertion of wisdom. By me Kings Reign, and Princes decree judgement: but also of those Heathen Oracles, Rex] Deorum omnium commune elogium, sic Apollo à Theocrito. Noptunus ab Homero, Priapus ab Orpheo, demum dii omnes ab omnibus Poetis. Cerda in lib. 10. Aeneid. p. 493. which by calling Apollo, Neptune, Priapus, jupiter, Kings, taught King to act according to the nature of God, Suaviter & fortiter; Paternly, with bowels of good will to their Weal, and severely to the preservation of Authority in all the just and useful appendencies to it. And since the power of legislation is eminently in the Prince, Lib. 2. de Jur. Belli & pacis, p. ●31. and every humane Law depends so upon the will of Man, that it not only is there in origine, but in duratione, as Grotius his words are, there is good reason to pray for Prince's direction in well doing, that they may both further it by their Laws and in their lives; which if they do desire to do, this Quod Principi placuit legis habet vigorem will not be too great a prerogative for them. For, though they will easily contemn such shadows of God, who reverence not that supreme and adorable Majesty, in comparison of whom all the glory of men and Angels is but obscurity: Yet hath he giwen such characters of divine Authority and sacred power upon Kings, as none may without sin seek to blot them out; nor shall their black veils be able to hide the shining of my face, while God gives me a heart frequently and humbly to converse with him, from whom alone are all the traditions of true Glory and Majesty; Eicon Basilic. c. 15. so saith that glorious Monarch, our Martyred King Charles. Qualiter non sanciunt Leges Angliae, dum nedum regaliter, sed & politicè Rex ejusdem dominatur, & c. Of this see the Comment on the ninth Chapter, where the Text being the same with what it here is, the discourse thereon is proper to be recurred to; only let me hint an instance of the moderation and bounty of one of our Kings, who commanded very sovereignly, yet was himself commanded to part with his own advantage for their good. 'Tis of Edward Grandchild of Edgar, who remitted the Danegeld to the people, which he looked upon as the Devil's heap, being exacted from the poor Subject by violence, Et de tam fera Exactione, nè Iota unum voluit retinere, Ingulphus Edit. Savell. p. 510. Voluminis. and therefore commanded the return of it to the owners, protesting, Not one farthing of it so unjustly obtained should ever bide with him; which I introduce, not as the only instance of such Monarchique bounty and benevolence (for later examples there are as great as it, 12 Car. 2. Note this O England and be thankful. The Act of oblivion or free and general pardon, etc. not being a lesser but a far greater indulgence, thanks be to God for giving his Majesty a heart to do it, and thanks be to his Majesty for being so free too, and so constant in that magnificent Action, which has, to use the Scripture phrase though in another sense, Isa. 16.1. prepared salvation for Walls and Bulwarks of safety in the loyalty of his people) I say, I quote not that now, as the only instance of Regal Heroicism; but to mind men, that are straitlaced, and think Monarchy not so free a Government as the Republican way is, that Greatness of mind directs Princes to bond themselves where no bound is besides that of their own fixation; and that, be the Regal power what in the Ocean and Altitude of it, it can in a mortal man and managery be, yet even this great power, when it is dispensed with an eye to God the Judge, (to whom Princes as well as others are, and shall be accountable, and in conscience to justice which Princes are to propagate and carry on) cannot be but beneficial to pious and peaceable Subjects; and that the freest Regiments men fancy to live under, will without this restraint either find occasions by arrogations of advantage to itself, or take occasion of derogation from others, to exercise its power vexatiously. Enough then of this part of the Chapter, I proceed. Quod Reges quidem Angliae aegre ferentes] Who these were which the Chancellor predicates this of, I do not well know; for though King john, Henry the Third, Edward the Second, Richard the Third, and Henry the Fourth may be as probable to be intended as any, in regard that the Chancellor might think, that the rigour of some of their proceedings, transcending the moderate tenor of the Common Laws, tended unto somewhat incongruous with politic Dominion, and came too near to that which he here calls, Libere dominari in subditos, ut faciunt Reges regaliter tantum principantes.] Yet that any of them did declare and produce so much displeasure against the Native Laws, (because they were such a Sanctuary to liberty and such a Mall to the contrary, as libere dominari in our Text's sense would be, and showed so great desire of other Laws by which they might be the more lawless) as might give rise to this assertion of our Text, is to me a Riddle. ●confesse the confession of my learned Antecessor on this service to Fortescue, Mr. Selden, Notes on Chap. 33. p. 41. who says, here I understand him not, from him I learn that there was a protestation against foreign Laws, and that the King in Parliament declared, and that with a plenary concurrence, 11 R. 2. That the Realm of England, unques ne sirrah rule ne govern par la Ley Civil, which shows, that they ever accounted the patrial Laws most fit for England; and satisfies me, that there was no signal endeavour in our Princes to alter the frame of our Laws, but that this, which the Chancellor here insinuates, has an eye more to some particular actions that signified, in the externity of them, some such tendency, rather than any studied and designed scope to such an impossible Atchieument. And therefore that H. 7. thought libere dominari (in our Text's sense) an unprincely English Principle, Dom. Baconus Cancel. in H, 7. is plain from this, that though he came in by battle, and recovered his Crown by a hot Military dispute: yet, pro animi sui magnitudine aleam tim jecit, he waved all Titles of Arms, and betook himself to his native right, and built up his regality by those durable and firm foundations of Law and inheritance, which he would so use, as a King by just claim and right of descent ought to do. And though he discarded not other pretences as second to this, E. Bacon's Hist. H. 7. but kept them to obviate private enmity and public contradiction; yet his great trust, next to God, was in the Law, which devolving the Crown on him, with it brought all perquisites of it, and laid all the obligations (I write the word with reverence) on him, to rule More Majorum, that is, by the Patriall Laws: and how the issuant successive Monarches from him have strenuously propagated this precedent all men know, that know any thing, and all men must confess, that will own the truth. For though mistakes and prejudices have given being to some seemingly-unpleasing actions, yet in truth there has been as great alienation in the minds of our Monarches, from introducing Persicam servitutem, (as Tully calls that Government which is Non modo Romano homini sed nec Persae cuiquam tolerabile, In notis ad lib. 2. Senec. de Beneficiis. p. 29. as Lipsius quotes him) as the Parliaments and People of it has had opposition and regret in their natures against it; and that not only because the Laws Municipe are the secrecy of their own establishment as well as of their People's freedom, but also because to maintain those Laws they were sworn at their Coronation. Postremo cum juramento addidit, quod noluit sacramentum violare ad quod astrictus fuerat in Coronatione sua, concedendo literas pacis, & indulgentia tam notorie delinquentibus, in sus persona contemptum & totius regni perturbationem & Majestatis Regiae lasi●nem. Walsingham in E. 2. p. 9●. Which truth Edward the second made use of, in Answer to the Lords and others in Arms against him, under pretext of their Liberty, assuring them, that he would never neglect the Majesty and piety of a King, so far as to depart from his Coronation Oath; and that since they had taken Arms in defiance of him and the Laws, they should be tried by God and their Country, whom they had disturbed thereby, and not be acquitted by his favour, to whom their hostility was as much as in them lay a Dethronement, or at least without mercy the prologue to it. And therefore as I in this, stick at the Quidam Regum,] etc. not knowing who the Chancellor intends; so do I at the act here charged on them, Moliti sunt ipsi progenitores tui hoc jugum politicum abjicere, ut consimiliter & ipsi in subjectum populum regaliter tantum dominarint; sed potius debacchari queant, etc.] This certainly is a very great charge, yet 'tis euphemized by the generality of the expression, and the namelessness of the persons it refers to. Yet perhaps our Chancellor to the other before mentioned, whom he conceived to rule besides the Laws, and were thereby censurable, Moliri jugum politicum abjicere] he might mean Edward the third who though (by the Stat. 14 Regni, Poulton, p. 140. it was ordained, That the Realm of England and the People thereof, shall not be subject to the King, or Kingdom of France; the reason of which Act was, because the Kings of England then being Kings of France also, the subjects of England might be subject to the King and Kingdom of France, and so grow into a Government like that of France, which is in the Texts words, In subjectum populum regaliter tantum dominari.] To prevent which, the Peers and Commons in Parliament requested the King to declare, That the Kingdom of England never was, nor aught to be in subjection, nor in the obeisance of the Kings of France which for the time have been, nor of the Realm of France: and a little after, Our said Realm of England, nor the people of the same, of what estate or condition they be, shall not in any time to come be put in subjection nor obeisance of us, nor of our Heirs nor Successors, as Kings of France, as afore is said; nor be subject nor obedient, but shall be free of all manner of subjection and obeisance aforesaid, as they were wont to be in the time of our Progenitors, Kings of England; so declares that Statute: notwithstanding which Statute his fingers (are thought by some) to 〈◊〉 after something in the French Government here. ● E. 3. c. 15. For though in the six and thirtieth of his Reign he passed an Act at the instance of his Parliament, that Pleas and Records of Law, which till that time were in French, should henceforward be pleaded in the English tongue, Vt singuli artes suas exercerent, & ut nulli pannis praetiosis aut pellura uterentur, nisi qui possint expendere per annum centum libras; & ut plebei operarii & agricultores non vescerentur cibis delicatis aut potibus sed haec omnia nullum effectum capiebant. Walsingham in E. 3. p. 173. Edit. Lond. and enroled in Latin; yet he did at that time, as Walsingham writes (though I confess no such printed Act is in Anno 36.) endeavour reducement of the Commons A la mode de France; No man was to wear rich clothing but he that could spend 100 l. a year; and the husbandmen and day labourers should not eat nor drink daintily: which though it was a fruitless constitution, it being free in England for men to wear, eat, drink, and live in any reasonable proportion, to God's mercy, in the blessing of their industry, and the discretion men show in the managing of it) yet it was suspected to be some little experiment towards a more plain change: but whether this were any inducement to the Chancellor thus to write or not, I cannot say, only somewhat historically true there was, which occasioned this averment of the Chancellors, who by this Moliti sunt Pr●genitores tui hoc jugum politicum abjicere, & ipsi in subjectum populum regaliter tantum dominari, sed potius debacchari queant] did not intend to blemish the Predecessors of his Prince, for that ought not to be suffered, as King james of happy Memory, the once Learned deceased King of this Land, counsels not to permit, Suffer not both your Princes (saith he) and your Parents to be dishonoured by any, Basill con Doron lib. 2. p. 158, & 168, Works in fol. especially sith the example also toucheth yourself, in leaving thereby to your Successors the measure of that which they shall meet out again to you in your like behalf, thus that King. No such intent, I say, had our Text-Master, but his aim being to press on the Prince the love of the Laws, he produces all those instances of discouragement to the contrary, from consideration of the naufrage Princes have been incommodated by, who have least adhered to the National Laws, Nullius consilium, nullius consortium, nulliusve solatium curare videbatur nisi Petri solius, qui pecuniam potius quam aequitatem plus respexit, munera quam causarum qualitates, Walsingham p. 70. in Anno 1310. and lain in their affections losest from them, as did Edward the Second, whom Peirs Gaveston so misled, that, though he loved gain better than justice, and his own profit beyond the common profit of the Realm; yet was so favoured by the King beyond measure, that he led him into very praeterlegal courses; so did Edington, Treasurer to E. 3. who to advantage himself did not care to embase the Coin, Hypodeigm. Neustriae, p. 122. whereby every thing growing dear caused much murmur in the Nation; for that it not only burdened the Subject, but dishonoured the Crown, in that which is one of the Glories of it, the Coyn. And therefore our Chancellor, Cent. 2. Chil. 2. Adag. 47. writing thus to the Prince, does not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, write beside his Text, as those Musicians do err in their art that do rave extra Cantionem, but he keeps in these notes of good counsel close to the duty of a grave Counsellor and a good subject, who, intent on his duty, proposes to his Prince such studies and ways of politic Government, as may make his Government paternal in his lenity, and loyal in his Subject's obedience; for well he knew, besides the provocation of God and the hazard of the Prince's peace, the contrary thereto does but betray seduction and transport, which is the greatest abatement to the glory of a Monarch of any thing possible to diminish him: and when he has done all he can to make good his first departure and eccentricity, his conclusion towards serenity will be retractation, which had Edward the First foreseen, he would not have broken the Act of 25 of his Reign, by laying unusual Taxes without consent of Parliament on his Subjects, Confirmationes Chartarum. 8 Instit. p. 532. which occasioned their murmur and disquiet, produced his passing the Act De Tallagio non concedendo, Anno 34 Reg. which, though it were acceptable to the Subject, yet did not advance him so high in their opinion, as forbearance to burden them, of which they could be easied no other way then by such an Act, would have procured him: 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Ad. 7. Chil. 2. Cen. 2. which the Chancellor, (no Aristodemus who had been seven years at Athens and yet was altogether an infant in strength) no such fruitless Student or Traveller but a man of great sageness and conscience, makes forth to the Prince by the just measure of Government, according to the Law of nature and the Comments of national practice and just constitution upon it, in a discourse which he purposely penned and termed, which though I have never seen, nor could I hear of any that ever saw it, yet was in being long after his time: and for which, as this, and other his Works, The praise of Fortescue. Townlaei Orat in memoriam Cambden. 1624. Imp. Oxoniae. Cui laus hac tribuenda est quod primum in ista materia glaciem fregerit, primusque docuerit multas esse exiguas vias in arteriarum extremitatibus, per quas sanguis quem à corde accipiunt, in ramulos venarum ingreditur, Deschartes in Method. Dissert. p. 43. D● D. Harvaeo. men do honour Fortescue in the words almost that the Oxford Orator did learned Cambden, Velata lugent jurium capita, ille velum detrahit, occulta stupent naturae mysteria, ille aperit, dignus unice qui coelo à consiliis adoptetur, & sacer fiet jurisprudentia arbiter; yea, as the most ingenuous Deschartes does our matchless Dr. Harvey, As (the first He that gave rise to the circulation of politic blood in the body of the English Government; none (I think without partiality) ever before him giving us so full and succinct an Historical and rational account of the English Laws and Government, as he did, who, as he was a great Statesman and Lawyer, whose many years, generous education and experience, had instructed him in what was knowable to a matchless accomplishment, so was he a very just and conscientious Christian and English man, Interveniente enim populi voluntate & assensu crescit robur & patentiae regum & major est ipsorum authoritas & faliciores progressus, Cominaeus Com. lib. 55. de Gest. Ludou. 11. p. 179. whose influence on his Prince spent itself in nothing more than in confirming him in the reason and love of the Laws; For, as wisdom and experience enables to give good counsel, which doth not only make Monarches prayed for, and praised while they adhere to them, but conjure Subjects to obey, in and for the Lord, their Governors so set over and so ruling amidst them, This is the effect of that part of the Chapter which treats of those things, Politice regere & Regaliter dominari, as they are portrayed out in the Governments of the Kings of England and France: but because concerning this I have written in the Notes upon the fourteenth Chapter, I conclude here, yet still following the Chancellor, who to make the Government of England, under its gentle and paternal Monarchy, appear glorious, compares it with the Government of France, which he accounts more despotique, and so less indulgent, as in the following Chapter is set forth. CHAP. XXXV. Reminiscere (Princeps divine) qualiter villas & oppida Regni Franciae frugum opulentissima, dum ibidem peregrinaris, conspexisti. THis Chapter treats of the condition of the French Subjects under the high and mighty Government of the French King, who governing his people not according to the ancient constitution of France, by a general Assembly of the three Estates, the Clergy, Nobles, and People, by whose sanction every one was bound, not the King excepted: (I say, after Albergatus no mean Author) this way of Government being after a long continuance changed, Quicquid in eo convent● decernebatur legis habebat vigorem, neque modo populos obligabat sed ipsum regem. Sed postquam regum virtus defecit, & cuique sua libido imporavit, haec consuetudo congregandorum statuum abolitae est, ut paulatim hoc jugum sum●●veretur. Tempore autem Ludovici undecimi perduellionis reus habebatur, quisquis de eo consilio restituendo verbum fecisset; solebatque Rex ille usurpare, se ex Ephebis jam excessisse, negue tutoris e'er, Albergatus discurs. Politic. p. 167. in Lewis the eleventh's time it was made capital (not only to endeavour, but even to word the restitution thereof.) France and the People thereof become ruled by Armies and Counsels of power, in which only Royal will and pleasure did preside; This being the condition of France in the infelicity of her Subjects crushed and crumbled into nothing by the hard hand of power unallayed, and unveluetly lined by the lenity of Politic Government mixed with Regal. The Chancellor (who was ever bred up under our paternal and divine mixture, which he treats of in many Chapters, as the Government which approximates that of God, Cominaeus Com. lib. 10 de gestis Ludou. 11. and of Paradise, if man had continued in innocence) minds the Prince of what fruit he ought to collect from travel, and how great advantages to intellectual accomplishment his pilgrimage in France gave him; since, while he was at leisure to observe (being discharged from the encumbrances of business, and pomp of life) he might, and aught to lay the foundation of after wisdom in the observation of present occurrences, which, because those of the Government and People of France (the place of his unpleasing present abode. (For, who can leave England, the happiest of Islands and Nations if it had one public spirited man in it, as the wise Abbot of Escalia adieving it, said, without grief or regret) were most contiguous to him? he humbly addresses to him the recollection of themselves concerning those discoveries of his Travel, which may facilitate to him the truth and importance of his Chancellors arguments, in behalf of England's constitution and Laws, here in compare with them. Now, though I well know comparisons in Governments as well as in persons, is no further discreetly practicable, then is civil, seasonable, and necessary, which restraints and modifications I am resolved shall bond me; Contzen Politic. lib. 1. c. 21. p. 48. yet must I crave leave to do right to mine own Native Country, and her most admired Government, Laws and Monarches, which according to all Authors and Confessions is the most free and fatherly, and to disclaim all admiration, or (as to my private affection and sphere) admission of any thing which is enervative of it, or in any degree tends to the eclipse of the glorious Monarchy herein by God fixed, which being Throned in righteousness, is, I hope, established in the blessed posture it is in, for this World's Eternity, as I may so say, or in plainer English, ever to last in the line of that Majestic Family, that now (blessed be God) Rightfully and Royally enjoys it, till Shiloh comes the second and last time to judgement. This then premised, as that tender of affection which kindled in me from my Text-Masters spark and flame in this Chapter, was not to be stifled but publicly owned as a signature of my loyalty, I proceed to follow him in his method, taking the augmentation of England's lustre from that comparison of the State of France, which our Chancellor here represents. Regni Franciae frugum opulentissima] This is that part of Gaul which is thought denominated from Francus, Cluverius Antiq. lib. 3. c. 20. Son or Nephew to Hector, who, after the destruction of Troy, about the year 420. is storied to be Chieftain to the Franconians, a German-people, who, being stirred up by the narrowness of their own border and the desire of a more convenient abode, moved armedly into Gaul, and being prosperous, sat down in that part which is between the River Scaeld and Seen, and thence was called France or Gallia Comata, Gallia Comata quae nunc Francia dicitur, Budaeus in Pandect. p. 86. Edit Vascos. from (I suppose) its fertility and abundant succulency of soil. I or though I know Pliny tells us all Gaul was called (a) Comata Gallia, omnis Gallia uno nomine appellata, lib. 4. c. 14. Comata, yet this particular noble Island of it was specially so called, because the Eden and Flower of all the Land: and this the Text complies with, in that it terms it frugum opulentissima] Two words very comprehensive and purposely phrasive of the latitude of abundance. Generale nomen est, non modo ad frumentae, leguminaque; sed etiam ad omnes fructus terra quos in alimoniam vertimus, Varro, lib. De Ling. Lat. For Fruges] is a word that contains every esculent and pabulary thing; Varro derives frumentu● à fruendo, because by food men enjoy themselves in a plenitude of health and strength, (b) Festus, Servius, & Donatus. others determine it, à frumine eminenti sub mento gutturis seu gurgulionis parte, qua cibus in alvum mittitur, à ferendo cibum appellari; whence soever, sure I am 'tis used in Authors to denote plenty and abundance. 2 Epistol. 1. 2 Georg. 2 De Natur. Deorum. Opulentissima here] so Locuples frugibus annus in Horace, Pareus frugum tellus, gravidae, letae, maturae fruges in Virgil, Foeta frugibus terra, Cererem fruges appellamus, unum autem Liberum in Tully; all which applied to the Text's sense, sets forth France as a noble Country: and indeed, such it to be, I myself have as well in a good part seen, as more fully from the best Authors read. Pomponius Mela, though he makes it no India, that it produces Pismires as big as little Dogs, Tam pinguis alicubi & tam ferasis soli, ut in ea, mella frontibus desluant; lanas sylvae ferant, etc. lib. 3. De situ Orbis. c. 7. Honey running down in streams, Woods full of Wool, Reeds laden with Sugar, and Vines with clusters of Grapes incredible; yet he terms it, (c) Lib. 3. c. 2. Terra frumenti praecipui & pabuli ferax: which is the reason that though France be but a part of Gaul, Tota illa pars Europae praelustris ac omnium pene nobilissima Gallia, in idem Franciae nomen transivit. Antiq. lib. 3. cap. 20. yet Tota illa pars Europae, etc. That most noble part of Europe, heretofore Gaul, is now called by the name of a little spot in it, France, so saith Cluverius. And therefore those commendations that the Natives give it, are not besides the truth altogether. Bu●●●, a most grave and learned French man, writes of it elegantly; and when he has asserted it of a clement Air, productive of things good and plentiful in their kind, Lib. 4, De Ass p. 169. Edit. Vascos. Vt ex filiis meis Primogenitus esse● Deus post me, & natu secundus Gallias imperaret. Lansius in Consult. Europae, p. 169. Geography p. 175. in fol. concludes thus, In ea summum Liberi Patris cum Cerere certamen, ut vini nobilitates non possis sine Nomenclatoris opera numerare. Which made Maximilian the Emperor wickedly, and with profaneness too great for a Christian, say, That if Nature could bring about his design to be a God, he would be that God; and then by his Will, he would pass his Divinity to his eldest Son, and his second Son he would make King of France, as supposing it the second preferment to that of his fancied Godhead. Add to this what our most accomplished Historian, and late deceased Countryman, Dr. Heylin reports in these words, The Soil is extraordinarily fruitful, and hath three Loadstones to draw riches out of other Countries, Corn, Wine, Salt; for which there is yearly brought into France 2000000. l. Sterling, and the Country so full of pleasant Fruits and Vines, Pymand. Mercurii, lib. 5. c. 11. Dialog. 5. p. 319. that never eye beheld a fairer object, so Herald I say, add this to all the rest, and to that of Strabo which Rosellius quotes, and there was good reason to say, France is a Country Frugum opulentissima.] Regis terrae illius hominibus ad arma, & eorum equis it à onusta, ut vix in eorum aliquibus quam-magnis Oppidis tu hospitari valebas. This clause shows France had need to be such as it is described, because it has such Armies in pay in, and moving through it; for as St. Clowis the chief founder of that Government is storied by the Histories of France to achieve his Greatness, the pedestal to this, Grimston Hist. France, p. 20. by such Artifices and practices of unchristian Policy, as I forbear to name; so have many after Governors there carried on their Grandeurs by fierceness and might of fury. So that not any lenitive dare be offered to soften the pleasure of the French King, but his Will must be the Law, which Albergatus confirms me in, who writes after the politic opinion, Relatione de Regno Gallico, p. 165. Ab ejus arbitrio solo omnis & belli & paces deliberatio, etc. Tanquam verus Monarcha solus omnium Dominus, etc. which uncontrouledness of power, because he finds men at Arms properest to advance and establish, to these does he give the civil spoil of the Land, that is, power to propagate his pleasure be it what it will, and opportunity under the pretext of that to do what they will with the poor Peasant, and drudging Countryman, who by these Homines ad Arma are said to be burdened. Onusta] not somewhat charged, as by pilfering and straggling numbers of loose people any place through which they pass, will be; but Onusta] a word of number, weight, and measure, having all the dimensions of grievance, as full of burden, not only as we proverbially say, As an Egg is full of meat; but as a Ship is when stowed to its full lading, 3 Offic. 66. so Onusta frumento Navis in Tully, when a Mariner knowing, Corn to bear a great price at the Port he intends for, crowds as much as his Bulk will bear; Livy 3. ab Vrbe. Onustus praeda, when a Soldier has so much spoil that he even breaks his back with the portage of it; Tacitus lib. 2. Tergum vulneribus onistum, the description of a soldier whose breast was not only pierced standing, but his back all wounds when flying; Onustus cib● & vin●, Cic. 1. Divinat. when a man's stomach and head is so overcharged, that he is fit for nothing but a basin and a bed: these are the Notions of the Onusta here, which points out France so charged and surcharged with these Cavaliers, that there was no room for any thing but these Homines ad Arma,] that is, Horsemen, for so our Chancellor intends to express the King of France his strength by. For though we read of Viri ad Arma nati in Lipsius and others; In Comment. ad. Taciti lib. De Morib. German. p. 449. yea, though Men at Arms in the Venetian History signified fusely All Soldiers, Shute p. 14. Nic. Faber. in Notis ad lib. 2. Controu. Senec. 10. p. 111. yet in our stories and laws, according to which, together with the common Notion of them in France, our Chancellor went▪ Viri ad Arma are only Horsemen, and so besides this in the Text, Walsingham in Hypodeigm. Neustriae. p. 118, 119. & equis ecrum,] other stories understand them; thus Thomas Beauchamp Earl of Warwick is by Walsingham said to encounter Contra ducentos homines de Armis, Cum multis Dominis & Baronibus & d●obus millibus fer● hominum nominatorum de Armis, de Communibus vero numerus ignoratur. Idem loco eodem. and Homines Armorum a little after; so the same Author, writing How E. 3. overthrew Philip of France, adds, With many Nobles and Barons, with two thousand men called, Men at Arms. These, I say, being in so great measure did not only terrify the people, but make the receipt of strangers in great Towns as homely and scarce, as the safety of them on their travels questionable. Now this the Chancellor remembers the Prince of, to raise in him a love to the politic, and yet Imperial Government of England; which, though it be seconded by force to suppress Rebellion and resist Invasion, yet is founded on general Consent, and Parliamentary recognition. So that what Seneca writes of Augustus is true of our Monarches, That they well deserve the Name of Parents, who are so tender and benign, Bonum Principem Augustum, & bene illi convenisse Parentis nomen fatemur, ob nullam aliam causam, hac gratum ac favorabilem reddidit, haec h●dicque praestat illi fam●m qua vix vivis Principibus servit. Senec. lib. De Clem. that their Subjects good is more cared for by them then their own greatness; so that if their power and their Subjects happiness (which is ever best in their respective conjunction) could be separate, which is not possible, their kindness would carry them rather to wish their people happy than themselves great: yea, so immortal a Garland is it to the Heads and Hearses of meritfull Princes, that it will bud a fresh blossom of glory to their memories when dead in person, though it deny any ornament or addition to living loveless ones. Which instance, to wave foreign precedents, is evident in the Reigns of two of our Monarches, Edward the First, and Queen Elizabeth: the former, at the Parliament of the seventeenth of his Reign, was besought by the Peers, Prelates and Commons fully there in obedience to him convened, to renew the confirmation of the great Charter and Charta de Foresta, according to what he had promised, but he stood off a long time; at last, being pressed to perform his Regal promise, he did it with a Salvo jare Coronae nostrae, Quod cum audivissent Comites, cum displicentia ad propria discesserunt Walsingham in E. 1. p. 44. which the whole Parliament took so heavily, that they returned home unsatisfied: And the latter, Q Elizabeth, so tempered her subjects, between awe of, and love to her, and so dreaded any appearance of violence, other than that of her Imperial, and necessary legal influence on her subjects, that she is in no story charged with any Act, but what has a defence of Motherly tenderness, as well as Majestic courage in it. Though then such like powers of Homines ad arma be not used nor approved of in England (except upon extraordinary occasions, when discontents and Parties, that will not be fairly reasoned, and gravely Lawed down, must be pessundated by the terror of them; Matth. 17.21. (this kind of Devil being not like the Gospel's Devil, cast out by prayers and tears, unless they are associated with force and punishment) yet in France they are, and without them the Plebs would be but ruleless; and therefore necessity, that has no law, calls for these homines ad arma there, and what their being in abundance any where can occasion better than rudeness and licentious outrage, let the (a) Doctor Heylin, p. 180. Author inform us, who says, the Neapolitans, Milanese and Sicilians, who have had trial of both the Spaniards and French for their Masters, choose rather to submit themselves to the proud and severe yoke of the Spaniard, then to the lusts and insolence of the French, which if they were such as denied even in Towns to Traveller, and that a Prince, Vix hospitari] that is, hardly lodging; what churlishness, to say no worse, do they express to meaner persons, and their own Countrymen, when they are more out of sight. Vbi ab incolis didicisti, homines illos, licet in villa una per mensem aut duos perhendinaverint, pro suis aut equorum suorum expensis soluisse aut solvere velle. This is a further instance, not of the miseries of a War; for, if an enemy had done this, the People of France, sufferers under it, might have said in the Psalmists words, Psal 41 9▪ If it had been an enemy that had done this we could have borne it, but it was ye, our Countrymen, our friends and our acquaintance, and this is that which renders it intolerably afflictive. For as much as the poor Peasant has nothing to live upon but his labour, and a high Rent, and pays contribution to the King's Army, and that in so plentiful a measure, that the Revenues of the Crown, to defray the charge of Government, is (a) Quo anno haec prodidi, Princeps noster tantam ferme pecuniam ex ditione Gallica percepit, Budaeus, lib. 3. de Ass, p. 114. B. counted as vast from that very Kingdom, Sic enim sunt Galli homines, ut prout quidque Principi aut collibuit aut collibuisse dictitetur, id perinde jus fasque esse credatur; omnium haeud dubie mortalium, qui quidem barbari non sint, maxim ut Graece dicitur Pytharchiei id est principalibus edictis aequo animo obsequentes. Idem. p. 115. as the Romans before the Conquest of Mithrydates, and the third expedition of Pompey had from all their Empire; yea, so absolute is the Sovereignty of their King, and so content are they to be what he pleases, that he imposes nothing but they submit to, and applaud the hand that puts so sore a burden on them; which Budaeus notes as a virtue in them, so meritfull as nothing can be more: so doth * Commentarius de rebus gestis Ludovic-11. lib. 10. p. 405. Paris. 1569. Cominaeus, adding, That it is unjust and inhuman, that a Prince, having such obsequious and open pursed People should press them beyond their ability; it being much more fair and generous to smooth them into a willingness by gentle invitation and reason of love; quaem imperiosa agere pro sua libidine; that is, then to screw and force by power and fear what they have, and he pleases to command from them, thus be; which well considered, as it lays load of infamy on those, that when there is but one Harvest and Crop in the year, from which profit and subsistence is gained, exact unlawful and unreasonable Contributions all the year long, and that without consideration of what the Payers suffer, and the Receiver is by His Officers deceived of; Budaeus, lib. 3. the ass p. 119. (of which Hybraeas the Orator told Antony; Asia has paid thee, Noble Cheiftain, two hundred thousand talents, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. This, if thou hast not received, call thy Collectors to account, to whom we have paid it; and if thou hast had it answered thee, since tho● canst not give as two Crops, and two returns, exact not two Tributes, each of which answers, or rather exceeds the utmost we can render thee.) As, I say, it accuses the Imposers of much mercilessness, so it renders the Imposed miserably poor and cowed; Hoc est enim perendit quod Graeci 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dicunt quasi post crastinum. Budaeus in Pandect, p. 32. Edit Vascos. For our Text says, they do not only perhendinare, (a word Lawyers and Historians use for stay, thence perhaps the word Enn or Inn, which is the stay for Travellers for a night or two; so Walsingham uses perhendinare to denote a stay, Magnates dutem apud Sanctum Albanum cum suis armatis exercitibus per triduum perhendinantes—; In E. 2. p. 91. so that perhendinare here is not only a chargeable, but a long stay, per mensem aut duos menses; and a losing one to put a further grievance, as the Text says, they pay nothing at their departure, neither for man or horse, which is not only the allegation of our Text, but the complaint of learned Cominaeus a creditable Knight, Quae quidem cohortes obequitant liuc illuc perpetuo, & non solum vivunt sumptu miserorum, sed etiam proterve & insolenter in eos multa faciunt; nec enim contenti sunt iis quae passim in agris reperiunt, verum miseris etiam hominibus vim adferunt, eosque cogunt longius abire, & aliunde adferre cibaeria delicatiora, mitto quod uxorum quoque & filiarum pudicitiam tentant, Commentar. lib. 10 De Gestis. Ludou. 11. p. 400. who says lamentingly, That the oppression on the poor Countryman is very great, not only by the Taxes that is unreasonably leavyed upon them; but ab Equestribus etiam cohortibus, etc. but from the charge the Cavalry, that lie on them, occasion, whom they not only eat up, but abuse licentiously; nor are they contented with what grows on the Farm and field, but compel them to travel for delicater diet then at home they have: and when they are gone to get them dainties, endeavour to abuse their wives and daughters to their lust, thus Cominaeus; which is, what follows in our Text. Sed quod pejus est, arctabunt incolas Villarum & Oppidorum in quae descenderant, sibi de vinis, carnibus & aliis quibus indigebant, etiam carioribus necessariis quam ibi reperiebantur, à circumvicinis Villatis, suis propriis sumptibus providere. This not to be contented with what is in house and at hand, is one of the unwelcomest qualities in a Boarder, even though he pay well as to the value and time; but when one comes on free quarter, and on charity, (as Government ought to think they do that come upon another's propriety, and yet are courteously treated) then to capitulate and indent what they will and will not have, then to take and leave what they lift, and to call for what is not to be had but with trouble and charge, is not only uncivil but unreasonable. Yet this is the condition of the French soldiery, who do not come, as our Country men have in many places (even during this late unnatural Commotion) done, with Caps in their hands, and carriages of humanity and gentleness; but with stern looks, drawn sword's, cocked pistols, Damn me, and all horrid oaths of Hell in their mouths, and when they are quartered, so continue their imperiousness, that 'tis hard to live in the house with them unstrapadoed, if not murdered. This irregularity, which often frightens inhabitants from their houses, and ever makes their houses terrors to them, is the effect of ill discipline and want of pay: for had they whereon to live and pay currently, Huic autem incommodo facile possit occarri, si bimestri quovis dependerentur eis stipendia; sic enim nullam essent haebituri causam qua se purgarent de injuriis illis quas inforunt, necessitate quadam ut aiunt, eo quod ipsis non persolvitur. Idem lib. 10. p. 400. they might be kept to the stricter conformity; but when live they must, and money they have not, the Officer bears with them for his own peace, which to prevent, as the Plague that infects Countries with ill will to soldiers, the * Dr. Ridley, View Laws Civil and Eccles. p. 88 Romans took a course to provide diet in kind for their soldiers, Summer diet from April. 1. to Septem. 1. and the Winter è converso, which diet was two day's Biscuit, the third day softer bread; one day wine, another day Vinegar; one day Bacon, and two day's Mutton, and by this kept they them lusty and vigorous, yet temperate and civil. For though I know to keep up the spirit there must be good diet, and enough of it, such as is flesh, wine, strong bear, and other changeable food; yet that men should be their own Carvers at another's cost and table, and make the giver a Vallet to their curiosity and intemperance, is that which France only its poor Subjects are abused by: we of England, God be blessed, do not understand other then by hear-say and reading. For though in Ireland from Edward the Second time, when the Earl of Desmond commanded in chief, the damnable custom of Coign and Livery was there set afoot, and continued to H. 4. his time, when, by the Statute of 12 H. 4. c. 6. it was destroyed, Davis History of Ireland, p. 30. for that by pretext of it the Commanders of the Army exacted from people horse-meat, man's-meat, and money at pleasure, without ticket or satisfaction: yet (times of flagrant war only excepted) were such rigorous courses never in practice with us here; nor in times of war were they justified any other, then by necessity and want of pay. So far is our licentiousness from the constant temper of the French, that necessity only works that seldom and skulkingly with us, which choice and no temptation, but that of ill humour and inclination to vice and rudeness, evidenceth boldly in them. And since the Government of France is supported by Armies and Garrisons, Heylin. Geogr. p. 238. and those so numerous, that Charles the Ninth is reported to have 15000 horse and 100000 foot of his own Nation, besides 50000 horse and foot of Swisses, Germans, and other Nations; and Lewis the Thirteenth is storied to have at once five Royal Armies on foot, keeping 120000 men in pay many years, rigging 1000 ('tis 10000 in Dr. Heylin, Geogr. p. 237. but I guess it the error of the Press) ships for sail and service: yea, for as much as the Kings of France so depend on the fidelity of the soldiers, there is no relief for the poor Peasant and Country-dweller hopeable, but they must have what they will, though to procure it they do arctare,] put the purse of the poor provider into little ease, and though he pawn (as it were) his own skin, bone, body and soul almost to purchase it; for, They must needs go that these Gallants of fury drive, whose violence has career enough to precipitate even dulness itself, and to make it fly with the wings of fear to avoid the Talons of their fury. Et si qui sic facere renuebant, concito fustibus caesi, hoc agere compellebantur.] This shows, that must is in France not only for the King, but for every Horseman, who, if he be but mounted and become a man at Arms, thinks himself absolute, holding his office by the Sceptre of his Batton, which is so nimble, that 'tis no sooner a word but a blow; and that upon his head who is de jure head of him, while in his family and under his roof. Now these Fustes, with which on unwilling, because (God knows) unable Hosts, they do execution, I take to be no tesserae Hospitales; nor can the Ruffian, In Paenul. In Verr. Act. ●. Budaeus in Pandect. p. 84, & in reliq. p. 253. B. that thus vapours and fumes, say with him in Plantus, Deum hospitalem & tesseram mecum fero: nor do these Hospitium renuntiare, nè hospitii jus violarent, as Tully says the custom was; for this in them had been a grace of ingratiation, which would rather have been thought a Prodigy than anything ordinary, and fictive rather than real. I say, I take this Mall of their uncivil execution to be no earnest for their welcome, but an intimation of that Club-law that they hold their interest in their Quarters by, and therefore while that is up, the Housekeeper is bound not only to the peace of good words, but even of willing looks; for if he show any disgust of his guests pleasures, straight to the lace he goes, which does so terrify them, Est quaedam sane in nobis innata pravitas, adeo magna quidem ut nulla plane ratio nos ab injuriis & violentia coerceat, Cominaeus Comment. lib. 19 De Gestis. Ludou. p. 396. that they are fain to take injuries contentedly, and to give thanks for being eaten up, and out of house and home, as we say; for so are these Horsemen flushed with their tyrannous absoluteness in their Quarters, that, to use Cominaeus his words, No reason or humanity can restrain them from injury and violence. Ac deinde consumptis in Villa una victualibus, focalibus, & equorum praebendis ad Villam aliam homines illi properabant. This continues the misery, 'tis general, every part must bear its proportion; these Curriers do circuit it to obtain the fattest prey and the plentifullest provision; these Clients to Venus and Bellona, the hot Goddesses, are all for diet and drink, that in the vigour of them reach the utmost extents of their flaming constitutions, which vice rather than nature hath so accended, that nothing but cold and hunger can reduce. Rather therefore then they will want these cherishings of their pleasure, by which the Wolf of feebleness and dispiriting is kept from the door of their moving Tabernacles, they will, as bite close while anything is to be had, so change their pasture when it begins to abate, Victuals of all sorts they will have; for though the Housekeeper, Sea-mew like, must live upon the Spuma Marina, the Dew (as it were) or nothing: yet these 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 must have first and second course, Adag. 33. Cont. 2. Chil. 2. p. 465. all sorts of things Victualia] quia vescuntur ab hominibus, they must have speedily, as soon as they call, willingly without regret, plentifully without scant, and seasonably, according as the nature of the year ushers in variety of diet. Focus privata cujusque domus, quemadmodum Ara aliquando Templum significat. And as food, so fire must they have, Focalia] for this, as it is as denominative of an house, as Ara is of a Temple, and as much to the completion of entertainment as meat is, Vrbem, agrum, arras, focos, seque uti dederent, Plautus Amphitr. Act. 1. Sc. 1. (since without fire and candle, which are Focalia, what comfort have men in entertainment.) I know Focalia has other senses in Authors, the Operimentum colli & faucium is so called by Quintilian; Lib. 11. c. 3. Advers. lib. 7. c. 10. but the Greeks applied the word pugillaribus & luctatoribus, which Turnebus notes as well as others: yet our Chancellor by Focalia intends those things that appertain to fire, which is best when 'tis in the Chimney; and thus it is near of kin to the Ancient's Focaria, Sire to the word Fornicator, who was Servant to the Baths and Fornaces, he that heated them, which because he ever kept hot, he was termed Fornicator; thence an old Fornicator we call a man of years, Turneb. advers. lib. 8. c 9 that when he is past action of folly, yet is speculatively, and in word, filthy and obscene. Et Equorum praebendis] This is to express Horse-meat, not only pasture and herbage, Tholoss. Syntag. Juris. lib. 15. c. 23. ss. ●. but Provender, Hay, Straw, which are all Prabendae; because they do in fructibus consistere: and such grass, hay, and grain being, they are termed Equorum praebenda, though I know Praebenda in the Plural number in the Canon Law has another sense, according to what the Ancients held the Residentiaries in Religious Houses and Cathedral Churches, enjoyed to supply religious Pilgrims and Strangers that came to them with testimonials, and Agellius extends it to all necessaries for an Army, when he says, Lib. 15. c. 4. Ventidius Bassus being straitened, Magistratibus qui sortiti Provincias fuissent, praebenda publicè conduxisse, these, and other large Notions of the word being not to the Chancellour's purpose, I keep myself to that sense of praebendae which is obvious, and respects horses in Armies, whose Quarters these Blades of Buff and Fury do change as they do their own when they impair, according to the old Proverb, Love me and love my horse, which love to their horses they best show by putting them into good pastures Ad Villam aliam homines illi properabant, cam consimiliter devastando.] These flying Torments, like fleas, skip every where, biting close, soon in and out of places, as they said of Charles the Eighth's expedition in and out of Italy, Try they will before they buy; yet not so happy the poor Peasant, Heylin, Geogr. p. 174. to have things bought of and paid for to him. Eat and drink and wench and rave they will, but a penny they will not part with in payment for what they take, Nè denarium unum pro necessariis, says the Text. And this ubiquity of theirs, though it terrifies all the Country, yet it ruins it less, and impoverisheth it, as it were, more justly, every part alike. No Angle of the Country that's good for any thing but is a Praebend for soldiers and their horses; yea, and for somewhat more rapacious and bloody, their wenches, called usually Sucklers and Laundresses, which the Text terms Concubinae, Morotrix dicitur, qua indifferenter so exponit omnibus; Concubina vero, qua uni soli se exhibet. Est autem Concubinatus foraicatio quaedans continuata rum soluta determinata, ita ut sit velut cohabitatio quaedam ac si Matrimonia effet conjuncta, Sayerus in Clavae Regia Sacerd. lib. 8. c. 2. num. 9 a word more press than Meretrices; for those are common to the seisers be they what they will, first come first served, when these are a sort of loose proprieties, pretendedly loyal to their own Mates, but extremely disorderly and villainous. Yet these, though forbidden by the strict rules of War, are suffered to attend Armies, and are so influential (being the Baggages that attend the luggage, lumber, and heavy draught of the Army) that they are taken care of by the Quarter-Masters, and are as curious to be pleased as any: ryea, being vicious women and warped from modesty, are the most beastly and pestilent enemies to the modesty of their own sex that can be imagined: yet even these, so sordid, so nasty, so troublesome, do they constrain their Quarters to receive in magna copia,] in great abundance; yea, for these as well as for themselves do they compel the inhabitants of the Vill● they come to and stay in, to provide all necessaries, not only food and fire, but Socculariae] Genus calciamenti à Sacco deductum, a Shoe like a slipper with an heel, which we call a Sock, after the likeness whereof it was made: the Comedian tells us as well of Risus Socci, as of Luctus Cothurni; In Vitellio. c. 2. but socculus the Diminutive, Suetonius writes of. Caligis] This is the Boot-hose, or leg, or short stocking which the Soldier wears, Plin. lib. 9 c. 35. Venuleius lib. De Militibus. hence called Caligati Milites; and though Caliga properly signify regumentum Tibiarum militare, the cover of the military Pipe, suppose the Coronet or Fife; Sueton in Calig. c. 9 Plin. lib. 7. c. 43. yet it being of likeness to a Hose signifies that. This Caliga, or military Calciament, gave the name to Cajus, Son to Germanicus the Emperor, who was called Caligula, Quia Manipulario habitu inter Milites ' educebatur. Vsque ad minimam carum Ligulam] Not only food and fire, washing and lodging, shoes and hose, but Laces, and every Utensil about these Firebrands, must the poor Peasant find; which makes me believe, that either France is all gold, or the Peasant all dross; for, unless whatever he touches be Coin, he cannot but be as bare as a louse, who has thus many Riflers of him successively each to other: and therefore no wonder they are poor spirited that are thus harrassed and outed of all ability to live handsomely or lay up any thing for their Children. Alas, poor souls, all their thoughts are how to please and progg to live, the gaiety of life they neither know nor desire, all that they have to call their own is an house of children, a wife horridly nasty, an house slenderly furnished, a back barely covered, and an Army of Vermine every where about them, and this is the condition of all those that dwell in open places, without Garrisons and walled Towns; for of them there is not one expers de calamitate ista] saith our Text. For though Garrisons and walled Towns, Villa & Oppida murata] be more chargeable, for that they maintain Garrisons to defend them, and discipline in them is very strict, because it is in view of all the Inhabitants, whose clamour would have audience if it were deserved; yet is that charge ten thousand times recompensed in the security they have that dwell in them, which is the reason that in all places, set England aside, no security is almost out of Cities and Towns, fellows to them, there being not only a force in Walls to deny access to Spoilers, but a kind of charm, which languages the rude approachers to beware of Sacrilege in violating them: Si quis violaverit Muros, capite punietur, Pompon. lib. 2. Digest. p. 119. Advers. lib. 13. c. 12. lib. 6. c. 6. lib. 16. c. 11. lib. 30. c. 30. In municipiis Muros esse sanctos, is Marcianus' his rule, lib. 4. Regularum; concerning Muri and the Notions of them, consult Turnebus his excellent learning, which I quote only to avoid prolixity, though the use of Walls is from the very instance in consideration very important, since these Walls do not only keep off the trouble, charge, and danger of Soldier's Quarterings, but the often passes and repasses of them; for so the Text says, Quae non semel aut bis in anno haec nephanda pressura gravatur, but very often is thus vexed and impoverished; so that they are not plagues for a day and away, but at all times, so often as they please: and this adds to the misery. Praeterea non patitur Rex quenquam Regni sui salem emere, quem non emat ab ipso Rege, pretio ejus solum arbitrio assesso. This Royal Monopoly of Salt is that which is one of the Mines of the French Crown's Revenue; and though our Text count it a part of the smart misery of the there people to buy so necessary a thing as salt is, which they cannot be without, any more almost than they can without water, fire, or air; yet truly propriety being the measure of the value of things (provided the price assessed, though it be proprio arbitrio, yet if it be in any degree moderate) 'tis damnum sine injuria to the people, since the King may as well make the most of his own as private men; though I think seldom Princes so do, though their Farmers and those that officiate for them, grinding the people to enrich themselves, draw much murmur of the oppressed people upon their Principals: for so unhappy are Princes, that offend who will under pretext of their authority, and by colour of their service, the distaste and odium of them is apportioned to Princes, which is a good caution to Princes not to crush their shoulders and crimple the supports of their useful lives with such super additions (to the unavoidable care of their proper offices) as arise from maladministration of men in place under them, Let every back bear its own burden, which I purposely here insert, not only, as it is just, to vindicate the right of Royal Commodities, as Salt in France is; but to remember the fatality of this Artifice of popular tumult upon the pretext of oppression by evil Counselors and Instruments, towards the best of men and Kings his Contemporaries, St. Charles, who so heavily complains of them, that his words are, If I had not mine own innocency and God's protection, Eicon Basilic. c. 15. Initia. it were hard for me to stand out against those Stratagems and Conflicts of malice, which by falsities seek to oppress the truth, and by jealousies to supply the defect of real causes, which might seem to justify such unjust engagements against me, so Herald This premised, I proceed to discourse of this the French King's restraint of Salt to any but such as buy it of him; and the reason is, because it is the King's commodity. A veteribus Romanis jamdudum institutum fuit, in Leg. 17. ss. Salinarum. p. 51. De verb. signific. Brechaeus, that learned Frenchman, tells us, that it has been the perquisite of Regality, and that which Magistracy has taken as its Revenue in ancient times, among the Romans always; and thence in those Countries which were fractions of it, and took pattern according to the proportion of their parts to its whole, to retain their necessary usages amongst them. This then of Salt, one of the great necessaries to li●e, I shall not write of at large, but refer the Reader to the Authors in the Margin; Coelius Rhodig. lect. Antiq. lib. 7. cap. 2. Plin. Nat. Hist. lib. 32 à cap. 7. ad c. 10. Brechaeus loco praecitato. only let me mind the Reader, that this Shall here, is not that Sal metallicum, id est, fossitium, which Strabo lib. 5. calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and (a) Lib. 18. c. 11. lib. 31. c. 7. Pliny, (b) Lib. 5. c. 123. Dioscorides, and (c) Lib. 1. c. 7. Varro mention, and of which I think I may with learned men conclude, that not only Absolom's Pillar was made of, but also Let's wives figure, Josephus lib. 1. Antiq. Burchardus in descript. Terrae sancta. part. 1. c. 7. as the solid body that in the perennity of its consistence would eternize the memory of their sins and punishments. No such Salt is the King of France's commodity here, but that Salt which the Wiseman saith, Salt savoureth every thing; that which not only our Lord hints of its conservating quality in that allusion to discretion, the steerage of the conversation from danger and disgrace, Have salt in yourselves and be at peace one with another; Marc. 9.50. but that Salt which is the relish of every Palate, and makes good every crudity, which the Ancients apprehending under the name of Salt and Wood, Parochi & Xenoparochi idem sunt. qui Peregrinis Salem & Ligna praebebant, sub nomine autem harum specierum omnia hospitibus necessaria intelligimus, Budaeus in Pandect, reliq. p. 262. Edit. Vascos comprehended all necessaries to a charitable entertainment: so that though many things to the celebrity of a Court-feast may be wanting, yet where bread, beer, fire, and salt is, there is no lack of the integrals of Meals, and those not any subsidiary to life, but wholesome to promote the comfort of it, being in some measure there. And therefore the universal requiry of Salt enhances the quantity that is vented and the price of it, especially where it being in the sale no general commodity, by occasion of which, one underselling another, the buyer has the more choice to deal with men, either as their good humour and necessities do render them more tractable, or to forbear them when the contrary; but in one hand, who either must be pleased in the price, or the accommodation cannot be had. This being the state of Salt in France, the Text complains of it as a sore curb to the Natives; for it is prized solo Regis arbitrio, and at such Rates (though Merchants may choose to buy it to transport, for buy it they will not but at such a rate as they can get by exporting it) yet the eaters and users on the terra firma must; Advers lib. 14. c. 19 p. 510. and by this he does so Orbem [Gallicum] Sale defricare, as the speech in Turnebus is, That he by his Salt at his own price dreyns away the blood of their purses, and so does in a kind, as of old was wont though in another manner, consecrate by * Tu●nebus advers. lib. 10. c. 22. p. 327. the Salt his Table of Royal plenty and riches, Lege Budaeum lib. 4. De Ass. p. 147. Edit. Vascos. which he supports his Imperial Charges in a good part with. For though he has other vast incomes, yet this of Salt is not the least; and therefore in that he has it, and that for so mighty a people, and that in such a measure as he may set his own rate, it is a very great Prerogative; which, since it must be in one hand, is fittest to be in the best and most charitable one, who like Meroveus, Grimston's Hist. France, p. 12. the quondam Governor of France, ruled so, That in ten years be omitted not one hour to do well; for Princes, as they have opportunities, so have spirits suitable thereto, and though private men may be narrow and make the utmost they can of what they have, yet they, out of their greatness of mind, love to be bountiful, and in so doing deserve not the complaints that otherwise would arise upon enhancing. For as it would seem too hard a pressure on Subjects to make them pay a rate for their breath, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Philo lib. De Septenario & Festis, p. 1280. light and water, so some make it hard to put such a gabelle upon Salt; yet, as I said before, it has been very anciently laid not only on the Roman and other Government's Subjects, Tholoss. Syntag. Juris universs. lib. 3. c. 9 ss. 1. & seq. but even in France. And though this Salic Law has excluded the Subjects from the Merchandise of Salt any otherwise but by buying it of the King, as well as the other Salic Law has Females from that Crown; Albergatus Disc. Politic. p. 348. yet there being a vast Revenue (reckoned at least to 700000 Crowns a year coming to the Crown by it; ●eylin's Geog. ) and being a continuance of a long time in the Crown, the Nation finds no burden of it, but grows rich notwithstanding it. For Princes do let and sell good pennyworths, and if their Subjects are pinched, 'tis by their Minister's avarices' which cannot be avoided, not their desires to sell to the utmost value; for some they must trust, and if they choose the wiselyest they can, yet they may be deceived, Opportunity often making the thief, and then their being deceived is more their misfortune, than their sin or misgovernment. And therefore the Subjects of France are no more displeased at this, than the Egyptians were with Ioseph's store of Corn, which, though it bought out the Land to King Pharaoh, yet rescued them that sold it from famine and perishing. Petr. Martyr. in 1 Reg. c. 9 For though this Salt raise a vast sum of money, yet it thereby defends the people from rebellion and invasion; because it maintains an Army that suppresses the one and advances boldly to refuse the other. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Chil. 2. Cent. 2. Ad. 8. p. 459. 'Tis true, I confess, there is no comfort in being hanged on a golden Tree, no more then for a Virgin to be stuprated by a beauteous person. If ruined a Subject must be, whether it be by Princes or others, men account it ruin and welcome it not; but yet in things beneath ruin, in shortenings and abbreviations of life, for particulars to suffer them to the accommodation of the generalty, is very endurable; for time and use wears out those prints of regret, that upon the first example and introduction of unwonted things, were fixed in the minds of men against them. French History, p. 56. The twelve Peers of France were wondered at, when first instituted by Charlemaigne to make his voyage in the Wars with Spain more honourable in show; yet ever since they continuing, are counted the Nobilities stabiliment and the allowed height of their honour. This imposition on Salt grew up first under the Wars between Philip of Valois King of France, Tholoss. Syntag. lib. 3. c. 9 and our King Edward; the French King being in want of money made a Decree, That no man, of what degree soever, should sell or buy Salt but from his Granaries, which he set up (seizing all Salt in every Proprietors' hand, and giving them a reasonable price for it) which done, he set what price he thought good upon it, and made every one at his stated price buy according to the proportion of his family; and from that time ever downward. This then taken up on that necessity, Lib. 4. c. 2. De Gest. Francor. has been kept up, Ingeniosum profecto inventum (saith Gaguin) quo nemo à tributo liber esset, & unde ingens Regibus pecunia quotannis venit; yet time has made this gabelle natural to the French Subjects, 3 H. 5. 2 Instit. c. 30. M. Charta, p 61. as Tonnage and Poundage is here. For though, saith Sir E. Cock, that were given to H. 5. but during his life in respect of his recovery of his right in France, and there was a Proviso in the Act, that the King should not make a Grant thereof to any person, nor that it should be any Precedent for hereafter: yet it continued all the King's times after, and all of them enjoyed it, which confirms, That time makes that pleasing which at first was not so. And so, though for the French to purchase Salt at the King's rate were at the first hard and disgustful, yet use has made the Nation perfect in the custom and way of so doing; that only which argues the rigour of it is, that the Subjects must not only pay the King's rate for the Salt they buy, but must buy such a proportion as the bodies of the persons in his family, are by the King's Commissioners computed to spend, so says our Text. Et si insulsum pauper quivis mavult edere, quam sal excessivo pretio comparare, mox compellitur ille tantum de sale Regis ad ejus pretium emere, quantum congruet tot personis, quot ipse in domo sua fovet. Indeed this is hard, Miserrimum era● spectaculum videre multitudinis & populi arumnas, Cominaeus Com. lib, 10. De Gestis Ludou. p. 403. that a poor soul, that must (through necessity) want much accommodation, because money that fetches it, is short with him, that yet such a miserable wretch (rich in nothing but children, wants, and vermin) should be compelled to take Salt, which perhaps he would shift without, or to such a proportion only as his money will reach to, (other things being considered also, which are as much or more concerning to him) beyond his ability, is very irksome and certainly offensive to God, because an oppression to the poor, whom God leaves in the world as objects of charity and exercises of our gratitude to him, between us and whom he only has made the difference. Yet is not this so strict as true, that it is the condition of all parts of France, the pressure whereof none feel but they that are least pitied by greatness, and least able to relieve themselves against the burdens of it. But poor Wretch that the Peasant is, he has no remedy, A good Principle. but to commit his cause to God the only helpful Patron of distressed Subjects, and unless he turn the heart of a Prince and make his bowels yern to his poor Vassals, there is no remedy but patience; Better suffer any misery and diminution than sin against the Law of Dominion and the fidelity of Subjection. This is the safest way to a good life and death; though certainly they have other Principles whose spirits rise up against Governors, whose accounts being only makeable to God, are not to be questioned by men any further than the Laws of Nations allow, The Author's prayer. and the limitations of Religion expound those allowances; my Prayer being ever, That God would season all good Subjects with that piety of resolution, that they may make them love and obey, more than fear and be in awe of their Prince; for love makes loyal, when hatred and dread is the preparation to treachery and revolt. He said well that avowed his own experience of God's work on his gracious soul, I had rather prevent my people's ruin then rule over them, Eicon. Basille. c. 15. nor am I so ambitious of that dominion, which is but my right, as of their happiness, if it could expiate or countenance such a way of obtaining it by the highest injuries of Subjects committed against their Sovereign, thus the Oracle of English Monarches. Insuper omnes Regni illius incolae, daunt omni anno Regi suo quartam partem omnium vinorum quae sibi accrescunt. Chil. 1. Cent. 6. Adag. 37. This is a further addition to the Revenue of that King, which though some may censure for Mala vicinia to the precedent salsuginosa vicinia; yet truly I know not how to think other, but that it is a reserve of the Crown on all the Vineyards, which were originally derived from it: and then 'tis no more a levy on his Subjects, than Rent is Tax on a Tenant, or Tithes on the Occupier of ground. Yet in as much as our Text-Master, who lived long there, refers it to a badge of servitude and villainage according to the old rule, Quicquid acquiritur servo, acquiritur domino ejusdem servi, seems to be more then ordinarily worthy notice; for in our Chancellour's time this fourth part de Claro, of the growth of Vines, was in effect, reckoning the charge of Tillage and gathering, Vt fore in tota Francia ubi octava de umo venali fisco debetur, Cassanaeus Catal. Gl. Mundi. p. 214. the third: and Cassanaeus adding another imposition of the eighth part, de vino venali, than the fourth part of the growth in kind, and the eighth part of the value in price, brings the best part of the profit of Vineyards unto the Crown: for as all persous are bound to yield it the fourth part of their growth without diminution, so are they every where to give it without exception. Et omnis Caupo, quartum denarium pretium vinorum quae ipse vendidit. This Caupo the Translator terms a Vintner, because such are with us the great sellers of wine; Caupona, ubi etiam advena & ad comedendum & ad cubandum, non ad stabulandum recipiuntur; & differt à Taberna, qua est locus ubi comestabilia venduntur, & comedentes recipiuntur, non ad cubandum vel ad equ●s stabulandos, sed comedendum tantum, Digest. lib. 23. tit. 2. Marg. D. Taberna, p. 2115. and of these is there a wealthy Corporation in London. Yet Caupo in the Law signifies so much as amounts to an Ordinary, where men eat, drink, and lodge, but not their horses; which differs from a Tavern, in that therein men eat and drink only and not lodge, it being a Tippling-house for a pass, and so the lawful residence in it only for the day: though * In Leg. 198. p. 429. De verborum signific. Brechaeus takes it otherwise, Caupo mercedem accipit, ut Viatores in Caupona manere patiatur, stabularius ut permittat apud eum jumenta stabulari; yet our Text restrains Caupo to an house of entertainment, an Hostlery as in France they call them, which though the Statutes of 15 R. 2. c. 8. 4 H. 4. c. 25.21 H. 8. c. 21. so calling, understand Inns for beasts receipt as well as mens: yet the Text primarily respects them as selling wine for men's drinking. But I take Caupo to be more general, and to extend to any kind of negotiatour, as cauponari to any kind of dealing; for it being Sire to Cupedia, which refers to lautiora esculenta venalia, takes in all kind of dealing for things, which the Greeks render by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉: thus Ennius uses cauponari bellum, which he borrows from Aeschilus, Lib. 1. De vita Apollonii c. 20. ¶ Lib. 4. c. 10. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; and Philostratus thus tells us Apollonius Tyanaeus wrote an Epistle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, to the Corn-Merchants; and in ¶ another place, when he writes of the toil and moil of callings, he says, There is no greater a slavery in the world, than your Merchants by sea and land have, who do not only keep Fairs in all weathers, and notwithstanding all hazards; but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, but keep so with comers and goers in those public houses, Plato lib. De Legibus, Tholoss. Syntag. Juris, lib, 39 c. 7. that they are ever bibbing, and buying or selling in them, which he reckoned desamatory. For the Ancients made Laws again Tavern-keepers, as persons infamous and not admittable to Magistracy; yea, in as much as the keepers of them were to receive all comers and minister to all their wants (which worthy people would not conform to do.) Of old those that kept such houses were counted E face plebis, no better, as we say, than they should be, josh. 2.1. under which reproach Rahab went, and was therefore called The Harlot; and our Lord is thought to be disgracefully alluded to in that scandalous taunt of the Pharisees, A Wine bibber, a friend of Publicans and sinners. This then is the large notion of Caupo, which the Text Master restrains here, not to limit its verbal latitude, but to reach the sense of his purpose in the Quotation; That every public house and merriment in it, pays a duty to the public charge, and that being the fourth part of the price, comes surely to a vast Revenue. Et ultra haec, omnes Villae & Burgi solvunt' Regi annuatim ingentes summas super eos assessas, pro stipendiis hominum ad arma. Concerning Vills, see the Notes on the 29th. Chapter. That which their mention here intends, is to notify, that as the open Country-dweller pays in his spoil by the Army, so the immured ones answer in taxes; and these, as they are annual, so are they not light and easy, but heavy and hard. Ingentes summas] not only great but wondrous sums, such as exceed almost numeration; for Ingens is a word of capacity, and has a kind of latitudinary vastness in it, Ingens Moles, ingens Exercitus, ingentes Colossi, and Populi ingentes, are frequent in Authors: yea every thing that is notorious and prodigiously wonderful is termed by it. 2 Georg. Plin. Panegyr. 103. Liv. lib. 4. Lib. 10. Bel●● Punici. J. Sleidanus illustrium rerum & Galliae descript. Virgil tells us of ingenti amore perculsus, and Pliny of ingens animus, fortis, magnus & constans, and Livy of ●ura ingentes, ingentes gratias, clamores, bellae, and ingentis nominis Rex; these things set forth the concurrence of Authors with our Text to express extraordinary Taxes by ingentes summas. And sure such they must needs be, for France is a Country that has 23 vast Provinces, and every Vill and Town in them being yearly assessed, the sum total of such Provents must be exarithmetique; yet so insatiable is the mind of some Princes as well as meaner men, that they think they never have enough, though they force men to dig upon the Rock, as he told Pyfistratus the Athenian Tyrant, where nothing but toil and grief is to be expected, and yet must it be done to pay his Master's imposition upon him, although the end of such levyes be not prosecuted, but the Subject preyed upon by the Army he pays, as if it were forces of Enemies: for the Text says, the taxes are levied Pro stipendiis hominum aed Arma] but in truth they have least of it, which causes the following words, that the Armata Regis, qua quam magna semper est, etc.] That the Royal Army which is great is grievous also, making little difference between taking all in an enemy's Country, and leaving none in their own Country: and this makes the condition of France sad, that men must pay to support an Army, and yet, by that Army they contribute to, be eaten up and totally ruined. Yet this is the misery of Armies, that they are not only chargeable but insolent and cruel, and are armed such to be and not to be refused, because they come into Countries all over prepared for commands and terror. Armata dicebatur virgo sacristcans cui basinia tog● erat in humerum rejecta, Fest. Armata] (a) Cicero pro Cecin. 44. Cic. pro domo sua lib. 1.38. Tully points out to this sense of armata] Armatos si Latine loqui volumus, quos appellare vere possumus, ●pinor eos qui scutis telisque parati ornatique sunt, and in another place he speaks of one incredibili armatus audaciâ, and Silius mentions, Armata dalis mens, and armatum fide pictus: so that the Army of the King being potent and poor, and being not paid their wages, are forced to either spoil or starve. And hunger breaking through stone Walls, and necessity forcing to what (but for it, is execrable and not the choice of men) the French Subject is hardly dealt with, who pays money for his security, yet is quartered upon by the Soldiers; yea and that in Vills and Burroughs, such an animosity is there in the Nobless against Corporations, and the Inhabitants of them, that they can neither bear their thrift, nor forbear borrowing of them when thrifty they are and can lend. Yea it sometimes happens that the huffs of greatness better endure detriment to Nations, then take reparations by the help of Citizens and Burgesses of Vills and Cities. There is a famous story confirming this in Walsingham: In R 2. p. 213. In the time of Richard the Second there was one Mexer a Scotch man infested our, Coast so boldly, that no Ship could stir to and fro but it was snapped; the Admiral of England that then was cared for none of these things, so true a Gallio he was in neglect of his duty, that the Subjects were afraid to trade, and merchandise grew scarce and dear: yea the Pirate braved so by his successes, that he said, He would surprise England ere long. When no spirit in the Nation rose to the suppression of this mischief, Sir john Philpot a Citizen of London, and a man of great wit and wealth, pitying his native Country (so nosed by a bold enemy, and neglected by heedless Ministers of State) resolved with himself to clear the Seas of this Cormorant, Ducis Lancastriae & caeterorum Dominorum defectum ne dicam falsitarem, qui Regnū defendere debuerant, attente considerans Walsingham. p. 213. in R. 2. and to secure his Countrymen and their Vessels from his rapacious clutches, Thereupon de propria pecunia conduxit mille armatos, etc. he raised a thousand men at his own charge, and with them set upon the Pirate, and not only took his prizes, but him the Arch-Pirat also; which action, though it had the acclamation of the Commons, yet brought him no favour with the great men: for Sir john Philpot was summoned before the Lords, and told, he was too blame so to do, Ac si non licuisset benefacere Regi & Regno sine consilio Comitum & Baronum, Loco pracitato. saith the Historian. Patiently he bore the several censures of his Judges, till overcharged with the tartness of the Lord Stafford, who rating him more than he thought became him, was by Sir john stoutly replied upon to this purpose, That he, not moved with pride or ambition, but with pity on their sloth and his Nation's dishonour, undertook the enterprise; and that what he had at his own charge done, was so far from deserving displeasure, that he hoped it was an acceptable work to God and his Countrymen: and that his Lordship ought rather to commend his zeal to his Country, Vt Comos non habuit quod responderet, Idem ●od. loc●. then blazon it as a demerit of it, which reply did so daunt that Lord, that he had not a word to say, thus the Story; which I note, because it often falls out, that Great-men think nothing worthy or acceptable, that comes from a hand they like not; (as seldom do the haughty of the Nobles and Gentry, Cities or Citizens, though descended of Noble and Knightly Families;) who, though they will seek Portions with Wives in Citizens Daughters (and were it not for London, what Mine of that kind would they find in England, as meanly as they think of it) yet are too often detractors from them, and utter phrases of disparagement to it, like that Marginal Note which my Walsingham has on this story in hand of Queen Elizabeth's time, A sawey Knave, Merchant's answer to a Nobleman. But enough of this, only 'tis pity Corporations, that are Staples of Trade, should pay to avoid Quartering on them, and yet be quartered upon: but this being the posture of things in our Chancellour's time of stay in France, occasions me to conclude, That all's fish that comes into the Soldiers Net. Psal, 124, 7. Isay. 1.26. And since their Net, which heretofore caught the Nation, is broken and we are escaped; and our Governors are as at the first, and our judges as at the beginning, as the forequoted Scripture expresses the happiness of a restored people; God give us to think of this seasonably. how much becomes it us all to sacrifice to God (in the advancement of his glory and the gratitude of our reformed lives) the first and fatlings of our serenity and order. For what Bocerus writes of Armies and Soldiers is most true, Bona quae bellum aufert, sunt liber Religionis usus, Reipub. tranquillitas, studia literarum, possessiones, agri, vineae, pradia, domus, agricultura, mercatura, navigatio, etc. Milites enim castra sequuntur, sape non ut bonam & justam causam defendant: sed ut spoliato & exuto omnibus fortunis adversario, ditiores domum redeant, pileis inter se nummos distribuant, holosericum non ulnis sed hastis metiantur, Lib. De Bello & Duello, c. 29. p. 219. All the good they do (necessity of Rebellion and Invasion excepted) is toleration of all Religions to gratify the parties potent in them, disturbance of settled order, decrease of good learning, dispossession of Subjects of their houses, lands, vineyards, and accommodations, impedement of husbandry, trade, navigation, destruction of buildings, murders of men, and waste of cattle and wealth; for the soldier qua such does more intend his spoil and pay then examine the cause; and caring not for any thing beyond returning home rich when he shall be discharged, studies no civility to the Country he is a stranger to and a temporary Conqueror of, thus Bocerus. From the danger of this then (God be thanked) England being delivered, we have a mercy beyond the Subjects of France; wherein, though there is no enemy, there is notwithstanding an Army, which does quarter on the people shrewdly, so it follows. Et ultra haec, quaelibet Villa semper sustinet duos sagittarios ad minus, & aliqua pl●res, in omni apparatu. Still more and more charge, belike France is all Gold and Gold's worth, not only the fourth part of the Grapes, and a penny on the Quart for wine sold, taxes raised yearly on Vills and Burroughs, free-quartring on the Peasants who live in the open Country; but also besides all these, every Town and Ville is bound to maintain at their own charge two Archers at least, and some more, every way complete, in all manner and equipage of War: this will amount to a mighty Army. Consider then if we do, Heylin, Geogr. p. 173. France to be in length 660 Italian Miles, in breadth 570, in circumference 2040, it's 23 great Provinces, that contain in Parish-Priests of the Clergy, who yet are but a small part of the men, yet are in number said to be 130000, other Ministers 100000, Heylins' Geogr. 3 Archbishops, 104 Bishops, 1450 Abbeys, 540 Arch-Priories, 12●20 Priories, 567 Nunneries, 700 Convents of Friars, 259 Commanderies of Malta, 27400 Parish Churches, in which are computed 15 Millions of people. I say, Budaeus lib. De Ass, p. 195. Edit. Basil. 1595. in fol. France so vast in circuit and numerous in people, having perhaps as many Vills and Burroughs as Egypt had Cities in Amasis his time, which Budaeus says, were 20000: if at 14 thousand of them 2 comes to 28000 Archers; and 6000 at 3 a Ville is 18 thousand more. I say, these thus computed make a very vast Army of Archers, and those are no mean Artillery but of great terror and execution. Antiquity thought so of them, for besides that the Asiatic Nations and the Indians to this day use them, Lib. 5. ad Attic. 108. ¶ De Germanis, Quintill. lib. 3. c. 4.20. the Romans and Germans had much esteem of them. Tully numbers Archers among the Magna tormentorum copia, multis Sagittariis, multo labour, etc. and ¶ Tacitus reports the Germans to Asperare sagittas ●ffibus, and Quintilian tells us of Armatus sagittis & face; and Ovid, though he want only uses the phrase Nudis sagittis uti ad bella, yet alludes to the customs of Wars, to have Arrows in a readiness, when the wolf of an enemy was before them, this dog of Arrows was behind hanging at their backs, Sagitta quod satis longe agatur, vel à satis & ictus, vel quod sagax sit ictus, Etymolog. ready to fix them. For as Arrows are an Engine of War, doing execution without noise and at distance, so are they very fatal in their galls to Horses, and their injuries to foot-soldiers, which made Moses, who was mighty in word and deed, compose his Army much of Archers and Darters, if Philo's Authority be Canon in the case; Lib. De vita Mosis, p. 628. Plutar●h. in Apothegmar. for he says, he had 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which are often as potent to force an enemy from his station, as that Persian money named Sagittarius, was, to force Agesilaus out of Asia, when the King of Persia by Timocrates gave him thirty thousand of them to have his Room rather than his Company. Natur. Hist. lib. 28. c. 8. p. 577& lib. 20. c. 20. p. 441. lib. 6. c. 29. The Archers then of our Text are such as do, though they do not Venenatas emittere sagittaes (as some barbarous Nations used, to cure the ill consequence of which Pliny tells us, men studied Remedies) yet do Vulniferas emittere sagittas, and such as brings men in potentia proxima, Stimulus amissae pecunia, pestis corporalis miseriae, malleus infernalis memoria, Sanct. Bernard. in Sententiis. by mayhem to death. Thus Saint Bernard tells us allusively, that God has three great sorts of Arrows to wound the hairy-scalp of wickedness, loss of fortunes, Corporal disquiet, and Infernal torments, and that there are but three defences against them, Calm fear, Devout love, and Virtuous wisdom, by which they will be frustrated. And certainly as heed to, and provision for the evil day afore it comes, is the way to conquer the terror and despoil the triumph of it when it comes; so to be unprepared for and negligent of it, is not only to yield the breast of life and happiness to the fury of Arrows of enmity, and to court a foe, in me convertite ferrum, but clogs the disconsolacy and shame of such advantage and insult, with reproach of asnery. And therefore our Nation, who ever found great advantage by Archers and Arrows, Not only by many notable acts and discomfitures of War against the Infidels * Holingshed, p. 473. Temp. R. 2. and others, but subdued and reduced divers and many Regions and Countries to their due obey sance, to the great honour, fame, and surety of this Realm and Subjects, and to the terrible dread and fear of all strange Nations, they are the words of the Statute. 33 H. 8. c. 9 enjoins Archery to be maintained; so did, before 3 H. 8.3. 6 H. 8. c. 2. which, though they are repealed by the 33 forementioned, yet stand good as to the approbation of Archery therein directed. And this the Text noting as a piece of the wisdom of the French (who has often been defeated and galled by our Archers and their Volleys of Arrows, Holingshed. p. 363, 373, 389, 397, 770, 771. as at Hambout in Edward the Third's time under the Lord Mannyes conduct, after at Abvile and Saint Requier, after at the battles of Poitiers, Aulroy, Agincourt, in the expedition of the Lord D. Awbeny and Earl Morley against the French in Henry the Sevenths' time) finding the use and consequence of them, array their Nation with them; though I read of no great execution that they have done by them, but yet they do continue the exaction of Archers from every Vill and Burrow, which doth find duos ad minus sagittarios, & aliqui plures. In omni apparatu & habilimentis sufficientibus ad serviendum Regi in guerris suis. This comes in to show, that not only the bare Archers are to be found, but them set forth to, and furnished for performance in the war; For omnis apparatus signifies a good clothing and arraying, as an Archer should be, with Bows, Arrows of all sorts, Files, Whetstones, Gloves, Bracers, Bowstrings, Sword, and all things else that to Archery appertaineth: Atque ad illam causarum operam ad quam ego nunquam nisi apparatus & meditatus accedo. 1 De Legib. 17. 1 De Invent. 74. Valla lib. 5. apparatus signifying not only the furnishing itself, but the preparation to it, training up to the exercise, and this added to the former, makes complete apparature: Thus Tully defines apparatus homo, and instructa & apparata domus omnibus rebus, as much as ornata, so that every thing that is deficient of the perfection of its kind, being said à magnificientia generis recedere. This apparatus being the triumph over that mutilation, is that which is understood the compleatness of it, which because in matters of war to have all necessaries to carry on our undertaking to its full execution, do become a Soldier. Habiliments of all sorts are necessary, and 'tis said, Cum habilimentis sufficientibus, whereby is meant, according to the French Habiliments notation, aptly, strongly, cunningly, and with good decorum; and this to be enabled by good setting forth to do, is cum Habilimentis sufficientibus, (as the Texts words are) worthy the King's service in his wars. Nul terre sans guerr●, Prov. Gall. Translated, He that hath Land, is seldom out of Law. Hypodeigm. Neustriae, p. 176. In Guerris suis.] A word made Latin from the French Guerre, which signifies primarily intestine dissension and contest, a thing frequent in France, but is used largely for any Military encounter; so Walsingham expresses it, and thence the word Warr which is of the same latitude: For wars being the Kings to begin and end, as to him in his Majestic consideration seems meet, those that are to assist him by tenure and roll are so to do in France, when ever his Army is in motion, and his Royal Orders to summon them to their Quarters; which Quoties libet eos summonere] is a very vast power in that King, Hist. France. In his life. and those People willingest submit to, and with least regret bear, who live in the times of such as Lewis the twelfth was, whom Histories publish to be good to his subjects, A brave K. and a true public Father. and always studied to ease them; for he raised many Armies of Horse and Foot without the oppression of his People by new impositions, which made his subjects often and freely grant him increase of Subsidies to supply his foreign and domestic affairs, yet would he not allow of those impositions, desiring rather to cut off the expenses of his own Person and Household to save his People from oppression and spoil: Thus noble was King Lewis, who, though he had all he pleased of his subjects in vassalage to him, and could mow the fair Meadow of France by the scythe of his Power as often as he pleased, and that to such a proportion as should shave, rather than only shear the fleece of his subjects: yet amidst all these temptations, he employed not his Power to burden and pinch them, Cent. 6. Chil. 1. Adag. 25. but knowing God his Chief, knew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, what was white or black, good or evil in him, would accordingly reward or punish it. I say, under such a Prince no latitude of power is too great, because God gives him power over his temptation, and thereby secures them that otherwise he could annoy: but when Princes of other temper, whose will is the Law, (when it wills nothing consenting with the Law of God, Reges enim illi, solum dici merentur qui se & alios virtutum plenitudine regunt, Cassan. Catal. Gl. M. p. 212. Gaguinus in Chron. Franc. Cass. Catal. Gl. Mundi, p. 579. Hist. France in life of Lewis 11. p. 415. Nations, Reason and Religion) are in power, then full sad is the case of Subjects, & full dismal the accounts those Princes have to make to God for terrifying their quiet and patient people, and burdened their contented backs beyond measure, and the proportion of necessity: which Lewis the eleventh King of France in a high measure practising, and rejoicing in nothing more than to tyrannize, did feel repaid him in the dreadful terrors of his sick and death bed; for when he began to decline, he was a terror to himself, hating and mistrusting every one, (not his own son and son-in-law, his daughter, Nobles, Courtiers, Commanders, excepted) but prosecuted them all with jealousies, only james Cortiera, a Burgundian Physician, he trusts, and was so desirous to live, that to draw forth Cottiera's utmost skill to save him, he gave him 10000 Crowns a Month, and what Lands and Offices for himself and his friends he would demand, his Nephew he made Bishop of Amiens; In short, so he would but prolong his life, he was contented he should command his Crown and Sceptre: after this, being fearful of death, he sends for Francis the pious Hermit of Calabria, falls down upon his knees before him, Cass. Catal. Gl. Mund. p. 579. desiring him to prolong his life: he causes the holy Relics to be brought from Rheimes, Paris, and Rome, and by them standing by him, hoped to preserve his life; and when all the Divines about him, told him he could not escape death, but was to prepare for the entertainment of it, all he says is, I had hope that God would help me, but God knew he little deserved it, for though he took the politickest course he could to have his cruelty in Government concealed, setting up his Statue in his life time, with his knees bended, and his hands joined together and lifted up as a devotionary, and this he did to prevent the effigiation of himself when dead, as the manner is, with both his hands downwards, to signify those that did in utroque male administrare; yet by this did he not avoid the severe Character of Historians: for miserable Prince as he was, God was not near in the comforts of adversity, the prosperity of whom was not only an estrangement from, but an enmity against God. Much good may Honours do them that buy them so dear as some great men, whose will is the Law, often do: so did the French Queen Katherine, who to establish her Regency after Henry the Second, found no better means then to abolish the fundamental Laws, the order of the Realm, the privilege of the Princes of the blood, the authority of the general Estates, and the Prerogative of the Parliaments. O surely 'tis a shrewd grief to undergo the cross purposes Princes affairs are ruled by. Philip the Fair would needs raise impositions of ten Deniers on every liure in Merchandises and Wares, Hist. France, p. 157. the people in Picards, Normandy, Orleans, Lions, and other places flew into such sedition that they made his life a trouble to him. And in Charles the Sixth's time, by reason of high Government, it came to that pass, that his very Servants banded against him, his Counsel plotted his ruin, and the chief Controulers of his actions were the Princes of the blood. These, These, are the miseries of Governments depending on will, which is such a wild thing, Tolle malam voluntatem, & toll●● gehennam, if not bounded by God who only can keep it from the hour of temptation and miscarriage, that there is nothing more fatal (except Hell) than it is; nay, it is that which makes the Hell of torment. This boundless Will in the dangerous effects of it, is the cause of that His non ponderatis, which produces Tallagia alia, etc. to the ruin and grief of subjects; for when Greatness is set upon the carrier, and will go on non obstante Religion and Justice: O then 'tis nothing but God can remora it. Saint Clovis, the Founder of the Gallique Greatness, is storied to commence his Achievements after a method very dreadful; He slew all his Kinsmen that their Principalities might come to him and his Race, he spoilt men prodigeously of their goods, he seized and slew Chararie and his son, condemning them (as they were polling) to be put into a Monastery; the son seeing the father weep bitterly said, These green branches will grow again, for the Stock is not dead, but God will suffer him to perish that causeth them to be cut off; which speech Clovis hearing of, said, They complain for the loss of their hair, let their heads be cut off, and slain they were. Add to this his Conspiracy with the servants of Raguachair, and when they had brought Raguachair bound into his presence, he reviles him for unworthy the blood of Merovee thus to suffer himself to be bound; and when those that he hired to bind him came for their reward, he reproached them with Avaunt Traitors, French Hist. p. 16, 17. Is't not enough that I suffer you to live, I love the Treason but I hate the Traitor: these and sundry the like which Gregory of Tours charges on him, make him a most grievous sinner though a great King, and the more grievous because so great a Personage. All these confirm, that Oppression proceeds from unlimited Wills. When Princes give way to vage desire, they bound no where, but think what they have too little, when what they would have, is far further too much. Alas, What would the French Monarch have more than he has, who has all his Subjects have? Enlarge his Revenues he would, but to what proportion he knows not himself, nor do his Subjects: Lewis the Eleventh advanced the Revenue of France one Million and half of Crowns; Francis the First doubled that Advance; his Successor Henry the Second doubled the first double; Charles the Ninth added to the six Millions a seventh; Henry the Third brought the seven to ten Millions, and after to fifteen; in Henry the Fourths time the Treasurer of the Duke of Mayenn said that his Master had more improved the Revenues of the Crown of France then any King had done before him, Heylin's Geogr. p. 238. advancing it from two to five Millions Sterling, and yet not a tenth part come clearly to the King's Revenue, the Crown having 30000 Officers to gather its Revenue. These and the like unhappinesses of our natures in height of fortune, argue Princes as men in danger, and Subjects under the ill Aspects of that Greatness, not happy, but as the Text's words are, Lacessita Plebs calamitatibus in miseria non minima vivere. His & ae● iis calamitatibus Plebs illae lacessita in miseria non minima vivit. These forementioned and others equivalent Oppressions, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. he calls Calamitates, to set forth the inevitable and fatal nature of them: for Calamitas is properly the violent beating down of Corn or other vegetables by Wind, Hail, Rain, or other Tempest. Theophrastus to show the demolishing nature of it, renders it by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that which causes pain in the fracture of a bone. From this Calamitas comes clades, which originally is Surculorum contritio, and so Calamitas calamorum is taken for Strages stratarum arborum; here it imports such affliction and sorrow of straight as men in love have, and as those that we say are at their Wit's end, that know not which way to bestir themselves. Lacessita Injuriis] Made mad by oppression, * 4 Eccles. 7.7. Livius. as the phrase is; thus Lacessere aliquem ad pugnam & bellum is To provoke to battle, and Sermons lacessere To provoke talk; and when Silius says the Bull does rupes lacessere, he relates to the Bull's madness, which will butt his rage against the hard Rock; and Turnebus when he reproaches intemperate men, Mortem lacesiit qui luxuriose intempevanterque vivendo valetudinem labefactar. Turneb. advers. lib. 11. c. 19 ad finem. says, they do Mortem lacessere; and I remember ¶ Donec privatus capit●, docuit suo miserabili fine nobiles Milites non lacessendos, In Edw. 1. p. 66. Walsingham writing of Pierce Gaveston says, he did Lacessere insolentiis Regni Nobiles, etc. He provoked by his insolences the Nobles of England, till they took his head off, and therein taught him more wit then to provoke honour and valour. By then this clause, Rusticos pascua esse Militum, Milites pascua esse Diabolorum, Dictum Ludovic. 12. Lacessita plebs in miseria non minima vivit] the Chancellor does not only mean they are kept short, as those pastures are that are overlaid, but so afflicted as those are that have craving bellies, and no food or money to buy it. This Cominaeus in other words sets out to the life, France he tells us was before and in Charles the Sevenths' time twenty years afflicted with grievous exactions, which Lewis his son increased upon them (as if he had fulfiled that commination that God threatened in that scourge of his, Deut. 28. ●1. That should eat the fruit of the cattle and the fruit of the land until the people be destroyed, who also shall not leave Corn, Wine, or Oil, or the increase of the Kine, or flocks of the Sheep, until they have destroyed them;) for so immane was he, that my * Cominaeus De Gestis Ludou. lib. 10. p. 403. Note this. Author says, It was amiserable thing to consider the extremities his cruelty forced people to: which makes me often to mind myself and all my Countrymen to be thankful to God for his mercy in our good Princes and good Laws, which do not only give us freedom and security with full consent, but deny the contrary upon pious and politic grounds. Cambden in his Remains. For as England has ever had more Parks and Chases in it then any part of the world no larger than it, ever had or has; so has it had more in number and virtue Pious and Merciful Princes than any Nation of the Christian World ever has had; which is the reason the Laws and they, have so well agreed to bless their people with riches, freedom, and co-operation in Government under them, that I may (under favour of the great and noble State-Oracle, the now Lord Chancellor of England) use his words very seasonably here, when speaking of our most dear and beloved Sovereign he says, The Lord Chancellor's Speech at the opening of the Parliament in May. 1661. He hath not yet given us, or have we felt any other instance of his Greatness and Power and Superiority and Dominion over us, nisi aut levatione periculi aut accessione dignitatis, by giving us peace, honour, and security, which we could not have without him, by desiring nothing for himself but what is as good for us as for himself, thus that Reverend and Honourable Sage; which makes me reassume my former Magnification of the Government of England, in which there is no slave, no Subject so vile and vulgar who can say he is lacessitus, or does live in misery through the oppression of his Prince and the Laws; but according to the thrift he expresses, and the blessing of God on it, lives in the enjoyment of what they acquire to him. Which not being the happiness of the people of France, they are said in our Text to live In non minima miseria; Budaeus in Pandect. p. 193. Comment, lib. 6. de bello Gallico. because, though they are in continual factions, according to that which Caesar wrote long since of them, and Budaus does not deny, In Gallia, non solum in omnibus Civitatibus, atque in omnibus pagis, partibusque; sed pene etiam in singulis domibus factiones sunt, which is enough to; keep them miserable; yet have enough whereon to support their lives and relations comfortably: yet is that they have, so charged, that the exhaustion from it leaves nothing theirs, but renders them so poor, That they do hardly keep life and soul together, for the Text says Aquain quotidie bibit] As in the foregoing instances, the fortunes and estates of the Peasants were charged, so as thence to render them poor in estate; so here is a particularization of that which is in a sort afflictive of their bodies, while, though they have wine and appetites to drink it, their expenses be so enlarged by their taxes, that they are fain to spare every luxuriancy to answer them▪ and for that cause, while they sell their wine they drink water, and that not only sometimes for pleasure or medicine, but quotidie, as often as they eat their bread, day by day. Now this water-drinking the Text makes a part of their misery, not as water is the Mother of liquors, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Dioscorides lib. 5. cap. 10. lib. 6. cap. 33. Lege Commentar. in lib. 5. c. 10. p. 623. and in some Countries, Seasons, and Cases excellently wholesome, being the natural drink of man and beast, and so a blessing and no injury; but as it is that, which in common account being cheap and i'll, is improductive of such generous Spirits as lustier liquors generate; and as it is that which has such a mortifying operation upon nature, that it leaves the drinker dejected and sad, and denies Nature all the merry notes of her Music and prankness. For thus Water understood amongst all Nations passes for a drink of meanness and want: hence that passage in the Prophet, wherein God alluding to the custom of Power to afflict perverse and facinorous Delinquents with a dungeon, and only bread and water therein, Isa 30.20. says, Though the Lord give you the bread of adversity and water of affliction, yet it shall be well, intimating, that only bread and water are the support of nature under adversity and affliction: so God's menacing Ierusalem's reduction to short commons for abuse of her plenty, says, I will break the staff of bread in jerusalem, Ezech. 4.16. and they shall eat bread by weight, and with care; and they shall drink water by measure and with astonishment. So that to drink water daily, and that to save charges, and to be able by such denial of themselves to gratify the great levyes upon them, which they should be unable to disarrear if they did not so, is that which confirms their misery according to the allegation of the Text, Nec alium plebeii gustant liquorem nisi in solennibus festis] Though water be most wholesome and the drink of epidemicalness, and though it does many good offices to nature, feeding it to no excess, engaging the entrails to no inflammation, though it impede corrosion and putrefaction, Ad tria sufficit aqua, ad potandum, ad Lavandum, ad cibes coquendos; sic verbum Dei crudos carnis cogitatus igne Spiritus sancti accedente coquit, & vertit in sensus spirituales, & cibes mentis. Sanct. Bernard. Serm. 22. in Cant. Caentic. most of which injuries to nature are promoted by sophisticated wines, and other ill-compounded liquors, as well as by salt, crude, and indigested diet; yet when water is become (in this sense) of a servant a Master, when it, from being serviceable to cleanlyness and to cookery of meat, advances to concorporate with men, and that to be the only drink they must take down, then 'tis hard. Water is thought cold comfort, welcome it is to Armies on their march, and to Shepherds for their flocks, and to Travellers on their plod, and to Garrisons in a siege, and to Prisoners in their Dungeons; but to men that labour hard and have Wines growing, yet must sell their wines to pay impositions and find Soldiers dainties, while they themselves are forced to drink water, this is irksome. Yet the condition of France is such, that the poor Peasant is kept so short, that eat and drink coursely he must; which though some do in England, 'tis because of other accidents, not their impositions. But in France the Plebs drink water except only Diebus Festis] These Die festi or Holy daeyes I have written of in the Notes on the 24 Chapter, that which I add here, is to notify the practice of Antiquity to indulge to these great days, and the solemnities of them, extraordinaries of all sorts, not only clothes and entertainments, Lib. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, p. 1174. Non solum autem vereres dicbus festis & laetis solebant templa ramis ornare & velare; sed & in magna laetina familiaribusque sacris & nuptiis suos postes e●am sertis umbrabant atque velabant & infulis decorabant ac insigmebant, addebant & lucernas. Turnebus Advers. lib. 25. c. 4. p. 929. & lib. 27. c. 7. p. 1051. but every other thing, the best whereof then appeared; so Philo tells us the jews did, and Turneb●s with Bud●ms out of the Roman Authors confirm. For though I know they had their (a) Budaeus in Pandect. p. 19 Edit. Vasco. Dies Magui, besides these Festa; yet did they in these Festivals abound argento, veste, omni apparatu, ornatuque, as (b) In Pandect. reliq. p. 1●9. Imp. Pasil. 1534. Budaeus testifies: which entertainment of Festivals, as the Christian Church has ever retained, as is evident in the Councils, and as Polydore Virgil has made good: so also the custom of France is, that though the Plebs drink water ordinarily, yet on Holidays they feed and drink better; (c) Lib. 6. De Invent, c. 8. their compotations are then, as larger and freer, so more cheery and spiritful: then they tipple wine Cum Privilegio. Froc●is sive Collobitis de canabo ad modum panni saccorum teguntur. As their drink is water, so their garments mean, Frocks of Canvas made of Hemp. This Frock anciently was the habiliment of Monk●; so Matthew Paris tells us in the life of Wolnoth, and so Ingulphus; not that I would have it mistaken as if these Frocks were that Vest we call the Candida Vestis or the Surplice, Formam Cuculli & Frocci quam colorem transmutavit Primitivum. In vita Wolnothi. M Paris p. 38. but that Monastique Garment, which of brown and coarse linen, or woollen hung down from the neck to the knees, and which now Porters in London wear and Horse-keepers: Indicit omni anno totum conventum cum secta sua de tunicis, omni altero anno de Cucullis, & omni tertio anno de Eroccis, Ingulph. Hist. Croyl. yea because they are worn also by Country jobsons at this day, and denote servility, we have a phrase when we would express our anger to one under our power, I'll canvas his jacket, or I'll canvas his Coat for him. This then of Canvas hangs over their close garments, which is in colour and nature much like our Barge-cloaths, either brown or of an hair-colour, good for weather and toil; and this I myself have seen the Peasants of France. in, God knows, with wooden shoes and pitiful other accoutrements. Ad modum panni sacculorum teguntur] Pannus is the general name for all that which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, not only honey, oil, balsam, which keep the inward parts from waste and injury; but that hemp, flax, and cotton, which rising from the ground, cloth, In verbo ' P 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. though course yet warm for outside covering, is made of. The Greeks call Pannus by ' P 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, saith Suidas. Indeed Pannus is taken for clothing of meanness, and things of meanness; so Paracel●us calls a blemish born with one, Lib. 15. c. 14. Advers. lib. 28. c. 13. p. 1080. Pannus; Pliny styles the tumour or swelling in the groin by Pannus, and Turnebus tells us of pannaria mala; and Pannicularia in the ¶ In L Divus De bonis damnator●m. Pannosus qut sordida veste, ●rassu panno vilique opertus est, nec hoc nisi de panpere dicitur. Digest signifies raiment and things of small value, not above five Crowns, which a man carries with him into prison or the place of his death, so Ulpian uses pannicularia; and he that is rude and beggarly in habit, a ragshame or rakeshame is termed pannosus: so (a) Justinus lib. 2. justine tells us of a Military Feat that was done under disguise, Permutato Regis habitu pannosus sarmenta collo gerens, castra● hostium ingreditur; and Saint (b) Pannis involutus sacram in corpore suo dedicavit paupertatem, Serm. 4. De Nativ. Dom. Bernard makes it A sanctification of poverty that our Lord humbled himself to be Pannis involutus; thus for Panni. But the specification is Saccorum] Saccus is one of the original words, that hold their own almost in all languages, in the Heb. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, whence the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which is, to strain wine so exactly as we would count it worthy our drinking, and keep it choicely as men do Cordials; hence the best wine is called by julius Pollux 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Sacco Vinum Veteres, Turneb. Advers. lib. 13. ● c. 14. and Theophrastus' mentions 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which wine, called Sack, holds its own (as we say) for esteem even with us. From this custom of streining wine through these Sacks or sacking, which were called (c) Plin. lib. 24. c. 1. & 3. Sacci Vinarii, we use to call every thing of linen or hair, that carries any value in it A Sack, A Sack of Corn, A Sack of money (for money-baggs are little Sacks.) Hence Religious men because their penitent souls are precious, and their natural sins by their sorrow is dreined from them, were prescribed to put on Sackcloth: from whence it's grown the Livery of those Superstitionists, who, under the pretext of Sackcloth, carry on subtle projects. So then when Sackcloth is applied to the poor French, 'tis to show their poverty, which cannot exceed the meanest clothing for their bravery. Panno de lana praeterquam de vilissima, & hoc solum in tunicis subter Fr●ccas illas non utuntur.] Cloth of hair they wear, but cloth of wool they wear not, or if they do, but that fort of it which is next door to hair, that is Dog's hair, as we sarcastically call course cloth. For since the nature of the French is confident and violent, necessity is on the King to humble them, if he will keep his high Government; and if humble them he will, it must be in all things, as well in clothes, as meat, drink, and money. And this the Text asserts he does in that they are allowed no fine cloth to wear, for that is for fine fellows, Masters of Peasants; the rough and course remains of refuse Wools are for their Vests, and yet those not in view portending any value, nor in Garments of any capacity; but in their short Coats like Cassocks, In Tunicis suis subter Froccas. Tunicae] most Authors agree to be the Cassock or Polonian Coats, Tunica vestis estcui toga superinducitur, Budaeus in Tandect, p. 54. Edit. Vascos. a Garment close and warm, which though the Greeks, and we after them (for England was ever more like the grave then light Nations in habit and religion) used long; yet the French Peasants cut off, wearing it in the place of a doublet, it being loose and warm, pliant to the body in the labour and activity of it. Some derive Tunica, a corpore induendo, others ab inducendo; because it is a garment drawn over not only the body but also some other cover of the body. Critic Authors discourse much of this Garment: Advers. lib. 30. c. 30. lib. 18. c. 19 lib. 11. c. 23. lib. 2. c. 4. lib. 18. c. 19 lib. 30. c. 21. in Turnebus we read of Tunica Nilotis, Tunicae coloriae, Demissae tunicae, Manuleatae tunicae, Tunicae Russae: and it should seem that the Laticlavian Robe, which Senators had, Cui Laticlavii jus non erat, ita cingatur, ut tunica prioribus oris infra genua paulum posterioribus ad medios poplit●● usque perveniant; nam infra mulicrum est. supra Centurionum, Budaeus in Pandect. p. 54. Edit. Vascos. was a Tunica; which, though not so long as women's trains, yet longer than the Military Coats, and was as the now Gowns Aldermen use, drawn over their other clothes: so that Tunica understood for the exterior and visible Garment, was applied to the externity of other things. The shell of a nut, Tunica nuclei; Rosinus Antiq. Rom. lib. 5. c. 35. p. 224. the skin or coat that covers the eye, which Anatomists make Cornea, uvea, vitrea, crystallina, this they called Oculorum tunica: that fatal Coat which Malefactors had of Pitch about them, when they went to be burned, was called Tunica molesta. In short, what the Text intends by Tunica is shortly uttered in that which is the Countryman's garb with us, The short Coat; which, though our Yeomen and Farmers wear, as Gentlemen do under a wide and longer vest: yet the Peasants in France wear under their Frocks of Canvas or Sacking. And this is their abatement and the badge of their servitude being the Vests of Porters. Neque caligis nisi ad genna disco-operto residuo tibiarum.] This further argues their suppression and vility, that they go barefoot, having neither hose nor shoes, but those of wood, or old ones, the refuse of our Nation transported thither. Now, as to be well shod as well as well clad was among the Romans and is amongst all Nations a sign of freedom and prosperity, Rosin. De Antiq. Rom. lib. 5. c. 36. p. 225. Proprie as cruris oppositum sura, Celsus lib. ●. c. 1. so to be the contrary is a sign of extreme poverty. And therefore the French Peasants are kept so poor that they cannot afford to buy hoses to shelter their shinbone (the Tibia here, which not only gives strength but beauty to that flesh, which environing it, adorns and symmetrizeth the leg) but are fain to go bare from the gartering, to which their breeches reach; and are so far from great breeches (which are semi-pericoats, and the invents of effeminate wantoness, who by affectation of them proclaim their lubricity, and what it is they are enamoured with) that they are glad they can purchase any thing that will tolerably cover their body, and defend the knee, where the motive vigour is, Arma quibus crura muniuntur Tibialia vocant. Hyeme quaternis cum pingui toga tunicis, & subucula thorace laneo & femoralibus & tibialibus muni●batur, In Aug. c. ●2. from cold and injury; which breeches so girt under the knee, may well be called Tibialia: as those other things were, which the Romans wore on that part armed with it, of which Suetonius writes, and of which to write more would be useless. Mulieres etiam nudipedes sunt, exceptis diebus festis] This is a further degree of the poor Peasant's misery, that not only he himself must endure hardship, but even his wife and Daughter; women in fex must do it also, and in that, in this particular of going barefoot, the badge of very beggary. Now, though true it be, that God made man, one nature, in two sexes; in which regard Philo elegantly calls man, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Philo lib. De Cherubin. p. 115. The male-woman, and woman, The female-man, puts them into conditions of compassiency: (and the state of Marriage is under the indispensible condition of For better for worse, for richer for poorer, in sickness and in health. And usual it is, and otherways it can not be, but that poor men's wives must be miserable with their poor Husbands (I mean, in that scantness of outward accommodation which men call a worldly misery:) yet, Muliards quast Molliores. for women so to be objected to hardship is very irksome to any man to behold, and unpleasing for me to write of. Tears here are the properest encounters of these Narratives, and 'tis pity a pen should any further eternize such Barbarism, then to be the remembrancer of that abhorrence, which men in all successions ought to have of it, for women's sakes who suffer by it. But so it is in France, the poor women are said, to save hose and shoes, to go barefoot and barelegged, as beggars do, fulfilling that of Philo, though in another sense than he meant it, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, lib. De Temulentia, p. 247. That they are subject to vulgar customs; only herein they exceed perfect beggars, that they have hose and shoes for Holidays, to Mass and to Recreation, where they see and are seen, Cum autem esset dies sanctus Pentecostes, supplicaverunt Cremonenses, ut propter diem sanctum differretur Pugna usque in crastinum saltem. Rigordus De Mediolanensibus in Gestis Philipp. Regis Franc. p. 212. they will go trimm; otherwise, nasty and pitiful persons they about their household affairs are. And this our Chancellor uses as an Argument of the French Country-womens' hard lives; though truly the Wives of their Nobless and Villagers or Citizens, are plentifully accommodated with all necessaries; yea, Fecit & in colle Quirinali Senaculum, id est, Mulierum Senatum, in quo ante fuerat Conventus Matronalis solemnibus duntaxat diebus, facta & Senatussonsulta ridicula de legibus Matronalibus, qua quo vestitu incederent, quae cui cederet, qua ad cujus ofculum veniret, qua pilento, qua equo saginario, quae asino veheretur, quae carpento mular●, qua boum, qua sella veheretur, etc. Lampridius in Heliogab. p. 199. Tom. 2. Hist. August. Script. Lat. so glorious and gay are they, and so have they by their fashions new-fangled our Nation, that though I do not wish a revival of somewhat like that Senatus Muliebris in Heliogabalus his time, which scoffing and deriding their vanities, brought an Odium on, and diminution of women, the wearers of them. This, I say, I wish not, lest it too much lessen them (whom we men ought to have high value of, and great loves for; because they are not only unspeakable blessings of life, when they are worthy their names women, but also the means of the continuance of the Race of mankind and so our temporal eternizers:) but that which I do wish is without prejudice I am sure, Vopise. in Aurel. and without all displeasure I hope to the truly worthy of that Sex; that as (a) In Pandect. p. 66. Edit. Vascos. Budaus wished for Paris; so I, for London and the Suburbs, might see such a constitution, Vt de nostratibus Matronis statueret, quae cuique cedere, quae cuique Dux aut Comes esse deberet, quid gestare, quid indui, quid amieiri, quidve cingi unamquamque deceret; but enough of this. Only, since the poor men's wives of France are barefooted all days but Holidays, and then put on hose and shoes in reverence to those days, I cannot but wonder whence that injunction of Simon Islip Archbishop of Canterbury in Ed. 3. time should proceed, Gulielm. de Nangis, De Gestis Ludovici Regis. p. 442. Script. Gall. when Holidays being in the greatest esteem and credit, because Canonically according to strictness observed, were to be days of recreation and devotion (which is the reason that the Historian makes Saint Lewis the French King's penance on Holidays to be meritorious) and no Artsman to work upon them; Literis fuis patentibus sub poena excommunicationis praecipiens universis Ecclesiarum Rectoribus & Vicariis sua Provinciae, & illorum subditis, ut de catero non ab●●ineant in sestis quorundam Sanctorum; ab operibus manualibus & servilibus, qua prius in talibus festis sieri non licebit. Walsingham p. 172. yet than the Archbishop by his Letter Patents to all his Clergy, inhibited upon pain of Excommunication, from abstaining on some Saints days from their Callings of labour, and permitted them to work thereon as upon common days. But I return to our Text. Carnes non comedunt ibidem Mares & Foeminae, prater lardum Baconis, quo impinguant pulmentariae sua in minima quantitate. This Leut all the year with the poor Drudges of France, our Text produces as a further argument of the tenuity of their condition, and their Taxes exhaustion from them. For that they eat no flesh, is not (I conceive) from any religious observation, or any State-injunction, but purely for cheapness sake; and by their hard diet to enable them to keep somewhat about them to entertain their Masters with, when they come abroad: and without which to treat and appease them, they would be cruelly tyrannous. For flesh they breed up and have, and stomaches they have to eat it, and a snap now and then they get of it; but they diet on roots, grains, and fruits, which they make into pottages: this the Text calls Pulmentaria] the same in effect with Pulmenta, that we call, Horat. 1. Ep. 19 Ius porcorum, pullorum, piscium, & jus pulmentorum, Largissimas epulas. Apuleius. Pulmentum pridem si eripait. Accius Plautus in Aulul. 9.37. water-gruel, pulse, or thin pottage, the diet of poor people: to which Horace alludes, Canes ut pariter pulmenta laboribus empta; and that which Apuleius, Plautus, and others mention as thin diet: this the Text says they do make hearty and strong with a small piece of lard of bacon, or, as I rather believe, by the lard of bacon in the broth, they so quat their stomaches that they make it go further by it; to this use of it Plautus alludes when he says, Ipse ego pulmenta utor unctiusculo; and for this use lard of bacon is fitly called Lard from arduo, quia ardour f●rmum & arduum facit; and thus bacon by being salted and hung in the smoke, and over the fire, Succidia verbum Catonianum, quo nostr● lardum significant, ex quo in usum suum quotidie partes succidunt. Agellius lib. 13. c. 23. has much of the succulency, and moisture exhausted; which being the matter of tenderness and putrefaction, renders it (in the absence of them) more compact, firm, and durable. Now this Bacon or Lard, becoming a dish that will dure, is ready ever upon the sudden, which is the reason that some of the * Ancients have called it, Succidiam, because they do daily cut such portions off as they use; and Tully says Cato was wont to call his garden hence Succidiam, quia inde quotidie aliquod resecari possit. This then so cheap to the Peasants, who bring up the swine of which it is made, and so ready at hand, and satiating the gross labourer's stomach, is the flesh, that only those poor souls are able to provide, which though they can do but in minima quantitate, yet better a little than none at all. Carnes assatas coctasve alias ipsi non gustant, praeterquam inter dum de intestinis & capitibus animalium pro nobilibus & mercatoribus occisorum. This shows, that the best of what they breed and kill, they sell to make Rend and pay Taxes and Quartrings; and that which they keep is the course parts, which are not moneys worth: and therefore they themselves sometimes feast with it, but Carnes assatas coctasve, Rost and boiled meats, which are the Staples of diet with us, they attain not to. Carnes assatas] This word assatas Etymologists derive from ardeo; and in the best Roman Authors assare and assum is as much as merum solum: Vbi aliquid aruit & rostum est, abit humidum, solum id quod siccum & aridum superest Beeman. in verbo. by way of Metaphor it signifies the effect of fire on any thing that extracts by its heat the moisture of it, and thence obdurates it, leaving nothing almost but siccity in it, or at lest nothing so much as siccity; this our language calls Through roasted. From this prevalency of fire, which by extraction of the humid parts, leaves siccity to predominate in roasted flesh, Critics term every thing of solitary import by assare, and the words derivative from it, Vox assa, A voice without Music, Tibiae assae, Music without voice; Assa, The place in the baths where they do only sweat and not wash, we call it a Stove; Assestrice● vocabantur, quia assident f●ta. Etymolog. Assae, Nurses that are so intent on the Babes they suckle, that they forget themselves and their relations, to tend them: so Assam pro mero solo sine aqua & humiditate. And when the Poets were said to devote a Poem to any particular person, they were said assare; and their Poems were called Assamenta. This is the Notion of the word, and the Ordeal by fire in which the flesh of beasts is purged and made innocent to the stomach of man; as also it is by the Ordeal of water (Coctasve) which is the effect of fire working by water on flesh; not by parching up, but by soaking out the moisture and humid parts of flesh, which it allures to its self, and by which the liquor of its purgation is heigthned and spirituated. This, though it hath not the pre-eminence of the former, but follows it in the account of cookery, we saying, roast and boiled, yet is very wholesome diet; and for weak and declining bodies thought most nutritive. It is with us here the diet mostly of the meaner sort, because it requires least charge and attendance to its cooking; but in France they use it much, because they delight in pottage, which is siered from it. Yet the Text says, the Country people have neither one or other; all they of flesh attain to is the offals, the nobler parts are for the freemen, and those that are moneyed and can far and live high, which our Text says are the Nobiles & Mercatores. The former for their blood and Commands sake, the greatness and dread of which will fetch from the poor Commons whatever it desires: The later, the Merchant or Citizen for his money sake, which does not only purchase him esteem in all places, as Cassanaeus sets forth notably, Catalogue. Gl. Mundi. p. 442. but also procure him all conveniencies to life and lustre. Mercatores quia pecuniam possident hisc● temporibus, plurimum gratia valent; veru● nulla gaudent prarogativa; quta omnis lucri avidi professio Nobilitatem in Regno illo maculat. Albergatus in Rel. Reg. Gallic. p. 115. For though in France, Prerogatives and Seats of Honour and Military Tenure be not purchaseable by Merchants and men of Trade; yet are such owned for very rich in money and money's worth. And I think the (a) Digest. lib. 23. tit. 2. art. 4●. julian Law, that prohibited a Senator's Son or Daughter to marry any one whose Father or Mother did Artem ludicram exercere, will not in the exposition even of France, which stands most upon Punctilios, extend to men of Trade, Paulus lib. 1. Ad Legem Juliam & Papiam. p. 2116. the Mercatores here; seeing Trade of Merchandise, buying and selling staple and useful commodities, is not Ars vilis but nobilis, (as noble as the Advocate, who sells his breath to the Client's fee, or the Soldier his life to his General's pay, or any other profession which men practice for reward) and so the Holy Story accounts it, May. 23 8. when it terms the Merchants of Tyre, The honourable of the earth. Sed Gentes ad Arma comedant alimenta sua, ita ut vix ova corum ipsis relinquantur pro summis vescenda deliciis. Before it was Homines ad Arma, by which the Cavalry were understood; now 'tis Gentes ad Arma, All the Soldiery. Provision the Peasants breed up, and perhaps sometimes and in some measure sell to raise their Rents, and other charges, but the most of what they get about them, by hard toil and parsimony, is but to satiate the Soldier, not to recreate themselves: which makes me think these poor wretches with others in the Asian Governments to be very miserable, and those, that so belabour them with affliction and pressure, to justly fear the return of that commination in Amos, Forasmuch therefore as your treading is upon the poor, Amos. ●. 11. and ye take from him burdens of wheat, Zeph. 1.17. Vers. 21. ye have built houses of hewn stone, but ye shall not dwell in them; ye have planted pleasant Vineyards, but ye shall not drink wine of them; for I know your manifold transgressions and your mighty sins, etc. or that in ¶ Deut. ●8. 36. Deuteronomy. For truly if Poverty, which is God's affliction, be Great men's marks to levelly their power at, and against it pitilessly to discharge itself; if they that could eat flesh which they breed up, if they had it, are not permitted an egg the slightest diet, Princes that have Subjects thus har●assed and shortened, have great cause to have long ears and quick eyes; yea soft hearts, to hear their Subjects groans, pity their griefs, and remove their afflicters; and that not so much upon politic and plausible grounds, as upon Principles of conscience to avoid the terrors of deathbeds, and the wrath of their eternal and supereminent Sovereign, under whose power they themselves are as well as the meanest of their people; so Lewes the Pious told the world when he was in affliction, Quod enim conservandis Regibus firmius praesidium, quam pietas, quam mansuetudo, quam clementia & liberalitas esse potost. Gaguinus, lib. 4. fol. 32. Edit. veter. That nothing preserved Kings so safe as piety to God, clemency, meekness, and justice to men. And Philip the Fair, when he was to die, calling for his Son Lewis that was to succeed him, said to him thus, Lewis, hitherto of my life I have reigned as a Monarch, vexing my people with unreasonable, Ludovice, inquit, Regnau● ha●tenus, plur●●is vectigalibus & tributis meum populum vexans, nec mihi satis cura fust, monetam cudere, qua legitimi ponderis esset; cam ob rem mu●torum odia in me concitavi: Ecce, post me regnaturus es, miserere Patris animae,. & quae perperam à me gesta sunt. ipse emendes. Idem lib. 7. p. 70. B. and to them ruining taxes and tributes, debasing my coin, by making that go for a value which indeed it was not worth, by this means I have raised the hatred of my Subjects against me: O Lewis, behold thou art to reign after me, have pity upon the soul of thy father, which is now departing, and see thou amend what has been faulty in my Government, thus Herald And thus have our pious English Monarches breathed out their Imperial souls in benedictions to the people, and valedictions to the world, showing that they died in the love of God as well as of men: Hear the Soul that was All, (as it were Heaven on Earth) The true Glory of Princes consists in advancing God's Glory, Eicon Basil. c. 27. To the then Pr. of Wales, now our Gracious Lord and Sovereign. in the maintenance of true Religion and the Churches good; also in the dispensation of Civil Power with justice, and Honour to the public peace: And in another place, Since the public Interest consists in the mutual and common Good both of Prince and People; nothing can be more happy for all, then in safe, grave, and honourable ways to contribute their counsels, in common enacting all things by public consent, without Tyranny or Tumults, etc. And how well this counsel in the name of God and by Paternal Authority given, is obedientially followed by our most excellent Lord and Master, Hear himself to his Parliament expressing, A word in season is like Apples of gold in pictures of silver. In God's name provide full Remedies for any future mischiefs; Be as severe as you will against new Offenders, especially if they be so upon old Principles, and pull up those Principles by the roots: but I shall never think him a wise man, who would endeavour to undermine or shake that The Happy Act of Indemnity and Oblivion. A divine sentence is in the lips of the K. his mouth transgresseth not in Judgement. Prov. 16.10. Foundation of our public peace, by infringing that Act in the least degree; or that he can be my friend, or wish me well, who would persuade me ever to consent to the breach of a promise I so solemnly made when I was abroad, and performed with that solemnity; because, In his speech at the opening of the Parliament. 1661. and after I promised it, I cannot expect any attempts of that kind, by any men of merit and virtue: thus divinely, and like himself speaks our good King. This disgression I have thought fit to make in relation to that sensibleness which good Princes have of their poor Subjects conditions, which surely they must needs relent at, who have Subjects dutiful to them, yet so miserable, that though they breed up flesh and dainties, hardly can keep on egg, the most trite thing about a Country, dwelling, for their own dainties, but are fain to crouch to the Soldiers that quarter with them to their undoing, so says the Text, the misery of the poor Peasant is, Vix ova eorum ipfis relinquuntur pro summis vescenda deliciis, Et si quid in Opibus eis aliquando accreverit, quo locuples eorum aliquis reputetur, concito ipse ad Regis subsidium plus Vicinis suis caeteris oneretur; quo, ex tun● convicinis cateris ipje equabitur paupertate. This is a further degree of misery, that a governor's eye should be evil because God's is good; or, that the thrift of a subject, not by vice or villainy, but by labour and frugality, should be the occasion of his scrutiny in order to his diminution. This, though it be here said to be the condition of the Peasant, yet is not his affliction from his Prince or Parliament; Si vis tribunus esse, immo si vis vivere, manus militum contiu● Nemo pullum alienum rapiat, ovem nemo contingat, uvam nullus auferat, segetem nemo deterat, oleum, sal, lignum nemo exigat: anon sua contentus sit de praeda hostis, non de lacrymis Provincialium habeat. Flavius vopisc. de Aureliano in Epistol. Militari. p. 273. but from those Soldiers in command near him, who can so pester him with inroads, and charge him with levyes, that those lunches out of him shall leave him as bare as his Neighbours: A cruelty that surely the Judge of quick and dead will severely punish, and such as the Prince, whose Agents these are, should endeavour to understand, and understanding to punish and redress; which Forcatulus, that learned French Lawyer, Ego boni ducis functus sum officio, qui debellare hostes didici, & socios honorifice tractare, corumque ulcisci injurias; didicerat autem optime Militum licentiam coercere, inquiens, Principem irritare Milites quos non castigat. Forcatulus De Gallor. Imp. & Philosoph. lib. 5. p 330. B. Imp. Paris 157●. says, was the excellency of Meroveus, the Founder and Amplier of the French Government, Who thought it his duty to overcome his enemies by valour, and oblige his party by kindness, and not to permit his power to be abused to the injury of any, not to suffer his Army to be licentious, but to restrain them where such they were; accounting it an encouragement to violence, not to prevent it by strict Mandates, and to punish it when, notwithstanding them, perpetrated: by which means he appeared not to them a rigid Lord, Ideoque omnibus populariter charus atque ita venerandus, ut ab ipso posteri Reges Merovingi in Francia appellari caeperint, indicio manifesto rarae virtutis. Idem eodem loco. but a calm Father, and so inserted himself into the love of the people, that to mind his Successors of what the people delighted, they should after his example express towards them, they called them Meroveus'. And surely if this example had been followed in France in our Chancellour's time, he would not have had so just occasion to have bemoaned the miseries of the poor Peasants, as in other, so in this respect. For as enjoyments of men's acquisitions is a great encouragement to them to industriously endeavour, and ingenuously design their plenty and locupletation: so to be deprived of those compensations, and to become the spoil of others, who by their power worry their plenty and rape it from them, is a disheartening of him to any thing above idleness; or at best to make him but slow and improlifick in expression of himself. For since the French Nation, Caesar lib. 6. De Bell. Gall. according to their old Druid delirancy, derive their Origin from This the God of riches, Cic. lib. 2. De Nat Deorum. that so many poor wretches should be in the Nation, who have not prodigally wasted their patrimonies, if any they can be thought to have from that Tradition, must proceed from the violence of some over others, and the success they have had therein against them; Galli natura feri sunt atque superbi, & in rebus tentandis animosi, in prosperis intolerandi, in suïs commodis augendis assidui, in alienis negligentes, & in re bellica saepe promissa fallentes. Quandoquidem hac apud illos viguit opinio, ubi commodum adest, ibi quoque adesse honestatem & Majestatem, soletque proverbio usurpari habeas Galliam amicum, s●d vicinum nequaquam. Albergatus in Discursu Politic. p. 160. which has made the Nobless absolutely great and rich, and the Peasants absolutely poor and miserable: And for which no better Apology can be made, than what I have heard, and is generally the character of the common French people. Keep them poor and servile, and they will be gentle and loyal; but let them prosper and be flush, and the waves of the Sea are not more insolent, proud, and boisterous than they are. Haec ni fallor forma est status gentis plebanae Regionis illius] This concludes the narrative of the common man's condition in France; which, though it be full of tristicity, and in the severalities of it very unwishable, because beneath the delight or endurance of a free spirit; yet must be borne by those whose subjections to their Prince calls them to this servitude: which though the Chancellor has given me from this Text occasion to illustrate and civilly to aggravate, with all those Historique circumstances, that carry it to a plenarty of discovery, and thereby render it unamiable; yet as the Chancellour's scope then; so mine now, is not to provoke those Subjects to impatience, or to arraign the Polity of that great and Majestic Nation; but, by the detection of that (so indulgent to Military men and their accommodation, and so unbenign to men in courses of civil life, such as is Husbandry, Arts, Merchandise,) to raise a just value and religious gratulation to God, and the Kings and Parliaments of our own Nation, by whose favours and mediations there is therein impartiality of freedom to all, Every man bear setting under his own Vine and under his own Figtree; (and the Laws being equally the benefit and terror of poor and rich, noble and common Subjects as they are good or bad.) We, that are so privileged by and happy under this Paradised Government, aught to express all loyalty and readiness to observe the Laws, and venerate the Lawmakers, who certainly have been ever as true nursing fathers to this Nation, as love, cohabiting with humane infirmity, would permit them: nor have for the most part more concerned themselves to promote their own private interest than consisted with the respective interest of their Subjects, according to the measure of the known Laws; so declares good King Charles the Blessed, I can be contented to recede much from mine own interests and personal rights of which I conceive myself to be Master, Bicon Basil. cap. 6. but in what concerns Truth, justice, the Rights of the Church, and my Crown, together with the general good of my Kingdoms (all which I am bound to preserve as much as morally lies in me) here I am and ever shall be fixed and resolute, so Herald And so should every subject testify his loyalty to be fixed and resolute for the King, his Laws, and his people's rights, against all insolence and innovation that rises up against them; for the Law being the surest foundation, Note this. all appearance according to it, and in opposition to whatever is frowardly contradictory and adverse thereto, is very worthy good Subjects: And I pray God give us all of this Nation the grace, To fear God and honour the King, and not to hearken to them that are given to change. Thus much concerning the French Plebs, and the restraint of them. Nobiles tamen non sic exactionibus opprimuntur.] This shows the partiality that is in France, in that the poor go to pot, while the rich go if not scot-free, yet are not exacted upon; for France being a Military Government, and the Nobless attending the King in his Wars and Armies, Non contribuunt ad collectas Nobiles & ex constit. Carol. 6. cavetur no subsidia aliqua, talia, focagia, impositiones, auxilia, à Nobilibus & corum Successoribus solvantur vel exigantur Tholoss. Syntag. Juris. lib. 3, c. ●. ss. 6. excuse themselves and their estates from all forage and charge, putting the whole burden on the poor Tradesmen, Vinedressers & Husbandmen: and this the Nobless do by a kind of Aboriginal right, as the instance of their freedom. And not to suffer them to be thus privileged, were to enrage them to those disorders that their quick spirits are naturally inclined to, Gallorum enim Optimates recepto more, qui in Francos translatus est, cafuriem insignem & copiesam lubenter ostentaverunt, ●● fortasse libentius quod (ut jam dixi) Franci quasi Liberi potissimum nominarentur. Forcatul. lib. 5. De Gall. Imp. Et Philo p. 300. B. Edit. Paris. 1579, and their enraged anger would make them persist in. Therefore as the great men of France have ever gloryed in great heads of hair unpolled, as a token of their being freemen; so have they preserved to themselves the liberty not to be polled of their fortunes by exactions. For by this means the King does not only keep up his Horsemen to keep under the rude common people, and repress the insolences of their discontents; but prevents the dangerous effects of displeased and unobliged Greatness: which has been such a pest to France, that it has not only raised great Armies in it, but kept them so raised up to the waste and spoil of men and treasure. For great spirits are impatient of diminution, and when they are that way as they think undervalved, meditate Returns, edged from the irritation of rage and grief, which ever make a desperate medley, as in Contarino's assault of Forscari Duke of Venice appeared; for that only proceeded from the opinion Contarino had that Forscari was the obstacle to his Admiralship of the Adriatic Seas. Shute's Hist of Venice. And so in other cases abundantly might be instanced, the avoidance whereof is that which dictates to a Non provocation of great persons and parties, which is the reason the Text says, Nobiles non sic exactionibus opprimuntur. Sed si illorum aliquis calumniatus fuerit de crimine, licet per inimicos suos, non semper coram judice Ordinario ipse convocari solet; sed quam sape in Regis Camera, & alibi in privato loco. This Clause presents the Nobless not sometimes very happy: for since Greatness is subject to temptation and Envy, both which are productive of Enemies, and Enemies contrivers of Accusations, and Accusations too often believed, and proceeded upon before the truth of things be throughly examined, greatness is even in France a thing of danger: for, who can be secure there, where his enemy may accuse, and he not be capable to defend himself juridickly; nay, how can innocence stand in judgement, if it may not be tried per Pares, Persons of Honour, as the Peers of a Nation cannot but be presumed to be. Yet the Text says this is the condition of the Nobility in France, who, though they are privileged, that in criminal Cases they usually may answer and defend by their Proctor, Tholoss. Syntag. Juris universi. lib. 32. c. 24. ss. 20. that they contribute not towards payments to the King, (Talia namque munera plebriis imponuntur pro modo suarum facultatum, as my * Guido Pap. Decis. 384. Authors words are;) though I say, Non sic exactionibus opprimuntur] yet their persons are in danger and their fortunes too, by being accused and condemned clandestinely as it were. Non semper coram judice Ordinario] in common apprehension, is before the Judges that judge according to the Laws of Nations, and the Customs of the Country, and are men of Law, and Graduates in that faculty. But the Notion of Ordinarius judex in France, Ordinarii Judices vocantur in Gallla qui judicant, cum ipsi non sunt periti, id est, non sunt graduati in jure; omnis enim graduatus prasumitur esse peritur. Et ideo his judicibus appenduntur Assessores, qui homines sunt perite, & qui illos judices informant in jure in omnibus Casibus. Catalogue. Gloriae Mundi. p. 293.294. Ordinaria & delegata potius copulantur p. 293. as I have it from Cassanaeus a Frenchman born, and a Lawyer bred, is this, When a man is to judge a cause who has no Law in him, but goes (as it were) according to the private instructions he has from his Superior, or according to the swing of his own will, having no rule to go by. Now, though true it be that these Judges purposely delegated, and termed Ordinary, (because they have but the learning of ordinary men in them, that is, they know no more of the Law than is the Law of reason) ought to be ruled by the judgement of the Lawyer, or Lawyer's assistant to, and associated with them in the Commission, and so mostly are and proceed according to the course of the Laws in those Cases. Yet so sad is the case of the Nobless there, that always they are not summoned to a juridical answer; but sometimes, yea, quam saepe, that is, sapissime, are summoned into the Camera Regis to hear their dooms according to their Princes Royal wills and pleasures: now, this Camera Regis is not Paris the Royal City, as London also here is, and thence in the Statute of 3 & 4 E. 6. c. 21. is termed the King's Chamber, nor the Bedchamber or Chamber of Presence, which the Greeks called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, because it was arched on the top and had a convex figure, which they render by Fornex, the Archness of its figure being the same in building that the Psalloides is in the body, argues state and united strength. Hence Camera signifies any thing that has an Arch-figure, Rosinus Antiq. Rom. lib. 10. c. 20. Camera Naves sunt archae & exiles, like close Liters, or Arks rather, which a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. lib. De Nominum Mutatione p. 1050. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. lib. 3. Devit. Mos. p. 668. Camera, id est, ex arca Domini. Tholoss, Syntag. Juri. lib. 6. c. 3. ss. ●. Philo calls, The sacred repository of the Law, and the Vessel fitted for their retention; it being the custom of Antiquity to make their Chests for any sacred purpose Arch-figured, as we see at this day in many old Churches in the chancels of them: and these Chests were the Camerae of the Church-untensils, Plate, Registers, Copes, Vestments, etc. wherein those times deemed the external Majesty of Religion to consist. This is some notion of Camera, Camera] vela ad excipiendum pulverem, ne super mensas spargeretur atgue dapes simul conspurcaret Ab Horatio Aulaa vocatur, quem morem hodie Principes & Monarchas servare compertum est. apud quos mensas sub quibusdam veluti Tentoriis sericess parars sape videmus. Rosinus Antiq. Rom. lib. 5. c. 27. p. 211. which, as to the Text's sense, may (as I conceive) be the Chamber of the King, where he lies down to rest, for in Military times Princes had their Pavilions in the fields with their Armies, over which they had Arches not only to prevent weather and wind, but dust and filths accession to them; and these were called Aulaea, like the Canopyes of State, Monarches to this day use to dine and sleep under; some call them Tentoria sericea: to these in our settled times, wherein Princes have fixed Courts, these Camerae do succeed; and the officer of State, that has the charge of them, is called Camerarius Regis: Qui praest cubiculo Camera Regi● Cassan Catal. Gl. Mundi. p. 263. in France, Le grand Chambellan. None of these Chambers does the Text chiefly intend, but the sense of our Text-Master in alleging this, is to tell us, that when Great men are in France under displeasure, they are summoned to the King's Chamber (not his Chambre des compte, or Chambre du domaine, or Chambre du Counsel, Serres Hist. of France, p. 559. London Impress. 1607. or Chambre dorée, but his Chambre Royal purposely erected as a Court of censure and doom: for when any, that were of dangerous consequence, appeared, they were called to the King's Chamber; so were the Lutherans in Henry the Second time, and others down all along since) to hear their doom. Et alibi in privato loco, etc. Up he go, and his doom is privately adjudged him, without judgement of his Peers, or defence of himself, Mox ut criminosum, eum Principis conscientia relatu aliorum judicaverit; very hard to be condemned unheard, yet it must be undergone, In Sacco positus absque figura judicii per propositi Mariscallorum Ministros noctanter in flumin● projectus submergitur] surely a Judgement full of terrible cruelty, The judgement on Parricide; Modestinus ad L. Pompe●am de Paricidiis. for of old, Parricides were scourged with bloody Rods, then put into a Sack with a dog, a cock, a viper, and an ape, Schottus in Notis ad Contr. 17 Senec. lib. ●. p. 142. all alive sewed up with them, and they all cast with the Sack into the Sea. And though I confess no Judgement can be too severe for such a Villainy as it is to kill the Pater Patriae; Minime majores nostri lagendum putaverunt ●um, qui ad Patriam delendam & Parents & Liberos interficiendos venerit. Pomponius Digest. lib. 11. yet this of giving an offender a cruel death, Absque forma judicii, is much more rigid then (I doubt) to God can well be answered; for he being the father of Mercies and the fountain of Justice, delights not to see Princes, Lib. De Septenatio & Festis, p. 1●84. in power under him, to be inclement and truculent, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Philo's words are, As not only the punishers of them offending in making their lives a torture to them, but after depriving them of an easy dispatch; for this he accounts the error of his entrust, and too near a compartization with those quadrupedial furies which he hath inferiorated to man in reason, and thence made the Subjects of his Empire: but that which he loves and commends in those earthly Gods, whose lustres both of power and life are determinable, is, That they should imitate him in beneficence, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Philo lib. de Judice, p. 721. Philo in lib. Quod det potiori, p. 170. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Idem lib. de Mundi Opific. p. 19 in suffering the Sun of their favour and the Rain of their care to impend all their Subjects; and though they correct their enormities, yet they then should pity their infirmities, and bestow their Compassions on them as men in nature with themselves; and if this they would do, considering themselves 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. The divine Artifice, whereby it hath exemplified its transcendency to the utmost capacity Mortality can attain to; their wills would be the Law by the victory their goodness gets over the loves of men, rather than their persons and power be terrible to them: then would not that complaint of our Text be so true as it is, Qualiter & mori audivisti majorem multo numerum hominum quam qui legitimo process● juris extiterunt] For however some Princes in the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and lustiness of their power may pish at calm and paternal exhibitions of themselves to their politic Children; A good Monition to Greatness. yet, when Experience the best Master has ingenerated the calmness of wisdom in them, they will account it the only rise to continuation and serenity: nor can any Prince be thought, as Lewis the Twelfth was, A Father to his people, but he that by Justice governs, by Prowess defends, by Parsimony enriches, and by clemency obliges his Subjects; for fury and severity unallayed by that Regal Grandeur which uses them only as Physic, is not the endowment of Kings, but the intemperance of sinful nature, which, though it torments others for a while, yet ends in the reproach and dishonour of its Practisers. And therefore let flattery prostitute truth never so much to the temporary satisfaction of licentious Greatness, yet all things done beyond the rules of Religion, Magnum sine mensura, dicitur enorm. Plin. Ep. 203. Morality, and National Laws, are Enormia; for since these are the squares and proportions according to which Imperial Architects should raise and carry on their politic fabric, Longitudines ad regulam & lineam, altitudines ad perpendiculum, anguli ad normam respondentes exigantur. Vittuvius lib. 7. De Opere Tectorio. whatever in any dimension transgresses this, is enormous: and though men mince it, and write not so openly and with vehemence as our Chancellor does of the absoluteness that is taken from colour of that Maxim of Law, Quod Principi placuit, which means nothing less than is imposed upon it to be its sense; yet do they in their hearts conclude, that such things are detestabiliter, damnabiliterque perpetrata, that is, that they are sins committed by them against the Laws of their Government, and therefore in their nature detestable, and against the Laws of Religion and therefore damnable: which Doctrine certainly, as true as truth itself, if it had been canonised at Rome, would have undermined that horrid Artifice of secular policy which is conclaved there; and which wrought pvissantly, Fuller's Hist. of the Worthies of England in Lincolnshire. p. 155. and to a notorious degree of wickedness in the case of Robert Somercot our Countryman, whom I read storied for one of the foremost of the three Elects for the Popedom after the death of Pope Gregory: the Card●nals being set to have an Italian and not an English man (and Celestine as after he was called and not Somercot) made Somercot away by poison to prevent his obtainment of the Chair, which they feared otherwise he would have had; but enough of this. For as our Chancellor here took leave of the memory of these practics to excuse his Dialogue from any suller Register of them, Lege Cassanaeum part. 5. Catal. Gl. Mundi. p. 198●. & seq. and to prevent the exasperation of his pen, which might else be keener than otherwise would be convenient; so shall I, after his judicious example, desist the further Comment on this Chapter, the residuary parts whereof are only enunciative of the design of this his exageration in what passages has concerning the people of France occurred, and concerning the Subjects of England are further to be produced. And as on the Text that concerned the people of France I have discoursed with all the veracity and modesty I could, acknowledging the French Nation very wise, warlike, and prosperous, and their Government best fitted for their Climate and People; so shall I, in what follows concerning the just equity and excellency of the English Laws, and the condition of England's men under England's Monarches, write the truth and nothing but the truth, according to the modesty and humble submissedness I have herein endeavoured to express, Acta exteriora indicant interiora secreta. Reg. Juris Cook ● Rep. 146. and hope I shall be by my betters allowed to have accordingly acted, hoping, that God will give us of this Nation grace, upon sight of the mercy we enjoy beyond others, to value out Governors and Government above others, and to pray for, and give obedience to the King, his Parliament, and his Laws, now happily flourishing amongst us. For surely if there be any National Government that has a symmetriousness to the Government of Heaven, The Author's hearty Advice to his Countrymen. 'tis this of our native Country; wherein, as our Sovereign resembles (with reverence to God the incomparable King of Kings and Lord of Lords I write it) the supreme Wisdom and Goodness, Rex hoc solum non potest facere quod non potest injuste agere. Reg. Juris Cook. 11 Rep. p. 72, 74. being by the Law said to be under no defect, and not possible (as King) to do wrong; so his Peers and Commons in Parliament do (in their proportion) assimilate Angels and Saints; Attribuat Rex Legi quod Lex attribuit et, videlicet. Dominationem & Imperium Non est enim Rex ubs dominatur Voluntas & non Lex. Bracton. lib. 4. and his Laws, that divine charity which directs all the Subjects to fear and love him, and to be at peace one with another. The consideration of which in this blessed Ternary, might perhaps occasion that old saying, which thus is in a good measure made plain by it, Regnum Angliae Regnum Dei, which though I know to be commonly understood of God's particular Patronage of England; Ash. in Fascicul. Florum Juris in Lit R. yet may as well be intended of the form of our Government after the Model of the Heavenly Empire: which premised, I humbly conclude this and enter on the following Chapter. CHAP. XXXVI. In Regno Angliae nullus perhendinat in alterius domo, invito Domino. AS in the foregoing Chapter he showed the misery of the open Country of France, where the Soldier commands all, and makes the poor Husbandman afraid to own himself Master of the house he lives in, and labours hard to pay his Rent for; so in this he parallels the condition of the English-husbandman with it: and he begins first with that which is the life of all security, the House, which he says the Common Law does so preserve to the owner's Propriety, that no man can come upon his ground against his will but is a Trespasser; no man lodge in his house without his consent and against his declared mind but is punishable, and, as the case may be, a fellow for so doing. Now this the Chancellor does to show the just Imperiality of the Crown of England, 26 H. 8. c. 1. 8 Eliz c. 1. 3 Jac. c. 4. 2 Instit. p. 274. which, as it depends on none but God, to whom only our Kings are (as to their Superior) accountable, (the Popes of Rome being but * 12 Eliz. c. 2. 25 H. 8. c. 12. Usurpers in their claim, and God jealous of and displeased at their insolent rivalry with him, causing a fire at Lions that burned the Pope's Wardrobe there, in which was that detestable Charter which weak King john made to the Pope to bring the Crown of England into servage to the Sea of Rome, evidenced his displeasure that any testimony should be extant of this Nation's slavery.) I say, as the Chancellor by this instance of the Text clears the freedom of the Kingdom of England, so does he avouch the exemption of every Subject in it from Vassalage; for as he asserts that the will of the Housekeeper is warrant enough for a man's abidance in it, though he be not ordinarily of the family; so doth he assure, that the will of the Master not had, Common right in 2 E. 3. called common Law 14 E. 3. 2 Instit. p. 56. no man can long, if at all, lawfully abide therein: the reason whereof is from that common right which the Common Law does every rightful Claimant to it for aid, Sub clypeo Legis nemo decipitur is the rule, and this the justice of England does to withstand intrusion upon men by bold braving persons; who else would take up their Quarters, presuming on the courtesy they never deserved nor are ever resolved to require. For though the civility of the Nation gives welcome, and did infinitely more in old times then now, See the Notes on the 35 Chap. to any man of creditable appearance, that came for a day and away, to any house of credit; yet perhendinare (which imports three days stay, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and under colour of that, differre in longum, de die in diem) it denies to any without invitation, which Invitation has ā more amicable sense then the Invito Domino] here, for that is an act of the will, choice, and allowance, which the Greeks render by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a calling of one to him by his word, letter, or servant, acquainting him when and what he is then and there to do; but this Invito Domino is as much as the Master unconsulted with, and in defiance of, and so not only without his privity, but against his publication to the contrary. When any man stays in an house when the Master bids him be gone, F●gitivum esse in ait Caelius, qui ea ment discedit, ne ad dominum redeat, tame●si mutato consilio ad cum re vertatur; nemo enim tali peccato, poenitentia sua noc●ns esse desinit. Ulpian. apud Digest lib. 21. Tit. 1. p. 1965. he is a trespasser, and may be a fellow, because he does Perhendinare in alterius domo invito domino] for the Law looks at the commencement of every action, and judges the effect according to it. And therefore if a man come forcibly into my house, and after he has so done I show not my distaste because I fear; yet the Law I suppose will judge the force offered, and not qualify it by my after-silence, Quia quod ab initio non valet, progressu temporis non convalescit: nor will the Law believe any man has a good intention to be harmlessly in the house when he enters into it uninvited, and stays in it against the pleasure of the Master of it, whose the house is, and to whom the Laws and charges of hospitality in it are accountable. Si non in Hospitiis publicis] These are public houses called Inns, and being purposely appointed for receipt of strangers, if they carry themselves civilly and keep lawful hours, they may presume the Master's good will as long as they stay and spend their money in it; though I make no question but if any man or men come to an Inn, and stay there above three days and nights (not having business, or being impeded travel by the act of God, or other unthought of accident) he or they may be suspected and drawn to give account of their stay even in these houses: for the Law raising them for strangers and travellers accommodation, intends they shall in the use of them be Sanctuaries of resuge against the incommodations of Journeys, and nor Lodges of disorder and harbours of vice. The word Hospes, whence hospitia comes, the Law defines to import a foreign dweller which has an house, Hospitalia] locus erat ubi recipiuntur homines causa misericordia vel auxilii. Digest. lib. 22. Tit. 1. p. 1966. S Asylum. and because this house that is the receipt of those unknown persons that come to it, does empty the purse of their guests by heigths of charges for necessaries had in them, it makes the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the word used of old for a stranger which we use for an enemy, which if an Host be, he is unworthy his place, for that is to be friendly and true to strangers. And of old before Inns and Hosts in them were in use, there were places of kindness set apart to receive strangers, Budaeus in Pandect. p. 84. B. Edit. Vascos. which places were called Hospitalia or Pro●enia; hence juppiter Xenius was called the Hospital God, and concerning affairs of these places they invocated him: and as these were Residencies of amicableness, and the elder Ages used them to maintain charity; so were these certain Emblems of kindness intercurrent, which being brought with the repairers to them, gave them the assurance to receive welcome, as being not a cheat; but one really in amity with them. These were, as heretofore I have mentioned, In Tandect. reliquas, p. 253. which might be as our Tallies cleft in the middle, one part with the comer, another residing with the Hospitallers, and without this brought and corresponding with the other part, they that came with them were suspected and not welcome; which probably gave rise to the Proverb with us, An unbid guest must bring his stool along with him. At first the entertainment in these was plain and homely, judge's v. 25. probably they lay in straw; and had viands much like that in the Holy-Text, * where 'tis said, jael set butter and milk before Sisera in a Lordly dish; but when the Greeks grew fortunate and effeminate, than their luxury spread its self over all their civility; and by them was brought in great Entertainments, not only lodging of them in gorgeous Chambers and rich Beds, but also the first night entertaining them at a public supper, and next day sending them pullen, eggs, apples, herbs, Note this. and all other Country things: in reference to which perhaps the custom of our Nation for the Sheriffs to entertain and present the Judges in their Circuits, was a long time continued with us. To these Sanctuaries, for such they were while the strangers in amity with them were entertained, (which was for three days and yet is kept up in sundry places, where the Chartree Monks have Convent) during which time they are sanctuarized, and have security from the immunity of their residence, not to be injured, so faith a Asylum] locus erat ubi recipiebantur homines causa misericordia vel auxilii, puta Hospitalia & consimilia, ab a quod est sine & sylvos quod est tractus, quia non extrahebantur inde, qui eo confugerant. Acursius; and Baldus; as he is quoted in the Margin of the (b) Gloss. ad Digest. lib. 21. Tit. 1. p. 1966. De AEdilicio Edicto F. Asylum. Digest, adds, Nota argumentum ex hac Glossa quod Malefactor non possit extrahi de Hospitali sicut nes de Ecclesia; concerning these (c) Syntagm. Juris. lib. 15. c. 28. Tholossanus has fully written, that which I shall add, is, that Antiquity giving so great honour and privilege to these, they in time became abused, not only to harbour idleness and enormity, but to charge the Country in which they were with burdens in provision for them; Observare aut●m Proconsulem oportet, ne in Hospitiis prabendi● oneres Provincias sicut Imperator nester cum patre Ausidio Severiano rescripsit. Ulpian. lib. 1. De offic. Proconsulis. to remedy which there were Laws made to ease and relieve the people against the exactions of them. And though Sanctuaries (such kind of Hospitals) are taken away with us by the Statute of 21 jacob. c. 28. yet Inns and receipts for travellers, Lib. 1. Digest. Tit. 15. p. 1●4. the Hospitia publica in the Text, remain: and the Law takes great care that such there should be in all convenient places, and those in them so honest and so able to furnish them, that no necessary for horse and man shall be wanting, nor any rates put upon them but such as are reasonable; by the 13. R. 2. c. 8. the gains of Victuallers and Ostlers is ascertained, and what they shall take for hay and oats over and above the Market; Sec 32 H. 8. c. 41. s. E. 6. c. 14. and though the strictness of the later clause in that Statute be, by the Stat. 21. jac. 11, & 28. repealed, yet the main scope of good using guests is retained: Innkeepers must take reasonable prices, and make good horsebread and full weight under the penalty even of that Statute of 21 jacob. 21. This exaction of Inns is punishable by the Common Law in Leets, as being Contra publicam pacem & fidem Regni, and an enormity which dishonoureth the Government, and imposeth upon strangers and men in need, who being unknown and far from home are unable to right themselves against it. And hereupon as the Text says the Law provides that Inns shall have present pay, and men not run in arrears or take from them on Ticket, Vbi tunc pro omnibus qua ibidem expendit, ipse plenarie solvet ante ejus abinde recessum;] so doth it caution that the prices so paid be no more than they have is worth, consideration being had of the charges an Innkeeper is at to fit himself with all things necessary to entertainment, for house-rent, servants, diet, wages, spoil of goods, candle, and all other things of house-keeping considered, together with the uncertainty of guests, and the casualty of fire considered, either they must take great gains, or live they cannot without becoming beggars; which the Law considering, allows them a convenient latitude, which, those that will encourage guests to come to their houses as they travel by them, do not abuse. Nec impune quisque bona alterius capit sine voluntate Proprietarii eorundem.] This, though it be the Common Law, yet is confirmed to the Proprietor against his disseisor by several Statutes; for, because Power would often make bold with what was another's, and Greatness sometimes thought it durst not be refused, because it was under its opportunity to ruin what did not crouch to it, Lords and Great men's servants seizing for their Master's uses what they pleased without and against the owner's will, & under such a price as they could not afford it, the Kings of Engl. consented to Laws of restriction, not only to themselves, as in the Statutes of 28 E. 1. c. 2.36 E. 3. c. 6.23 H. 6. c. 14. 7 R 2. c. 8. making it penalty felonious to take from any man what he is lawfully possessed of without his consent, Droit ne poit pas morier, Reg. Littletoni, See 1 Instit. p. 279. although it be for the King's or Queen's own uses, so are the Statutes of 28 E. 1. c. 2. & 20 R. 2. c. 5. For though fit it be that the King, being the Head of his Subjects, and the Noble He that impregnates this whole politic Body with life and lustre, should be supplied from this body with all things necessary to his subsistence for so beneficent purposes: yet does the King think fit, out of grace to his people, not to make his Prerogative their punishment, but to live and let live, that is, to cherish their industry and goodwill, by ease of, and justice to them, as in greater, so in lesser things. And thus our sacred Kings have in all Ages done to prevent the insolence and deceit of their Purveyors, who, to enrich themselves, have abused the King's power to the people's impoverishing, that as none can purvey but for the King or Queen, or the Royal Issue; so none can for them, but by their special warrant with the owner's consent, at a reasonable value by the Constables of the Town assessed, if the buyer and seller cannot agree to pay ready money or at a certain prefixed day, so is the 21 Chapter of Magna Charta, Sir Ed. Cook. 1 Instit. p. 35. 3 E. 1. c. 31. 4. E. 3. c. 3.5 E. 3. c. 2. 10 E. 3. c. 1.14 E. 3. c. 19.25 E. 3. c. 1.1 R. 2. c. 3.2 H. 4. c. 14.1 H. 5. c. 10. 11 H. 6. c. 8.20 H. 6. c. 8.28 H. 6. c. 1.2 E. 6. ● c. 3. All which and sundry others since made, being in affirmance of propriety, and that by the King himself and his Great-men, for the common good declare their joint and several zeals for propriety; For the Common Law (saith Sir Ed. Cook) has so admeasured the Prerogative of the King, 2 Instit. p. 36. as he cannot take nor prejudice the inheritance of any; I'll add, Nor can or ought the Subject to entrench upon his Prerogative, but to hold himself bound to give unto Caesar the things that are Caesar's, for the Law also is so, and so is and aught to be owned; De Possessione, id est, De Proprietate. Digest lib. 5. Tit. 1. De Judiciis. K. Si de vi] p. 694. lib. 7. Tit. 6. p. ●44. Cook. Littleton p. 146. B. Note this well. which I the rather note, because Protection and Propriety, that is, Possession, is no further, or otherwise due to any Subject by the Law, then according to his duty by the Law he gives subjection and aid to the King, Defender of the Law; and if he justifies the possession of Subjects in their propriety, there is reason his Subjects should justify him in the propriety and possession of his power. Which since they mainly do by owning according to the Law his just Prerogative, it becomes them to consider their duty in the point of religious and legal obedience; for by the favour of King's have good Laws been made, and these in particular which conserve Property according to the Notion of our Text. Neque in Regno illo praepeditur aliquis de Sale, aut quibusdam mercimoniis aliis ad proprium arbitrium, & de quocunque venditore providere. This shows the liberty of English ingenuity, that it may work upon any thing it judges a profitable employment for it. For as the enhansing of any commodity by one person or more, with exclusion of others, is accounted a Monopoly, and so against the Common Law, and against the Statute of 21 jac. c. 3. so, to deny any Subject to deal in what he sees most convenient and gainful for him (the Commodity not being forbidden, ' or dangerous to the Public, but such as consists with honesty and usefulness) I humbly conceive to hinder him of this (where no topique Privilege according to Law is co-operating with such impedement) is to abridge him of his Right; for the Text says, Neque in illo Regno praepeditur aliquis.] All sort of victuals men may eat, and all sorts of ordinary clothes men, that can pay for them, may wear and in any Merchandise men in open places by buying and selling may trade, and with whom they will buy and sell or not they may please; the Land is open for all industry, and trade both home and foreign not embargued: for though the Corporations for Trade, such as are the Merchants-Adventurers, and those that trade to Turkey, 12 H. 7. c. 6. Muscovia, Eastland, the Corporation of the Merchants of Exeter, and the East-India's, were first erected and since continued to regulate trade, and to prevent, See the Preamble to the Statute of 4 Jac. c. 9 by the prudence of their own experience the overclogging of Markets, which is apt to be when every person that will, may trade, and for what proportion he pleases, to the ruin of the commodity; while necessitous men, that must sell, sell at the rates foreigners will buy, and so the purses of the Subjects of England are emptied to fill those foreiners, to whose Markets such Merchandises are so unproportionably carried. I say, though on these and other grounds, Corporations restrained such from trade to those places who were not Members and submitted to the Government of them; yet in all other cases Trade was ever free; not only to Aliens, who by the Stat. of 9 E. 3. c. 1.27 E. 3. c. 2. 11 R. 2. c. 7.1 H. 4. c. 17.14 H. 6. c. 6. and many others by which they were permitted to sell the commodities they brought in gross, or in retail, (notwithstanding any Charter to the contrary) but also to native Subjects, Who, during the time of their Prince's Wars, being charged, ought indifferently to enjoy all the benefits of their most happy peace, so says the 3 jacob. 6. which therefore gives liberty, notwithstanding all former Charters to the contrary, to all his Majesty's Subjects, from henceforth at all times to have free liberty to trade into, and from the Dominions of Spain, Portugal, and France, etc. so the King be paid his customs, and the freedoms of Corporations, Cities, and Towns not infringed; so that the like restraint on Salt in France, is here on no Merchandisable Commodity whatever, Cook. 4 Instit. jurisdiction of Courts. chap. 45. other than such as is charged by Act of Parliament, or Royal Mines, which are Mera Regalia, as the Tyn in Devonshire and Cornwall is, which being the King's in the right of his Seignory in the Duchy of Cornwall, is his commomodity, and from his Farmers to be bought; but once of them bought is freely to be traded in. Rex tamen necessaria domus sua, etc.] Concerning this, see the foregoing Notes on this Chapter, and the several Statutes therein quoted, which do confirm the Text in the severalities of the Chancellour's assertion. Neque Rex ipse per se aut Ministros suos Tallagia, Subsidia, aut quaevis alia onera, etc. Concerning this, see the Notes on the ninth Chapter, which do confirm what here is in our Text. Ipse Patria munus afferre, & fascibus suis illam premera potentia & dignitas est, humili se ac depresso loco stare putat, quisquis non supra Rempublicam stetit, accepti ab illa Exercitus in ipsam convertuntur, & Imperatoria concio est. Senoc lib. 5. De Benefic. p. 94. Blessed be God and our Kings, the case of England is not like that of Rome, Wherein, every man of power thought himself but pitifully accommodated, if he did not set his foot upon the neck of the Common wealth, and trample down the Majesty if that to set up his own Greatness: But such as makes the generality of the Subjects rich and happy, and the Prince happy in governing such wealthy and well-ordered people. And by reason of this freedom is it that the Text says, that the poorest man in England uses fructus quos sibi parit terra sua] that is, eats, drinks, sells, wears whatever he has growing; yea can dispose of any emolument that he gets propria, vel aliena industria, that is, by his labour or others kindness to him, ad libitum arbitriumve] as he pleases, without ask any leave to spend or give it; for though a man may not burn his house; because that is destruction and may tend to the ruin of other men, whose houses by contaction or Neighbourhood may be burned also; yet any man may fallen his freehold or pull it down (no custom being in the Manor to the contrary) and use his Land to what kind of purpose, not forbidden by Law; he pleases: so much does the Law of England favour propriety, that it submits every thing to it that may consist with the public and other private interests intermixed with it. Vnde inhabitantes terram illam locupletes sunt, abundantes auro, & argento, & cunctis necessariis vitae. This Vnde relates as well to the freedom of Trade, as to the Subjects exemption from unreasonable arbitrary and un-Parliamentary Taxes; for Trade being the way to get estates and freedom from vast contribution to the public (except in extraordinary occasions, when all lying at the stake, all is due to the Commonwealth's service and support) being the means to preserve an estate so gotten; the locupletation and enriching of the Nation may be reasonably ascribed to both, and they both be allowed the Vnde here. In that then the Subjects of England are said to be Losupletes, Cum id tempora Reipubls. postularent, aut à muneris pro familiari copia faciendi assiduitate. Budaeus in Pandect. p. 13●. B. Edit. Vascos. that is, Assidui, for so the Law of the twelve Tables defines it, ab assibus, id est, Aere dando, when men are such as answers every thing that is required of them, this is one sense of (a) Locuples p●rro est qui satis & idonee habet pro magnitudine rei quam creditor petit. Tholoss. Syntagm. lib. 24. c. 3. ss. 21. Alciat. & Forner. in Leg. 134. ss. 1. Locuples, though the genuine one be from the great possessions men have, for which they are termed Locupletes: Locuples à lata hamo, hoc est locorum plenus, qui pleraque loca, id est, qui multas possessiones habet, saith Festus; and with him accords (b) Lib. 5. c. 10.39. Quintilian: and (c) Lib. De Senectut. 52. Locupletem ait dictum qui pleraque loca hoc est possessiones ac pradia tenst. Agellius lib. 10. c. 5. Tully, when he writes Semper enim boni assiduique Domini, referta cella vinaria, oleariae & penaria, villaque tota locuples est, abundat porco, hedo, agno, gallina, lacte, caseo, melle, etc. intends a man rich in real estate, Lands of great revenue, Rents of liberal income, such as our Law calls men of great Demesnes and Freeholds of Inheritance; for though in the largeness of the word, and the acceptation of Authors, any person of note and thing of value is termed Locuples, 5 Verr. 39 1 Verr. 30. lib. 5. c. 14. as Annus locuples frugibus by Horace; Locuples ac referta Provincia, Locuples copiis civitas, Copiosa plane & locuples mulier by Tully; Locuples & speciosa eloquentia by Quintilian; and Plato with Pythagoras are by the Orator termed Locupletissimi Authores: 2 De Divinat. 179. yet the more proper notion of Locuples is from fixed estates in Land. And thus the Chancellor says the Subjects are Locupletes, some of them rich in real estate, others in personal, Abundantes auro. Abundantes auro & argento & cunctis necessariis vite] This is meant of personal estate, which consists of Movables, Money, Plate, Leases, Merchandises, Householdstuff, Corn, cattle, and other things money-worth; which are called necessaria vitae, because without them there is no living: for money being the nerves of all commerce, and that which answers every thing in its exchange for it. In the terms Auro & Argento] are the general notations of riches and plenty; Gen. xiii. 2. Gen. xxiv. 35. Gen. xliv. 8. so Abraham is said to be very rich in Cartel, in silver and in gold; so in Ioseph's brethren's sacks, there was silver and gold; so Balaam joins silver and gold together, Numb. xxii. 18. & xxiv. 13. and the Gods of the Nation are said to be of silver and gold, Psal. cxv. 4. Dan. v. 4. and so in sundry other places: by which it appears, that our Chancellor speaks according to the account of portable wealth, which is reckoned by money and plate, silver and gold; and in this he says the Subjects of England do abound. For though England has no Mines of gold or silver, Lib. 1. De Gallorum Imperio & Philosophia, p. 48. B. as Diodorus says France of old had, which Forcatulus, in love to his Country perhaps, is ready to believe, and make public for Franc's glory; yet England has such Staples of Cloth, Wool, Tyn, Led, and other such like useful trafficks, that will transmute themselves into gold and silver, and by turning and winding the penny in trade will advance the Rent of Land, the Revenues of Custom, the Hire of Workmen, and the plenty of living; which is equal to the having gold and silver in kind, since it not only is equivalent to, but in some degree better thus than it, especially when by this means there are Caetera vita necessaria purchased, which is Household furniture of all sorts; so that the Subject is not only rich, but accommodated neatly and correspondently to his condition, having his house and its appurtenances complete, as well as his purse full. Aquam ipsi non bibunt, nisi quando ob devotionis & poenitentia zelum aliquando ab aliis potibus se abstinent. This is purposely inserted to show, that necessity and choice are two different impulsions to the drinking of water. In France the Peasant drinks it to save charges; here, when it is drunken, 'tis upon religious accounts, for penance, and humbling of the flesh; which is well added by our Text to bring the poor's draught into the possibility of a Prophet's reward, and of a Prophet's practice, self-abasement, which is the sense of those three words, Devotion, Penance, and Zeal, or rather the Zeal of devotion or penance, which is that which alone is in them commendable; for there is no devout soul, that is penitent for sin, and casts himself down before God in confession and contrition for sin, but is willing to deny himself any thing that is fuel to the fire of his carnal combustion: which because liquor of mettle is, he drinks water: Now this the Chancellor says the English do thus drink but not for poverty; for so the Peasant does not aquam bibere, but drinks beer and wine, the former commonly, the other upon feast-occasions, when also They eat all sorts of diet that the Season and Country yields, and their purses and stomaches will reach too, whether fish or flesh. Pannis de lanis bonis ipsi induuntur in omnibus operimentis suis] As all Merchandises, furniture, meat, and drinks are free, so all Apparel. It's true indeed here have been sumptuary a 37 E. 3. c. 8.3 E. 4. c. 5.22 E. 4. c. 1.1 H. 8. c. 14.6 H. 8. c. 1.7 H. 8. c. 7.1 Phil. & M. c. 2. Phavorinus part. 10. De hominis Excellentia, c. 19 p. 63. Laws to restrain such and such things to particular degrees; but those have been but temporary and short-lived. For though Inordinate and excessive Apparel, as the words of the Stat 3 E. 4. c. 5. are, is a great waster, especially when it is such as Nero's was, who never wore a suit of clothes twice, or Heliogabalus, who did not only make luxuriant garments for himself, but Leonibus & Bestiis nobilissimas parabat vestes; and so Lollia Paulina, whose garments were all trimmed with Pearl; or as Agrippina, Aurelian, and others, who all were very extravagant in them, these indeed 'tis fit should be restrained and denied, See his gracious Majesty's Speech at the Prorogation of this Parl. 1662. If men will not deny themselves the having them. But for any other clothes to be denied, though it has been, yet at this day it is not; the Nation being so full of Gentry in all places, that the younger brothers, no less Gentlemen than their elder, think themselves, concerned to oppose it, being loath to see their industry, secundated by God, to be eclipsed by Laws in disfavour of them. Etiam abundant in lectisterniis & quolibet supellectili, cui lana congruit, in omnibus domibus suis, nec non opulenti ipse sunt hustilimentis domus, necessariis cultura, & omnibus quae ad faelicem vitam exigantur secundum status suos. This further sets forth the riches of the Housekeepers of England in the furniture of their Chambers and Rooms for their Recreations and Callings, (a) Quod sacrorum gratia lecti in Tomplis sternebantur, ad discumbendum in apulo publico. Abundant Lectisterniis says the Text] Alciat. in Leg. 45. p. 127. de verborum signific. These we call Bedsteeds at this day; but of old they were the Beds that they eat upon in their Solemnities and Feasts devoted to their Gods. Hence properly Lectisternium (from lectus & sterno) employed the Preparations in the Capitol for jupiter, Lib 5. ab Vrbe. Valerius Maximus lib. 2. cap. 1. De Nuptiis. Tu esto Lectisterniator. Tu argentum eluito. Plautus. juno, and Minerva; concerning these Livy and Valerius Maximus write: hence Plautus terms him that doth Lectum sternere, (as we say) cover the Bed or Table, Lectisterniator. With us one of the chief furnitures of houses are these Lectisternia, not only Couches but Beds well furnished with Curtains, Vallens, Counterpanes, Hangings, Blankets, Pillows, Tables, etc. which the Text terms Supellectilia] these the (b) Supellex] domesticum instrumentum Patrisfamilias, quod neque auro, argentoque facta, vel vesti adnumeratur, id est, res mobiles cujus numero sunt mensa Trapezophori, Lecti inargentati, Sipontinus. Civil Law accounts as aforesaid, and c Lib. 5. c. 8. Pliny too in these words, Totam supellectilem ligneam; every thing also that was useful and graceful in any condition or course of life was hence called Supellex, (d) Lib. 8. c. 9 lib. 15. c. 4. Turnebus uses Philosophiae supellex, and Servi supellecticarii for the Wardroper, and e Lib. 1. De Orat. 80. Lib. De Amicit. Lib. 2. Philip. Tully has Oratorum supellex, and Vita supellex, and Cogitatio supellectilis ad delicias, Lauta & magnifica supellex. So much is Supellex changed in its sense from what it first imported, namely, the Tents or Receipts of Ambassadors when they went their journeys, which being covered with Leather, Supellectilis origo, immanavit, quod olim his qui legationem profsciscerentur, locari solerent, qua sub pellibus usui forent. Fornerius in Leg. 183. p. 3●2. De verb. signific. as our Sumpter-horses lading, and our Portmanteaus at this day are, (which carries the Journey-provision, and thence were called Supellectilia;) that now every implement not only of the house is couched under Supellectile, but every furniture of what nature soever. Here in our Text Supellectile cui lana congruit] signifies the furniture of Beds, such as I predescribed; which, though they are now made of silks in great abundance, yet in Henry the Sixth's time were of homebred, and home-span making. De Lana] For our Ancestors in the Golden Age of thrift, kept their families un-idle, and not only killed the provisions they bred, but also made the linen and woollen they wore; which profitable practice being brought to maturity in the house, The Woman's Kingdom, our Law terms them Spinsters from that property of a virtuous woman, Prov. xxxi. that so to do Solomon describes, who certainly wrote what in that case was The conclusion of wisdom: for the house being the place of residence and security, does then best please a noble Master and Mistress, when 'tis well arrayed and furnished for all purposes of entertainment and convenience; which because the Housekeepers of England have to a greater proportion than is usual any where else, yea, to so complete a degree, as no addition is almost possible to be made thereto, the Text says, they are Opulenti in omnibus necessariis ad quietam & felicem vitam, secundum statum suum. Nec in plasitum ipsi ducuntur nisi coram judicibus Ordinariis] See the Notes on the 26. and 27. Chapters, wherein, what concerns the residue of our Text in this Chapter, is written upon; which being wellweighed, and the differences of Despotique and Paternal Governments considered by the good and evil effect of them, his conclusion commended to the Prince, is, That the Laws of England are the best rules of governing England by; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Plato lib. 1. De Republ. p. 576. and that those Princes, (Progenitores tui as his words are) who declined the observance of them, were led therefrom by the Prepotency of passion and the neglect of justice, which they, as Princes, should ever have prized above all, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Plato in Minoe, p. 564. inducit Socratem sic loquentem. which is modestly the substance of that which he expresses in those words, Et nun ambitio, luxus, & libido quos praedicti Progenitores tui Regni bono praeferebant, eos ad hoc commercium concitabaet,] which he requests the Prince to consider as the monition of his loyal Servant, for his Royal peace and fame, which are best propagated and advanced thereby, And so he concludes this Chapter. CHAP. XXXVII. Sanctus Thomas in libro quem Regi Cypri de regimine Principum scripsit, dicit, Quod Rex datur propter Regnum, & non Regnum propter Regem. THIS Chapter commences with a quotation from Saint Thomas, and from that little Tract of his, Cogitanti mihi quid offerrem Regia celsitudini dignum meaque professioni congruum & officio, id occurrit potissime ●fferendum at Regi Regni de Regno conscrib●rem. In Proamio ad librum. which in very great duty and devotion to the dignity and piety of Kings, he wrote to the then King of Cyprus; it is in the order of his works placed in the seventeenth Tome amongst his Opuscula: and though it be amongst his Breviaries, yet it has many valuations with me from several adjuncts of conspicuity, Papa potest canonizare aliquem approbando & manifestando alicujus hominis sanctitatem & toti Ecclesiae proponere, & eorum venerationem mandare; nam inter puros homines Papa est caput Ecclesia. Tria autem sunt de Canonizatione alicujus Sancti, Sanctitatis, ejus approbatio. 2. Sanctitatis ejus adept● à popul● veneratio. 3. Fidei totius Ecclesia benesicia illius Sancti posc●ntis confirmatio. Baptista Rubaeus in Rationali Divinorum. Offic. lib. 1. c. 58. p 209. Impress. Venet. which justly may be attributed to it. The first whereof is from the Author Thomas Aquinas, whom the Text terms Sanctus Thomas, which title our Chancellor not only gives him as he was sanctified by divine grace, and a Member of that mystical body of Christ, but as also this holy man was canonised by Pope john the 22. about the year 1323. and that not so much for the piety of his life, as for that miracle which by invocation on him is pretended to be wrought on his decayed Niece. Now though this Canonization (to write gently of his Holiness and his Saintings) have some things in it, which in the design of them presume those that by it are (as far as it can) honoured; yet the many natural, religious, learned accomplishments he above the rest of his Contemporaries had, render him semidivine with me, though he were abstracted from his Registry in their Calendar; and these (amongst many others) are, First, His Origin was noble, Aquine in Campany, and from Parents in it, as some write, descended from the Earl of Apulia and the Kings of Sicily; or as others from the Lombard-Race, and that Earl of Aquine who lived in Great's time about the year 800, which honour of his blood and birth no doubt kindled him to great endeavours, Author vita Sancti Aquinatis. and to such expressions of an holy Magnanimity, as seldom appears in the brats of Plebeity. Secondly, The prediction of his after-proof by an holy man, who, when his Mother was with child with him, told her, She was with child with one that would be most famous, adding his name, profession, addiction, and acceptation with God and the world, Nec res sanctissimi viri mentem fefellit, saith his Biographer. Thirdly, His early entry upon serious study; for coming very young to Naples, he quickly mastered Logic and natural Philosophy, disputing so notably in them, that every one that heard him admired, and expected a suitable progress. Fourthly, His declension of applause and public suffrage, cloistring up himself in a Convent, notwithstanding the many temptations and civil violences he had expressed to further his conspicuity. Fifthly, His obediential obstinacy in embracing this order of religion against the commands of Theodora his Mother, and continuing in the love and labour of it, maugre his Mother's Artifices to remove him, and his brother's vehemence in rending, tearing, and abusing his Priestly habits. Sixthly, His famous Masters, john St. Geminian and Albertus Magnus, who were so proud of him, that they would not suffer him to lie hid, but so proclaimed him to the World, Vt ●a lucerna non jam sub modio sed de sandelabro emicaret. Seventhly, His constancy and abnegation of himself for Christ's sake, refusing a large Patrimony with his brethren, and after, the Great Archbishopric of Naples, when Clement the Fourth presented him to it. Eigthly, His capacious memory which held whatever was reposed in it. Ninthly, His general admiration and acceptation with all degrees, Bishops, Archbishops, Cardinals who frequented his readings, and grew famous by them. Tenthly, His choice friends Clement the Fourth, Vrban the Fourth, Gregory the Tenth, Lewis the Holy of France, Cardinal Bonaventure, Ptelomaeus Luce●sis, and Reginaldus Privernas, Birds of a feather fly together; I omit the miracles ascribed to him, as that of the Woman of St. Sabins Monastery, Reynald, &c, because I think them questionable: but these prementioned excellencies concentred in him, made him a Vessel of much grace, fit to glorify God here on earth, and fitted for God's glory of him in Heaven. This, This, is the Saint Thomas, the Author of the book quoted by our Text-Master. The Book this matchless Author wrote, was of the Government of Princes, a very high subject worthy his incomparable Genius, which made its nest with the stars, Libri qu●s de Regimine Principum ad Cypri regem conscripsit, ostendunt quod illuc usque suarum virtutum fama, nominisque reverentia penetraverit, quid autem libris illis huic Regi conscribendo occasionem prastiterit, nondum mihi compertum est, nisi quod crediderim suarum virtutum samam, gratum ●um & amicum tunc illi regi, tunc aliis multii ipsam reddidiss● Aut●r vitae ejus. and thought triter Texts were beneath the Majesty of its endowment; that it was His, is praise enough to it, and that he wrote to a Prince of Princely qualities and offices, commends his prudence in so proportionate a choice: for surely he must have some rays of a Princely mind in himself, who has the confidence to write to Princes of matters purely Princely, and to treat aptly and with counsel of those secrets which are locked up in the Cabinets of Grandeur, and to which none can unsacrilegiously approach, but those that are pious, modest, loyal, and prudent; and such in every degree Saint Thomas therein approving himself, directed his thoughts to the then King of Cyprus. These things premised as emphatique in that our Chancellor here quotes out of him, we will humbly and in God's fear consider the particulars as they are pertinent to the order of our Commentary. Rex datur propter Regnum & non Regnum propter Regem] This is a truth no wise man can, and no just Prince will deny; for God instituting Government in nature, which requires something regitive in every multitude, and having in that institution a regard to the generality of his creatures and the propagation of it, Oportet esse in omni multitudine aliquod regitivum. Lib. 1. c. 1. De Regimine Principum. though he place the power of order and jurisdiction in one or a few, yet does he it in order to those many whose good he therein chiefly eyes. For in that God gives one the Prerogative and Jurisdiction over multitudes of others, 'tis not as that one is such numerally, but as that One in number, is Many and All in dignity, as having a divine Vicarage in him, in the worth whereof he's worth 10000 of them, the Sun, Shield, Father, Oracle, the All of them. And hence, though true it be that the Philanthropy of God displays itself in putting the Many of his creatures under One for their good and profit, which is Rex datur propter Regnum;] yet true also it is, that though multitudes are not made for Holocausts to the rage of Princes, which is Non Regnum propter Reg●m] yet comfort, observances, and supports of Princes they are appointed to be, and Princes that love, govern, and discipline them deserve, ex opere operato, they should be such to them; and therefore God has endowed Princes not only with such qualities as are attractive of Subject's loves, and have cogency on the wise and worthy of them, Justice and Generousness, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Plato lib. 1. De Rep. p. 576. whereby their hearts are pleasingly and to their profit stolen from themselves and set on their Princes with resolutions of loyalty and reverence towards them; but also with such adjuments of extern terror, as shall make the good safe in their fidelity, and the refractory punished for their mutiny and disorder. Now this Doctrine of the Text quoted out of Aquinas, all good Princes have in the sense of St. Thomas, and all good Authors owned, especially our own; so is the sense of the Preamble to the 1 E. 6. c. 12. showing, that Princes as Fathers are to make Laws best suiting to the tempers of their people and to the time of their Reigns: so King james of blessed memory acknowledged the duty of Kings in those words, K. james in his book of The true Law of Free Monarchies. p. 195. of his Works in folio. As a loving father and careful watchman, caring for them more than for himself, knowing himself to be ordained for them, and they not for him; and therefore countable to that great God who placed him as his Lieutenant over them, upon the peril of his soul, to procure the weal of both souls and bodies, as far as in him lieth of all them that are committed to his charge, etc. not to encourage their Subject's petulancy and peremptoriness, (For though Princes are so generous that their Subjects cannot ask more than they can give, yet Princes may reserve to themselves the incommunicable jewel of their conscience, Eicon. Basilic p. 76. Edit Octau. and not be forced to part with that whose loss nothing can repair or requite;) but to mind themselves of their account to God, which as Fathers they are to make, Gubernatoris est navem contra maris pericula servando illesum ad portum salutis: bonum autem & salus consociata multitudinis est ut ejus unitas conservetur, quae dicitur pax, qua remota, socialis vitae perit utilitas, quinimo multitudo dissentiens sibi ipsi onerosa Lib. 1. De Reg. Principum. c. 2. p. 287. and to their Subjects, as to their Children, to express; and by which they infinitely deserve more love and support then ever they have from them, be they never so dutiful and open-hearted to them. And therefore Kings being as Angels, Dati à divina bonitate propter homines, non solum Christianos, sed & Gentiles, & cujuscunque generis atque conditionis, as * Lib. De Excellentia hominis. part. 1. c. 53. p. 131. Phavorinus says of them; whatever can be attributed to them without sin and flattery is very highly due to them, See the Preamble to the Stat. 3 jacob. c. 26. and but the bare duty and not supererogation of Subjects to them. And therefore this position is true in its just and prudent sense, in which only our Text-Master quotes it, and I after him discourse on it; for in the Anabaptistique and jesuitique sense of judicial power in multitudes over their supreme Magistrates, 'tis treasonous, execrable, irreligious, anti-scriptural; 'tis all that is pestilent to Monarchies, dishonourable to Religion, and every way unsafe for the sacred persons of Princes. Concerning these things then, I having written in my Notes on the 13, 14, and 15. Chapters of this Book, I shall pursue it here no further, only pray, That Princes and People may ever keep close to the Laws of their Sovereignty and Subjection; for otherwise, Nulla est securitas, Lib. 1. c 2. De Regim. Principum. sed omnia sunt incerta cum â jure disceditur, nec confirmari quicquam potest quod positum est in alterius voluntate, ne dicam libidine, as Aquinas his words are. Quare Rex qui hec peragere nequit, impotens est necessario judicandus. Sed si ipse passionibus propriis aut penuria it â oppressus est, quod manus suas cohibere nequit à depilatione subditorum suorum, quo ipsemet eos depauperat, nec vivere finite & sustentari propriis substantiis suis: quanto tunc impotentior ille judicandus est, quam si eos defendere ipse non sufficeret erga aliorum injurias? Here the Chancellor shows, that as the Mastery men act over themselves, is more noble than that they can over others; so the weakness men express in being conquered by their lawless wills and reasonless passions, is more notorious and defamatory then to be victored by an Adversary: and this he applies in the reason of it to Princes in order to themselves and their Subjects; for God having endowed them with divine souls, and with Authority over their Subjects, men in common nature with them, and to whom they as Fathers, Shepherds, and Guardians ought to evidence themselves; for such to sauciate and exhaust them, and by a leontine voracity to consume them and theirs, and all to bring their Wills to be the Law, and their pleasures the Iron-Saw by which they hackle the persons, fortunes, and freedoms of their poor Vassals, is an act of truculency, so altogether unmanly and irregal, that Polybius says, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Po●yb. lib. 1. p 82. Nothing is more execrable than the injury and avarice of Governors; yea, so to do is not only to be an enemy but worse than an enemy, a worrier of the flock he by office is, and by affection pretends to love and keep. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, quasi dicas, Regnum omnibus numeris absolutum; ejusmodi erant Reges Principes Romani, Ulpiani tempore, nihil jam priscae civilitatis retinentes, omnia arbitrio suo staetuentes, ut & nunc Reges nostri sunt, qui omnia in potestate habent, quique ut Homericus ille Jupiter, quoquo se verterint, omnia circumagunt, nutu etiam solo omnia quatientes: denique Humani Joves, sed qui tamen hominum more emoriantur. Budaeus de Reg. Galliae. Annot. in Pandect. p. 49. Edit. Valcos'. Illud naetura non patitur ut aliorum spoliis nostras facultates, copias, opes augeamus, hoc enim expectant leges, hoc enim incolumem esse Civium conjunctionem, quam qui dirimunt, eos morte, exilio, vinculis, damno coerc●nt. Jacob. Tapia. lib. 2. De triplici bono & vera hominis Nobilitate. p. 245. Turpem dicens ebrietatem in Rege quem oculi omnium auresque sequerentur. Seneca lib. 3. De Ira. Yet this is the unhappiness of absolute Greatness, that while it musters and marshal's forces to evict foreign assault and Subjects sedition, itself is found guilty of violence and depredation upon the lives, estates, and serenities of its Subjects, to whom because it does by a pravity of will and a vicious affectation, which it may if it will resist, do that which is unjust, therefore is Impotentior less virtuously just and abundant in true fortitude than that Prince is, who, though he has force, yet dare not fight, because his number is not such as he promises himself victory by; and so by fear suffers his Subjects to be spoiled, whom, by a manly venture and a masculine performance, he might have secured. Now this impuissance our Chancellor lays down as God's punishment of vice, which so allays the soul, that by uninnocencing it, leaves only in it a pavidness and irresolution to any act of Heroickness, that look as an unchaste wife cannot comfort herself against all the infirmities of life and crosses of her Marriage state, That she has a good conscience to God and her Husband, whom by disloyalty she has not abused; so a Prince that is never pleased better than when he by negligence reduces himself to straits, and then mercilessly relieves them upon his Subjects, Depilatione subditorum] frequently; not once and away, but to such a proportion as it may be said, Depauperat subditos:] and to suffer his Subjects so to be made miserable by it, as Nec sinet vivere, & sustentari propriis substantiis.] Surely thus to put the Yoke of servitude on Subjects, to gratify the licentious Insubjection of the Prince's Soul to Reason and Religion, seems to bode ill to any Prince that is guilty of it. And therefore Herodotus lib. 3. Hist. Praxaspes, Cambyses his favourite did friendlyly by his Master, whom, when he saw Persianly luxurious and rubified by an high and ranting compotation, he with civil affection and majesty of prudence, admonished him from reiterating such a Kingless jovialty, telling him, That Kings, who are the Chiefs of Nations, on whom all their eyes are, and after whose examples they all do, aught to be wary what they do, least by an ill Precedent they undo thousands of their Subjects; for one ill example shall more pervert then many good Laws can rectify. And therefore one of the most Kingly qualities, that mortality is capable of, is Self-Mastery, because where that is endeavoured by us, and from God consolidated to us, we are able to keep our prospect into things clear, and not judge by the false Glasses of extremes, which magnify or diminish, multiply or lessen, as our addictions to those vices are more or less prevalent, or intense: for still judgement being obfuscated, our power is transferred to that we are enjoyed by, Potens etiam non solum à possum verbo. verum etiam à potior deducitur. Turneb. lib. 29. c. 24. which is the victorlust. Therefore where ever wisdom resides in Princes, I mean not only cathedrally but personally, there is in those Princes a constant study to keep free from all Preoccupations; Non enim me cuiquam mancipavi, nullius nomen fero, multorum magnorum virorum judicio credo, aliquid & meo vindico. Senec. Ep. 45. and so to ascribe to others, as not to exclude themselves the liberty to consider and judge what they themselves are to do. And this truly I think we of this Nation have very really and to a miracle of Regal Constancy, seen in that once Father of us all, whom I take leave frequently to quote as my Oracle, King Charles the First, Kingly Constancy. whom no adversiry, no eclipse, not even that of death, could make recede from his resolution of Patronage to the Church, the Law, the Crown, the Subject, to all these he being firm, gave not way for fear or hope, but quitted himself as a Christian, whose graces had mastered his infirmities. And the second to him is his Son, our now Gracious Sovereign, who by that fixed immovableness that he, notwithstanding all temptations to the contrary, retained, and in the Act of Oblivion and Indemnity expressed, Speech at the opening of the Parliament. 1661. L. Chancellors Speech then and thereunto annexed. Lib. De study literarum recte instituendo. p. 10. B. Edit. Vascos. which He calls, The principal Cornerstone, which supports the excellent building of this Government. Declared such a piece of fatherly tenderness and ●iety, as could proceed from no heart but such an one, in which God hath treasured up a stock of mercy, and justice, and wisdom to redeem a Nation, they are the words of His Majesty's great Chancellor; and of them I may say in Budaeus the Parisian Chancellour's words, Mercurialis hic sermo, mentium sublimium interpres est, mirificorumque sensuum enarrator disertus & copiosus. But I return to the occasion of our instance, which is, The necessity of Power in Princes to refuse passions when they are not co-incident with reason, which power unless they have, be they never so great, they are Impotentiae nexubus vinculati,] and with King john will put their Crowns under servage rather than not be revenged of their opposites: which ill habit and distemper of soul is that remain of sin unmortified, which thief-like having once crept into the house, opens the doors and lets all its Comaradoes in to him; and so this, Impotentia & Incontinentia conjung●ntur in bonis authoribus. Turn. advers. lib. 20. c. 21. Ne quis vestrum neve corum aliquis, qui vobis paruerit, ●ffensionem aut divinam aut nostra● concitetis. Spelman in Concilus 396. ad An. Christi 928. being the effect of incontinence, not keeping desires within their prison, carries them to all the expressions of vageness and immorality, so that, no bounds being observed, they lie open to all kinds and all degrees of transport. 'Twas a rare charge Athelstane gave the Fathers and others in the Council of Gratelean, I would have you, saith he, do by me as our Lord Jesus commanded we all should do; Do as we would be done by: Give me therefore only what is my right as your King, and keep what is God's right to his use, and what is yours to yourselves, that none of you or your creatures may by wrong-doing deserve and have the displeasure of God and of me, Thus this King, whose potency over his will and passion rendered him more like God then his throne did, without which he had been but Polyphemized, goodly statured, yet defective in the main instance of and ingredient in his admirableness. By this than it appears that our Law considering, and our Princes willing themselves to be considered politic Monarches, whose Soveraigntyes admit mixtures of paternity to them, did only intend such practice of power over their subjects as should render them able to support themselves by their subjects, and willing (their subjects in such subjection to them) to preserve in the free use of what God, Nature and Industry had made theirs. This is the sense of all that the Chancellor doth or can write on this argument, for the glory of a King is to be Liber in his Prerogative, and Potens in his Subjects; so is the King by his, How? His virtue-regal secures himself and his Subjects Erga propriam passionem & rapinam, and so declares him and them Liberi.] And then that he is able to defend them, Eorum quoque bona & facultates] and theirs from assaults of enemies, thiefs, robbers, and seditions by Sea and Land; this declares him Potens by them, and they potent under him. For of all things in the world the most sovereign expression of wisdom is, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. To keep close to the Laws of our Country and the civil customs of our forefathers, Aristoteles 2. Lib. 2. Politic. and to live by the Written Laws, and by them to judge of all men and things, which happy compact accomplishes that felicity which * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Polyb. lib. 6. p. 491. Lib. 2. D● Gestis Alphons. Polybius says Lycurgus brought to his Country, when, by the right settlement of equality between men, He did so cement them, that they did join together into one common Soul and City of civility and wisdom. For though wise Alphonsus of Arragon, whom Panormitan styles Regum gloria & sapientiae exemplar, thought it solaecismous Reges ab aliis regi, & Deuces ab aliis duci, calling those that would do nothing without their Councils concurrence, Consiliariorum Mancipia; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Philo. lib. de virtutibus & vitiis. p. 295. yet that Maxim of so doing will remain the eternal honour and security of Kings: For, since the Laws of Nature and Nations prescribe it, to do otherwise is to be injurious to their durable and wise enactions, which the pristine Kings, Polybius gravely tells us, did so devoutly abhor, that as they were chosen for their abilities of intellect and resolution; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Polyb. lib. 6. p. 456. so did they not so much as think of bringing, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. their Government under the vassalage of their lawless and corrupt wills, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, but invigilated their charges and were not haughty and rigid but calm and familiar with them; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Plato lib. 1. de Leg. p. 774. and by this preference of justice, lenity, and temperance to fierceness, wrath, and luxury, which Plato prescribes as the very necessary project of Princes, and which renders them truly worthy; and therefore the delight and blessing of their Subjects. This then to be able to do, notwithstanding the temptations of self-accommodation to the contrary, is to be potentior, liberiorve] then any King can be who can deny him nothing, will and power can accumulate to him; for this which sufficit scipsum debellare, as the Text's words are, is only the felicity of those moderate and virtuous Kings, who, because they know they are delegated by God to rule according to his method, exalt righteousness, and are themselves thereby exalted: Quod potest & semper facit Rex politice regens popalum suum Quare experientiae effectu tibi constat Princeps, Progenitores tuos qui sic politicum regimen abjicere satagerunt, etc. This clause the Chancellor adds, to show the ill success Princes have in England had, who have ruled praeter morem Majorum; for though we have here been blessed (as I said before) with many most pious and just Princes, who have so ruled, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Plato lib. 5. De Rep. p. 663. as became England, wherein, to use Plato's words of Greece, Men ought to be virtuous and free, and lovingly to live together, and are only to be kept such by the Laws, their delight and buckler: Hoc enim vinculum est hujus dignitatis qua fruimur in Republ. Hoc fundamentum libertatis, hic fons ●niquitatis. Cic. Orat. pro Cluentio. yet some we have had, who, though I say not they endeavoured Politicum Regimen abjicere] yet by governing otherwise then according to the strict Laws, brought infelicity upon themselves and their people. For this Nation consists of men born and bred up to freedom, and if they see their Prince as mild and vigilant, so just and valiant, Polybius lib. 5. p 361. they will admire, assist, and obey him, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. as convinced of his kindness and good offices to them; as they did in the general excellent temper of the time of Queen Elizabeth, which is observed by the great Minister of our State, L. Chancellour's Speech at the Prorogation of the Parl. May 19 1662. p. 11. To be full of blessed condescension and resignation of the people then to the Crown, and the awful reverence than they had to the Government, and to the Governors both in Church and State: so, if they perceive the contrary in the effects of unwarranted actuations of power, they grow sour and displeased, setting themselves to disappoint his deviation, and to own the law and customs of ruling, in which are deposited the Subjects security and the Majesty of the Prince, which amounts to that of the Text, Non solum in hoc non potuisse nancisci potentiam quam optabant, videlicet, ampliorem, sed & sui binum, similiter & bonum regni sui, per hoc ipsi discrimini exposuissent & periculo grandiori] For such Princes, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Polyb. lib. 11. p. 624. not considering what the adversity of popular troubles produces, and what amidst them to do, being deceived by the meretricious suggestions of Parasites, who bewitch them with their delusions, do draw on themselves and their Confidents those difficulties that ever end in disquiet and sometimes in worse; so befellit to Ed. 2. probably one of the Princes intended by our Text-Master, for he being seduced by giddy Gaveston a foreiner, who laboured to bring in such absoluteness as the Laws of our Kings do not approve of; and that not for the King's profit, but that this favourite and perverter, who ruled him, might thereby rule all, so far inflamed the discontent and jealousies of the Peers and Commons, that this Butterfly, that was so gay in the Summer of the King's favour, must be accused and apprehended, to the performance of which they so strenuously and with incessancy applied themselves, Tanquam legum subversor & publicus Regni proditor, Walsingham in E. 2 p. 76. Quos odio inex●rabili perstringebant, ca maxim quia regem ducebant pro sua voluntatis arbitrio, in tantum quod nec comes, nec Baro. nec Episcopus quicquam valuit expedire in Curia sine horum consilio & favore. Idem eodem loco. that they put him to death, As a subverter of the Laws and a public Traitor to the Kingdom, and when he was dispatched, not without the King's great affliction, the Despencers father and son succeeding to the King's favour, mis steered him likewise, So that the King led wholly by them, and all things following the counsel and appointment of those Gratioso's, neither Earl, Baron, Bishop, or other could do any thing with the King but by their favour and mediation, they became so execrable that they were forced to fly; and the King himself that had lost his Subjects hearts for their unhappy sakes, becomes a Prisoner at Kennelworth Castle, and was ever after unhappy: which I observe not as a virtue, but the sin of the Nation (for bonum benè) good Laws may be evilly stood for; and evil men removed by evil means become the sin of a Land) but to clear the truth of the Text, and to applaud the prudence as well as piety of our well-advised Princes, who do nothing of importance without their Councils advice, and declare no binding pleasure but either by matter of Record (Lex praecipit & Rex praecipit being convertible) or by some Declaration in affirmance of known and undoubted Laws, which considered, the Subjects of this Land have echoed back the filial duty that this paternal obligation merits of them, As knowing (to use the words of a most noble and eminently accomplished Gentleman, Sir Ed. Turnor Speaker of the Commons House in Parliament, in his Speech to his Majesty at the Prorogation of the Parliament in May 1662. who now is deservedly honoured publicly by this Nation) that the strongest building must fall, if the coupling pinns be pulled out; and therefore our care (saith he) has been to prepare such constitutions, that the Prerogative of the Crown and the Propriety of the People may, like squared stones in a well-built Arch, each support the other, and grow the closer and stronger for any weight or force that shall be laid upon them. Tamen haec quae jam de experientiae effectu practicata, potentiam Regis regaliter tantum Praesidentis exprobrare videntur, non ex Legis sua defectu processerunt, sed ex incuria, negligentiaque taliter principantis. This is added to show that the absolute power of Kings, if just, is much more tolerable and to be admired, then that, which under the pretext of it, is practised by some that rule by it; for if there were a consideration of Subjects as the Mines and Quarries out of which the gold and silver of Prince's incomes must be fetched, and they were by Princes studied and secured, that so they might the more safely bring their rich ladings to the Port of their Prince's Exchequer, and having paid their duty there, make the most (with their Prince's blessing and good will) of what is theirs neat and clear, as by the rules of Justice under the absolutest Monarch in the world they ought, than would they have encouragement to bless God and their Prince for the mercy of a Government, which did thus permit them to be happy under the Allegiance and Justice of it. For it is not the strictness of Government associated with Justice, that makes Subjects grieved and discontented, (no more than the vigilant eye of a prudent husband over his beloved wife makes her discomposed, for this being an argument of a wise mind to keep her to himself, and to prevent all bold attempts upon her (in the negation of which chiefly lies that sex's security) is the great argument of her virtuous gratitude and resolved loyalty to him) but that which offends Subjects, and makes them entertainers of fears and cross humours, is not ex Legis defectu] want of a right rule to walk by, (for that the Law of Nature and Nations prescribes to every man, who more or less has the Principles of it legible in his mind) but the grievance is, Vbi jam sum ista regula, ubi quid sit justum ab injustis cogn●scitur; ubi descripta sunt, nisi in libris illius lucis qua veritas dicitur, ubi lex omnis ju●tae describitur, & in cor hominis qui operatur justitiam: non migrando sed tanquam imprimendo transfertur, sicat imago annuli ex annul●. Sanctus Augustin. lib. 14. De Civitate Dei. c. 15. in the distorted will and the loose affections of the Governor, who, regardless of the main ends of Government, Justice, and National Prosperity, launches out into the Ocean of pleasure, and in the endearing of them (not only drenched but drowned) loses all thoughts of that distributive Regality, which from the intentness of a real greatness and virtuous care of and conscience to Subjects, aught to be manifested; which Seneca found true in Nero, and thence was bold to tell the World, That Tyrants and Kings differ not so much in their outward appearance of State, Quid interest inter Tyrannum & Regem; specie enim ipsa, fortuna, as licentia par est, nisi quod Tyranni voluptate s●viunt, Reges non nisi ex causa & necesiitate, lib. 1. De Clementia, p. ●24. as in their direction of their Power to a proper end, Tyrants being truculent as delighting such to be, but Kings as being forced to the severity they practice by necessity, and as that remedy which they unpleasingly apply. For since Kings are the Ministers of God, and have credited to them the conservation of justice and virtue, Rosellius in Pymand. Trismig. lib. 1. c. 1. quast. ●. p. 164. vol. 1. Orat. 1. contra Aristogiton. Digest. lib. 1. tit. ●. p. 73. which they are to propagate by rewards and punishments, and in the distribution of them, not to err into any arbitrary by-path, but to follow the Commune Praeceptum, which Demosthenes calls, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and on that ground, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, he says, It binds all men; to be remiss and cold in propagating that their divine interest, and to permit sovereign balm and prudent medicinality to run at waste, and to effect no purpose of its designment, but the contrary rather, is surely that which provokes God to give people up to their own frowardnesses, and to make them inundate the Mounds and Walls of Religion, Loyalty, and civil love; and not to fear the power of him, whom they see weak by the absence of self-denial, and by the facility of being victored by delightful folly, which captivity being, very often (through the deceit of man's heart and the temptations of Satan) the misfortune of mighty Potentates, who stand on tiptoe of their unlimited Greatness, the Chancellor shows that by reason thereof the condition of politic Princes is much more secure, and in the issue and last result of it, not inferior to it in the point of absoluteness, Non consolabimur tam triste ergastulum, non adhortabimus ferre imperia Carnificum, ostendemus in omni servitute apertam libertati viam. Seneca lib. 3. De Ira. p. 592. since by the bonds of love and the convictions of the paternal merit, it challenges as of right, and receives with all readiness of good will, the firm and flourishing fidelity and benevolence of Subjects, By which great seal and affection which they bear to them, Preamble to the 8 Eliz. c. 19 as the words of the Statute are, the Subjects do so meditate on and provide for their Prince's security, Preamble to the 13 Eliz. c. 1. In whom consisteth all the happiness and comfort of the whole State and Subjects of the Realm, that they are so far from disputing, that they freely concur with them in all their just and regal postulations, and set themselves with all careful study and zeal, to consider, foresee, and provide for them, as professing, By the neglecting and passing over whereof with winking eyes, there might happen to grow the subversion and ruin of the quiet and most happy State and present Government of this Realm, Quia ad hoc ordinatur corum potetestas & ●ujuslibet domini, ut prosint gregi, alias non sunt legitimi domini sed Tyranni. Aquinas lib. De Regimine Principum. c. 10. which God defend, so are the words of the Statute aforesaid, which I thus mention to fortify the Chancellour's position, that Politic Princes become more absolute in conquering their people by kindness, and convincing them of the benefit their care and vigilancy over them returns upon them, than any severe and rigid administrations in the behalf of absolutely Regal Potentates arrives at, which is the sum of what Saint Thomas in his book of the Government of Princes wrote, and what our Text from it collects, and what in the Notes on the 14 and 15. Chapters I have endeavoured to illustrate, and which here I have been no more copious in than I hope will be profitable to the Reader, whom it may direct to praise God for the blessings we in this Nation enjoy, Remember this. while we are governed by Laws, just, holy, useful, and proper to us, and by a Prince the Guardian of them, Perierant omnia ubi quantum suadet ira, fortuna permittit, nec diu potest; quod multorum malo exercetur, potentia stare: periclitantur enim, ubi eos, qui separatim gemunt, communis metus junxit. Seneca lib. 3. De Ira. p. 5●3. whose administration is not regulated by wrath, and written in the terror of Subjects, but who admonishing his Subjects to beware the penalties and dangers of his Laws, covets rather their amendment by gentle and merciful means, then with severe execution of his Laws to be enriched by their evil deeds and offences, See the Preamble 10 the 7 Eliz. c. 14. they are the words of the Preamble to the Statute, 8 Eliz. c. 19 The consideration whereof should be Monitory to us to be dutiful, and to account nothing so much our honour, as to value the mercy we above others are made happy by, and to beleaguer God with earnest prayers, that he would ever preserve amongst us, The unity of the spirit in the bond of peace, without which neither Sovereign nor Subject can be solidly happy; concerning which * Lib. 1. c. 9 D● triplici bon● & vera hominis nobilitate. jacobus Tapia has excellently discoursed, and in all reason and experience it is so found to be true. And hereupon, as the Chancellor concludes this Chapter with St. Thomas whom he began with, wishing that Omnia Regna politicè regerentur,] so shall I end my Comments on it, Eicon Basili● p. 243. Edit large. Octau. with the advice of an Oracle among Kings and men, our late Gracious King Charles the Father, Nothing can be more happy for all (both King and People) then in fair, Rare counsel worthy a good King. grave, and honourable ways to contribute their counsels in common enacting all things by public consent without Tyranny or Tumults, which is, Politicè regere & regi in St. Thomas his words, and to which as oracular, and that which is the Prayer of every good Englishman, aught to be (in our Holy Mother the Church of England's words) subjoined, In the Litany of the Church of England. We beseech thee to hear us good Lord. CHAP. XXXVIII. Tunc Princeps. Parce obsecro Cancellarie, etc. THis Chapter is as other formerly have been, but accommodative to the personation of the Prince, and his proportionable demeanour in the dialogue. All that the Chapter affords is but doctrinal to tender and infant-greatness to be sequacious of grave and learned age, which this our Chancellor having in that sense that age is truliest honourable in, attained to, and so abundantly and with matchless sincerity evidencing to him as that flourishing branch, which though rejected and forsaken of men, and thereby made a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief; yet in the breathe and longings of his loyalty, He, He (our Chancellor who loved much, and therefore aught to have much forgiven him) hoped and expected (though God knows it was otherwise) would come to pass. I say the Chancellor in all his pourtraying a most intense loyalty to his Prince, whose Interest (as he conceived it) he was a sufferer for, and after was with it civilly interred) I say this long robed Heroick thus approving himself, is deservedly courted with a Parce obsecro Cancellarie] and entreated to a further Information to his profit, which he professing the particulars of it were, as in these words, mihi namque perutilia sunt] the Chancellor is engaged to pursue his own promise in the method of the personated Princes recital, primo ut aliquos alios casus, etc.] in producing some such Cases as the two Laws do disagree in, that in consideration of them he may the clearer judge which of the two he does most incline to study and approve as best for the Government of the Kingdom and people of England: This is the sum of this Chapter. CHAP. XXXIX. Cancellarius. Quosdam casus alios in quibus dissentiunt leges predictae, ut petis Princeps, detegere conabor. HEre the Chancellor answers the personated Prince his expectation, which being to be from him satisfied wherein the Laws agree and disagree, and the reason of both will better clear up to his understanding the way of his choice. This then being the scope of this Chapter, as it is appendicious to those other foregoing instances * Chapters●1 ●1, 22, 23, 34, 35, 36, 38. of their dissonancy; though the Chancellor writes with much judgement, yet presses he not his authority further than the reason of his arguments seizing on his judgement, sways his affection and practice; For so the modest words of our Text are, Sed tamen quae legum earum praestantior sit in judiciis suis, non meo, sed arbitratui tuo relinquam.] This for the Introduction. The words of the Chapter most material follow. Prolem ante matrimonium natam, ita ut post legitimam, lex civilis & succedere facit in haereditate parentum, sed prole● quam matrimonium non parit succedere non sinit lex Anglorum.] Prolem.] This is a word of largeness, importing the issue of any creature or thing used by Orators and Poets for that which the Greeks call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, 1. Fastorum. thus Ovid mentions, volucrum proles, and Virgil, Olivae proles, faelix urbs prole virum, proles ignara parentum, Tully has also Ferrea proles, Ferrea tam vera proles exorta repente est. lib. 2. de Nat. eorum. and * Pascit autem si est generosa proles frequenter duos, nonnunquam trigeminos lib. 7. Tholoss. syntagm. Juris. lib. 9 c. 6. ff. 1. Columella writing of the Goat, calls his young Generosa proles; in this diminutive sense of proles, Budaeus uses proletarius sermo for plebeius, such as is nulla animi dote; and the poor in Rome were from this called Proletarii, whence perhaps our word to prole up and down, as much as to shark, the Act of necessity. To those that are the refuse and ignoblest of Families, the Law shows no countenance, in honour to marriage God's Institution, and that which he has in laid with honour amongst all Nations, so saith St. Paul, and to confirm this which is so clear, were to question the universal embracement of it; now Matrimony being the chaste limitation of the loves of one man and one woman each to other at one time, Uxorem duxi, natum sustuli, filium educavi. Quintil. lib. 4. c. 2. the Chancellors phrase of proles, and not natus, nor filius quod omnium constantissimus sit amor parentum in filios, saith Sipontinus, Charitas quae est inter natos & parents dirimi nisi detestabili scelere non potest. Cic. lib. de Amicit. nor Liberi which extended not only to the legitimate children of the body, but to the nepotes & pronepotes, to which * Lib. 7. c. 3. Tholoss. lib. 10. c. 3. Glanvil assents, when he calls these Haeredes; I say the Text naming those he writes of, not by these names of credit, but by that of Proles which is a common title of the proceed of any creature, does thence insinuate that illegitimate children are as no children, Consensus praeponderat concubitui. Tholoss. lib. 9 c. 3. ss. 3. Consensus solus facit conjugium. Rogul. Juris. being abscinded from the descents of the Families of those that got them, and that because they are ante matrimonium natae.] For though in the Court of Heaven they may be legitimate, their parents consenting conjugally each to other before they coupled, and continuing loyal each to other after; Promis●to de suturo Matrimonio, sequente copula, facit Matrimonium praesumptum, contra quod non habet locum probatio. Regul. Juris apud Tholoss. lib. 10. c. 4. ss 3. Discurs de Matrimonio. part. 2. c. 8. ss. 2. a p. 244. ad p. 248. In Epist. ad Exoniens. Episcopum Council, Tom 7. part. 2. p. 739 yet in foro seculi the Proles ante Matrimonium natae, are Proles ignara Parentum, incerta, and so have no right jure divino aut naturali, as Covarruvias notably determines notwithstanding the Declaration of Pope Alexander, which says, Tanta est enim vis Sacramenti, ut qui antea sunt geniti post contractum Matrimonium-habeantur legitimi. Now Proles ante Matrimonium natae they are, who are born before the Parents of them are lawfully married, that is not married as the Pope by his Canons and Dispensations indulges, for that sometimes has made that lawful which God's Law has made unlawful, and on the contrary, as the Statute of 32 H. 8. c. 38, declares; but according to the appointment of the Law of England, 2 & 3 E. 6. c. 23. Glanvil. lib. 7. c. 12. & 14. Solemnised in the face of the Church, and by lawful Authority, the truth and loyalty of which the Bishop only must certify, which these Natae ante Matrimonium proles not being capable to be, they by our Law come to be infamous, Selden's Notes on this 39 Chap. Ubi non est copia aliorum, bene assumuntur minus legitimi. Gratian. Decret. part. 1. dost. 55 fol 66. Ita ut post legitimaem Lex Civilis & succedere facit in haereditate Parentum.] Mr. Selden quotes justinian for this, though the Canon rather than the Civil Law makes them inheritable, if their Parents marry after, and there be no other issue born after Marriage, This, (a) Loco praecitato. Lex enim h●sce justis filiis aequiparat, nihilque a legitimis legitimatos differre jubes, no● high invicem dissimiles a legitimis & naturalibus censentur. Alciat. lib. 3. de verb. signific. p. 366. Tholoss. lib. 10. c. 4, 5, 6. & lib. 6. c. 11, 12, 13. Covarruvias says, is Favor jure Pontificio Matrimonio impensus. I confess the Civil Law has, a way of legitimation of them, as our Law has by Act of Parliament. Sed Prolem, quam Matrimonium non parit, succedere non finit Lex Anglorum. So great a reverence has the Common and Statute-Law to Marriage, that though natus intra Matrimonium shall be the child of the Marriage, Matrimonii honestas naturalis est. Tholoss lib. 8. c. 1.15. De Privilegiis Matrimonii lege Cassanaeum ad consuetudinem Burgundiae ad tit. des droit appartenans a gens mariez. the father by Marriage being presumed apt for generation, as natus ultra mare within the 25 E. 3. & 42 E. 3. c. 10. shall be the King's Subject though it be born extra limits, if infra ligtantiam Regis Angliae, 2 Instit. p. 97. on c. 9 of the Stat. of Merton. yet natus extra, that is, ante Matrimonium shall be a Bastard; for that the Law repudiates all vage lust, the affront of Marriage, Non potest de facili praeter consensum haredis sui filio suo post-nato de haereditate sua quantamlibet partem donare. lib. 7. c. 1. and dishonours the proceed of it. I know Pope Alex. 3. in 6 H. 2. made a Decree to legitimate antenate Children upon subsequent Marriage between their Parents; but this was never allowed here for Law, but the contrary asserted, so Glanvil, who wrote in Henry the Second time, says, Orta est quaestio, si quis, antequam pater matrem suam desponsaverat, Glanvil. lib. 7. c. 15. fuerit genitus vel natus, utrum filius talis sit legitimus haeres cum postea matrem suam desponsaverit. Et quidem licet secundum Canon's & Leges Romanas talis filius sit legitimus haeres, Haeres autem legitimus nullus Bastardus, nec aliquis qui ex legitimo Matrimonio non est, procreatas esse potest. lib. 2. c. 29. fol. 63. 20 H. 3. c. 9 tamen secundum jus & consuetudinem Regni, nullo modo tanquam haeres in haereditate sustinetur, vel haereditatem de jure Regni petere potest. So such, Bracton also, who wrote in Henry the Third's time, says are not inheritable, and that per consuetudinem Regni; for though he would write favourably of the Ecclesiastical Constitution, which all the Bishops of England did in the Parliament of 20 H 3. promote, yet all the Earls and Barons with one voice answered, That they would not change the Laws of the Realm which hitherto have been used and approved; which Bracton I say considering, though he says the natural sons of men ad omnes actus legitimos idonei reputantur, Nec haeredes judicabuntur quod Parentibus succedere possunt, propter consuetudinem regni qua se habet in contrarium lib. 2. c. 29. yet restrains it non nisi ad ea quae pertinent ad sacerdotium: for as to secular things they are not lawful, which Sir Edward Cook takes notice of in the 8 Report in Lechford's Case; and (a) In Descript. juris Feudal. p 21. Spurii autem non succedunt etiam in Gallia Patribus vel eorum agnatis, & ita conveniunt omnes, quia non habent jura sanguinis. lib. 45. c. 6. Doctor Zouch shows this to be the Custom of Normandy, and Tholossanus makes the Law of all France, as others do generally of all the world; for even amongst the Athenians if a man had a base son he had some portion allowed him, but the inheritance went unto his lawful daughter, so says (b) In verbo 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Suidas: and so strictly did our Law ever adhere to it, that in times of Popery, when the Canons of the Pope were most adhered to, yet the Bishops in case of general Bastardy, when the King wrote to them to certify who was lawful Heir to any Lands or other Inheritance, 2 Instit. p. 97. on ch. 9 Mert●n. aught to certify according to the Law and Custom of England, and not according to the Roman Canons and Constitutions, which were contrary to the Law and Custom of England, and this was the reason they loving the Canons and fearing the Pope who laded them with such chain-shot, desired in the Parliament of 20 H. 3. to be relieved, but in vain alas; for the Nation would not stir from adhering to Marriage, and the issue lawful of it; and that Bastardy is an exception against inheriting, Lib. 6. c. 38. Capite de exceptionibus contra personam quarentis, etc. Fitz. Herbert. Title Bastardy 21, 22, 25, 27, 28, 30, 33, 39 and the year books 1 H. 6. fol. 3. 11 H. 4. fol. 84. 39 E. 3. fol. 14. 44 E. 3. fol. 12 Fleta not only makes good, but all later Authorities. And to help this in a particular case, which otherwise would have ended in disherison, was the Statute of 9 H. 6. c. 11. made, For Bastards begotten and born out of lawful Matrimony (an offence against God's and man's law) as the words of the 18 Eliz. c. 3. are, has ever been not only disfavoured by the Laity in Parliaments, but by our Clergy in their * Deum ista conjugia semper prohibuisse & nunquam placuisse, & pracipue temporibus Christianis Concubinas baber● nunquam licuit. nunquam licet, nunquam licebit excerptio Egbedi. Ad Ann. 750. Canon 125. Spelman in Concil. p. 271. sic in Canonib. sub Edgaro. p. 462. sic inter Leges Canuti; p. 558. 501. 516. 234. 787. 298. Convocations; for although the Pope gave liberty, and some of the Clergy of old took liberty to enjoy Concubines, yet the Church in her Councils decried and execrated it as abominable, and made the issue of it un-inheritable, Non legitimam proclamans, saith our Text. Civilistae in casu boc Legem suam extollunt, qui incitamentum cam esse dicunt, quo Matrimonii Sacramento cesset peccatum. Here the Text terms those learned Gentlemen of the Gown, which in other places it names juristae, Advocati, jurisperiti by Civilistae, A name of art and dignity given to those that are Graduates in the profound study of the Laws, the termination sta referring to the person, as ius does to the office, thus Sacrista, Exorcista, Lanista, jurista, Canonista, all appropriated to men so and so qualified; for these are not Orators or Historians words, so much as terms of art and private invention. That which the Text says of these, is, that they do extol their Law for this indulgence, that is, they being Professors in both Laws, the Canon as well as Civil, do as much as in them is, keep up the credit of their Laws, by evidencing the reason or equity of them. And though this dispensative enaction be the Popes, and so directly their Canon-Lawes rule, Tholoss. lib. 9 c. 21. sl. 2. yet inasmuch as the rule is with them In Matrimoniis judicandis, & in his qua aed ea pertinent, praeponimus Sanctiones Pontificias Civilibus, our Chancellor says these Civilians, for that is the title of most eminency, do Legem eorum extollere, that is, Lib. 5. Belli Africani. 530. Orat. pray Plancio in jugurth. they judge it prudent and just, and such publicly and with confidence avow it; thus Extollere armatum in sublime is by Hertius used, Extollere caput & se erigere, and Ad coelum landibus aliquem extollere by Tully, Extollere verbis pr●clara ingenia by Sallust, Extollere indignationem by Pliny, Extollere in majus by Livy: all which show, that our Text by these words Legem eorum extollunt] intends a Magnification of their Laws, In Parad. 17. which is what the Orator intends by Extollere se gloriando & praedicatione, as Tully's words are. This I note, because it is not a vain jactancy that our Text mentions these Civilians guilty of, for that had been not worthy them but to be passed over by his ingenuity, no such extolling is this, but it's such an extolling as is grounded upon reason and conscience, Quia incitamentum eam esse dicunt, quo Matrimonii Sacramento cesset peccatum] That is, supposing the first act be so strong a fetter to continued lubricity, Non enim coitus Matrimonium sacit, sed maritalis affectio. Forner. ad Leg 13. ff. 1. p. 36. lib. de verb. signific. which is the sin of Incontinency, Marriage limiting & legitimating the vageness and obliquity thereof, turns the sinful passion into a sinless virtue, such fruitions in the latitude and effects of them becoming, by a not to be blushed at transmutation, noble and creditable, which before such Marriages were culpable and infamous; yea, notwithstanding all the precedent irrectitude, charity may persuade to interpret a dispositive Marriage in their minds, who (in their censured familiarity) were thus cordial each to other: Qua ratione deprensi in concubitu & adulterii accusati se excusant, si conjugium c●ntraxisse asseverent, corumque affirmatio verisimilis sit. Alciat. ad Leg. 174. p. ●75. lib. de verb. signific. yea and the Marriage in being, be but the design their loves tended to, though the completion thereof had for some time and reasons interruption, so are the words, Prasumendum quoque dicunt esse, tales fuisse contrahentium animos, quales esse demonstrat subseq●ens Sacramentum.] And therefore the Church of Rome counting Marriage a (a) Field in his Appendix to the third book of the Church. c. 15. Lege Cassandrum in Consultat. cap. De Romano Pontifice. p 31. Holy thing (for that's as much as Sacramentum here will amount to) makes the issue of it legitimate, which Act of legitimation is but yet the favour of a particular Church, Tom. 1. Concil. Tract de Primate. Rom. Ecclesiae. p. 25. etc. Dr. Field of the Church lib. 4. c. ●. etc. 31. which though some Councils have declared to be Sacrosancta & Apostolica Ecclesia quae non ab Apostolis sed ab ipso Servatore Dominoque nostro primatum obtinuit, yet has only power over its Members and within its limits to establish what it pleases in matters of ritual and circumstantial nature, but in the Doctrinals and Mains of Religion, the Scripture not men ought to be Judge: and therefore if the Church be taken here for the Roman Church, Pro Prasidentibus Ecclesiae, pro Ecclesiasticis viris, Turrecremata Summ. lib. 2. De Ecclesiae. & pro auctoritate Papa virtualis Ecclesiae, as the Romanists generally hold; Doctor Field's 4. Book c. 1. of the Church. then that Church Non habens maculam neque rugas neque aliquid hujusmodi, as (a) Tom. 6. p 485. Nihil proinde aliud credendum, tenendum, aut docendum est, nisi quod sanctae Romana tenet & docet Ecclesia, omnium consentientium Ecclesiarum Mater & Magistra; cum vero qui à side Catholica & Romana Ecclesia recedit, necesse est a veritate & capite deficere. Concil. Trevirense ad Annum 1549. Tom. 9 Concil. p. 336. Baronius his words are, will not establish any thing which is not according to Scripture and Morality, and so is not the Ecclesia here, that does habere natos ex subsequenti Matrimonio for legitimate. For than I suppose the Church, which they say, as headed by the Pope, cannot err, must be granted to err; and that in allowing that for ends of Policy and gain, which has an apparent turpitude in it, and from which there is no absolution, but by God's mercy by an humble penitence, which subsequent Marriage does not necessarily nor always imply; so that the Ecclesia foetus hujusmodi habet pro legitimis] must only be meant of a part of the Church-Catholick, that is, The Roman Church, which though vitiated in many things, both practices and opinions, yet having the Integrals, I dare not deny a Member of the Catholic Church: and I understand the Chancellor only to intend the Roman Church here as it does foetus hujusmodi habere pro legitimis; for the Catholic Church does not so judge, nor as I think has ever so declared. Ad quae sic respondent Legis Angliae periti. Primo dicunt, quod peccatum primi concubitus in casu proposito, non purgatur per subsequens Matrimonium, licet ejus merito delinquentium quodam modo minuatur poena. This has several parts of its answer worthy consideration, First, that the primus concubitus was a sin, because a violation of chastity and an act of lust and irregular concupiscence; for it being not an observance of the institution of God, nor to the end of prolification, (which though it happeneth unexpectedly to be, yet was not the end of the coition, but merely the effect of brutish sensuality, which titillated the concupiscence to acts of inordinacy, and took the object it first lusted as the creature of its pleasure, not the beloved and solitary object of its adhesion,) there being no end of God in the institution of Marriage designedly promoted thereby, no blessing of God on such conjunction can be expected therefrom, though the patience of God forbear punishment of such a sin against his Law, the breach whereof this act was, and does not in the very act destroy the sinner; yet is the sin entered on record in heaven and without repentance is damnable: and therefore the subsequens Matrimonium does not purge that, for then the remedy must antedate itself and work before it had a being, than it must be either in its own nature, or in God's acceptance of equivalence with guiltlesseness, for else how can it purge from the guilt of sin committed, not that then can it do, but all that it can do is to mitigate scandal and to give restitution in point of fame, as thereby it imports to the world, that there was an inclination and addiction of them to a Marriage completion, A contrahentibus publicata Matrimonia olim valida. To. 9 Concil. Gen. p 670. Luke xii. 46, 47. and that they were soularily married, and so the subsequent Marriage may be purgatio, that is, declaratio intentionis conjugalis, and this may purgare à tanto though not à toto, or as the Text is, Poenam delicti minuere,] though not tollere, which is all one with that of our Lord, Not beaten with many stripes but with few stripes, by which appears that though the Church of God and the Laws of men may allow the issue of reputed Marriage to be lawful, though there were a pre-marriage, Bracton. lib. 2. De aequirendo rerum dominio, c. 29. p. 61. Zouch in Descript. juris Feudal. p. 21. in Custom de Normandy 27. provided that the party that was free when married, did not know of the former Marriage, Quia crimen non contrahitur nisi volunt as nocendi intercedit, & voluntas & propositum distinguunt maleficium, as the rule of (b) Bracton. lib. 3. c. 17. De Corona. p. 136. Law is, and the children and one Parent ought not to suffer in this case for the other Parent's sin. Though I say there be favour showed the issues of these Marriages, yet generally the Laws of God and men abhor them, and allow no respect unto but thunder out Comminations against them, Concilior. Gene●al● Tom. 7. c. 2. fol. 1151. Tom. 9 p. 411. Tom. 7. c. 2. p. 527. Proles tali nata pollutione non solum Pareniem accipiat" n =" sed etiam in servit-tem ejus Ecclesiae de cujus Sacerdotis vel Ministri ignominia nati sunt" n =" jure perenni manelunt. A●t. 10. Concil. Toletan. 9 Tom 4. Concil. p. 781" n =" 782. and when satisfactions are given for the very specific sin" n =" yet the stain of it remains" n =" and the trouble of it in the conscience of the sinner while he lives to remember it. And therefore though our Text saying" n =" Ecclesia tales habet pro legitimis" n =" seems to favour the Church of Rome's Primacy" n =" as if whatever she" n =" for politic ends" n =" publishes her pleasure in" n =" must be the doctrine and judgement of the Church; yet so long as the Scriptures give no allowance thereto" n =" nor the Catholic Church" n =" " Cassand. lib. De Officio pii viri. p. 786, 787. Vniversalia praecepta juris naturalis sunt indispensabilia. Durand. lib. 1. distinct 48. Qu. 4. art. 10. p. 277. lib. 2. Dist. 44. qu. 5. p. 467. Pralati Ecclesiae non sunt domini sed ministri, nee fundatores sed executores. Idem lib. 4. dist. 22. qu. 1. art 8 p. 299. (of which the Roman is but a part, and God knows as now 'tis gallimaufryed and made a Cabinet of Civil Interest and State-policy as well as of Church-doctrine and Church-discipline, but an infirm and vitiated part) the noise of the Church makes no great Music in Catholic ears; for all the Dispensations and Allowances that are given to immoralities and turpitudes do but prostitute the credit of those that take money for them, and render them deservedly censured for Pilati rather than Praelati, for Carnifices not Pontifices: God will never approve in Heaven actions evilly done on earth, upon the suggestion of good intents and great good aiméd at. I like not the allowance of Stews to keep chaste women from being tempted, nor of Concubines to help on the singleness of Priests, nor of subsequent Marriage to legitimate issue, though the last be most tolerable of the three. Dicunt etiam quod peccati illius conscii, tanto minus inde penitent, quo Leges transgressoribus illis favere desiderant. This is a sure consequence, as impenitency arises from obcaecation and sin not discovered: so impudence and confirmation in sin, from sin by Law not censured or disallowed; for the rule being, Quod non vetat Lex, id mandat, if there be not a notorious manifest of the Law's displeasure, the corruption of mortal nature will thence derive an encouragement to commit and justify it. And therefore the Laws of our Nation having the Laws of God for their Original and Exemplar, do according to it justify themselves to claim obedience from men, because they enjoin those moral and just acts that the Law of God does, which is, That every man shall enjoy his own wife and every woman her own husband, 1 Cor. 7. Heb. 13.4. because Whore-mongers and Adulterers God will judge; And that whatsoever is beside or against the honour and loyalty of Marriage, is a breach of the Divine Law, and a Trespass upon the Civil Magistrate the Keeper of both Tables, by which these Laws retain their Majesty and worth, Cum Lex sit sanctio sancta, jubeus honesta & prohibens contraria,] as the Text saith: while they do by no connivance at the sin make the sin either little or none at all, and so tacitly invite to the Commission of it. And this our Chancellor gives as the reason of the Law against Legitimation upon subsequent Marriage, Philo lib. de Spe cialibus Legibus. p. 780. because if this should be allowed, all vageness of fruition would be practised, and unless issue come which they neither expect nor welcome who are lustfully acted, never subsequent Marriage would be. Therefore the Law to honour and establish Marriage, necessitates persons to be in that state, if they would have their issue descendable to estate or blood. Nec vallari potest lex ist a per hoc, quod Ecclesia foetus hujus modi pro legitimis habet. Pia namque mater illa, in quamplurimis dispensat, quae fieri ipsa non concedit. The sense of this clause is, that there is no argument from the dispensation and permission of a thing to the legitimation of it, Dispensatio non potest fieri contra pr●cepta juris naturalis communia, sed tantum contra ta qua sunt quasi conclusiones corum. prim secunda quaest. 97. art. 4. Mal. 2. 25. because many things are suffered upon reason of state, etc. to gratify emergent necessity which are not otherwise tolerable. Moses has gave the Jews for the hardness of their hearts a bill of divorce, which from the beginning was not so. Polygamy was not reproached in the Patriarches, because the World was to be peopled; yet God made One man for one woman, and why? Because he sought a godly Seed. This therefore being our Chancellour's argument, he excludes all subterfuge under the Church's introduction of allowance, Ne Vallari potest Lex ista] As much as the Law has no trench or strength about it to shelter the inference from the Church's permission to her justification, (for so vallare is in Authors understood, Lib. 10. c. 33. 7. Atque haec omniae quasi sepimento aliquo vallabit, disserendi ratione, veri & falsi judicandi scientiae. Cic. 1. de Legib. Cic. the Aruspice Res. 4. so Pliny mentions Munire & vallare contra feras, and Vallare sepimento is in Tully, Monitis vallare aliquem in Silius, and thereupon though he proceeds to own a Power and Prerogative in Greatness to do (in things not mala per se) as it shall see fit to the carrying on of order and the compliance with the necessity of humane affairs, which otherwise it cannot accommodate, yet does he deny that on this ground the conclusion of the Church's approbation of Children ex Matrimonio subsequent followeth. Pia namque Mater] The Church he calls a Mother, because she bears Believers in her womb, unto birth; and being born nourishes and suckles them to further growth by the sincere milk of the word professed and teached in her, in which relations though the Holy Text call only jerusalem above (the Church Triumphant) The Mother of us all; Gal. iv. 26. yet it terms the Church on Earth The Body of Christ, 1 Coloss. xviii. 24. Ecclesia est uxor Christi & pro amplitudine prolis sua mater sidelium. Turtecremat lib. 1. de. Ecclesia. c. 40. and The Spouse of Christ, and these import the office and affection of a Mother to Believers and Professors the Sons and Children of Her, which she doth evidence to them more eminently than other Mothers can do; for though they being seduced, do unnaturally leave their children to the wide World: yet the Church like a ●ious Mother, as she keeps herself close to truth, so doth she keep her children close to her in the truth declared by her and defended from her, for their support. And thus she shows herself a pious Mother, who more regards the unity and edification of her children, than her own lustre and satisfaction, which is the cause that she as pious as she is, does that sometimes ex plenitudine affectus, which she approves not in examine stricti judicii. This the Text calls dispensare] a relaxation and exemption from the ordinary rule, which though the Church of God in all times hath in things indifferent used, Non enim aliud est dispensatio quam juris communis quadam in favorem particularem & relaxatio seu correctio, quae & privilegium dici potest. Alciar. lib. 2. d● signific. verborum. p. 554. Nunquam dispensandum est in prajudicium boni communis. Sanctus Thom. prim. secund. quaest. 97. art. ●. Oranis dispensatio à praelato debet fieri ad honorem Christi, & ad utilitatem Ecclesiae. secund. secundae. qu. 88 art. 12. Pontificiam dispensationem quando non adest justa causa dispensandi valere in Foro Fori, sed non in Foro Poli. Bellamin. To. 7. Concil. 6. p. 1987, 1988. Tom. 3. Concil. part. 1. p●25 ●25. as St. Paul bore with those of the Circumcision. even while he preached and pressed the Circumcision, not of the flesh and the letter, but of the Spirit, and the Church has since done after the example of Christ, who though he were the end of the Law, yet was present at and affirmed the Pedagogy of the jews while it was the way of the National worship: yet in things of an absolute evil nature, the Church never arrogated a power of dispensation; for the Church being but the body of Christ, cannot do any thing valid against her Head, as the legitimation of what he has damned, must and will be. And of this nature I apprehend dispensations in cases of legitimation of Children upon subsequent Marriage must be; for if it were in its own nature a sin to couple with a woman, which is not ours by Marriage, then to marry her cannot extinguish the sin, Ex dispensatione Summi Pontificis nuptia contrahe possunt licite intra gradus seu generationes prohibitas. Tholoss. Syntag. lib. 9 c. 11. ss. 23, etc. Duarenus lib. 3. De Beneficiis. c. 6. p. 89. Bellarm. lib. 2. c. 11, De authoritat. Conciliorum. Benzonius. in Psal. 86. p. 246. Solus Deus potest dispensare in praeceptis divinis, non autem Papa. 1. 2 da. qu. 94 art. 5. Reg. Juris. Inter L. S. Edvardi si quis di usura convictus. Glanvil. lib. 5. c. 16. nor admit into an unstained state the proceed of it, Quod enim ab initio temporis non valet, progressu temporis non convaelescit; and hence supposing the Church of Rome allowing the Pope dispensative power, not only in ordinary things (his Prerogative herein not infringing the Prerogative of Christ, who only can forgive sins) but in higher matters, such as are the licensing of Marriage within prohibited degrees, taking and breaking Oaths, Pluralities of Benefices, Incontinence of living, etc. In these cases, if the Pope shall honestè accipere quae inhonestè petuntur, give way to such things to advance his peace, or enrich his Coffers, which he seems to make by arguments of subtlety to be propriè & quarto modo (as I may so say) for the Church's edification, because to maintain his splendour, in which he would make the World believe all the Church's good and greatness consists. I say, if the Pope shall do this as the viruall Church, yet it is more an argument of his pride to usurp it and of his Church's cowardice to suffer it, than any argument that they approve dogmatically of it, Quia quaedam tolerantur quae non approbantur, of which infinite instances might be produced, so some things are permitted which are not commanded in our own Laws. Usury the Stat. 37 H 8. c. 9 calls, A thing unlawful, as it was by the Saxon Laws, Utterly prohibited by the word of God as a vice most-odious and detestable, as the words of the 5 & 6 E 6. c. 20. are, though the 13 Eliz. 8. repeal the 5 & 6 E. 6. and re-invigorate the 37 H. 8. yet does it only allow Usury at 10. l. per Cent. as the 21 jacob. c. 17. does at 8. l. per Cent. for a year to be unpenally taken; All Usury forbidden by the word of God it expressly calls Sin and detestable, but the Usury it permits and dispenses with (not allowing the practice of Usury in the point of Conscience and Religion, so are the words of the 21 jacob. c. 17. confirmed by 3 Car. 4.) is as to any advantage the Civil Magistrate should take against the takers of it; these Statutes taking away the old Usury, Stat. Merton. c. 5. 2 Instit. p. ●9. which before the Statute of Merton was practised here by the jews, and after till Henry the Seventh's time, when by the Statute of 3 c. 5. it was declared, For as much as importable damages, loss, and impoverishing of this Realm is had by damnable Bargains grounded in Usury, coloured by the name of new Cheivance, contrary to the Law of Natural justice, to the common hurt of this Land, and to the great displeasure of God. I say, the Law though (it taking away these) did permit moderate interest to be taken; yet did but what the Text terms dispensare with the taking it, as not looking on it as a matter of conscience, but as a great expedient for trade and correspondence between man and man: and thus Usury at this day standing, the Law may be said dispensare rather then constituere Vsuram. And so in other cases instances might be given, which confirms the Chancellour's position, that the Church in admitting the issue of such after-Marriages for lawful, does not so much doctrinally conclude, as piously dispense with what thus happens upon presumption of subsequent penance in them, and future satisfaction to be made by them for former scandal, Per Matrimonium subsequens docetur Ecclesia contrahentes poenitere de praeterito & de futuro per Matrimonium se velle cohibere] And then as the Text says, if Saint Paul did Fraena virginitatis laxare quod consulere noluit] If he that preferred virginity above Marriage, yet did indulge Marriage to Christians in persecution rather than burning, Absit ut mater tanta?] Our Chancellor puts a God forbid upon the denial of the Church to show lenity to her Children, when they, fallen into sin by aforesaid enjoyments, desire to return from their wander by subsequent Marriage, and this is that which he produces in favour of the Church, Quae foetus hujusmodi habet pro legitimis, that is, if the woman, Mother of them, be before in concubinatu, in familia retenta, so that there be an undoubted affection as in a wife, (saith the learned (a) Mr. Selden on this Chapter and words. Bachelor, who makes many Doctors therein to agree with him) in this sense the Church takes Prolem ante Matrimonium natam pro legitimis. Sed longè alium in hoc casu Lex Angliae effectum-operatur, dum ipsa non concitat ad peccatum, neque peccantes fovet: sed terret eos, & ne peccent, minatur poenas. This he produces to purge the Law of England from cruelty and unmercifulness in this exclusion; for Marriage being the institution of God, and Lust a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, not only a pugnation with God but with nature, which intentionally by it in her noblest operation is defeated; the Law of England to prevent or correct this sin committed, doth incapacitate the issue of it inheriting, and puts a deserved blemish upon them. And this it does to declare its abhorrence of vage lust and inordinate copulation, the sin much of the Nation, and that which the Law would be interpreted in not punishing to encourage, and in not abhorring to cherish. Therefore is the Law constrained minare poenas, not castration and exoculation, which are since Christianity antiquated, but illegitimation of the issue, and a disherizing of them, as no Cyons' from the root and growth of the family; and if children be gotten between two, an offence against God's Law and man's Law, the words of the Statute of 18 Eliz. c. 3. They shall be provided for by the reputed father and mother, consuls a consulendo, gladiis, id est, Ringis, & Ringa cingunt Renes talium, ut custodiant se ab incestu luxaria; quia luxuriosi & incestnosi Deo sunt abominabiles. Bracton. lib. 2. the acquirend, rerum dominio. c. ● fol. 5. B. so is the Statutes direction confirmed by 3 Car. c. 4. yet if any bastard-child so gotten and born shall be destroyed and made away, which some l●wd women do to avoid their shame and escape punishment, the Statute of 21 jacob. 27. makes it Murder without Clergy. This the Law does to show, as Bracton says, That luxurious and incestuous persons are to God abominable; and Philo gives it for a reason why Bastards are not to come into the Congregation of God, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Because these, Archers shooting at Rovers direct their Arrows to no one only object, but being wild and of random fancies, imagine not One, God the Creator and Preserver of all things, but many causes and principles of things and creatures, and thence are execrable to God, because Authors of all monstrous and prodigious tenants and actions, Lib. de confusione inguarum. p. 341. the effects of their vast wits and limitless passions, thus Philo. And therefore since Carnis illecebrae fomento non egent;] and that be the Laws never so strict there will daily dishonour accrue to God by the infirmity of our nature, and the advantages Satan takes by our discovery of ourselves to tempt us, as the irritamenta lasciva, be importunate and incessant, (never expiring menace of us while we are in the body) so are our vigilancies and remedies to be suited thereto, and all little enough to keep under the body, which naturally tends to expend itself in generation rather than on any other way; for every creature naturally desiring being and perpetuation in its kind, embraces that which thereto tends, which because to generate its like is the only means to effect his desire, Necessarium fuitad quietam & pacificam hominum vitam aliquas ab hominibus Leges imponi, quibus homines improbi metu p●na a vitiis co●iberentur & virtutem assequi possint. S. Thom. prim. secund. qu. 95 art. 1. Conclus. his actuation will thereto drive: and so man having the common notion of desire with the creature, intensely designs the conducement thereto, and is kept from it by no restraint but that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Virtue divinely restraining, or fear of punishment servilely deterring him, which the wisdom of God wellknowing, riveted in humane nature such prudence and conservative Principles, as do answer every requiry of Nature's infirmity, and adjuvate every branch of the interest of God in the circumduction of things to the full point and consistence of his glory, for which he made the World and all creatures in it. Et homo quum individuo perpetuari nequit, perpetuari naturaliter appetit in specie sua; quta omne quod vivit, assimilari cupit causae primae, quae perpetua est & aeterna. This is here introduced to show the reason of man's dotage on generation-enjoyments, 'tis because the good of being ever he cannot obtain, (his body being elementary, mixed, and so dissolvable) his great drift is to contribute to the being of his kind, though by it he pay the death and determination of his person; for though the life of man be dear to him, job. 2.4. skin for skin, that is, one part of his substance after another till all be exhausted, will a man give for his life: yet to be a benefactor to succession in prolification is that which preponderates life, and more natural and noble is it for man to carry on the succession of man by generation, then to enjoy individual life if it were possible to a perpetuation, because the one is but a solitary good, the other a diffusive and general one; which Abraham no mean Artist in nature as well as in piety apprehending, Gen. 15.2. complaints to God, that all he had, did him no good since he went childeless, as conceiving, he lived not at all to the purpose of nature who had not generative energy, or having it, expressed it not; nor did he seem to himself favoured by the God of nature, whose natural endowment orderly expended brought no harvest to succession. Now though I am apt to think there was some sensual instinct that impresses this desire and urges on this impetuosity of man; yet do I not believe but that some ambition of a temporal eternity as pledge of assimilation to the first cause (in a degree and apprehension of perpetuity, and as it were indeterminateness of being) acts man to this: & God having furnished him with soulary powers to it, proportionates corporal Organs to those offices of life and activity, Under fit quod plus delectatur homo in sensu tactus, quo servatur species ejus, quam in sensu gustus.] The Senses of man are the deficient participations of Intellect, Sensus est quadam deficiens participatio Intellectus. Sanct. Thom. part. 1. qu. 77. art. 7. say the Schools, because they distinguish of objects and things by some directive and discriminative property, which is like though not very intellectuality; Sensus gustus quadam species tactus quae est in lingua tantum, non autem distinguitur a tactu in genere, sed a tactu tantum ad illas species quae per totum corpus diffienduntur. Sanct. Thom. qu. 78. art. 3. ad quartum dicend. those senses that are here mentioned are the two keenest and most consequent of all, Taste and Touch, which though they he but one in the true nature of them (Touch comprehending Taste as it is the sense of all the parts, whereas Taste is but the touch of the tongue) yet are distinguished in the order of Senses; and as no man can live without food and taste, Quod cum absque aliis sensibus vivere po●tumus, absque aspectu scilicet, odoratu, a●ditu, atque complexu, absque gustu & cibis impossibile est humanum sustinere corpus. Sanct. Hieron. tract. 2. c. 8. so no man can generate this kind without touch. Therefore the a Hist. Animal. lib. 4. c. 8. Philosopher makes this inseparable to generation, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Men and all Creatures that do generate have touch. And man, though he be answered nay exceeded in other senses by the creatures, who have them in transcendency above him; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 lib. 1. c. 15. yet in touch and taste he is Lord of them all; none have them in any degree comparable to him. This is his peculiarity and donative of Prerogative, wherein he is more excellent than all the works of God's hand; for this is that without which no other sense were acceptable to, or illustrious in him: for in these his soul eminently appearing, does accommodate them with all the energies and subsidies of it, Plin. lib. 10. Hist. Animal. c. 69 p. 210. Lib. 2. De anima. Text. 94. Capit● do Odour. which is the sense of the Philosopher, lib. 2. De Anima. c. 3. and therefore in the third Book and twelfth Chapter, he calls the touches of the tongue and of all the body, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, The necessary senses of living creatures; which touch of man being so excellent, (and as it is more quick in some men than others, so argues more excellent souls and prudent minds) is the reason why above the ordinary proportion of men, wise and brave men are most addicted to Venery; not only upon the account that men generally are, Lib. 11. c. 63. De gener. Animal. which the Philosopher mentions when he says, There is no time exclusive of their courtesy as there is in other creatures: but as they are apt to intend an object summarily and to an ecstasy of degree, Note this. Lib. 3. De anima. Fracastorius lib. De Sympath. & Antipath. c. 14. Phavorinus part. 1. c. 29. Plin. lib. 7. Animal. and on that object so enamouring them and enamoured by them to expend themselves to a prodigious, luxuriant and boundless proportion, which in some has been not only to the heights of constitution and civility, but even to an insaniency, or what's further, exanimation; thus died Cornelius Gallus and Quintus Haterius, two Roman Knights, and Pontanus reports one Beltr and Ferrerias of Barcelona so to have died, and multitudes of others. But enough of this, that only which I drive at is to commend the reason of the Text, that as the sense of Taste keeps man by the help of meat and drink to live this bodily life, which is vivere in individuo,] so the sense of Touch enables him to immortalize his frail body, by generating his like, which is vivere in specie: and by the improvement of this, Plus delectatur homo in sensu tactus, quo servatur species ejus, quam in sensu gustus, quo conservatur individuum. Quare Noe ulciscens in ●elium qui ejus pudenda revelavit, nepoti suo, filio delinquentis maledixit, ut inde plus cruciaretur reus quam proprio possit incommodo. This Quotation is out of Gen. ix. 25. where Cham the second son of Noah is cursed for his unnaturalness, in that, when his father was denuded, he did not modestly cover him as his brothers did, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 etc. Philo lib. de his verbis, resipuit Noe. p. 278. Non tantum servilis erit conditio sed vulgari servitute deterior. Vatablus in Loc. but rudely beheld him with a bold and braving glory over his infirmity, which therefore God curses him for, and to show his abhorrence of such a childeless unnaturalness curses his posterity; for Canaan his son for this fact is condemned to be a Servant of servants, that is, the meanest of servants, not only of a servile condition, but more base than servility to men can be thought to be, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Servus perpetuus qui nunquam manumittitur ab co cui servit, as Drusius renders it: though therefore Cham was the immediate sinner, yet God to show his Judgement on his sin, No 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Philo lib. praecit. p. 280 punished his son Canaan, inasmuch as Canaan signifying Commotion, was stirred up by Cham, which imports Heat; for though the sin were in Cham's heart lurking, yet so long as it appeared not in villainy of action God declared not the curse against it, but when it did, punished it in his posterity who are to this day, A Seed of Evil-doers. Quare Lex quae vindicat in progeniem delinquentis, penalius prohibet peccatum, quam quae solum delinquentem flagellat. This is a good consectary, and justifies the Law of England in that it follows the Method of God in punishing Children for Parent's transgressions; for though the punishment of Hell-fire be annexed to the person that sins, according to that, The Soul that sinneth it shall die, Ezech. 1●. And the father shall not bear the iniquity of the son nor the son of the father, but every one shall answer to God for their own deeds and not for another's; yet in external punishment, as the good of Parents often reaches evil children their posterity, so the evil deeds of Parents often reaches good children their offspring, (and that for the greater solemnity and notoriety of God's Sovereignty both in rewards and punishments:) Answerable to which, As God is known by the judgements he executeth when the wicked are taken in their own snare; Psal. 9.16. so is the power of God in the distribution of earthly Magistrates to be proportioned as may most encourage to good and deter from evil. Which because those Laws do most effectually, that reward the child for the father's virtue, and punish the child for the father's sin, as in the case of Bastardy the Law of England doth. The Chancellour's position that the Law of England is Lex casta,] and that quia facit castos by its admonition and discovery of the excellencies of continency; or if it works not that effect, yet it does fortius, firmiús qué repellere peccatum, by declaring the issue of incontinence Illegitimates, then do those Laws that do, ex Matrimonio subsequent, allow them. This being the Chancellou'rs conclusion, He therewith ends and so do I the Notes on this Chapter. CHAP. XL. Praeterea Leges Civiles dicunt filium naturalem tuum, esse filium populi, de quo Metricus quidam sic ait. Cui pater est populus, pater est sibi nullus & omnis. TO the honour of the Civil Laws be it written, that they do all imaginable Honour to Marriage and all dishonour to the contrary; the rule therefore of the Law is, That the Marriage proves the Son, and that the son that will have a father and inherit from him, Nuptia probant filium, Gloss. ad Nolit filium] Digest lib. 1. tit. 6. the his qui sui vel alieni juris sun●. p. 98. Cum legitima nuptiae facta sunt●, patrem liberi sequuntur, vulgo quaesitus Matrem sequitur, lib 29. Digestorum. Lex naturae haec est, etc. Ulpian. lib. 17. ad Sabinum. Digest. lib. 1. tit. 5. p. 93. Syntag. Juris. lib. 42. c. 2●. ss. 23. & lib 45. c. 6. ss. 1, & 2. & lib. 44. c. 2. ss. 18. must be the son, of his Marriage, thus Celsus peremptorily concludes, and Ulpian says it is the Law of nature, That he that is born out of lawful Marriage, unless there be a particular Law to the contrary, has no relation to his father that begot him, but must rely on his Mother that bore him: to this agrees Tholossanus, who calls these natural sons, Spurii, his words are, Cum naturales tantum procul à patris successione arceantur omni illicito coitu reprobato jure divino, & naturales etiam ideo à feudo rejiciuntur paterno, etiam si fuerint legitimati rescripto Principis, and a In Leg. 191. ss. 1. Foeminarum. p. 435. Alciat allows only legitimate sons to be of their father's family; yea, so doth the Civil Law suppress these as to any thing of splendour, that though they come from the body of a man, yet his Nephews and remoter kindred shall inherit and not they; for they being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are therefore left at large, and by the Law unprovided for as strangers are: answerable hereunto is Littleton's rule, Cook ●n Littleto●. p. 3. 123. Dyer. p. 313. 345. A Bastard is quasi nullius filius, and therefore can lay claim to no blood or fortune by descent, but if any he hath it must be by deed or will, by which they often (and God forbid it should be otherwise) have estates given them: for if any man knows a person to be his child, though sinfully begotten, (the more is his shame and aught to be his sorrow) not for him to give it his estate, if no lawful children he have, or something of it if such lawful children he have, is a very great unnaturalness, and that which discovers an horrible ingratitude to nature, and a sensuality in himself which he ought to recompense to the child which was passive in the act of his generation, and yet is thereby rendered infamous; which One, as I have heard of note, in the Reign of King james the Wise, considering, and having a great affection to his natural son, settled his estate upon him, his Kindred endeavouring to make it void by a Bill of Equity, had as much right done to them therein as the eloquence of Sir Francis Bacon then a Pleader could afford them; upon the close of Sir Francis his elaborate impeachment of the settlement, which he said was done to make and favour a spurious brood, the than Judge of the Court of Equity leaning upon his staff, and well attending the strength of his arguments and the vehemence of his expression, notwithstanding them, decreed for the settlement, saying, Terram dedit filiis hominum, wherein he did well (if the case was only thus as I have heard it reported.) For reasonable it is, that he that has the power of an estate should settle it as he pleases, and to those he best judges to deserve, which certainly those must by any reasonable man be judged to be who are his children, though not legitimate, he having none such, yet natural, and such he having. Which I write not in the least degree to apologise for looseness which I hate, or to dishonour Marriage by the benefit of which (I bless God) I have been happy in a serene life and an hopeful issue; but to dissallow that execrable oblivion and sordid folly, which too much sways with wanton and wild persons, who first sin against God in begetting children in vage lust, and then sin against their own bodies, in disowning such support of the fruit of them, as they are able in point of estate to allow. But of this enough. Cui pater est populus, pater est sibi nullus & omnis. Cui pater est populus, non habet ipse patrem. Sect. 1●8. of Villeinage p. 123. This is mentioned as the saying of a certain Metrician, but whom I know not, nor doth Sir Edward Cook, who yet recites it in his Commentary on Littleton, mention the Author of it, possibly 'tis some obscure Monkish Distich, whose Authority being of urgent weight, the author's name may remain a secret without loss to any Reader; the sense of it is but the same with what in other words is forecited, and therefore I shall mention it only as a pass to that absurdity which the Chancellor says will follow upon legitimation of issue upon subsequent Marriage, to wit, That when as a natural child he had no father at his birth, thereby he after gets a father and so becomes a lawful child; which in reason no children being possible to get without aid of that Gloss, In Margin. Gloss. lib. digest. 23. ti●. 2. de ritu Nuptiarum p. 21 12. Ulpianus lib. 6. loco pracit. which is diametrally contrary to our Common Law rule, Quod ab initio non valet, ex post facto convalescit, which though it be a good Gloss to that of Vlpian's in the case of a Senator, Ad Legem juliam & Papiam there treated on, and a Libertine may by the Prince's indulgence become just a ●xor; yet in case of issue, ex post facto legitimated, is very hard to yield: nay certainly since the Text says, non novit natura, how a man can be father after birth that was not father at the birth of a child. It may be added, nec admittere debet justitia, how from a corrupted fountain of lewd fruition the pure streams of legitimate children should flow. Maxim infra regnum Angliáe, ubi filius senior solus succedit in hereditate paterna. As marriage is defined by Philoxenus to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the cohabitation of man and woman in all conjugal duties, so the fruits of it are by the Law of conjugation to inherit the possessions of the so married couples: And that in England, not as they are equally allied to, and descended from their genitors by equal proportions, but as all the glory and sovereignty of descent is fixed on the eldest son of the Family, who is the chief in blood, and also in inheritance above his brethren. This the Ius commune of England allows, and though particular customs in Manors rule descents otherwise, as in Gavel-kind and Burrough-english Tenors, yet the Lex terrae is so, that solus senior succedit haereditate paterna.] And this seems to come up to the appointment of God and the dictate of Nature, Eo quod pater in illo primum masculam suam virtutem exserit, & declarat se virum esse. Fagius & Munsterus in 49. Genes. Drusius in Genes. 99 whereby the eldest being the head of the Family, as every sheaf did homage to his sheaf, so did there such a Majesty reside in him, that he being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 did overtop others and took them under his umbrage to defend them from all inconvenience, and to be a kind of divine Oracle to them all. Thus Reuben is said by jacob to be his first born, my might and the beginning of my strength, the excellency of dignity and the excellency of power. Now this the Hebrews write to consist in that the government and authority over his brethren should be his as their common father, and that they should stand before him and give reverence to him as to their father; and Drusius adds that by virtue of primogeniture he should have two portions of all his father's estate to any of the rest: Thus Primogeniture was accommodated amongst the Jews; with us in England 'tis so ordered that wherein the elder brother's reverence is diminished, his estate is advantaged, the younger brothers are not bound to be so submiss to their elder, nor are they often so; but the elder brother has the inheritance, Lib. 8 disput. digest. lib. 15. tit. 1. de peculio. 57 Stuprum in virginem viduamve committitur quod Graci 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 appellant Budaeus in Pand. Reliq. p. 223. Fleta lib. 1. c. 14. and this ties the younger brothers to their respect for fear, if not for love. All the while spurious issues are (as to descents) out of doors. For as the partus ausillarum & foetus pecudum, are by Tryphonius coupled together as equally disregarded by the Law, so in our Law, filius ex stupro cannot participare cum filio ex legitimo thoro] that is, the child of adultery or unlawfully coition (for the Julian Law uses them both promiscuously) cannot partake the inheritance with the child of lawful marriage, because the Law looks on issue only lawfully begotten, which none being but those born in wedlock the descent of estates is only upon them by the Law of England. Nam Sanctus Augustinus sic scribit, Abraham omnem censum suum dedit Isaac silio suo, Lib. 16. De Civitate Dei. c. 25. filiis autem concubinarum dedit dationes, ex quo videtur innui quod spuriis non debetur haereditas, sed villus necessitas. Here is an instance in confirmation of what the Law of England does in the case of lawful issue, and what the men of England ought to do in the settlement of their estates amongst their children; Concubina sum faminae cohabitantes cum hominibus absque scripto & subarratione & legitimis Ceremoniis. and this is out of Gen. 25.6. where Abraham a most holy man is storied to have by the permission of his wife (a beautiful but as yet a barren woman) a Concubine named Hagar, by whom he had a son, begot and brought up in the house, and to whom he gave love and portions as a father to his children, but not the Inheritance; for when Sarah's Isaac was born, than the Concubine and her brat was to be gone, Gen. 21.11. Cast out this Bondwoman and her son (said she) for the son of the Bondwoman shall not inherit with my son, even with Isaac, which words of vehemence Sarah spoke as the challenge of that right which was due to Marriage, and the son of the wife by the Laws of nature; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Demost. Orat. contra Neaetam. for so the Greek Orator sets out the right of Wives above Concubines or vage women of pleasure, which men use as, and when they will; and their lust satisfied, throw them off as debauched Vermint: but Wives men have lawful and inheriting children by and make them Ladies of their lives and families. And Musonius, after he had made a very eloquent and just Encomium of Marriage as no impediment to Philosophy, showing that Pythagoras, Crates, and others were furthered in their studies thereby, Musonius in lib. An Philosophiam impediant nuptiae. Stobaeus Serm. 186. Hierocles. lib. De Nuptiis. concludes, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. That Marriage must be the most excellent and worthy state of life, because the Gods are particular tutelars and fautors of it, and do special honour and respect to it. Yea Hierocles, when he has written notably of Marriage, concludes thus, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Neither can Cities be without families, nor families without Marriage, for that is no perfect family but maimed which is not such by Marriage. And hereupon Concubines and use of women besides wives, though it has been of old tolerated to some persons and in certain cases, yet it was non ad explendam libidinem, sed ad generandam prolem; and it did not make a man exsultans sed obediens conjugi, as the father observes of Abraham, whom though it very sorely grieved to have Ishmael thrust forth and disowned, yet it irritated not to browbeat Sarah, or reason down her eagerness, which made the father cry out of him, O virum viriliter utentem soeminis, Lib. 16. De Civit. Dei. c. 25. Spurius] à 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 seminare, quia nihil habet à patre nisi semen. Etymologistae. conjuge temperanter, ancilla obtemperanter, unlla intemperanter, but to yield to her; and when his wife that first betrayed him to her Maid, recalled her indulgence and removed the rival of her jealousy, Hagar goes from Abraham and Ishmael with her, and though it grieved him to turn them out of doors as rents from him and no parts of him, yet away they went packing with some small pittances, Cap. 25.6. such as aftertimes termed, Ad nothos pertinentia bona, which the Athenians called that part of a man's estate that he might give to his By-blows to the value of 1000 Drachmas, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Aristophan. with these he packed them away, the inheritance was Isaac's the son of Marriage begotten on the wife; Habent ergo nonnulis● munera silii Concubinarum in plaga Ortentis, sed non perveniunt ad Regnum promissum. Sanctus Augustin. lib. 16. De Civit. Dei. c. 34. Hebrat sentiunt altercationem inter Ismaelem & Isaacum subnatum fuisse de hareditate, quisnam ipsorum potior haeres Abraham suturus esset, ibique Ismaelem consisum praerogativa primogenitura pra se Isaacum contempsisse. Fagius in Gen. 21.11. and because Ismael's insolence was such, that being he was before Isaac in time, therefore he strove with him for the inheritance, and was impatient that Isaac should have it, contemning him as the younger, therefore the Hebrews think Sarah was so earnest to remove Ishmael, and Abraham, who knew in Isaac's seed the blessing was to reside, consented to and forwarded it, giving them Censum ejus, that is, not Lands and Houses, for those fixed things he thought better became his heir, but his portable fortune, cattle, money, goods, and such like, these being of value are called a Budaeus in Pandect. priores p. 54. 55. Edit. Vascos. Census; for since Abraham being a Prophet, and knowing the mind of God, understood, that one so born as Ishmael was, ought not to come into the Oeconomy of God, as b Cresolius Mystagog. lib. 2. cap. 4. p. 220. Cresolius had at large discoursed, he thought it best for his son Isaac's peace to banish Ishmael his house, and to leave Isaac sole Master therein. Ex quo videtur innui quod spuriis non debetur haereditas, sed victus necessitas, as the Text is. Sub nomine vero Spurii denotat Augustinus omnem foetum illegitimum, qualiter & saepius facit sacra Scriptura quae neminem vocat Bastardum. That these base children are no heirs, nor can have the rights of their Parents descend to them, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 etc. Eustathius p. 1455. l. 40. Edit. Romae. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Suid. in verbo 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Tholoss. Syntag. Juris lib. 42. c. 27. ff. 6. is plain from all authority; for though they that are thus born may have many brave qualities, according to that the learned Selden on the Text quotes of Peleus out of Euripides, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and Agamemnon in a In Androm. act. 3. v. 90. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Scholar in Homer. in ●. Ilyad. Plutarch in Artaxerxe. In Comment. Grac. Lingu. p. 442. à Platone. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉] Qui non est ex propria & legitima uxore, sed ex alia natus muliere, extraneus de his dicitur, qui est ex urbibus vicinis Jerusalem, humilis & contemptibilis. Pagninus in verbo. Homer declares Teutrus to be: yea, though in some parts of the world at this day, these natural sons have gentilitial Privileges, though no where they succeed to the inheritante, yet in all Ages and times 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was a word of diminution, and an alloy to any thing it was affixed to; thus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is opposed to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, so any feigned foreign and not proper atticism the Greeks termed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as proper and regular elegancies they called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Budaeus renders by spuria cogitatio, and Suidas explicates 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 beggarly, trite, mean, next door to stranger that no body knows or owns. Hence the b Tumebus Advers. lib. 17. c. 15. p. 567. lib. 29. c. 13. lib. 30. c. 31. p. 1190. In Summis Tit. Matrimonii, p. 589. Latins use virginalia & spuria, id est, procliscoena parte; so Apuleius calls the parts of our bodies which are covered spuria & fascina. Though therefore the Holy Ghost in Scripture use not the word Bastard, because 'tis of a later edition and language, yet He uses that which sets it forth, and by spuriousness intends all dishonour to lust, as the contempt of that ordinance of God which he accepteth the issue born from, and which all mankind after his example admits to inherit, as Crespetius has to my hand made good, and c Tholoss. lib. 45. c. 11. ss. 13. Tholossanus agrees to; and hence our Chancellor in the Text infers, Ecce differentiam non minimam,] etc. Which is purposely subjoined to cast contempt on incontinence, as it is in contradiction and upbraid of Marriage, that though the children of them that be such may be valiant, witty, learned, etc. yet there is somewhat in their very constitution that will corrode the vitals of their consistence and duration. This the Chancellor makes good from the fourth Chapter of Wisdom, where the words are, Emittere ex se profundas radices ut faciunt arbores bonae, hoc est, sobolem virtuesam seu vitam laudabilem. Carthus. in loc. But the multiplying brood of the ungodly shall not thrive, nor take deep-rooting from Bastard-slips, nor lay any fast foundation, that is, as Carthusian's exposition is, They shall not shoot out their roots, as thriving and pregnant trees expansively do, their children shall not be virtuous and notable for holiness of life. Non dabunt radices altas, saith a Gloss, though they flourish in the upper boughs of their temporary prosperity, yet they are intenaces soli, their root withers, and so non collocabunt stabile fundamentum; and all because they are not built upon the rock of God's institution and benediction, Marriage, Cassan. Catal. Glor. Mundi. p. 416.417. but upon the sands and fallacious levity of wantonness, which is the reason that the Doctors say they are Inhabiles ad ea quae in decoro consistunt, ut ad dignitates, that is, Quia tale statutum contra jus divinum, ut in Burgundia dicitur. Idem eodem loco. They (saith Cassanaeus) can be no Counselors of Princes, no Witnesses, no Doctors of Law, not bear Arms or Ensigns Gentilitial, not claim right in their father's Wills, not be successible to Inheritances either by Custom or Statute, as the Law of Burgundy is. Reprehendit & Ecclesia quae eos à sacris repellit Ordinibus] Such has ever been the account of Holy Orders, that not only the Church has kept from them persons that were impares oneri, Baron. Tom. 9 ad Annum 723. p. 33. Concilium Pictaviense sub Paschali secundo. Binius 7. Tom. Council p 530, 531. Cressol Mystag, lib. 2. p. 156, 231, 262. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, lib. 7. Politic. as maimed and illiterate, but also sordid and mean born ones, the reason being good, Rerum divinarum tractatio maxime ad ingenuous pertineat; therefore the Philosopher in his Politics prohibits Husbandmen or men of sordid life to be priested, and if so, then much more reason has the Church to prohibit spurious Children to be in d In decretalibus statutum est quod nullus Episcopus spurios aut servos, donec à dominis sunt manumissis, ad sacros Ordines promovere praesumat. Glanvil. lib. 5. c. 5. Orders, because the disparagement of their birth transcends all other incapacities; for their birth being against the Laws of God, (fornication and adultery being sins against his purity and institution) the issue of it cannot but be odious to him, and so unfit to serve before him; and therefore the Church has ever abhorred men of stained Origins to be in Orders, as well as of polluted lives, Epist. 3. Innocentii. Part. 1. Tom. 1. Conciliorum. p. 755. Tom. 9 p. 555. such as are Keepers of a Cap. 24 Can. Apost. Tom. 1. Concilior. p. 8. & Can. 60. p. 14. Tom. 7. p. 674. Concubines and loose Immoralists, whom it hath not only excluded before they took Orders, but deprived of them after they in them have lived unworthy of and unsuitable to them; for God having appointed those that serve at his Altar, Ridere ea Rideri secularibus derelinque; gravitas tuam personam decet. St. Hieron. Epist. 7. Ad Laetam. and live on his Altar, to live and be holy as the God of their Altar is. A profane and lewd, nay a light and jovial Priest, whose crankness at tipple and entertainments of riot and dissolute mirth is a blasphemy to his serious and sacred Calling, aught to be accounted of the number of those, Quos reprehendit Ecclesia; for I dare say, Note this. (who, as a Gentleman, know the Modes of converse, and the Intrigo's of these fashionable civilities and correspondencies) That Priests, who feed high, study and pray little, Vestis aspera, zona pellicea, cibus locustae, milque sylvestre, omnia virtuti & continentiae praparata. Sanct. Hieron. Ep. a. ad Rustic. Monachum de Joh. Baptist. frequent women's companies, neglect their watch of the flock of God, over which they are set, give way to passion, affect excessive Pomp, and are drowned in the cares and lures of the World, never do, or shall bless the Church of God, nor will Religion according to Godliness prosper in their days; for these will by their ill lives and putrid examples, subvert more than they will by their doctrine convert: and therefore the Church does justly reprehend these, because they are Beams in the eye of her brightness, Scars in the face of her beauty, Spots in her feasts of love, who make the Sacrifice of the Lord to be abhorred, and the way of truth to be evil spoken of. This I the rather note because men are apt to huddle upon Orders without any consideration what the work of Holiness and Mortification is upon their hearts; alas, 'tis not learning alone that qualifies a man to be a good and gracious Minister of Christ, for many of them shall have cause, notwithstanding abundance of this, to cry out, Scientia mea me damnat, as Saint Augustine once did; and at the last day 'twill not be, Matth. 7.22. Lord, have we not in thy name prophesied, and in thy name done wonders, that will procure Christ's owning: for notwithstanding all these fruits of great parts he shall say, I know you not, depart from me ye workers of iniquity. Not then these extern Prerogatives will be the refrigeraries in that Solstice of his indignation, Plus debet Christi discipulus prastare quam mundi Philosophus, gloria animal & popularis aura atque nummorum venale mancipium; tibi non sufficit opes contemnere nisi Christum sequaris. Sanct. Hieron. Epist. 26. ad Pammachium. but the grace of his likeness in the heart and life, the humility, sincerity, and preciseness of the life to the rule of his word; This, This, well understood and well practised is the best learning in the holy Ecclesiastic, and without this, great parts will but make men mad on the World, and venture their eternities rather than not carry the day in it; Lib. 6. the Consideratione. which has caused the pious and tender-spirited men in all times of the Church to debacchate against secular snares and avocations, so did St. Bernard to Eugenius, so did a Ex Epistol. ad Maketum de Egressu ex Babylone. Clemangis, so did Luther, Aliquid permittigratia virtutis, quod alias non permittitur. Gloss. in Pandect. lib. 3. tit. 1. p. 331. O virtuti so have, so will all zealous men do to the end of the World; for while passions, which are the tinder for Satan's spark to kindle upon, be keen and quick in men, they will do any thing to undo themselves and others souls and securities, rather than not prevail in their design. Caesar Borgia was known to be the unholy son of that unholy, Note this. Holy Pope Alexander the Sixth, when his father would Cardinalate him, which he could not, (he being, as spurious, uncapable by Canon) He the Pope found this Villainy to evade the obstruction, He suborned certain Knights of the Post, (as we say they are, who will swear and forswear any thing) who came into Court and deposed, that Caesar Borgia was the lawful son of another man; and so his incapacity was delete, and he admitted: which contrivement between a sensual father, and a most like son, favoured of so high a falsehood and deep-tinctured hypocrisy as suited with no Varlets better than Herod and judas, whose interest was only to rage and get gain, though they prostituted their souls and bodies to the greatest servitude. And therefore no wonder the Church does not only Tales reprehendere, but also Indignos judicare sacro Ordine, & repellere ab omnia praelatia, as the words of the Text are. Gideon autem virorum fortissimus, septuaginta filios in Matrimonio legitimo procreâsse, & non nisi unum solum habuisse ex Concubina; filius tamen ipse Concubinae, omnes filios illos legitimos nequiter peremit, excepto uno solo. This story is out of judges viij. 30. where Gideon is said to have many Wives, Saltem per consuetudinem, non per legem. Drusius in loc. Mothers to those seventy sons, which Polygamy was in some degrees successive, and in other degrees contemporary; for though he had not all his wives at a time, Concesta fuerunt viris uno tempore plures uxores in spem ulterioris sobolis. Grot. in loc. yet at all times he had more than one, it being then no scandal to have many Wives, but rather an honour as thereby there was the greater occasion to people the world, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Libanius Declam. 33. p. 748. Edit. Moreilii, Anno 1606. then but thin of Inhabitants. Now the children of these Wives were all Coparceners in the inheritance, the eldest only having the double part, and they entercommoned in affection each to other, and were together in the house of their father, loving and tendering each other; but the base son who was filius meretricis or concubina, (not that she did make mercimony of her body by taking reward for the hire and pleasure of it as Harlots did, Mulieres fuisse artis Cauponaria, quarum mariti tum forte abierant negotiationis ergo. Vatablus in 1 Reg. ●. 16. who were wont, when their Husbands were abroad at Sea or otherwise, to expose themselves to the lust of any Chapman, and if they proved with child by it, which was rare and against their wills, to kill their child;) for no such person was this Gideon's Concubine, but one that probably kept to him only, and gave him no just jealousy that any one came near her carnally but himself: but that which is the disparagement to her and her child is, Cum Lex hoc nomine vetat connubia diversarum tribuum, ne permistio fiat pradierum. Drusius, Munsterus, Clarius in loc. that she was uno viro addicta citra vinculum Matrimonii, that she was of another Tribe than Gilead, and therefore must with her son be a stranger to inheritance. This is that which brands her and disables her son to inherit, which so boyles in the stomach of this blazing star of lust, that he meditates the ruin of all his father's lawful sons. In which story there are sundry things observable. First, There is the Bastard's craft, he enters not on the act alone without a strong party, nor craves aid of any that would come in to him, but solicits the Sichemites, whom he calls his Kindred, Bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh. Secondly, The Bastard's confidence to attack the Sichemites and to solicit them to such a design, and so to engage them by his plausible insinuations, as not only they should connive at and underhand approve his project, but give him money to entertain men to effect it, Chap. ix. 4. Thirdly, The Bastard's cruelty to slay so near relations, Brethren, so many of them, sixty nine; in that place, their father's house; at one time, upon one stone, in sight of one another, upon no provocation, but because they were legitimate and must inherit, not he. v. 4. compared with v 2. and 6. Fourthly, Here is the Bastard's subtlety, rage, and cruelty, partly frustrated by God, and his fancied Sovereignty disturbed by the reservation of jotham one of Gideon's sons unslain, whom God preserved to revenge the blood of the sixty nine slain, upon the Bastard and his Sichemites, from the 7. to the 24. verse. Fifthly, The effectualness of small means cunningly carried and subtly employed to bring portentous things to pass, seen not only in Abimelech his sin in soliciting the Sichemites, and murdering the sixty nine sons of his father, but in Iotham's Parable, who set all Israel a-gog to revenge the fratricide purely by the cogency of a Parable and the intention of it, which explicates the falseness and ingratitude of the Sichemites to Gideon their Deliverer, v. 8. and prophecies God's vengeance on them for it, v. 19, 20. and God's means to unravel the rope of sand that they twined together to hold their wickedness fast, by sending an evil spirit between Abimelech and the men of Sichem, v. 23. Lastly, The commensuration of the punishment to the sin, rule he would who was born to serve, ruin his brethren he would who ought to have reverenced them as his betters, Partisans he would have in the fact, that having begun he may go through with it; but God turned his Confederates into conspirators against him, that the cruelty done to the threescore and ten sons of jerubaal might come, and their blood be laid upon Abimelech their brother which slew them, and upon the men of Sichem which aided him in the kill of his brethren, so is it v. 24. Thus may we see how just God is to make the sin men design for their greatness, their shame and diminution; which not only happened to this Bastard and his misguized Partisans here, but to sundry others to this day; For though it be not an infallible rule that God's vengeance always meets with sinners in this world, in the punishments that are declarative of their sin, Surius Commentar. ad Annum 1541. yet often it is so. That Queen of Hungary found it so, who being unjustly possessed of Hungary against Ferdinand the King of the Romans, and after Emperor, and not able to defend it against Ferdinand, craved aid of Solyman, who came into Hungary, and deprived her and her son of the Kingdom; and Henry the third of France when he designed the murder of the Duke and Cardinal of Guise, used Saint Clement for the watchword to the Assassins, and after the same Prince was himself murdered by one Clement in the midst of his Army. D. Avila. p. 316. Quo in no tho uno plus maliciae fuisse deprehenditur, quam in filiis legitimis. 69. This is subjoined to set the disgrace of adultery and fornication home in the abhorrence of all good men, who cannot but hate it, not only because it tends to the utter destruction of souls, but is a provocation of the terrible wrath of God, upon the places where such abominations were used and suffered, they are the words of the Stat. 32 H. 8. c. 38. but also because the sin and obliquity of it, is so through vitiative of the production of it, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 lib. 1. Gener. Animal. c. 18. p. 1061. that it according to our Chancellors sense makes them out of measure sinful, as full of mischief as a toad is of poison; which though it be too often true (as it also is in the children of lawful marriage, than which mankind never saw greater villains than some of them are:) so is it not ever true of base children as we call natural sons, for some of them have been in all times men of Courage, Selden in c. 40. of Fortescue Tiraq. de Nobilitate c. 15. Pontus Hutterus de veteri Belgio ad finem. Learning, Piety, Prudence, every way accomplished. Hence is it that not only our Text tells us of a bonus Bastardus, but Mr. Selden out of Tiraquella and Hutterus concludes, That most of the brave spirits, and able, of the former times are in the Catalogue of famous Bastards, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plutarch in Alcibiad. ad Initium p. 192. edit. Paris. some of whom have had dubious Mothers: So Nicias, Demosthenes, Lamachus, Phormio, Thrasybulus, Theramines, famous Athenians and brave men, and others; if they had any Fathers known, yet those known to be theirs by surreptitious and unchaste raptures and effusions. To omit what a Lib. 1. Tom. 2. Haeres. 55. Epiphanius writes the Jews held, Melchesedec ideoque nec nomen patris vel matris in sacris literis expressum, says he, I say to omit this, there are precedents of multitudes of the greatest Heroics of this Tribe, Scotius, Farthenius, Theseus, Romulus, Abimelech, jeptha, jupiter, Neptune, Venus, Apollo, Aeneas, Homer, the Parthenia amongst the Lacedæmonians, Demaratas, Themistocles, Demades, Timotheus, Aristonicus, Perseus, Hircanus, Remus, Brutus, jugurtha, Alexander, Claudius, Constantius, Theodoris, Carolus, Martel, Carlomannus of Bavania, Manfred, Hencius, Pope john the eleventh and twelfth, Adelstan, Amundus King of Suevia, Pomponius L●tus the great Geographer, Gratian the great Decretalist, Andrea, Ferdinand King of Naples, and Alfonsus King of Arragon, Comestor, these and thousand others, have come of that illegitimate race, and yet been renowned in their times, which shows that God has a secret and predominant power over natures not only act but sin, that he can suspend the vigour and vehemence of that Pheontick gallop that makes the genitors of these meet together like torrents, that coupling make a mixture to swallow up all calmness of temper and mediocrity, that this I say is so sweetened, Sperma omnibus rebus nascentibus attribuitur pro Principio, Scaliger in Com. ad lib. 1. Animal. Aristotel. fo. 33. is a mighty mercy to mankind: for else should these, who are beast card as Kilian Etymologizes Bastard, id est optimae indolis sive naturae, and have cheerful and high spirits, Illegitime enim & furtive concubitu procreati, animo plerumque sunt alacri & elate, ingenio sagasi, & judicio exacto; Sumnerus in Gloss. ad scriptores, Antiq. Angl. Impress. Lond. 1652. sage wits, and mature crafty natures, not be restrained: what prodigies of men would they be? Yea, what terrors would not their vast and various endowments surprised by Satan, occasion to the world, but this that is their sin by Nature, God corrects by special favour; not as they are issues from libidinous stocks, but as they are passive under that regency of nature, which in the natural generative expression of her, is his own Implantation, and in which nature vitiated by sin is instrumental to the multiplication of mankind, and this is the reason why any of this race are so restrained, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist. de Part. Animal. lib. 1. c. 1. p. 970. and so excellent, as to favour any thing calm and sober; for in nature there is nothing in them but the heights of all passion and excess in which sense the Text makes them to be more fierce and hot by nature then legitimate children are, which is the reason that they have been ever the Attempters of desperate actions which no spirits but theirs durst cope with. A lively instance whereof is in Fresco the Bastard of Azzom of Este, mentioned in the Venetian story, which duly weighed, the saying mentioned si bonus est bastardus hoc ei fuerit à casu videlicet gratia speciali, si autem malus ipse fuerit hoc sibi accidit à natura] is not only true as Grace gives the advantage against the corruption of nature in all both good and bad, but also as it does more than ordinarily overcome the evil of nature in these that have their pravity wodded and double died by the lewdness of their parents, and the lawlessness and monstrosity of the motives to, and kindle in their coitions, Shute p. 167. which the Text not only expatiates upon, calling it libido parentum culpabilis, peccatum fornicantium, and that which in legitimis castisque amplexibus conjugatorum non solet debacchari; For thus our Text in sundry parts of the Chapter phrases it, that it concludes them to deserve rather the title of filios peccati then peccatorum] which brings to my mind that Tradition of the jews that the cursing Tribes on Mount Ebal were the sons of the Handmaids, Mentioned by the Phoenix Prelate Bishop Brownrig. 1 Serm. Inauguration p. 19 and the Tribes of Gerazim were the sons of the Free-women, and they were Tribes of blessing to show no doubt that children born against the Law of marriage are worse than those according to it; for children begotten of unlawful beds are witnesses of wickedness against their Parents in their Trial, so saith the Author of the Book of Wisdom c. 4. v. 6. which warrants the Chancellors Eulogy of lawful progeny in those words, O quam pulcra est casta generatio cum claritate; for if all the examples of villainy in a profuse and debauched rage and wander of choyceless looseness were perished, Dion Cassius. lib. 38. but only that of Messalina to Mnestor the base and sordid Pantomime, whom she dishonoured herself with; That, that, were enough to set forth the horrid and detestable nature of that impetus, which as it is kindled by Hell in the members, does tend to Hell in the compliment and reward of it. Creditur idcirco, caecum illum natum de quo Pharisaei. Joh. 9 Dixerunt, tu in peccatis natus es totus, fuisse bastardum, qui nascitur totaliter ex peccato. That this blindman was of old held a Bastard, was not only the opinion of the Ancients who wrote before our Text, and the belief of many Christians according to it; but also the consent of Grotius, Pererius and others, and that because he is said to be totut natus in peccato, a Toting sinner, as we say, a monstrous great sinner, such an one as has not only the blemish of his genitors natural sin, in which all the sons of Adam are conceived and born, but an over and above-sin upon him, not only of the nature, but also of the state which his Parents who begat him were dishonourably in, Incomparably Learned Doctor Hammond in his Annotations on this Text 9 john. to wit, not the state of marriage which has the presence and allowance of God with it, and thereupon being a kind of sinless and Innocent state is honourable among all men, but a state of contempt and sculkingness, a lucifugous' state, which is that of the night, a state of prey and violence, that derives on the proceed of it, the reproach and scorn of a thorough and total turpitude. Cic. 4. de Finib. 2. Tuscul. Q. Totum & parts. Cic. 1. Academic. Totus ego. Totus gaudeo, Plautus. Totus natus in peccato] so Tully ranks totum & universum, toto corpore atque omnibus angulis, as if the vitiation of the prostituted parents incubated all the Mass, and dislustred it in every limb, article and action of it, totus natus in peccato; For though there is in all as I wrote before a defilement of every faculty of the soul of man, and a deformity in the abuse of every member of man's body; yet in one born thus, there seems by this to be a super-superlative impression of sin, which disposes the sinner (subject of it) to be violent, eager, cruel, crafty, and what not which is opposite to learning and judgement of temper, the endowment of chaste and lawful love. Hence the Pharisees a sect of knowing and smart men, who had notable insights into arts and men, reply so vehemently upon him, tu doces nos, as if they intended to tell him he was out of the road of spurious born men to affect to be learned, that they wholly begotten in the sulphur of lust, are more disposed to actions of mettle and violence then to arts, books, and things of coolness and composure. This the Chancellor understanding the sense of them in that place, writeth, Bastardum non ut legitimum in naturalibus esse dispositum ad scientiam & doctrinam. The sum then of this Chapter being to advocate for the Law of England in its exclusion of the issue upon subsequent Marriage from inheritance, having done it, as he conceives, in the former part of the Chapter, he proceeds to such an Epilogue as resolves all the prealleged particulars into one Mass of assertion, that therefore the Law of England does not Parificare Bastardos' & Legitimos in haereditate paterna, quia illos dispares judicat Ecclesia in haereditate Dei; and therefore determines for the English Law, because it doing honour to Marriage and punishing its reproach, deserves to have all honour and suffrage from those that are children born in Marriage. And so he concludes this Chapter. CHAP. XLI. Princeps. Revera cam quae fortius à Regno peccatum eliminat & firmius in eo virtutem conservat. IN this Chapter the Prince is introduced complying with the Chancellour's judgement in the Preference of the Laws of England, as the rule of Government here, to any exotique Laws; which though for other Countries they may be convenient, yet to this, other then as assistant Laws, are altogether inidoneous. And that the Chancellors praise of the Laws may not appear more the effect of custom and use (the Tyranny whereof prevails often beyond the influence of reason and judgement) then of experience the best Oracle next to that of justice in Government, there is such a Preface precurring it, as will not be denied welcome with all men of science and conscience. For as sin is that which promerits a divine curse and impends it over Kingdoms sure to sink under the weight and terror of it; so Laws in Kingdoms which do cast forth the abominable thing that God hates, and preserve the integrity of soul which God accepts and will reward, are certainly the most to be approved and chosen. And this the Law of England doing in the Method that in the foregoing Chapter is described, the Chancellor presents the Prince, though in the main satisfied, with some further instances of the variety of the Laws in their Prescripts and Sentences, which is the Sum of this one and fortyeth Chapter. CHAP. XLII. Leges. Civiles sanciunt, quod Partus semper sequitur ventrem. THIS is agreed by all the Doctors, In liberali causa matris non patris inspicienda est conditio. Tit. de lib. causa L. 28. & L. 40. Tholoss. Syntagm. lib. 20. c. 7. ff. 2. Lib. 7. c 2. ff. 10. Ulpian. lib. 27. ad Sabinum. Digest. lib. 1. tit. 5. p. 93. De statu hominum. Fornerius ad Leg. 17. p. 76. de verb. signific. Tit. De his qui in potestate sunt. Alciat. ad Leg. 196. p. 425. de verb. signific. Legitime natus quoad conditionem & originem patrem sequitur, matrem vero sequitur non legitime natus. Bartol. Digest. lib. 1. tit. 5. p. 92. Celsus lib. 29. Digest. Digest. loco pracitat. Partus naturae ratione matrem sequitur, and the reason is because in the Law the partus is pars visceris matris; the reason of this Law ¶ Notes ad cap. 40. Fortescue. Mr. Selden shows to be, That where Marriage or Jura Connubii could not be, there always Partus sequebatur ventrem; to this Ulpian assents, Lex naturae est ut qui nascitur sine legitimo Matrimonio matrem sequatur, on which the Gloss, Quoad libertatem & servitutem quod & verum, etc. That the Partus, (which is the child out of Marriage, Partus aucillarum & foetus pecudum, Paulus joining together) is here meant, appears not only from that of Ulpian, Connubio interveniente liberi semper patrem sequuntur, non interveniente Matrimonio matris conditioni accedunt, but also by Celsus, Bartolus, Paulus, and all the Doctors: to these agree the a Gratianus Decret. par●. 2. caus. 15. qu. 8. fol. 246. Canonists, and that from the reason which causes the semper in our Text; for that is jure naturae & gentium so to have it; for though the father that begets may be uncertain, yet the mother that produces must be certain, and whose child soever it is not, here it is, a In vita Themistocl. Plutarch writing of Hercules says 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that he was the Son of a lewd woman, and because jephtha was the son of an Harlot, Mater quae legi se subjecerat, non maculabat natales, neque ad haereditatem capescendam obstabat. Grotius in jud. xi. 2. id est, extraneae saith Grotius, They thrust him out of his father's house, as being no chip from his block, but his mother's son, and as such disparaged; according to this b Advers. lib. 29. c. 13 p. 1112. Turnebus writing of the Spurii uses these words, Horum natales non habent obscuram matrem sed patrem appellare non possunt. 1 Kings xiv. 21. c. xv. 2. c. xxii. 42. 2 Kings viij. 26. This the Holy Text regarding is sure to remember the Mother's name as the glory or blemish of her son, for though the father be the motive and active c Phavorinus lib. de excellent. hominis. part. 1. c. 16. p. 56. cause of generation, yet the matter of the child is more from the mother, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist. Hist. Animal. lib. 1. c. 3. (the f●tus being form by the vis plastica which consists of the nature of the womb as well as of the seed of the father) and by conjunction of them both (as say Anatomists) forms all the parts of the body as to their spermatical and solid substance, which compagination being resident in the belly of the mother, gives the child a stronger tincture of the mother than father, from whom it passes only in a whirlwind; nay besides this the mother by a constant act of sovency does in se ipsa generare, as she (does by the umbilique veins unto the arterias illiacas, and all the rest of the parts of the body by which air is given to the child) convey nutriment from herself to it; which is the reason that children do most favour the mother, not only in visage but in humour, and why wise men do choose brave women to breed upon; for as a course cloth proves an ill ground for a noble design and draught in picture, and as a tough and misshapen log will deform the art of the noblest Statuary, so will an ill-chosen wife vitiate and alloy the brood of any family: Non-observation of this cause of much mischief. which is the reason why choices by prudence (as they fashionably call their Marriage jockkying, wherein persons bartar away their comforts and conspicuities in a brave and procerous issue, for accommodations of pelf and coin) are so often repent and digressed from with abhorrence, because there being no true splendour, the disseminations whereof will bud and blossom in posterity, the portions the father acquired with the mother is doubly and trebly expended with the daughters and sons, whose blemishes thereby are fain to be compensated for with great and wasting portions: the like mischief is where brave women marry with absurd men, the incomplacency whereof they often, if not always repent. Vt si mulier servilis conditionis nubat viro conditionis liberae. Proles eorum servus erit, & è converso, servus maritatus liberae, non nisi liberos gignit. Digest. lib. 1. tit. 5. ss. 5. p. 83. Florentin lib. 9 Instit. Digest. lib. 1. tit. 5. de statu hominum. p. 87. This is the instance wherein the Partus does sequs ventrem. A Lord has a woman that is his vassal, she marries one that is free, as the child is ingenuns qui ex matre natus est libera, so is the child of a bondwoman a slave or servile in his condition; now though servitude be against the Law of nature, and this constitutio juris gentium 5. and this constitutio juris gentium being introduced by saving persons victored from death, who having the right of their persons so under their power and kept alive till their manu-mission, they marrying, though to a free man, do not produce a free child but a bond one, because the Partus does sequi ventrem, Notes on the Text. p. 49.50. and the mother being in that condition, the proles or partus of her must so be; Mr. Selden not without warrant thinks this thus to be, Upon presumption that the Marriages with bond-people were always accounted but Contubernia and not Connubia, In Legem 184. p. 398. lib. de verb. signific. Hercle quid istuc est? Serviles nuptia? Servine uxorem ducent? Plautus Prol. Casiu. and they were called Contubernales non Conjuges, which I find allowed by For●erius, Nam quod inter liberos & cives Romanos Matrimonium, id in servorum conjunctione & copula Contubernium Veteres appellarunt, which justinian calls servile consortium; and Contubernales Ulpian expounds by Conjuges servi & ancillae, when as Connubium * Tholoss. Synt. lib. 9 c. 1. ss. ●. 1 Instit. on Littleton, p. 123. He terms ducendae uxoris jure facultas, nullum cum servis: so that when the Mother does convey her condition to the child and not the father, as in this case it should seem to be understood, such are children Contubernii non Connubii; yet this I find currant, that the child is wrapped up in the mother's condition, and whatever the father be, yet in reputation of the Civil Laws is as his mother is bond or free. Sed Lex Angliae nunquam Matris, sed semper Patris conditionem imitari partum judicat. This is confirmed by all our Books, Sect. 187. Cook on him. p. 123. Liber Rub. c. 77. Bracton. lib. 4. fol. 271. Si mulier serva copulata sit libero, partus habebit haereditatem. lib. 4. fol. 298. Partus monstrosi, id est, contra naturam seu formam hominum, non dicuntur esse legitimi. Bartol. Digest. lib. 1. tit. 5. p. 30. Si une villein prent frank feme a feme, & ad issue enter eux, l' issues serront villeins; mes si neife prent frank home a sabaron, lour issues serra frank, saith Littleton, according to all the Books, Quia semper a patre non a matre generationis ordo texitur. And though I know Bracton tells us in the County of Cornwall there was a custom in some Manors, That if a bondwoman marry to a freeman, and she, by him admitted to his free house and bed, have two children, one to a freeman, and she, by him admitted to his free house and bed, have two children, one shallbe free as her husband, the other bond as she; yet the same Author says in another place the general Law was, If a bondwoman marry to a freeman, the child of them shall inherit, which must be understood of being free as his father, for else he could not inherit, the rule being, Quicquid acquiritur servo, acquiritur domino i'll lives servi, supposing them the Partus not to be Monstross, (for then they are non Legitimi by both Laws, such as are mentioned by * Historia naturae, p. 134. Ammian, Marcellin. lib. 19 Neirembergius and Ammianus Marcellinus, Aliquid habens duo capita, as the Gloss on Paulus explains Prodigiosum.) If the partus be secundum membrorum humanorum officia a child, it shall be reputed and as such, follow the condition of the Father, and be his child whose the marriage is according to the rule of both Laws, Pater est quem nuptiae demonstrant. Quae putas Legum harum melior est in sententiis suis? Crudelis est Lex quae liberi prolem sint culpa subdit servituti, Nec minus crudelis censetur, quae liberae sobolem sine merito redigit in servitutem. Because our Text-Master here is both the Scrupler and the Resolver, and seems to determine hardly against the Civil Law, which in this case he calls Lex crudelis, by the same reason the Civilians may call the Common Law so, ob exclusos nothos ex subsequente Matrimonio, treated on in the foregoing Chapter. Because (I say) there ought to be a very calm soul and a wary pen in writing any thing to the prejudice of the accord of both Laws, Ratio non potest reddi in his quae sunt de justitia positiva, nisi quod sic visum fuit Legislatori. Digest. lib. 3. tit. 1. D● postulando. my humble offer shall be in excuse of the Civil Law for the Continent, thus prescribing, That 'tis Ratio quia Ius, and in Laws of positive Justice, there can no other reason be given, but the pleasure of the Lawmaker; which as they allow us for our Law, we must allow them for theirs: For since the Amassers of the Civil Laws are deservedly to be owned and honoured as men as learned and wise as any either the Greek or our Lawmakers have been, that which they, in this case, have constituted, to be the Law of the Empire, is to be thought as fit for that vast body, as our Law's appointment fit for us to observe. For as he ought to be counted a madman, that because there was one Messalina, whose wantonness, if it could be coped with an hundred times a day, Quae etsi centies in die viro commiscuerat, potius delassatam quam satiatam sepradicabat. would rather be wearied then satisfied, cries out against all women as insatiable; so are they to be esteemed little other then mad, who, because there are differences in the manner of exhibiting Justice according to the Common and Civil Laws, exclaim against the Civil Laws for this, when as it concerns them rather to applaud the wisdom of Law makers in framing their Laws thus variously to answer the varieties of men and manners, which arise from constitutions and accidents attending them. For there is no diversity in either of the Laws but has Topique arguments very rational allegable for them, and upon scrutiny will appear to be so strenuous, that all circumstance of time, The Author desires ever to be modest in all his expressions of the Laws. place, and persons considered, they will not easily be overthrown; which gives me the constant monition to be very circumspect in averring any thing on the side of one Law, which may have any unbeseeming reflection on the other Law. All that I have written, or shall write in the case of both Laws, shall I am resolved savour of no unhumble affectation. I honour both Laws in their respective Spheres, though ever, as to the Government of England, I must, and shall ever say and protest to all men, That the Common and Statute-Laws are in my mean opinion the only way of wise, mild, and effectual rule of it, that the wit of man can prescribe, or the experience of man discover, always premising the association of the Civil Law in those cases wherein that Law is adopted, and made by use and custom part of the Lex Terrae. And therefore though the Chancellor here doth marshal the arguments on both sides, that out of them well considered and discussed, the reason and judgement of the Prince whether to adhere to may be cleared; yet shall I, in the illustration of it, only modestly point at those things that are material in both their arguments as here they are alleged, and so proceed. Legistae vero dicunt, Quod non potest arbor mala fructus bonos facere, neque arbor bona fructus malos facere. Ac omnis Legis sententia est, quod plantatio qualibet cedit solo quo inseritur. This Sir Ed. Cook mentions on Sect. 187. Littleton. p. 123. Digest. lib. 7. tit. 4. p. 938. Gloss. O. & p. 977. lib. 2. Tit. 1. de servitu tibus & Digest. p. 1433. Solum vertere, id est, terram. Budaeus in Pond. Relig. p. 116. Caesar Cons. This is the defence the Civilians make for their making the Partus matris sequi ventrem, because every plant partakes of the nature of the soil in which 'tis set and grows; for the root fixed in the ground and drawing nourishment from the solum or terra (for it is all one) the Plant is said cedere solo, because the soil or mould wherein it grows, victors and conquers it from its own original nature to somewhat analogous to the nature of the soil, which is cedere solo, as we say, a resignation to become one in nature with the soil; so Cedere loco, urbe, patria, domo, is in Authors to leave one's Country and residence, and Cedere bonis & possessione is in this sense used by Quintilian, and Amori turpi cedere by Valerius, Cedere testibus by Ulpian, and Vives when he expresses the desire of one to his wife to give up her interest in her son-in-law to him, writeth, Exorata uxore ut sibi genero cederet, and some where I have read of Cedere foro for Bankers, who defraud men of their moneys by non-appearance, which is giving themselves up to obscurity, playing least in sight; all which answer the purpose of our Text-Master, rightly phrasing his intention, Gassendus de Plantis. Tom. 2. Physic. lib. 4. c. 5. p. 179. Theophr. Hist. Plant. lib. 1. c. 7. that Position has a great influence on action, and nourishment on nature. Hence argue the Civilians, if a Plant by mere being in the earth, partake of the earth, and is good or bad as the soil, is in which it is; then the child being pars viscerum matris, and lying long in her and having ablactation and fovency from her, must needs be according to the ordinary dispensation of nature as the mother is: and therefore if the mother be good or bad, the child is presumed such as she is to be, since according to nature, A good tree cannot bring forth evil fruit, nor an evil tree good fruit. Therefore, say they, just it is that the partus which lodges in the belly of the mother and partakes so much of her as to be predominantly in nature hers, should be denominated from the mother and be reputed bond or free, good or evil as she is; which argument of theirs carries much of reason with it, for it is built upon undeniable Premises, Such as the tree is, such is the fruit, our Saviour's argument, Matth seven. 18. according to which all mankind conclude, Menander has the same, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Grotius makes this the principle of nature which all men concur in; Grot. in Matth. seven. 18. Arist. 2. Topic. c. 9 Lib. 1. Hist. Animal. c. 2. 2 Nat. Auscult Tract. 3. c. 3. Gassend. Physic. sect. 1. lib. 4. c. 8. so that supposing God the supreme cause interpose not, nor he by his influence divert not the ordinary course of nature in causes and effects, it stands for a general rule not to be denied, that a good tree, so long as it is good, Clarius in Matth seven. 18. brings forth good fruit, and an evil tree while it is evil, brings forth bad fruit, Quamdiù quisque malus est, non potest facere bonos fructus; sicut enim potest fieri ut quod fuit, nix non sit, non autem ut nix sit calida: sic autem potest fieri, ut qui malus sit, non fit malus, non tamen potest fieri ut malus benefaciat, quia etsi aliquando utilis est, non hoc ipse facit sed fit de illo, divina providentia procurante. Aquinas in locum. A bonis bona proficiscuntur necesse est, à malis contra, saith Clarius, which I suppose he borrowed from Saint Augustine, as did also Aquinas, who to this purpose quotes him; for a surer rule cannot be given, then to judge according to causes of effects: so that the mother being the nourisher of the child, which she supplies with sustentation from every part of her body according to the capacity of the child, which without it would never thrive nor make to birth, (since neither the mouth, nor the liver, nor the heart, say the Physicians, do prepare nourishment for the child, but the mother from her store and treasury of succulency sustains it,) there seems very high reason that the mother predominating in the nature of the child, Lex natura est hac, ut qui nascitur sine legitimo Matrimonio matrem sequatur. Ulpian. lib. 17. ad Sabinum. Digest. p. 93. pracitat. should, where not the Mother in Marriage, denominate the child, and its external condition follow the nature of the belly of the mother wherein it was so long steeped, and from whence so carefully produced; and this the Law-Civil so orders, because the mother is more limited and bound to abide with the child than the father, for which cause 'tis proverbially said, 'Tis a wise child that knows his own father, for the mother every one must know that either sees her delivered, or hears it from those that saw her, and thence transmit it to others and so it becomes notorious, Qui est in utero pro nato habetur quoad sui commodum. Reg. juris apud Gajum. lib. 1. Instit. Digest. lib. 1. tit. 5. p. ●●. but the father of the child, there is only the mother's word for, which though it be of great credit, being (in a cause of vehement suspicion) assured in the pains of that condition, yet is not so demonstrably true as the certainty of the mother, from whose belly the child is taken; which being the reason of the Civil Law's position, Partus semper sequitur ventrem, seems to me not to be without much of reason in the observation of it. Ad haec legis Angliae consulti dicunt: quod partus ex legitimo thoro non certius noscit matrem, quam genitorem suum. Nam ambae leges quae jam contendunt, uniform iter dicunt: quod ipse est pater, quem nuptiae demonstrant. The Law of England looking upon the child as the partus legitimi thori, concludes the child as well capable to know his father as his mother; for the knowledge here being that of polity and civil enaction, follows the prescript of the Law which appoints and order it, which is that lawful procreation be within marriage, so that if a child born in marriage may know his mother who is the wise of the father, the same child may by the same rule of marriage know his father, that being concluded on by all hands, Pater est quem nuptia demonstrant. Paulus lib. 4. ad edictum. Digest. lib. 2. tit. 4. De in jus vocando. p. 186. He is the father who is the husband of the mother in marriage; for as the parturition of the child by the mother declares who is the mother of the child, so the marriage of the mother with the father attributes the fatherhood of the child so begotten and born in marriage to the husband in that marriage, and his in reputation of Law it shall be, if no impossibility in him to beget it be maintainable; and as wedlock declareth the mother as to honour, so doth it the father as to legitimation and inheritance; and the man being the head of the wife, 1. Instit. on Littleton. p. 123. and the wife and he but one person in the Law, the Law of England holding up the honour of marriage, and vilifying whatever is honestative thereto, judges it more convenient ut conditio filii ad patris potius quam ad matris conditionem referatur] as the Texts words are, and being with us there is a rule which none must depart from, That no man ought to think himself wiser than the Law, all argument against this constitution and practice is sacrilegious; for though here be under marriage a discrimination of sex, yet is there an unity of nature and indiscriminate parentage, so is the Text. Cum de conjugatis dixerat Adam, erunt ipsi duo in carne una, quod dominus exponens in Evangelio ait, jam non sunt duo, sed una caro. This is produced to show both the antiquity, honour and innocence of marriage (instituted in Paradise, and hence by God sanctified to the ends of his institution) and the intimacy of marriage, which purports a dearness of invisceration beyond that of adhesion, for 'tis not said they shall only leave father and mother and cleave to one another, but 'tis said that those acts of leaving dear relations, and cleaving to the solitary choice marriage makes, shall be that, whereby they may be one, which aphorism uttered by Adam in Gen. 2.24. was (I am apt to think) when he was extatique or seraphic above what he as a mere man was for it is prophetic and prefigurative of what should be the conviction and duty of man and woman in marriage to the end of the world. Lib. de recta nominum ratione. Eam naturam quae rebus nomina imposuerit celsiorem esse hac humana. Clarius in Loc. Deus per hominem dixit quod homa prophetando praedixit. Sanctus August. lib. 2. de Nuptiis c. 4. Vatablus in Matth. 19 v. 5. I take my notion from Saint Augustine and Clarius) I say when Adam was thus abstracted from humane feculencies, and carried above the perch and flight of the narrow and dwarfie prospect of mortality; Then, then, was it that he said of man and woman in marriage, erunt caro una] that is, says Vatablus, unus homo, for that ipsi duo in carne una, is our Lord's addition in Matth. 19 v. 5. where the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 seems to me to be somewhat less than that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mark. 10.7. For when a thing is joined to another, as Fletcher's do in pieceing of arrows, or Masons in cementing of stones, or Builders in joining frames, though there be a support and assistance each of other, yet there are flaws and joints which wind and weather may pierce and make chinques and chaps in, but when a bone forced aside, is set in its proper place, and a Cyons inserted the stock, and let into a convitality with it, than it grows to be one invisible punct of kindness and conjunction, then is that done which this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 seems to me to intend. Thus our Lord says, Adam's erunt una caro is made good in the double 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which refers to the union of body and mind, by which è duobus fiet unus, ●rasm. in Loc. not as if the Holy Ghost pointed, saith Erasmus to the carnal contents of marriage, which the Greeks termed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, or that he commended this Idem Adag Cent. 9 Chil. ●. Adag. 23. union as it was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wherein wives had delights of husbands as husbands had of wives (though this is the effect of marriage) but our Lord drives it thus home to represent the dearness of that tye in the virtuous amicitiality of it, Grot. in c. 19 Gen. v. 5. Nostris ex ossibus alter. 4. Aeneid. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 2. Politic. 4. Plutarch. in sympos. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. if it were abstracted from all possibility of sensual fruitions, and the oblectaments of carnality; and so St. Paul in Ephes. 5.30. applies it to Christ and the Church, which dignification of marriage Grotius thinks to be that which declares marriage to be rem vere sacram, non humanitus sed divinitus repertam, for 'tis God that can make two in an house to be of one heart, and one mind, that is, to be two in one, which the Heathens made the top of Concord and kindness. Now this the Chancellor applies to the case in point, if, cum masculinum concipiat faemininum, ad masculinum quod dignius est referri debet tota caro sic facta una] as much as if he had said Adam (the first man and husband) under the polysexuall word, Man, couches Woman part of him, and imports the nobility of humane nature to reside in the man as being the first tempore and dignitate, which I write not to advance the huffs and prides of men over their companions, who are bone of their bone, and flesh of their flesh, the best, only, excellent, and rational comforts of life, but to assert the rights of manhood, and to excite men to live and love, worthy the majesty and merit of their divine Endowment; for in that man is called creaturarum pretiosissima & dignissima, Digest. lib. 21. tit. 1. p. 1997, 1998. de edilicio edicto. Theophilus' Antecess. Instit. lib. 3. tit. 3. de senatus consult. Tertul. p. 4●2. and is preferred above the woman, as Theophilus Antecessor makes good, and Fabrottus observes on him to be according to the Laws of nature, and to what God declares Gen. 3.16. where he says to the woman Thy desire shall be to thy husband, Semper seniorem juniori & amplioris honoris inferiori, & marem famina & ingenuum libertino praeferemus Ulpian. lib. 54. adedict. Digest. lib. 22. tit 4. p. 20●4. Digest. lib. 1. tit. 9 p. 119. Aelian. hist. animal. lib. 9 c. 5. which Aben- Ezra reads by obedientia tua erit viro, it is to be understood, not as if the dominion of man were a tyrannous and violent one, but to show there is a certain natural and affectionate virtue implanted by God in the woman, disposing her with complacential delight to submit to her husband's mild and civilly-obliging Government, Observe this. Non semper cum mulieribus mariti agunt amice & 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Grotius in 1 Tim. c. 2.11. as that which she is made free by, & rests happy in. Now though Grotius according to the ballast of his Incomparable judgement makes the subjection mentioned in 1 Tim. c. 2. v. 11. to be a branch of servitude penal on the woman being deceived, and so first in the transgression; yet surely it is that w hc by the Institution of God is very comely in them to submit to, & very contributive to the order and propagation of mankind, and therefore the glory of modest and virtuous women to own in all the latitude of a marriage loyalty and sweetness; for no wife recalcitrates the government of her husband whom she is presumed to have chosen and voluntarily to have pledged her faith to and reverence of; Tholoss. l. 11. c. 4. Prius diligendam esse uxorem quam ducendam, cognoscendam quam amandam; & sapius maelitia & contemptus uxoris causam, esse stultitiam & fatuitatem maritorum qui non noverint cum uxoria opera authoritatem viri retinere. Tholoss. lib. 9 c. 6. ss. 17. but she that is fickle in order to dishonour, and weary in preparation to a desire of change: for man being in his nature so excellent that he has the perfection of all creatures in him, the lustre of Jewels, the flourish and increase of Plants, the activity of Animals, the intellect of Angels which made him be accounted by the Ancients quoddam omne, Phavorinus lib. 17. & 18. de Excellentia hominis. p. 134. Principium jure tribuitur homini, c●jus causa videntur cuncta alia genuisse natura. Plin. in Pro●mio ante lib. 2. Hist. Natur. Tholoss. lib. 9 c. 4. ss. 10.11. Vxores coruscant radiis maritorum & eorum dignitate & privilegiis gauden●. Lib. 6 Fidei Commiss. Digest. lib. 1. tit. 9 p. 122. mortalis Deus, Eccel●ior coelo, profundior inferno, longior terra, latior mari, as Phavorinus his words are, (for which cause the Ancients have attributed so much to him that they have made all things nothing in compare with him) I say, as woman is blessed rather than burdened with his superiority, so are their children begotten by him, dignified by bearing his name, and becoming him in the continuity of a succession, which is the reason that our Common Law considering that the greater is more worthy than the less (because it implies the less in it, and has prelation from the super-addition it hath) appoints the child to follow the condition of the father and not of the mother. Ipse quoque civiles leges dicunt, quod mulieres semper coruscant radiis maritorum suorum. This Tholossanus confirms from justinian and the Authentic; and Ulpian concludes, Femina nuptae clarissimis personis, clarissimarum personarum appellatione continentur; and Acursius gives this in our Text for the reason, Quia uxor fulget radiis maritorum. Hence is it that the * Tholoss. lib. 18. c. 13. ss. 25. Laws say, Vxores domicilium & forum maritorum sequuntur, for since they are one flesh with their husbands, good reason is there they should have the same respect their husbands had while they continue their husband's relics, or marry in his degree; for though if they marry above, they mend their lustre as their Marriage is more illustrious, or equally, they are no losers, but still do coruscare radiis mariti; yet if they take husbands beneath it, the courtesy of England is, they retain their best title, and this women have to preserve their Matronage, or if not that, to compensate the subjection they are under; not that which of old was executed in case of disloyalty, Apud veteres Romanos nulla fuit Lex. neque institutum divortii faciendi, & licebat maritis axores adulteras occidere, aut vinum si bibissent. Brochaeus ad Legem 191. p. 411. lib. De significatione verborum. but that affectation of show and pomp which is naturally in them, and which if they are abated in or deprived of, they grow discontented and unpleasant. For though the Laws of Nations do abhor a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and he deservedly be reproachable, That being enthroned by God does consent to his abas●ment and vility, Pudendo eorum more qui usque adeo uxoris sunt, ne dicam ignavi, ut domi sua privati sint & uxoria potestati pareant, cum foris Magistratus gerant, & viris imperare se dignos esse censeant. Budaeus in Pandect. p. 16. Edition. Vascos. as that unworthy husband deserves to be accounted to do, who is shriveled up to nothing by the parch and sharpness of his Sultanish wife, as Budaeus complains many henn-pecked men are deservedly accounted; yet does civility, religion, and good breeding commend to, and command from men love, respect, yea, high kindness and courtship of endearment to the wife, as the flower and fineness of all domestic contents. And since the wife has no greater, nor at all any nobler portion of the felicities of life then what she has devolved from and imparted to her by her husband, worthy and wise wives, or those that such women would be accounted, Note this well. should be very exact and choice in the fixation of their Marriage-loves, for surely the aberrations and straggles from pudicity, and the intoxicating Labyrinths of stolen and defaming pleasures, commence from the violences that either parental commands, or ambition, or covetousness gratified, surprise women of rare parts and persons by to unequal matches, from the husbands of which these wives having no coruscation, but rather a total Eclipse through the fog and dead night of their dismal and inorient appearances, these Sparks, enraged by the loss and diminution of their names and reputations, turn Apostates to their plighted troth, and seek abroad what they have not at home; to prevent which, as the great botch and plague-sore of womanhood, and that which is the dead fly in the precious ointment of their reputation, it were to he wished they would resolve on such husbands as have cornscancy, and those had, and that had from them, be satisfied with them. For surely, next the grace of God, nothing is so certain and effectual a muniment of feminine modesty as a complete and suitable husband, which does not only make all eggs of attempts on her, addle, but gives her a serenato in her mind, and disposes her to the most noble and notable endeavours and performances of her Sex, which Livia the Empress, wife to Augustus, so made true, that she, from the example and ambition of congruity to her husband, grew the mirror of mortals, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Dion. p. 600. ad finem vitae Augusti. not only loving and observing him while alive, but rewarding even the news of his being in heaven brought her by Numerius, who not only said, but swore he saw his soul fly into heaven; which felicity of his she no doubt would have thought herself little concerned to reward, had she not had a vigorous affection from him, as the He, from whom she had the Cataracts and full streams of glory descending on her. For women's passions are the signs of the Heaven, and points of the Compass they steer by; and therefore to keep those influences of theirs within Compass, Holingshed. p. 562, 626, 627, 659. that they portentuously inundate none of the fair grounds of Religion, which they are the greatest Pretenders of Neighbourhood to, Policy and Laws of Nations have allowed them many reserves to blunt and break the ferocity of such passions in them, Selden's Titles Honour p. 879. 6 Rep. p. 53. which to men are denied, Mulieres honore Maritorum erigimus, & genere nobilitamus] says our Text. For though that be a true rule, Ceo que est gain per Marriage poet auxi estre perde per Marriage; yet if a Queen-Dowager marry any of the Nobility, or under that degree, she loses not her dignity. Katherine Dowager married to Owen ap Theodore Esquire, and maintained her action as Queen of England, Rot. Pari. 26. E. 1. Rot. 1. and the Queen of Navarr marrying with the Brother of Edward the First, sued for her Dower by the name of Queen of. Navarr and recovered it. But si minoris ordinis virum postea s●rtitae, etc.] If she marry in the same order with the first husband, she goes as the rate of the second husband is, so is the rule in Acton's Case, unless the dignity be such by her birth, then 'tis inseparable; but if not, Quando mulier nobilis nupserit ignobili, desinit esse nobilis. ● Rep. p. 18. then if upon her second Marriage she marry in the same degree below her Husband, she loses, so is the judgement of the Judges in Acton's Case before cited, Mes si feme s●it noble, etc. per descent comment que el marry ou un desonch le degree de Nobilitie uncore son birthright re maine, car ceo est annexe a son sank & est caracter indelebilis. 4 Rep. p. 118. Countess Rutl. Case. 6 Rep. and in the Countess of Rutland's Case, and so our Text is to be understood; yet if she marry not in her first husband's degree but beneath him, as being a noble woman to a Knight, or being a Lady to a Gentleman, she by the courtesy of England holds her own degree of first or former Marriage, as we see in every day's experience made good; See Selden's Titles Honor. p. 879. and this the Law of England allowing in courtesy to women, Nuptae prius consulari viro, impetrare solent à Principe quamvis perrarò, ut nupia iterum minoris dignitatis viro▪ nihilominus in consulari maneat dignitate. Ulpian. lib. 2. De Censibus 12. p. 124. does honourably by them, considering they are the Mothers to those Children which succeed to their fathers, and whose Husbands are presumed to will their Honours to those their Wives on whom they beget their Children, as to such Children begotten of them, upon which ground the Chancellor concludes, Digest. lib. 1. tit. 10. that since the Mother (retaining the honour of the Husband's condition who is Father to the Son of Marriage) is said honore & conditione resplendere] the Son who is born to the Father will by the same consequence be resplendent by his Father's state to which he succeeds; for the Father being the predominant in Marriage, Which is the Common Law of England saith Sir Edw. Cook 1 Instit. on Littleton. p. 123. the denomination of the child as to freedom or bondage is by our Law to follow him, Si neife prent frank home, lour issues serra frank, is Littleton's rule. Crudelis etiam necessario judicabitur Lex, quae servitutem augmentat, & minuit libertatem. Nam pro ea natura semper implorat humana. Quia ab homine & pro vitio introducta est servitus. This our Chancellor writes to disable Principles of absolute Government introductory of will for Law, and of slavery instead of liberty, from prevalence with the Prince, whom he endeavours in this discourse to make a Mirror of goodness and Regal temper; and the better to press on the prevalence of his loyal project, to all the precedent insinuations in behalf of Laws, as the rule of manners in men, and administrations in Princes, he adds this of inveighing against cruel legality, which the Scripture calls, Setting up mischief by a Law, as well knowing that nothing is more common with Politicians than sub gravitatis purpura nepotari, to pretend Law and Justice for Will and oppression; which abuse of God's trust, and men's confidences evidencing itself in the fruits of hard conditions on willing and ready obedience, he terms a cruelty because an approbation of that which is the abridgement of natural freedom, and a stabilition of that in the room of it, which is unpleasing to and regretted by the humane nature; for though servitude was brought in upon necessity, Tholossan. Syntag. Juris lib. 1. c. 1. jure Gentium introducta fuit servitus. Tholossan. syntagm. Juris lib. 11. c. 1. and reason it is that those that reserve them whom they could slay, should after saving of them have their service: yet is it not to be promoted to such high degrees of diminution of man's natural freedom, Servitus est constitutio juris Gentium qua quis dominio alieno contra naturam subjicitur. Florentinus. as shall extirpate all remains and footsteps of the primaeve sanction, which, as the Law of nature, is immutable. For servitude is the result of that defection from God and nature's innocence, which lust and corruption occasioned; Digest. lib. 1. tit. 5. fol. 88 De Statu hominum. and as the longer it wanders, from its first station, the more contumacious it is against the rule of its censure and restraint: so the more adverse to a return of regulation it is, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Arist. Politic. lib. 6. c. 2. the more pugnant with that justice and lenity that should associate power and magnanimity. And therefore since liberty is the instinct of all creatures, Bestia quas delectationis causa concludimus, cum copiosius aluntur quam si essent libera, non facile tamen patiuntur se contineri. Cic. 5. De Finibus. who are not brought into the power of man but against their wills, and who no longer rest under it then that power has a menace and dread in it; which liberty in men is that jewel and darling that they will venture life and soul to preserve it from losing, Cic. 10. Philipp. 1 Offic. or else recover it when lost, as we see in the combustions of all the World, Tholoss. Syntagm. lib. 11. c. 12, 13 14, etc. which chiefly are to contend for it. I say, this natural liberty overpowered and become servitude is so much the abomination and distaste of humane nature, that the Chancellor says, It is a cruel Law that exacts against the Law of Nature and the God of it, Qua sit libertas quaris? nulli rei servire, nulli necessitati, nullis casibus, fortunam in aquum deducere. Senec. Epist. 75. & 76. Hanc quam dico societatem conjunctionis humanae munifice & aque tuens. justitia dicitur, cui sunt adjunctae pietas, bonitas, liberalitas, benignitas, comitas, quaeque sunt generis ejusdem, atque haec itae justitia propria sunt, ut sint virtutum reliquarum communia; nam cum sic hominis natura generata sit, ut habeat quiddam innatum quasi civile atque populare, quidquid aget quaeque virtus, id à communitate, & ea qua exposui charitate atque societate humana non abhorrebit. Budaeus in Pandect. p. 13. Edit. Vascos. who being himself a free Agent, created his creature to a freedom. Now though the Laws of men have profitably introduced restraints of freedom in the sinful excesses of it, and reduced the power of multitudes into few, and the Dictates of licentious will to the Empire of religious Justice and moral order; yet is this no violence or rape upon the natural freedom in the main design of its position and donation, but a preservation and improvement thereof to those principal ends, that the mercy and wisdom of the endower thereof indulged it for, which, if not stinted in the excursions of it, (as sin by defacing the soul has sensualized it) would be a more intolerable evil in men then in beasts. And therefore Laws and Lawmakers are Patrons to common preservations, and to be honoured as Secundi Dii, who do favere libertati where they may do it salvo ordine & regiminis pace, and yet propitiates it no otherwise than it is favourable to its self in a regularity of action and a virtuosity of order, which so far is accommodated to multitudes, as they, by the prevalence of virtue conquered to the will and Empire of prudence, are fitted for the entertainment of it: which because the people of England are in the Mass of them more civilised then most Nations are, the Laws of England are said by our Text, In omni casu libertati dare favorem. Haec considerantia Iura Angliae, in omni casu libertati dant favorem. That is in omni casu legali dant libertati legalem favorem; for the Chancellour's drift is not to assert an incircumscription of favour in the Law to licentious and ill-constituted liberty, (for then he had made the Laws of England Patrocinies to every extravagance; nor would any virtue or order be promoted here, did the Law in the latitude of this notion favour liberty.) But this In omni casu libertati dant favorem, is so to be understood of the Law, as it makes good the definition of ars aequi & boni, which a Law ought to be, and then the sense will be, That the Laws of England in all cases wherein freedom consists with virtue and peace, favours the freedom of Lord and Vassal, that the rights of both may be properly conveyed to them; and hence the learned know that the Laws of England are called Libertates Angliae, 2 Instit. p. 3. quia liberos homines faciunt: and therefore the first Chapter of Magna Charta is Concessimus etiam & dedimus omnibus liberis hominibus Regni nostri, Pag. 4. which words Sir Ed. Cook says extend, To all Persons Ecclesiastical and Temporal, yea to Villains, for they are accounted freemen saving against their Lords, yea against their Lords when they unlordlyly abuse their Villains; for though Villainage did draw service, and the Lord might command his Villain or Neif to any service that was painful if honest; yet to that which had turpitude in it, or was above the nature and ability of man to do, and was only fit for a beast, the Lord jure dominii could never force the Villain to perform; for as the rule is Lex non cogit ad turpia, so is it also Lex non cogit ad impossibilia. And the Law of England being grounded upon the Law of God and upon Reason and Religion, defends the Villain from the unlawful tyranny though not the just service of his Lord; for though a Villain shall not have an appeal of Robbery against his Lord, for that the Lord may lawfully take the goods of his Villain as his own, Sect. 189, 190, 191. Cook on it p. 123. B. 1 Instit. Fleta lib. 1. ●. 5. yet in an appeal of Murder, Poet aver envers son Signior une action d' appeal de mort son pere ou d' auters de les Ancesters que heire il est, saith Littleton; for the Law, says Fleta, does not as of old reach ad vitam & mortem, sed hodie coarctata hujusmodi potestas, qui enim servum suum occiderit, non minus puniri jubetur quam si alienum interfecerit; and to this Littleton gives many instances of the Lord's accountableness if he do exceed, Sect. 189. ad 194. Libertas Legibus & Magistratibus suis constat & Imperii certa forma. Lipsius' in lib. 2. Taciti p. 43. as appears in him in the title of Villainage, which declares the Law of England, dare libertati favorem. For the Law was not made to shelter oppression and injury, but to succour innocence and passivity against it; and if the Lord upon presumption that his Neif is his, shall ravish her, notwithstanding his propriety in her as to his honest service, yet his injury to her chastity, which is her jewel, by the Laws of God and men, shall bring on him loss of his eyes, propter aspectum decoris quibus virginem concupivit, and loss of his testicles whereby he was excited ad calorem stupni; and if this will not secure the unvitiated chastity of a woman, but her Lord will riot on her, as was the sin of some in Edward the First's time to do, then by the Statute Westmin. 1. c. 13. 34 E. 1. 'tis declared Felony, which the Leet being in the L. Manor, Cook on 1 Westm. c 13. p. 1●1. 2 Instit. cannot (saith Sir Edward Cook) inquire of but the Courts of Law, because 'tis a felony by Statute not by Common Law. Yet here is to be remembered, that though Marriage with a freeman enfranchised a Neif, yet even then, though the Lord could not recover his Neif from the freeman that had enfranchised her during coverture; Fleta lib. 2. c. 54. 1 Instit. p. 136. Nullam vilem personam natione spuriam vel servilis conditionis ad militia strenuitatis ordinem promovere licebit. Fleta loco pracitato. yet the Lord for this should have recovered a reasonable recompense for the service of his Neif: and so if a Villain be made Knight, though there be no reduction of him to his service, yet there is a rationabilis valour to be recovered, for the Law though it cannot recall what is once done and cannot be undone, yet does it preserve as well to the Lord his liberty as to the Villain or Neif their freedom, and so the Laws of England are justly said libertati dare favorem. Et licet jura illa judicent eum servum, quem servus in conjugio ex libera procreavit, non per hoc jura illa rigida, crudeliave sentiri poterant. The Laws of England adjudge the child to that state which the father is in, for the Mother does nihil confer to the child but only nourishment and production, Cook 1 Instit. sect. 187. p 123. Britton. fol 78. B. Bracton. lib. 4. fol. 29●. Such as the father is, such is the child, so saith Littleton and Sir Edward Cook on him, and that because the husband and wife being one person in Law, the condition of the man shall determine the condition of the child begotten on his wife; for as a Neif marrying a freeman during coverture is enfranchised, so a freewoman that marries a bondman is during her coverture a bondwoman, and cannot redire in pristinum statum till she be released from the coverture, since such as the husband is, must by the Law the wife be. For though in case of Crowns husbands may be Subjects where wives are Sovereigns, as King Philip was to Queen Mary, Stat. 1 Mar. c. 2. yet between Subjects the Laws of Matrimony are such as devolve the Prerogative on the husband, and subjects the wife to his condition, Fuller in Westmorl. p. 136. In lib. 3. Annalium. p. 514.515. which the Queen of France sister to Henry the Eight made good to Charles Brandon, and Queen Katherine Parr, who after the death of Hen. 8. married the Lord Seymour, and was a very respectful wife to him; and Lipsius on Tacitus shows this to be the nature of Marriage in all times and amongst all people, and so is not a violence or fraud by which women are either forced to and beguiled into a degradation, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Plotinus Ennead. 6. lib. 8. p. 740. but an act of will and choice, proprio arbitrio se fecit ancillam] that is, not only to do that which the a Digest. lib. 7. tit. 8. de usu & habitatione. p. 954. Ancilla usuaria did, if her husband's fortune will not support her without it, but also that which the Ancilla usuaria was not bound virtute ancillatus to do, that is, to bear children, which though the bondwoman might not be b Ancillae non emantur ut pariant. Gloss. T. venit, Digest. lib. 19 tit. 1. bought to that end, yet the wife is married so to do; and when she knows this is the Law of her Marriage, and is carried by that motion of nature which is rational to put herself into the conjugal Chariot, and to be hurried up and down with the vicissitudes of it, Lib. 5. tit. 3. ex Ulp. lib. 15. ad edict. ss. 27. and to submit to the conduct of her husband, the guider of it; when, I say, this is soberly and with consideration entered into and accepted, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Plotin. Ennead. 2. lib. 3. p. 144. the woman is bound so long as her husband lives to be conformable to him, and the proceed of their ventures must be in condition as He that is of them the father: which no doubt the Heroic Constantia the Relict of Raymond Prince of Antioch was contented with, Fuller's Holy Warr. c. 32. p. 85. who after she had lived a good while a widow, refusing the affections which many Princely Suitors proffered unto her, yet at last descending beneath herself married a plain man Reynold of Castille, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Plotin. Ennead. 6. lib. 8. p. 736. yet was contented with the choice she had made, and the reason was because there was a free choice of her own, which to repent of would argue her light, and continue on her an impossibility to be remedied, which contradicted the merit of generous patience and contented freedness. For though God has left to man the Viceregency of all creatures under him, and as the great c Major ratio in hominibus quam in Angelis. Rosselius in Trismegist. vol. 1. lib. 6. come. 8. c. 2. p. 284. & vol. 2. lib. 4. c. 16. p. 444. Master of reason, has subjected the woman to him, and endowed her only with such proportions of courage and art, as may make her know good and evil, Nisi te Marcia scirem tam longe ab infirmitate muliebris animi, quam à caeteris vitiis recessisse, & mores tuos uèlut antiquum aliquod exemplum aspici. Senec. lib. de consol. ad Marciam. and submit to her husband as her head, and have desire to him as to her boundary, which when she does and shows herself to do, she does her duty; for the wife is sub potestate viri, & ipse dominabitur tibi] saith the Scripture, which being the Magna Charta of man's superiority, the woman is hence bound to her good behaviour, which many of that noble sex delight with so great readiness to own, that they sometimes steal the hearts of men from them, and with it their Empire, which while they abuse not they deserve to keep, and have sooner from wise men than fools. By all which it appears that Marriage is favoured, and the children of it succeed to the state of their father either bond or free; and that the wife (if she be not Sovereign) is under the Common Law of Marriage in all the precise determinations of it, and that the wife so being, can expect no better a reputation than reflects on her from her husband, whom though she is free to choose before she marry, Vxor nomen est dignitatis, non voluptatis. Digest. lib. 24. tit. 1. p. 2203. yet she is bound to cohabit with and submit to when married: for a wife being A name of honour and not pleasure, as the husband that duly considers the friendship and beauty of his Conjunct aught, so will he kindly and with tenderness and respect apply himself to her, and so work upon her love that she shall think her yoke easy and her burden light, while she is with fidelity and courtesy thus victored. This is the Summa & forma Legis Angliae in this case, which gives some inlet to the judgement of both Laws, in the wise constitutions of them for the respective places of their Regency; my conclusion being in this case as in the former, For England the Law of England is the best, Pater est quem nuptiae demonstrant, & nunquam matris sed semper patris conditionem imitari partum judicat.] CHAP. XLIII. Princeps. Anglorum Legi in hoc casum, etc. THIS whole Chapter, as the 41. is only serviceable to the compleatness of the Dialogue, and to the vehiculation of the Chancellour's design to that perfection, which his aim (through the mediation of providential advantages well observed and improved) promised him to arrive at; for though many men and things properly fitted and industriously followed do not attain what, in the enterprises of their actors minds, In corpus humanum pars divini spiritus mersa. Senec. Ep. 66. arbitria bonorum & malorum Ep. 7●. Ep. 92. lib. 2. De Benefic. c. 8. & 4. De Ben. c. 10. they are studious to dispose themselves and their endeavours towards: yet so long as reason, which Seneca calls, A portion of divinity, sunk and lodged in us, and that which leads the creatures and follows the Gods in the wisdom and conduct of it, so long, I say, as reason sways men, they are well guided, and probable to arrive at the lawful issue they expect. This being the Chancellour's argument in the personated Prince, that he makes it omnis honesti comes, and thence concludes on the Law of England's side, is but what he has throughout this Treatise done, and which he thinks the Laws of England deserve: and that because they do not only show themselves just to give to every one their due, that will sue to them for right, but establish right to innocent and impotent babes that are not able to help themselves. And hereupon the rule of reason and Law is, as here quoted, Odia perstringi & favores convenit ampli●ri] which is the rule of the Civilians, Digest. lib. 4. tit. 4. Gloss. p. 534. de minoribus 25 annis. Lib. 14. tit. 6. de Senatus consult. Macedoniano's. p. 1502. Nullum bonum putamus esse quod ex distantibus constat, Senec. Ep 103. Tria ex praceptione veteri prastanda sunt ut vitentur Odium, Invidia, Contemptus; quumodo hoc fiat, sapíentia sola monstrabit. Epist. 14. and Accursius applauds it, so also does our Laws; for where any case is equilibrious and is capable of two senses, the best and most beneficial one is put upon it, and it made to intend what is most in favour of justice and mercy, and in prevention of discontent and hatred. Seneca tells us that the old rule of wisdom was to avoid three evils, Hatred, Envy, Contempt, the way to do which, wisdom only can discover; and that being in the Law which is sapientia temporis, it in all cases prefers justice and mercy before oppression and violence: and this not only in exposition of Regal Grants, and in cases that concern the estates and liberties of men, but their lives also, and most chiefly, Pleas Crown. p. 133. witness that of Mr. Stamford, where it is said, that though by the strict rule of the Common Law, he is not to have benefit of the Clergy who cannot read any where in the book offered to him; yet in judgement of Law, and for favour of life, he that can read but a word or two, or spell letters, and after put them together, shall be allowed clericè legere; so whereas a Prisoner in Felony was in a bad case, 2 Instit. p. 164. because he lost his challenges to the Inquest that found him guilty, and yet upon the Inquest of office formerly used, ut sciatur qualis ordinatio liberari debet, he forfeited all his goods and chattles and the profits of his Land, Mercy the true property of a judge. until he had made his purgation; The thrice Reverend and Learned Sage Sir John Prisot studying how to relieve the poor prisoners that were destitute of counsel, with the advice of the rest of the judges in Hen. 6. (our Chancellour's) time, for the safety of the innocent, would not allow the prisoner the benefit of Clergy before he had pleaded to the felony, and having had the benefit of his challenges and other advantages had been convicted thereof, which just and charitable course hath been generally observed ever since, which is an argument of the favores c●nvenit ampliari in the Text; See Statute of 3 Ed. 1. c. 32, 33. and that it may carry on the Majesty of Government in a due circulation of Inferiority and Superiority. Odia perstringi is also the care of our Law, for all feuds and animosities it discountenances, and as they appear punishes as breaches of the peace, or by actions of recovery against the damage of them if just cause be; for our Law being Lex pacis & concordiae, promotes every adjument to quiet, Note this. and prosecutes every remora thereunto, and therefore declares, That it conceives jealousies and distances in names and ways of contradiction each to other, to be a not only fever but plague-sore to a Nation; to cure which there is a rare Prescript by one of the best State-Physicians (if the frenzy of the Nation would have harkened to him) that ever this or any other Nation had, given in these words, Beware of exasperating any faction by the crossness and asperity of some men's passions, Eicon Basil. c. 27. To the then Pr. of Wales now our most gracious Sovereign. humours, or private opinions, employed by you, grounded only upon the differences in lesser matters, which are but the skirts and suburbs of Religion, wherein a charitable connivance and Christian toleration often dissipates their strength, whom rougher opposition fortifies, and puts the despised and oppressed party into such combinations as may most enable them to get a full revenge on those they count their Persecutors, who are commonly assisted by the vulgar commiseration, which attends all that are said to suffer under the notion of Religion, thus that wise King; and to this purpose speaks a Right Noble and well-advised Sage and Grandee after him, who minding the wisdom of the Nation, what, as wise Physicians, they are to do, divinely counsels them, Be not (saith he) too severe and rough towards your Patients in prescribing remedies, The Lord Chancellor in his Speech. May●. 1661. how well compounded soever, too nauseous and offensive to their stomaches and appetite, or to their very fancy, alloy and correct those humours which corrupt their stomaches and their appetites. If the good old known tried Laws be for the present too heavy for their necks, which have been so many years without any yoke at all, make a temporary provision of an easier and a lighter yoke, till by living in a wholesome air, by the benefit of a soberer conversation, by keeping a better diet, by the experience of a good and just Government, they recover strength enough to bear, and discretion enough to discern the benefit and the ease of those Laws they disliked, thus the Grave Chancellor and Counsellor of England, whose divine and ponderous counsel in these words, confirm the wisdom of the Law alleged in our Text, Odia restringendo & favores ampliando.] For surely if any thing carry a Law with credit to its noblest end, The glory of God in the orderly Government of men according to the rules of justice and the dictates of kindness, it must be that participation which that Law, in the soul and design of it, aptly expressed in administration, hath of that divine wisdom and goodness by which the world and all in it is governed by God, Whose ways are all mercy and truth as well as judgement and power. And these being the scope and practice of both Laws in their respective Spheres to promote, though there be a variation in the method, yet the union in the end makes them happy conducements to multitudes felicities; which considered, the Chancellor is to be understood not to allege his arguments for the Common Law out of design to reproach any other Law, but only to win the Prince to a love of the English Laws, upon consideration that of all others they are the most suitable to the nature of England and Englishmen. And so he proceeds to the fourth case wherein the Laws vary, contained in the following Chapter. CHAP. XLIV. Leges Civiles impuberum tutelas proximis de eorum sanguine committunt. THIS is the fourth Case wherein the two Laws do vary in their Judgements, to wit, The tuition of Orphans; for though the Laws agree to supply the impotency of them by substitution of some persons meet to rule and order them and theirs in that necessary trust, yet the Common Law and the Civil Laws do place their confidence of the due execution of this honest and parental charity diversely. The Civil Law does commit Impuberum tutelas to the next of their whole blood, saith the Text. This act of the Law is according to the law of nature, and the provident wisdom of Nations; for impuberty being the novicism of manhood, and that vacation wherein the first dawnings of virility are not, Pubes] lanugo qua maribus decimo quarto, feminis duodecimo anno circa pudenda oriri incipit, quod quia maturitatis est signum, factum est ut mas pubes sive puber vocatur, quamprimum ad generandum aptus est, & femina ad concipiendum. Theophil. Antecessor. lib. 2. Institut. Tit. 116. p. 344. De Pupillari Substitutione. Edit. Fabrotti. but persons (Males under 14. and females under 12.) have no sign of the spring of perfection and adultness in them, the in-ability of the child thus infirmed was ever in all times and Nations made good by the addition of some person of years, integrity, and worth; who during the child's incapacity to order himself and his affairs, should dispose them to his advantage for him. This is evident not only in the times of the jews, but also of the Heathens; for Laertius tells us Aristotle appointed by his Will Antipater Guardian of his son Nicanor and of all he had, till Nicanor should come of age to take care of himself. From this common observation of Nations Saint Paul mentions this Law in Gal. iv. 1. where he tells us, The Son is under Tutors and Governors until the time appointed of the father; for as the Master or Lord had the power of the Servant or Villain jure Gentium, Pueris pupillis dubantur Tutores, furiosis & adolescentibus Curatores qui res suas administrabant. Erasm. in loc. and could manumit him when he pleased: so had the father jure Civili, power of the child to dispose his estate to him when he pleased, Theophilus' Antecessor. lib. 1 Instit. tit. 10. p. 67. De patria potestate. which is the reason why 'tis said, Till the time appointed of the father. For these Impuberes were ever alieni non sui juris, and till they were seventeen years of age or eighteen, Impubes constitutus in patris potestate, citari non potest verbaliter nec etiam realiter, id est, capiendo personam. Bartolus Digest. lib. 2. tit. 4. p. 193. as some say, they were by the Athenians not admitted, * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Laertius in vita Aristot. p. 116. Edit. Romae. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Hypocration testifies, but were under tutors who answered for them upon all occasions; Gajus lib. 1. ad L. 11. Tabul. Digest. lib. 2. tit. 4. p. 193. so that according to this account, Impuberty, which the Greeks called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and which we account the whole time of childhood to 14 years of age in males and 12 in females, Theophilus' Antecessor. Instit. lib. 1. tit. 21. p. 138. De Authoritate Tutorum. is therefore under tuterage, because till then there is not probable discretion to guide themselves in any commendable convenient measure, Brechaeus ad legem 204. lib. De verb. signific. p. 447. but apt they are to be deceived and abused through the levity of their nature, and their unexperience in the quality and temper of good and evil. And though in some children there may be monstrous pregnancy not only of wit but also of body before this age, as was in that Boy which a Sanctus Hieronym. Ep. ad Vitalem Presbyterum. St. Jerome mentions, and in those that b Brechaeus in Leg. 204. loco pracitato. Brechaeus out of Hostiensis reports of; yet for the most part, and not without somewhat wonderful, Fornerius loc. pracit. p. 448. 'tis otherwise: for Seneca tells us, ante pubertatem non testantur, and the Laws think adultery incredible ante decimum quartum annum. Pubescentes herbae non mihi videntur adulta, sed lanosae, lanuginosa; nam in veneficio quo viri qui pu●ent & barbati sunt▪ petuntur & incantantur, majorem vim habere, plusque pollere quam leves & impuberes censebantur. Turneb. Advers. lib. 26. c. 26. p. 952. And though Puberty being the inclination to the vigorous time of life, and that in which every thing flourished and appeared gay, was accounted lovely and acceptable; in allusion whereto pubes and pubescere and pubentia are ascribed to all things of appearing perfection, as pubescentes herbae, and Genae pubentes we read of in Virgil, and Rosae pubentes in Statius, Ora pubentia and virgulta pubentia foetu in Claudian; Advers. lib. 5. c. 3. p. 141. lib. 26. c. 26. p. 952. lib. 23. c. 7. lib. 30. c. 9 p. 1160. and in Turnebus nothing is more frequent then to have pubes and pubertas expressed in this sense, as mpubes and mpubertas is in the contrary. All which I instance to illustrate the wisdom of Nations, who did hold the infancies of men and women, excused from all care of and prudence in business; yea almost from all punishments except in notable wickednesses, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Basilic. lib. 60. tit. 51. c. 44. Quod illum ubi adolevisset multò fore crudeliorem existimarent, ubi mens adhuc tenera malis cupiditatum imbuta venenis, sese jam prodit, supplente aetatem malicia. Fornerius ad Legem 204. p. 449. de verb. signific. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Aristippus apud Laertium lib. 2. p. 52. Edit. Romae. as in that case wherein the Areopagis censured the Lad who picked out the eyes of a young Crow, which those Judges thought to be so ominous of a future wickedness in him, that, They punished him severely for it, to nipp the fruit of his growing folly in the bud of its first appearance; which well ruminated, directs to pitch well in the assignment of children to trusties or Tutors. For as good or bad Masters ordinarily make good or bad men, institution being a second nature, and rendering youth such as they probably become men; (which was the reason that Socrates made grave men, when Dionysius made light ones:) so good or bad Tutors and Guardians produce Pupils or Orphans rich or poor, well or illbred, according as they do carefully improve or carelessly neglect the trust reposed in them: which trust that they should be engaged to mind more from the stimulation that nearness of blood presuming dearness of affection proclives to, the Text says the Impuberum Tutelas is committed, as followeth. Proximis de eorum sanguine.] The Grammarians deriving proximus from propè make this person here mentioned to have the priority, to be of the nearest of the whole blood of the Pupil, Alciat. ad Leg. 157. p. 344. de verb. signific. for though Proximus be a general word, (in which sense 'tis no more than Vicinus and Amicus, there being a Neighbourhood and cognation of manhood, habitation, profession, friendship, in all which proximity is allowed, yea brotherhood.) Yet in the Lawyer's sense, cum transfertur ad sanguinis jura, than the Proximi are such as not only do positivi vim habere, Lib. 1. Elegant. c. 17. Biochaeus ad Laegem 157. loco praecitate, Proximus est quem nemo antecedit, ut supremus quem nemo soquetur. Fornerius in Legem candem. and are primi, proximi, & intimi, as Valla writes, but also such as are soli in relatione, that is, supremi, such as have no fellows to them in nearness of blood and perpendicularity of descent, these the Law terms Agnati seu Cognati] which terms are (a) Gentilis vero & agnationem & cognationem complectitur. Paulus de Grad. & Affinit. lib. 38. Gentilitatis nomina, and are not to be understood in Pliny's sense, who makes agnatus to amount to abundans; so he calls the supernumerary Members of man's body, which are useless and monstrous, (b) Lib. 11. c. 52. Membra animalibus agnata, and (c) Lib. 11. c. 39 Pili agnati for abundant hairyness: but by Agnati the Laws intent those that are of the Male-bloud from the line of the father, Tholoss. lib. 11. c. 9 ss. 6. lib. 42. c. 12. ff. 1. lib. 45. c. 13. ss. 6. Selden on this Chap. p. 50. Tholossan. Syntagm. Juris. lib. 9 c. 9 ss. 12. Alciat. lib. 2. de verborum significat. p. 559. Agnati sunt codem sanguine procreati, sed proximiores. Forner. ad legem 53. lib. de verb. signific. p. 142. as Cognati are of the Female; and these Agnati are the first in preference, for the Cognati are comprehended in the Agnati, but not the Agnati in the Cognati, since they are further off & are not inheritable, nor can have the custody of them while the Agnati are in being, for Agnatio does in the Law comprehend all right of alliance: and therefore in all disabilities, whether of nonage or lack of reason by madness, the custody of the impotent Kinsman was to be in the Agnatus the next of his father's blood; Si furiosus est, agnatorum gentiumque in eo pecuniaeque ejus potestas esto. Cic. 1. De Invent. 132. Varro lib. 1. de Re Rustic. c. 2. so Tully and Varro mention the Law, and (d) Budaeus in Pandect. p. 90. Budaeus tells us the Proverb hence grew, Carry madmen to their Kindred, not that they are sure ever to be most taken care for, and most made of by them, but because the Laws of Nations in preferring them, follow the rule of nature, which is, that we love our own; which Saint Paul had regard to when he says, * Ephes. 5.29. Never man hated his own flesh but nourished and cherished it: and that Cousins of the whole blood are one flesh and so ought to be as to the title of love and dearness cannot but be granted, jura generis non possunt dirimi. Bartolus Digest. lib. 2. tit. 14. de pactis p. 294. D. which is the reason that this commitment of either children or madmen to the nearest of their blood, Ius agnationis non posse pacto repudiari non magis quam quis dicat nolle suum esse. Modestinus lib. 5. Regularum. is by the Lawyers said to be a Law that cannot be receded from, a nearness that all the water in the Sea will not wash off, as we proverbially speak; and Vivian after he has glossed upon the Texts of the Doctors, who all agree the latitude and fixation of the right of Agnation, concludes, Id est jus quod habet quis, ideo quod est agnatus ut in hareditatibus & tutelis; whereas then the Chancellor says aguati fuerint seu cognati, Idem dico si est cognatus. Vivianus in Gloss. P. Ius digest. lib. 2. tit. 14. p. 294. Cognati omnes dicuntur aequalis juris. Syntag. juris lib. 6 c. 13. ss. 12. Consanguinei una massa, quilibet autem eorum residuum dicta massae Grorius in locum. Lorinus in locum Digest. lib. 3. tit. 5 p. ●64. Gl. c. he thus joins them, because the same privilege in this case is to the cognates as to the agnates, though the preference be to the agnates if such there be; For what Budaeus says of gentilitas & agnati that the ancients always joined these words together, is true of the cognati & agnati, they differ little or nothing but in priority, where they are competitors. For so great is the indulgence of the Law to the agnati, that in some cases they are exempted from what the Son as heir was bound to, as Tholossanus who is my Authority for it, makes good, and therefore as God appointed in the 27 of Numbers and the 11 verse, that the Father having no brethren, the inheritance was to be to the inheritance that was next to him of his family, who was counted residuum, a part, and the remaining part of himself, so the Civil Laws do in case of infancy or incomposure of mind appoint the care of the disabled person to his next kinsman, who is, as it were, sui residuum; and this being ordo juris, aught to be accounted antiqua solennitas. Et ratio hujus legis est, quia nullus tenerius, favorabiliusve alere infantem sataget, quam proximus de sanguine ejus. This is the reason of the Law in custody of persons, Ad proximiores primum defertur tutela a lege, quod bona tutius administrari nec melius conservari posse lex crediderit, quam ab eo qui, eadem ad se, suosque perventura aliquando speret. Tholoss. syntag. juris lib. 12. cap. 6. ss. 9 Gen. 13.8. as well as in conservation of goods. For as to goods preservation the Laws Civil commits the care and power to the next of kin, because 'twill be thought they will best look to them that they be not wasted whose they are to be, in case of death or misfortune; so the person none are presumed more faithfully to love and keep then those that are of their blood and alliance, this surely is a rational conclusion, which from the beginning was as true as true could be; for in the simpler and less subdolous ages, as there were no vices so frequent and prodigious as now there are; so were there no deceits of trusts occasioned by them as now there are, such being culpae vitia, non naturae, This is made good from that speech of Abraham to Lot, Let there be no difference between me and thee, and between my herdsmen and thy herdsmen, for we are brethren. Abraham as I believe referring to the Law of Nature, which for bad depredation on friends and neighbours, much more on brethren, who are one in blood and solicitous fidelity each to other; Yea, I am apt to think, that Cain making that reply to God, Gen. 4.9. Am I my brother's keeper? had some self-accusation that overtook him and impeached him to his Conscience of sinning against that Law of love to and of a brother, which the strict ligament of that relation implies. And certainly those passages in Saint Paul, Rom. 14. 1 Joh. c. 2, 3, & 4. Love the brotherhood, offend not thy brother for whom Christ died, cause not the weak brother to stumble, and those of Saint john wherein he lays the law of love to the brother, do all lay load on this his obligation of tenderness to relations in the preservation of them and theirs from injury, Tamen longe aliter de impuberum custodia statuunt leges Angliae. Nam ibidem, si haereditas quae tenetur in socagio, descendat impuberi ab aliquo agnatorum suorum, non erit impubes ille sub custòdia alic●jus agnatorum ejus, sed per ipsius cognatos, videlicet consanguineos ex parte matris, ipse regetur. Because there was not as I conceive, when our Chancellor wrote, any villainage in England, nor any estates held in base tenure, except copyholds of inheritance be accounted such but much of the mean states in socage, that is, the service of the plough, therefore our Chancellor begins to show how the Children of such being infants or otherwise uncapable to order themselves and their estates, Cook 1. Instit. p. 86. Bracton lib. 2. c. 77. Glanvil lib. 7. c. 9 & 11, lib. 9 c. 4 Fleta lib. 1. c. 8. lib. 3. c. 14, 16. are by the Law cared for, to wit, the Lord of whom they hold such their estates, does grant over the custody of the body of the heir of the deceased socager, to his next of kin that cannot inherit. For all lands being derived from the Crown, as the great Tenors called Tainlands, were in the hands of the Nobles and Gentry, who held them in escuage or other military tenors, and attended the Kings in their Wars; so the lesser ones named Reevelands were held in socage; And the heirs of them when impuberes, 4. & 5. Phil. & Mary c. 8. Preamble. that is, within fourteen years if male, or twelve if female, if they be not given by will of their father, or delivered by him in his life time to any particular person son whom the Father selects to that trust, shall be in the custody of the prechcin ●my a que le heretage ne poet descendre saith Littleton. 1.1 istit. on Littlet on. p. 16. For the Law intending the preservation and good nurtriture of the Child, commits it to them that have great interest of love, though none of estate, in case of the failer of the Child, well knowing, that occasion often makes the thief, and that many an one had not been so bad as he was, had he not been trusted farther than he ought. P. 88 Nanquam remanebit aliquis in custodia alicujus de que haberi posits suspicio, quod velit jus clamare in ipsa hareditate Bracton lib. 2. p. 87. Flera lib. 1. c. 9 Clanvil. lib. 7. c. 11. To prevent which danger of treachery for advantage, the Law concludes, That no heir shall remain in the custody of him, that there is any suspicion of his claim to the heirs estate, which they of the Mother's side not being, the commitment shall be to the next of kin on the Mother's side, to whom the inheritance cannot descend. And our text adds the reason, which is the reason of all ancient books; To commit the custody of a Child to him that is next to succeed to the inheritance after him, is to commit the sheep to the Wolf who is readier to worry then cherish it, and who secures no further than he may preserve it; from others to make it become a prey for himself. Now the law in this is not more jealous than wise, nor more vigilant than rational; for there no greater villainies have been acted in the world than those who from hopes to gain by their success have been encouraged to act them, This is the heir le's kill him that the inheritance may be ours, was the cursed combination of the evil terretenants in the Gospel parable, A friend that is near, is better than a brother that is far off nor are any acts of truculency more transcendently horrible than those that have been acted by, or connived at by relations of blood and kindred; Were not Cain and Abel brothers, yet Cain who should have been his brother's keeper was his butcher? So Esau and jacob were uterine brothers, yet none more malicious against plain and downright jacob then his furly brother Esau, The brethren of joseph were Joseph's sellers to strange Merchants, which was intentional murder in them; because they would have joseph out of the way, who was more beloved of their common father than they were. And who considers that not only falsehoods in friendships but even in brotherhoods are frequent, and that it was Reuben who vitiated his Father's Concubines, and Absalon that intruded his Father's Throne, and Amnon that stuprated his own Sister, and Zimri that slew his Master, will conclude, that men's enemies are often those of their own house; Theatr. vita humans p. 1646. nor shall men readilyer find greater fallacies, and more real ruins from any then from false Brothers, and perfidious Uncles, the confirmation of which Zuinger has collected in the instances of Danaus to his brother Egiptus, Xerxes to Masistes, Horatius Romanus to Curiatius, Atila to Buda, Vitiosa to Theofred, Gondebald to Childeric, Perinus Fregrose to his brother Nicholas with many others, but above all, the enmity of Zaringensis Prince of Carinthia to his kindred, is notable, which he dying expressed by willing that all his plate, jewels, and utensels of worth might be gathered together to provoke his Kindred to fight, and stay one another about the obtaining of it, Idom p. 2174. 2375. 3406. Josephus Antiq. lib. 15. c. 15. to which josephus adds the story of Ptolemy Governor of jericho, who that he might reign, slew his brother-in-law with his two sons; I could instance in many more, but none of them are more pregnant to confirm the rational and prudent severity of our Law in committing the custody of heirs to those that after them cannot inherit, than the examples of perfidy, that first occasioned the Law so to be; for undoubtedly there were precedents of this mischief before this remedy of it was found out and prescribed, since ex malis moribus bona leges nascuntur, and the Law willing to provide safety for those that cannot provide for themselves, nor aught to be sacrifices to their keeper's voracity, established this prudent reserve, to prevent that effect of ambition and covetousness which ends in murder of innocence and intrusion into their rights, witness that bloody Richard the third, whom, Sir Thomas Moor anatomizes to be versepellis, In Hist. R. 3. Impress. Lovanii. iracundus, invidus, semperque etiam ante partum pravus, This Uncle, who could be light and grave, pensive and pleasant, rageful and mild, religious and profane, as he saw his projects were best accommodated by his ambidextrallity, This monster of Guardians, whose very exsecation from his Mother's belly portended that somewhat he would prodigiously act in his life. This, This crafty and bloody Uncle cogs his two Nephews into his custody, Sive id inscitia factum seve fato, agnus certe consulto in lupi sidem creditus est. Idem p. 408. as one that had a parents love for them, when God knows he all the while intended their murder and his own enthronization, which, though the mother of those royal babes foresaw, and did as much as a prudent foresight, and a motherly affection could do to prevent, yet was not prevalent to effect it; but the Protector (for so the Uncle was) first got possession of them, than slays them, than secures all their loyal friends, from whom he dreaded trouble, and at last ascends the Throne; Which nefarious fact ratifies the reason of the Law, to commit the heir to none that by the miscarriage of it can possibly inherit, but to the next kindred of the contrary side, who may be presumed to have affection enough to perform a trust, and not any temptation from advantage arising to him to forfeit and betray it. Sed si hereditas illa non in socagio, sed teneatur per servitium militare, tunc per leges terra illius, infans ipse & baereditas ejus, non per agnatos neque per cognatos, sed per dominum feodi illius custodientur, quousque ipse fuerit aetatis viginti & unius annorum. This is added to show, that as there are men of arts and arms in every Nation, so there are tenors and services by which these men hold lands in order to peace and war, arts and arms; having therefore in the former clause declared, how the infants of socagers, which are men of the plough and plain, are secured during their minority, he proceeds to evidence, how the infants of the more noble Tenurers, who hold by military service are provided for, and those he says are to be kept by the Lords of the fees, of whom they hold their estates, and to whose persons they in war, when able, are to do service. Per servitium militare] Hear the Chancellor passes over lands held by Homage Ancestrel, because, though the custody is the same with those in Escuage and Serjeantry, which are the military services here, yet perhaps there was at the time of our Chancellors writing little land held by Homage Ancestrel, both Lords and Tenants altering and changing, and the land nor continuing in the blood of Lords and Tenants as by the precise nature and rule of that tenure ought. Escuagia a scuto quo militare dicuntur, Bracton lib. 2. c. 36. scutagiam dicitur quod talis prastatio pertinet ad scutum quod aessumitus, & servitium militare dicitur. lib. 1. c. 14. Littleton sect. 153. Cook l. 2. c. 8. p. 68, 69. Entitled the statute of Wards and reliefs. And thereupon the Chancellor takes notice only of such tenors as were in being, concerning the custody of the infants of which, is most pertinent to his purpose, and those are Escuage and Grandserjeantry, or Knight service, this Littleton defines thus. Tenure per grand serjeantie est lou an home tient ses terres on tenements de nostre Seigniour le Roy, etc. On this, Sir Edward Cook has largely written, and made good in himself, what in another place he writ of Sir William Herle, Chief Justice to E. 3. the words are, This our student shall observe that the knowledge of the Law is like a deep well, out of which every man draweth according to the strength of his understanding, He that reacheth deepest, he seeth the amiable and admirable secrets of the Law, Thus he, which truly I think he himself made good in his Commentary on the 95 sect. of Littleton, therefore to him I shall refer the Reader, and to the Stat. of 9 H. 3. c. 27.28. E. 1.17. E. 2. c. 2. 2 Instit. p. 44. To these militaria servitia then as attendancies on the King in his wars, the Text says, the heir of the tenants shall be committed domino feodi] till he be 21 years old, which is the age of livery and manhood, or full age, so 9 H. 3. c. 4. 52. H. 3. c. 6. 3. E. 1. c. 21, 22, 47. 13. E. 1. c. 7. 14. E. 3. c. 13. direct, and so has been the Law I think till of late the Court of Wards, and all the privileges and effects of it was by our now gacious Sovereign taken a Statute of 12. Car. 2. c. 24. away, so that now all the military tenors as to marriage and relief are void; and the custody now I suppose is to follow the course of socage tenors proximis de ecrum sanguine] unless the ancestor shall otherwise will or deliver in his life time his heir to any person he has a great trust in; for than I think, the Lord of the fee upon petition is to grant it to that person, none being more prudent, in the presumption of reason, to judge of the fitness of a Guardian for a child, than the father of the child. And thus wardships, which Mr. S●lden says, were before the Conquest, or at least contemporary with it, as appears by the authority he quotes against Higdens supposed contrary assertion, Notes on c. 44. p. 51. Titles honour p. 692. 693. determine, notwithstanding they were instituted at clientes perpetua patronorum profectione defenderentur, ac vicissim eos omni obsequio colerent, as Oldendorpius, Craig, Cujacius, and all the feudists agree, and hereupon though I might take occasion to pass over this Chapter, because the Law and usage in it is by the late Act of Parliament in a great measure, if not wholly obseleted, yet I shall shortly descant on it, because somewhat not unworthy the Readers entertainment may perhaps be culled from it. Tholoss. Syntag. Juri. lib. 15. c. 28. ss 5. Brechrus & Fornet. ad Leg 217. p 472 de verb. sig. Cic. 1. De Invent. 5. Ipsum Scipionem accepimus non infantem fuisse. Cic. de clarit. Orat. 33. Ennead 1. lib. 6. p. 52. Quis put as Infantem talem.] Therefore the Law committed the Heir to custody, because he was Infans, a state of helplessness, ab In, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, & sando, one unable to tell its own wants, or judge what is good for its self. This is not only tempus cum fari possit, which is about the seventh year, but also by our Laws to a greater proportion, and that not in inheritances only, but in other cases; therefore infants and Insipientes are ranked together and opposed magnis & disertis viris, and Infans in the Orator is taken pro non facundo, Orationis facultate destituto: consideration then being had to Infancy as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. A kind of inform thing capable to take whatever art and use impresses on it and fits it to, as Plotinus his words are, there was good reason that infans talis, who was ratione tenurae to do military service, should be educated in actibus bellicis] Indeed naturally in masculine children there is an inclination to manly things, which is the reason that whereas females delight in babies, Neminem excelsi ingenii virum sordida dolectant & humilia, magnarum rerum species ad se vocat & extolliet, noster animus in motu ect, eo mobilior & actuosiar, quo vehementior fuorit. Senec. Ep. 39 clouts, and such like toys, boys are pleased with Drums and Daggers, Swords and Pikes, with Tops and Balls, with running and swimming, all manly exercises, yea and the horse youths mightily delight in; now if this proclivity be furthered by custom and education, Despexit illum, quod non bellicosus vir, & pugnis affuctus; nam cernebat illum juvenem rubicundum & pulchro aspectu, quales martiales homines esse non solent, ques radii solares & assidua desatigatio deformes reddunt. Clatius in 1 Sam. 17. v. 33. Romana Militia mos fuit puberes primo exerceri armis, nam decimo sixto anno militabant, quo etiana solo sub custodibut agebant. Servius in 5 Aentid. Turncbus A'dvers. lib. 26. cap. 22. p. 9●4. it by the assuescency to, causes a delight in and an attainment of the skill of it to perfection. For Soldiers are not expected to be neat and clear-skined, but robust and hardy, such as are harrassed and adusted by continual hardships; which David not being, but seeming to Goliath to be a youth tenderly and delicately to be brought up, was contemned by him: to prevent which the Romans took a care to educate their Puberes martially, and to place them under Tutors to be disciplined accordingly, which Servius and Turnebus specially remember us of, so did the Germans, and so did we ever; which because the Gentry were best able to instruct men in, as being men not only gladio cincti, but gladio dediti, therefore had they the education of their young Tenants, as those that could and would melius instrucre eos] because as they were hardy, valiant, and loyal, so were their Lords whom they attended in war better defended, and brought off with honour and safety. Which brings to my memory that story of the Lord Audley's four Esquires, who attending their Lord in the black Prince his Wars in France, were rewarded with the 400. Mark a year, which the Black Prince rewarded the Lord Audley with, and that with this further testimony from him, That they having right-valiantly defended him, deserved, what he had presented him, to have given them. Et qui majoris potentiae & honoris astimatur.] This is written to show that the Law judged the Lord meetest to have the custody and education of his servants, who must when he is able personally attend him, because his Lord best knows how to breed him, and is probable lest to injure him; for his Lord having a great estate has not the temptation thereto, as in a minuter fortune is more urgent: yet this rule is not so general but there are many flaws to be found in it, and so notorious have the abuses of Wardships and Marriages been, that our Gracious King, as I said before, has quitted them by an Act of 12. c. 24. Et quid utilius est infanti, qui vitam & omnia sua periculis bellicis exponet, quam in militia, arcubusque bellicis imbui. 'Tis true there is nothing more profitable and efficacious, for so the learned explain and join them, Digest. lib. 13. tit. 4 p. 1383. & lib. 8. in. 6. p. 1030. then for any child to be trained up in his youth to that which in manhood he must practise; for that being facile and habitual to him, Lib. 20. tit. 1. p. 1908. causes with his delight, an acquirement of excellency in it. Egregium virtutis apud vos efficium est, voluptates pragustare. lib. De beata vita. Hence proceeds that which Seneca says of the Epiraeans, Whose discipline made them virtuous by a pregastation and fore-contemplation of the pleasure of it; Tubebat eos qui audicbant pictano in Tabula voluptatem pulclierrimo vestiia & ornatu regali in solio sedenzem, etc. Cic. 2. De Finibus. De Cleanthe. for when they intent their minds on War, They do, as Cleanthes says, fam●y victory in all the angustness of it coming towards them, and discard fear, as beneath the aspiration of their courage and constancy, and sedate and exterminate those pests of youth (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc.) vice, unsetledness, wildeness, which are in the a Ethic. c. 1. Philosopher's opinion, the mars and cancres of all their hoped for improvement; for, since youth is the time of desire, ‛ Hey 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, lib. 2. Rhetoric. c. 12. and is spent most an end in travel and observation, what is then treasured up, grows dear and natural to men; for the Philosopher observes well, that Experience makes wisdom, which youth wanting (for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as his words are) use teaching perfection, 6 Ethic. c. 10. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, lib. 2. Rhetor. c. 12. and use being learned by time to accustom a child to manly things, is the only way to make him manly when a man. And this, had it been more the method of those to whom Wards were granted, that they had done as they ought, Alcaeus & Philiscus Pseudo-Epicuraei Roma pulsi, quod essent turpium voluptatum adolescentibus Autores. Aelian. lib. 9 c. 21. (brought up young Wards to Heroic and Brave Sports, and Feats of Arms, by which their minds employed, would have been more fixed on manly things, and more averse to vice and effeminacies, Gassendus lib. 3. c. 4. De vita & maribus Epicuri. Tom. 5. Oper. which are the Hell of youth, and disarray them of all hopes of future perfection) there would never have been such a Party in the Nation, Invenis genere nobilis, manu fortis, sensu celer, ultra Barbarum promptus ingenio. Paterculus Hist. lib. 2. p. 72. Edit. Lipsii. and those of the Gentry, against Wardships, but still they might have continued; but when favourites covered them, not to breed them up bravely and martially, and to make them as Arminius in Paterculus, Noble in mind, valiant in person, quick in action, prompt in design, but to get their estates, and marry their persons to their disparagement, or at least contrary to their fancies and delights, what could be more the abuse of a brave institution then this was? For though I know there is nothing but is abusable, and if abuses in things should always occasion the amotion of them, Tom. 5. Oper. lib. 8, c. 5. De vita Epicuri. nothing, though never so good, would continue, as Gassendus has learnedly observed in the life of Epicurus: yet I cannot but confess, abuse in this, which so often ruined noble youth both fortunarily and personally, is upon occasion just enough punished by determination. Et revera non minime erit Regno accommodum, ut incolae cjus fi●t in armis experti. This is not to be denied, the Common Laws enjoin this: for in the Confessor's Laws 'tis thus said, Debent enim universi liberi homines, etc. secundum feudum suum & secundum tenementa sua arma habert, & illa semper prompta conservaere ad tuitionem Regni & servitium Dominorum suorum juxta praceptum Domini Regis explendum & peragendum. Lambard. p. 135. E Saxoni. Statuimus & firmiter praecipimus, ut omnes Comites & Barones & Milites & Servientes & universi liberi homines totius Regni nostri praedicti, habeaent & teneant se semper in armis & in equis, ut decet & oportet, &c Inter Leges Will. 1. Edit. Twisd. All free men ought to have Arms according to their condition and tenure, and to keep them always in Kelter and ready to defend their King and his Kingdom at the service of the Lords, to whom they are to attend in the Wars, when the King shall summon them. and so in the Laws of the Conqueror 'tis said, We enact and establish, That every Earl, Baron, Knight, Esquire, and all other Freemen of our Kingdom, have and keep in readiness their Horses and Arms, as becomes their quality and degree; and that they be always ready to serve us whenever our necessities shall put us upon commanding their assistance and service: so have later Statutes declared and enjoined, viz. 7 E. 1. 13. E. 1. c. 6. 1 E. 3. c. 6. And the custom of the Nation to train the freeholders' and them to discipline, declares it, that it has ever been held accommodum Regno, that the Incolae Regni should be in Armis experti] And thus they ever have been, and ever I hope will be to defend their King and his Laws, Gassend. Tom. 3. lib. 1. Exercis. Paradoxorum. which they will boldlyest and best do, when they do not fight at random and in confusion, but according to method; for that is true Philosophy which our Text here quotes, Quilibet facit andacter, quod se scire ipse non diffidit, which though some practices confure, yet the rule in the main abides, and so the Chancellor concludes this Chapter. CHAP. XLV. Princeps] Immo cancellary Legem banc, etc. HEre the Chancellor obtains from the personated Prince, a concession in behalf of the Laws of England, that they do wisely provide for the care and custody of Orphans and their fortunes, Lege Theodorerum in Orationibus de Provident. Tom. 4. Operum and especially of that nobilium progenies whom he terms so provided for, that de facili degenerari non potest. Now though the prime and efficacious prevention of degeneration, is the merciful act of omnipotence, which only can put bounds to nature's insolence, and which alone can shore up its declension from its central rectitude yet wise and wary laws are great helps and advantages thereto, not only as they discover the turpitudes of straying from the good old way, but as they punish such strayings with disfavour & terror. Therefore the law & custom of England, looks upon the nobiliam progenies, as the young nobility, not only in the sense Seneca writes of, Bona mens omnibus palet, omnes ad hoc sumus nobiles, animus facit nobilem, cui ox quacunque conditione supra fortunam licet surgere. Seneca Ep. 44. A brave mind becomes every one, and by this we are all noble, the mind makes the Nobleman, by which a virtuous soul will be great in meanness, and free in restraint and bondage; but as they are successors of the Peerage of England, and so presumed to be ad virturem benè à natura compositi. Neminem despexeris, étiamsi circa illum obsoleta sunt nomina, & parum indulgente ad juti fortuna, sive libertini apud vos habentur sive servi sive caterarum gentium homines. Erigile audacter animos, & quicquid in medio sordidi jacet, transilite: exspectat vos in summa magna nobilitas. Lib. 3. the benefic. These that have from the examples of their ancestors, and the rewards thereof, such excitations, cannot but be roused up to great actions, at least, non facile degeneraripossunt; for degeneration is à genere decedere, to become mongrel and rascal; and as there is no value to be made of excrements and deformity, according to that rule of Gajus, a Cicatricum aut deformitatis nulla fit astimatio lib, 6. ad Edict. Provinc. c. 7. so is there no honour due upon any account to degeneration quâ such, and therefore, as the Countryman is said to degenerate, who doth deponere rastra ut sequetur castra, Digest. lib. 9 tit. 3 de noxalibus actionibus p. 1098. and the child to degenerate, when according to Servius b Degener est qui patris vel majorum suorum moribus non respondit, in 2 Aeneid. iIuvenis patriisnon degener●oris Ovid. 3. de Ponto. he doth not appear like to, and worthy of his parents so is the Nobleman said to degenerate, when he does not take in noble principles, and evidence them in noble practices. Hence is it that all defects from notable originals proposed, after which generous copies should be taken, Cic. lib. de Provide. are termed degenerations. Statins tells us of degener alta virtutis patrum, Pro Flacco. Cic. 1 Divinat. and Tacitus of insidiae degeneres, and Pliny of degener humani ritus, and degenerare in feritatem, and Tully of degenerare à gravitate paterna, Plin. lib. 5. c. ●. Proles non degener Senec. Ag●mem. 5, 15 à perenni constitutaque virtute morum, à secta vel Doctore aliquo degenerare. All which confirm, that where so notable helps to virtue are, to accept and improve them is non facile degenerari potest nobilium progenies.] Sed probitate potius, strenuitate, & morum honestate antecessores suos ipsa transcendet, Of Probity, see the notes on the two and twentieth Chapter, to which I add * Illum esse praecipue probum in quo vires imaginationis rationisque prorsus intellectis formata sunt, adeo ut tota vita secundum intelligentiam peragatur, ubi non vitae praeest Daemon aliquis, sed ipse Deus, & scilic et divinus intellectus, tum intellectualis unitas qua est intelligentia quasi auriga caput etc. In 3 Ern●ad. Plot. lib. 4. c. 5. p. 282. Ficinus his note, That Probity consists in likeness to God the only rule of excellency, and in conforming the life to that intellect that he has endowed man with, as the conduct of him in all his worthy and wise actions, which God only will reward and accept; for this, He, that is, one simple being, looks upon, as a sincere act of the intellect, leading to a plain and uncompounded action of virtue and integrity, which being delightful to God, to whose pure nature it is a present, he rewards with approbation and credit with men, in regard of which 'tis termed probity] which is such a tincture of the whole man with goodness, that it will stirt a man up to do, as Probus is reported to do, excellent things with pleasure and delight, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Juliani Aug. Caesaris in Probo. Edit. Cantoclari Tom. 3. Rom. Aug. script. Graec. minorum p. 837. as he is said to build 70 Cities and dispose of the Empire wisely, that little time be reigned, which was but 7 years, and therefore to be favoured of the Gods, whom though they suffered to be afflicted, yet they so far succoured that they made all his Traitors miserable. So that this Probity, is that ballast and temper of the mind, which keeps a man from evil, by a propitiousness of mediocrity, which it insinuates, and thereby guards from all engagement in, or pursuit of unreasonable and licentious things, which Seneca calls a sempiternal bappiness, Semper esse felicem, & sine morsu animi velle transire vitam, ignorare est rerum naturae alteram partem. 4. de Providentia. and a transition of life without any snarl or discomposure, so that a man knows not what the black & passionate misery of nature and life means. O 'tis a rare attainment to be thus adorned, the merchandise of this virtue is better than the merchandise of gold; for it makes us active non malitiae, sed virtutis impulsu & imperio, and sways us to follow what is good purely for that goods sake which is an ample Theatre to itself, Honestum propter nullam aliam. causam quam propter usum sequimur. Seneca 4 Benefic. c. 9 and a sufficient reward to its practiser. Which, though debauched minds, as Messalina's was, think folly and madness of pusillity of spirit; yet will be honourably monumental to its patrons and clients, when their turpitude will render them infamous. Therefore Numerianus though but a schoolmaster by profession, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Dion Cass. lib. 60. p. 686. yet sent by Severus, General into France, deserved, and obtained great honour from Severus; for he did not only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, sending the Emperor great sums of money, but also did like a just and a worthy servant, impart honest and prudent counsel to him, and when his Master would have given him ample honours, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Idem in Severo p. 851. he refused them, and betook himself to a mean country domicil, and small pittance, which Severus day by day allowed him. Here's probity tuitive of innocence, which will make a man not only not covet great things for himself with the injury of others, but perform all his actions in aspero & probo as I may so say, that is, spotlesly and without blemish, pay the age and time a man lives in, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, idem quod 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lipsius in 19 Epist. Sever. the debt of his parts and talents which God has lent him to serve his glory and their good with, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, in aspers, not in reviles, but in currant and beauteous coin, not only in that which is intrinsiquely valuable, In Pandect. reliq. p. 234. Edit. Vascos. but that also which is outwardly grateful, probato opere & approbato, that is, recte & probe consummatum se praebere, Est enim approbare, efficere at probum, rectumque judicetur, id quod quis facit vel dicit. Cic. in Verrem. as Budaeus appositely out of Tully. So that by probitate, Our Text means, a rectitude of inclination, disposing a man to do every thing squarely and above-board as if all the eyes of Men and Angels were upon him. Strenuitate] This points out to that specifique endowment which God gives virtue, Boldness and undauntedness in pursuit of that which is good, and this seems to be the native honour of every thing that's English, that it is not discouraged by repulses, but pursues its end, aut vincere aut mori. For, as our horses will not faint at a tug, but draw many and many repeated pulls at a living tree, which they cannot stir, and lose their eyes rather than discover cool mettle; and our dogs are so bold and braving, that they will fasten upon a Lion once and again, and never be drawn of but by violence, Vowels descript. of England. p. 231 Adag. I'll 2. Cent- 7. p. 635. Lib. 10. c. 5. Lib. 4. Thucyddes. Idem lib. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, protatto at acciperentur vel accuserentur. Turneb. advers. lib. 16. c. 12● p. 533. nor yet easily by that, but will come on a fresh, as often as they are let loose, witness that dog of the Lord Buckhursts, who, before the French King in one day, alone, without any help, first pulled down a huge Bear, than a Pard, and last of all a Lion: so our soldiers are no viri cervini, but strenuous and daring beyond any others. Fortissims viri & milites strenuissimi as Pliny's words are, not only strenuous, as strenuus is accompanied with acer and dirus, but as it is explained by cita and celeris, as they are resolved, and dispute not of the danger, but conclude the action, be the hazard what it will, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Prompt to all performancies, as the Historian says of some, when he opposes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, vigorous activeness, to supine lazyness. This strenuity than is the proof of soldiers, and as the Laws Civil gives to fruitful matrons more privileges, both alive and dead, than they did to barren ones (cujus honoratis ossa venuntur Equis) so did they attribute more to strenuous soldiers then to spiritless ones; for though I know strenuity as an influence of the stars, which are boasted by Astrologers to convey to men fortitude of mind and Herculcan efficacy, be but fabulous and nugatory, In Astrol. lib. 4. c. 9 p. 364. & lib. 3. c. 13. I mean, as to the necessary influence of them, which Picus Mirandula makes good against them: yet do I confess, that strenuity (arising from a natural vigour, alloyed and debased by no guilt or vice) is a very great virtue in a Soldier. And this our Text says the breeding of young Heirs under their Lords, the Nobles, did arrive them at. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Plato in Protagor. p. 240. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Idem. 1 Rhetoric. c. 9 1 Moral. c. 19 Non quicquid mortale est, bonos mores facit. Senec. Ep. 122. Ad Attic. lib. 7. 1 Offis. Pro Muraena. Honestate morum] By this I think the Chancellor intends Fair condition and civil deportment, that kindness and truth of conversation which excludes all elation and falsehood, and abhors mixtures of fraud and levity with that which seems amiable and worthy in men. This Plato is so precise in, That though he expects not men should be irreprebensible, yet he would have them that would be accounted honest to do no evil premediately, and for the once as we say. This Honesty the Philosopher calls, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the good of justice, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the victory and honour of all good men and good things, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the utmost procedure of virtue, beyond which nothing by man can be acted here on earth. This Pleonasm to the honour of Honesty, the Moralist gives the reason of, 'Tis no mortal Principle that moves to Honesty of manners, but a consideration of God above, and conscience within and men without, all Supervisors or Judges of our Behaviours. Upon this ground the Ancients mate the most noble virtues and rewards with Honest as, Tully joins Dignitas with Honestas, and writes of Honestatem & decus conservare, and Honestatibus partis & omni dignitate privare; thus Honest a dicta, nonestus dies, nonesta virgo, nonesta forma, nenesto loco natus, nonesta arma, nonesti exitus, nomen nonestum, mors nonesta, are so frequent to express the best of excellencies by, that there is no doubt but our Chancellor by morum nonestate] means the best and most unspotted accomplishments of generousness, blamelessness of life, 1 Offic. c. 8. Lib. 3. c. 4.19. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Enchyrid. lib. 4. c. 2. p. 380. and exemplarity of conversation, Honest as turpitudini vitae contraria, as Tully and Quintilian often mention them. This Saint Paul calls walking circumspectly and inoffensively, and Epictetus, A freedom and friendship with God, which (saith he) God expects I should walk worthy of; for he has not given me in charge adorning my body, or getting a great estate, or an honourable fame, but he has commanded me upon the penalty of his disfavour and his abhorrence and rejection of me, to be sober and solid, to live orderly and conform to the moral Dictates of reason, avoiding all turpitude as the disluster of his image in me. Indeed, next to that we Christians call Grace, this Honesty of manners is to be valued and endeavoured; for it not only keeps from every extreme, but carries on and continues in such a direct line of mediocrity, as is glorious to behold and imitate: and therefore is so much the more to be pressed on great men, because they are so apt to love and practise licentiousness, and are by it so influential to misled the meaner sort, that without it prevail over them, all good Virtue and Order is like to be discarded the World. For my part, I think sobriety and civility of Manners and Garb the great Ornament of Nobility and Gentry, and conclude, Philostratus in vita Apollonii. lib. 4. c. 10. p. 190. as Apollonius Tyanaeus did of Sparta, They do, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. extend their glory to the Heavens by it, and in the failer of it, Eclipse and drowned them, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, not only in the Sea but on the Land. The consideration of which made Pliny, that grave Author, brand the Aedility of Marcus Scaurus, with mischief to the Commonwealth, because it introduced new toys into it, to the dishonour and abolition of the old fashions and manners. This evil to avoid, Probity, Strenuity, and Honesty of Manners will instruct, while it prefers to men of blood and honour self-denial of vicious appetites, courage in virtuous undertake, and exactness and veracity in demeanours and dealings. This is to become A man without welt or guard, the same he seems to be, and this is the noblest end of generous education. And this our Chancellor says young Lords and Gentlemen are probabler to have abroad then at home, and in the Lord's Houses rather than in their father's house, because 'tis Altior nobiliorque Curia, etc. Antecessores suos ipsa transcendet, dum in altiori, nobiliorique Curia quam in domo parentum illa sit imbuta, etc. The sense of these words is, That as every youth is presumed to excel as his opportunities to excellency are more and meeter to that end, so every age and succession of education gives being to somewhat of additional accomplishment which precedent times and breed did not; for as the World grows older in time, so the men of it grow quicker in invention and more dextrous in action, and thence facilitate more and more that, Actiones nostra, nec parvae sint nec audases nec improbae, lib. 3. de Ira. Hinc Lipsius, Nec viles minutas. que esse actiones nostras vult, incultas nimis, & audaces, media sequamur. In Comment. 64. sect. c. 7. p. 602. Note this. Sequuntur à conversantibus mores & ut quadam in contactus corporis vitia transiliunt, ita animus mala sua proximis tradit. Senec. lib. 3. de Ira. p. 590. which but for their discoveries, would be difficult and immethodique. This is the sense, as I conceive, of this clause, upon the groundwork of which the Chancellor raises a lofty rooff of prospect upon the houses of Noblemen in his time, which as they were Curiae for the multitudes of frequenters to them, so were Nobiles altioresque by the great entertainments both for activity, fashion, and feasting in them beyond what was in the houses of the Gentry; for of old, before and in Hen. 6. time, the state of the Baronage was great, and They were attended not with few but many, not airy and pigmy, but sad and proper servants, well-clad, well-manured, well-fortuned, well-treated. The Majesty of England was seen in every appearance of Nobility, in the Garb, in the Train, in the Table, in the Solemnities, in the Officers, in the Recreations of their Houses, all Arts, Arms, Exercises, Pleasures being there so ordered, that the young fry of both Sexes, thither sent and there accepted to be bred, came away madepeople as to all their after-lustre, and owed all the after-eminency of their lives to the acquirements of those Houses, which the Text calls, Nobiliores altioresque Curiae then their father's houses were. But the times being altered and the Methods of Houses transformed, the Gentry's children now find their father's houses their best and safest residence, and from it obtain the best and only preferment. Principes quoque Regni sub hac Lege regulati, similiter & Domini alii à Rege immediatè tenentes, non possunt de levi in ruditatem lasciviamque labi. As the mean Lords hold of the Chief Lord, so the Chief of their Chief the King; Ego autem (inquit Cicero) Nobilium vita victuque mutato mores mutari civitatum puto, quo perniciosius de Republicae merentur vitiosi summi in Civitatibus viri, quod non solum vitia concipiunt sed cainfundunt in Civitatem; neque solum obsunt, quod ipsi corrumpuntur, sed etiam quod corrumpunt, plasque exemplo quam peccato nocent. Cic. lib. 3. de Legilus. Budaeus in Tandect. p. 97. B. Edit. Vascos. Sarisburiensis de Nugis Curialium. lib. 4. c. 4, 5, 9, 7, etc. and as the heirs of these were during their impuberty, educated in the houses of their Lords, and thereby taught to love and serve them according to the condition of their Tenors and their native degree: so the Noble youth, Principes Regni, the young Lords and Barons, during their Minority, were trained up in the King's Court, as the properest School of Virtue, Prowess, and Heroic demeanour; for as soft raiment is for Prince's Courts, so are all noble qualities best becoming it, and best learned from the virtue and variety of the displays of them in it. For suppose a Court (such as The Solomon of Kings, the First of his Name over England, Basilie. Doron. 1 Book p. 148. of his works in fol. sets it forth) lustrous in a Prince and Chief, who doth, as he adviseth, Remember, that as in dignity he hath erected you above others, so ought ye in thankfulness towards him go as far beyond all others. A moat in another's tye is a beam into yours, a blemish in another is a leprous bile into you, and a venial sin (as the Papists call it) in another is a great crime into you, 2 Book. p. 166. 167. Suppose a Prince such therein as to use his words, Let your own life be a Law-book and a Mirror to your people, that there in they may read the practice of their own Laws, and therein they may see by your Image what life they may lead, in the Government of your Court and Followers in all Godliness and Virtue, in having your own mind decked so with all virtuous qualities, that therewith you may worthily rule your People. And a little after, As to the Government of your Court and Followers, King David sets down the best Precepts that any wise and Christian King can practise in that point; for as ye ought to have a great care for the ruling well of all your Subjects, so ought you to have a double care for the ruling well of your own Servants: Choose (for your service) those within age that are come of a good and virtuous Kin, such as are come of a true and honest Race, and have not had the house, whereof they are descended, infected with falsehood and treason. Delight to be served with men of the noblest blood that may be had; for besides that their service shall breed you great good will and least envy, contrary to that of Start-ups, 2 Book p. 169. ye shall often find virtue follow noble Races. And again, Make your Court and Company to be a pattern of Godliness and all honest virtues to all the rest of the people, Be a daily Watchman over your Servants that they obey your Laws precisely; for how can your Laws be kept in the Country, if they be broken at your car, punishing the breach thereof in a Courtier more severely thin in the person of any other of your Subjects, and above all, suffer none of them (by abusing their credit with you) to oppress or wrong any of your Subjects, etc. And shortly, maintain peace in your Court, banish envy, cherish modesty, banish debauched insolence, foster humility and repress pride; setting down such a comely and honourable Order in all points of your service, Pag. 170. that when Strangers shall visit your Court, they may, with the Queen of Sheba, admire your wisdom in the glory of your House and comely order amongst your Servants. I say, imagine a Prince's Court, not like that Cornelius Agrippa mentions to his friend in those sarcastique and profane words, an non in Inferno es, amice, qui es in Aula ubi Daemonum habitatio, nor like that * Tom. 12. Bibliothecae Magnae part. 2. p. 712. Epist. 14. Petrus Blesensis writes of; but thus exemplary, thus refert with rare persons and religious practices, as this King proposed his Son's Court to be when he should come to it; Conclude this not an Utopia, or a display of Kingly wit and politic sagacity, but what really and truly his wisdom found out to be the Interest of Kings to make, and the Religion of Kings to keep their Courts such. What (when a Court is such and so ordered) can be a readier and more notable means to ingenerate and preserve virtue in youth then Education there, where they shall not take in good and grave Principles as they do, who do Vappambibere è lagenis, Chil. 4. Cent. 5. p. 1090. but ingurgitate them freely as they do, who do E dolio haurire, who are (as we say) at the Wellhead, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, encircled with every thing that is magnificent. I say, in a Court that is thus raryfied and sublimated, (that by the Elixir of Imperial Prudence is turned from tinn and course metal into pure gold, as Frederic the Third, King of Denmark, is reported to have made his Court) no miscarriage almost because no degeneration can be in lasciviam ruditatemve de levi] For the sobriety of such a Court keeps youth from luxury, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Aristophan. in Pluto. Dion. Hist. lib. 48. p. 382, 507, 556. Chil. 2. Cent. 6. p. 610. Dion, lib. 48. p. 382. 13 Rich. 2. c. 3. Stamford's Pleas Crown. p. 38. and the state and fashion of it from rudeness. For though Athens were a place wherein there was so many Artists, that no one Artist was valued, which made him in the Tragedy cry out, That there was no Reward is her, nor any Art flourished there: Yet this Domus Regia] in the Text, called in other names, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, has Rewards and Encouragements for every conspicuity in its Courtiers, and they that compare any places to them, where nobly (and as of old) they were composed, does Rosam cum anemona confer. For as Princes have no fellows in their Dominions, so have their Courts no fellows in the Privilege and Magnificence of them; for besides that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is given them abroad, our Laws make them exempt from ordinary Jurisdiction, and offences done in them contrary to the sacredness of them highly punishable. If a man fight in the King's Court, the King being then and there present, he shall lose his right hand, and be for ever, during his life, imprisoned, and pay fine and ransom at the King's pleasure, which was like to have been the doom of Sir Edmund Knevet in Anno 1541, but that the King remitted it upon his humble submission and entreaty; for these Residencies of the King are accounted Honours by the Statute of 37 H. 8. c. 18. and it being against the Honour of the Sovereign of the Law to have his Laws violated in his presence, the penalty of such Insolence is very severe: and those that make bold to brave and dishonour the order and sacredness of them, are welcomed with a punishment remarkable. Fulbertus reads those words of Psal. xxviii. Magna Bibliotheca Patrum. Tom. 11. p. 101. Adorate Dominum in atrio sancto, by Colite cum in conscientia vestra mundissima, and he gives the reason, ipsa est enim Aula Regalis & habitatio Spiritus sancti. And therefore all persons that approach the King's Court, as they are to be trimly habited, and to the elegantest proportion of their degree; so ought they there to demean themselves soberly and with civility, since Prince's Courts are Paradises of pleasure and state, Alex. ab Alexan. lib. 2. c. 6. Zuinget Theatr. vit. hum. p. 1319. Luitprand Ticinensis lib. 6. c. 2. as might at large (if need were) be made good out of great and grave Authors: which is the reason the Chancellor here in the Text says, Opulentiam, magnitudinemque illus collandare. Dum in ea Gymnasium supremum sit nobilitatis] The Court of the King according to our Text, is not only the sphere of riches and lustre, but the Academy of activity and manliness Gymnasium nobilitatis, A nudis dicta Gymnasia Scalig. lib. 1. Poetic c. 22. says our Master. Now Gymnasium was the place where the Actors of old, Budaeus in Pandect. p. 95. Edit. Vascos. stripped themselves naked, that they might show themselves active, without hindrance. (a) Lib. 2. de Ira. Nutritus in palatio contubernalis & condisispulus Augustorum, non est inflatus superbia, nec alteros homines adduct a front contempsit. sed cunctis amabalis ipsos principes amabat ut ●tratres, venerabatur ut dominos; ministros autem corum & universum ordinem palatii, sic sibi charitate sociaral, ut qui merit, inferiores erant officiis, se pares arbitrarentur. Sanctus Hieronymusde Nebridio ●p, ad Salvinam viduam ejus. Seneca terms Pyrrhus (the institutor of these) maximum praeceptorem certaminis Gymnici, and the caution he chiefly gave his youngsters was, that they should not be passionate and choleric but do as wise Courtiers ought, accipere injurias & refer gratias. Lipsius' his Commentator tells us not what Pyrrhus this was, but Pyrrhus probably it was the Epyraean King that brought in dancing, called afterwards Pyrrhica saltatio. These corporal exercises of running, vaulting, just, wrestling, tilting, and torneaments, though under other names, together with the liberal learned sciences, were always judged so proper for Courts, that nothing was judged more peculiar to them then they; because they took youth off from effeminacy, and intended them on exp●essions of manliness. Budaeus asserts Lycaon the Arcadian, to have delivered them to the Greeks, P. 95. B. in Pandect. Edit. Vascos. who had their Lycaeum, Academia, ●ynosarges, to further the education of youth, and in all these, erudited them according to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, or laws of instituting youth by their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, who were purposely designed to attend them. And how diligent the young fry there were, that they might be notable gamesters, and renowned for their victories. Plautus' minds us in those words, Ante solem exorientem, Racchol. Act. 3. Scen. 3. etc. nisi in Palaestram v●neras, If one came not into the pit before Sun-rise, he was sorely punished: There by running, striving, activity of spear, quaiting or throwing up in the air, fight at Cuffs, playing at ball, dancing, they exercised themselves rather then with Whoring and Kissing, thus he. And surely had not the wisdom of humane nature found it necessary to divert youth from sinful pleasures which engage the mind, they would never have done such honour to these corporal exercises, and the excellers in them as they have done; nor would Historians have taken the pains to write of their ancients Athletae, and Palaestritae, their cursores in stadio, their saltati●nes & pugilum certamina, Zuinger in Theatro p. 2519. their Hyplomachi gladiatores, their equestres concursus & pugnae, as Caelins Rhodiginus, Plato, Sabellicus, Athenaeus, Pausanias, Alexander ab Alexandro, Plutarch, Scaliger, Diodorus Siculus, Faber, have done; and therefore I conclude that they are necessary and advantageous to draw out and keep up the manhood of the mind, Saltationem armatam Curetes docuere, Pyrrichen, Pyrrhus, Sueton. in Ver. c. 12. and to enable men to serve their Countries, with their bodies against their enemies, and justify the Courts of Princes to have exercises of activity. Not only the Pyrrhica saltatio, which, though on foot was somewhat like Tilting, wherein the engagers were armed Cap-a-pee, and the Sicinnis, which was satiric, wherein the dancers clad as satyrs, by the variety and agility of their motions, did provoke by the rareness of their singing, delight: but also that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, or civil exercise of dancing, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, &c Lib. sept. de legibus. which Plaeto calls very honest and harmless dancing, And we may call French and Country dancing, or dancing in Masks, which truly is in its self I suppose so harmless a repast, as nothing can be more harmless, (evil be to them that evil think the jollity no doubt is lawful, if it be used lawfully) And much (in things not mala per se) is allowable to the Courts of Princes, which is not fit to be practised elsewhere, which if some would rightly consider, they would not be so imprudently rigid in their censures, as they, more to their own disgrace then to others disadvantage, impudently are. As then to the suprema Gymnasia of our Text, and the schola quoque strenuitatis, probitatis & moram] which the King's Court is called, I can write nothing punctually as concerning the teaching of Martial seats and activities therein; but near and in the verge of the King's Court, all these exercises have been and yet are taught, though now the young Lords more addicted to travail then heretofore, learn them abroad, whether they go very young, and so these places and masters are not so much taken notice of as then they were. Holingshed p. 366. P. 474. P. 646. 774. P. 807. P. 815. P. 873. P. 805, 806, 896 But that practices of activity have been ever here performed, is plain in our stories, in 18. & 19 E. 3. these were performed at Windsor, in 14. & 15. R. 2. the King kept his Court at the Bishop of London's house in London, and there were justs in Smithfield, and after, dancing and revelling after the Court manner in Henry the 6. time at the Tower, and at Greenwich, so in Henry the 7. time, at Sheen for a month together, within and without the King's Palace: so at Westminster 1. H. 8, 4. H. 8. at Greenwich, and 14. of the same King, there before Charles the fifth, and ever since almost, though of late years Tilting has been disused, yet still other exercises are continued; So that when our Text says, it is scholà strenuitatis, probitatis & morum, it intends such a collection of men of arts and arms, Adag. Chil. 4. Cent. 10. p. 1193. Chil. 4. Cent. 8. p. 1151. True Nobility, whence. of valour and courtyery in it, that every young nobleman that thereunto comes, may (if he have ambition to appear, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a prognate of Jupiter's, be excellently adorned with all compliments of honour) and not be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, not one that has no evidence of his nobility, but his bare descent; for, as it is not bulk that declares the man, but spirit and valour, so is it not name and equipage that publishes a nobleman, but a brave mind and a brave courage, See Sir Edward Waterhouse, my Uncle's Epistle to the Earl of Essex, in Holingshed. p. 1266. a staunch virtue, and a not to be impeached fidelity: these are verae nobilitatis insignia, and therefore are by our Chancellor annumerated as those things which do honour and illustrate a Kingdom. Quibus honoratur regnum & floret] This is a great truth which all experience subscribes to, that strenuity of action, probity in mind, and honesty of manners is the chief glory of any Kingdom. This I think, Moses according to our Texts sense intimated that 4 Deut. 6. where he charges Israel to keep all his enactions, which God, who had so highly deserved of them, had enjoined them observance of; For this says he, is your wisdom and your understanding in the sight of the nations, which shall hear all these statutes, & say, surely this great nation is a wise and understanding people. For virtue being the corner stone of Governments, and the firmament of its lustre, no honour is to be had or kept without her, nor is the truly any where, but where she shows herself in the fruits of courage, abstinence from turpitude, and zeal for propagation or order, which three are the leures of greatness to any people; for valour gains ground, and makes the purchase, & prudence orders acquisitions by equity of administration, whereby it cements minds so together, that they as one man join in propagation of common interest, raising by the art of loyalty, such a rampire and defence about them, as no art or assault of their enemies shall subvert, and darts such rays of conviction on beholders, that they cannot but admire and desire to be under the roof of such politic artificers, as build both stately and securely, yea, and makes the way open for merit to be rewarded, when servility and abjectness of condition makes unchearful subjects, and such as, though they are bound 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, With golden fetters; yet would think themselves more happy to be free: not as to dependence on and loyalty to their Prince (for that is the best Charter and evidence for orderly political freedom) but as to that Vassalage which is the effect of absolute and unlimited will, Sarisburiensis lib. 4. de nugis curialium c. 1, 2, 3, 4. Quanto quisquo promptior obsequio, tanto citius honoribus & opibus extollitur. Tacirus. Florere authoritate & gloriae. Cic. Ep. ad Nigidium. Florere exis●imatione Cic. pro Fronteio. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. dictum Peryandri Eras. Adag. Chil. 2. Cent. 2. p. 473. which being no method of our Princes to their subjects, produces in the subjects, thus paternally treated, Strenuity, Probity and honesty of manners, to such a degree as makes the Kingdom in which they are, honorari & florere, flourish in its self, and be honoured abroad by others; for there is nothing acquires such benediction of God, on men studious to thrive by just and good endeavours, as justice, honesty, and persistence in their well and judiciously chosen way, which as they are first commended to the affections and made connatural by good breeding and right principling in youth, so are often visible in those enlargements, which manhood in the ripe and prudent experience of it, occasions men to evidence, and by it to be renowned. For since wisdom makes a man's face to shine, and education is the stirrup to help up into that faddle, where, well seated, we sit notwithstanding all the menaces of dismount, that the various and cross accidents of life suggest to us, it is the readiest course to attain that, by such company and conversation, as are greatest masters of it; and this being to be observed in the houses of Lords for young gentlemen, and the Court of the King for young Lords, as therein to breed them was the custom in our Chancellors time, the Conclusion of our Text is as in all other Chapters, that this method of England in this as in other parts of it, was best for England, while it was the use so to do. And what the difuse or other appointment of their custody and education will better to after ages produce, then that did to our times let after ages tell when they know, We that know but in part, can but prophecy in part. To God to whom the event of all things is known, and by whom overruled I refer it, and so I conclude this Chapter. CHAP. XLVI. Tunc Cancellarius. Sunt & alii casus nonnulli in quibus differunt Leges audictae, etc. TO the prementioned cases, wherein the two Laws in the manner of their administration differ, our Chancellor subjoins that of manifest Theft and of ingrateful Libertines; in both which Cases the Civil and Common Laws give different judgements. Leges Civiles judicant Furtum manifestum per redditionem quadrupli. Furtum] the Lawyers derive from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, id est, auferendo contrectandoque; Alciat. ad Legem 183. p. 392. de verb. signifi●. Paulus jurisconsult. Alciat. Disput. lib. 1. c. 10. Tholoss. Syntagm. lib. 37. c. 1. Digest. lib. 17. tit. 1. hence they define it, Contrectatio rei alienae mobilis & corporalis, frandulenta, invito Domino, gratiâ lucrandi rem ipsam vel usum ejus vel possessionem. It must be Contrectatio, for the animus intercipiendi is nothing as to men, if contrectatio be not; so is the Gloss, sine contrectatione furtum fieri non potest, And rei alienae; for in propria non committitur furtum. Mandati vel contra Gloss. non r●ddidis. p. 1674. Therefore the matter of the Theft must be the right of another, and mobilis & corporalis it must be, Tholoss. lib. 37. c. 1. & 6. & 12 lib. 11. c 28. Digest, lib. 17. tit. 1. Mandati p. 1674. Digest. lib. 18. tit. 1. H. Dubitatio in Gloss. Tholoss. lib. 37. c. 6. & 12. & lib. 11. c. 28. Qui, ultra modum, tempus vel locum à Domino constitutum utitur, furtum faci● quia invito Domino facit. Tholoss. lib. praenotat. quia hae, capi, ferri & moveri possent; for although Aulus Gellius tells us Sabinus delivered it, Non hominum tantum, neque rerum moventium quae auferrioccultè & surripi possunt, sed fundi quoque & edium fieri furtum: yet the more currant judgement is, that Thefts must be the re mobili & corporali, and then it must be fraudulenta, for animus fraudendi maxime inspicitur, & non sit furtum sine affectu furandi, as also it must be invito Domino, not only when first taken, but when it is kept longer than his time prefixed; so also if it be taken or kept with his privity and consent, it is not theft, but a theft it is if otherwise, Furtivum non est quod sciente Domino inclusum est. Paulus lib. 3. ad Neratium. Digest. lib. 24. tit. 1.63. p. 2217. because it's done animo lucrandi rem ipsam, vel usum ejus, vel possessionem, Furtum facit, scienter accipiens indebitum; and no man that takes what is not his own, but knows it to be another's, and takes and keeps it to the injury of the right owner, Digest. lib. 4. tit. 9 but is a thief, and this makes the Theft: for Theft is not computed inter casus fortuitos, Baldus Digest. lib. 9 tit. 3. ad Legem Aquiliam. but it supposes a premeditation and an ill mind to the owner of it, which they call not only damnum cum corruptione rei, Manifestas fur est, qui in faciendo deprehensus est, & juxta terminos ejus loci unde furatus est, comprehensus est. vel antequam ad cum locum quo destinarat porvenire. Paulus lib. Sentent. De Furibus. but furtum cum amotione rei. Now these Furta were either Manifesta, such as are in the very fact, in which the thief is termed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, hoc est, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, with the thing stolen about him, or he that is apprehended within the bounds of the place whence it was stolen; or else not manifest ones, Q●asi ad manus s●ris sta●s. Cic. pr● Ro●cio. that is, such as though they are proved, yet they came cleaverly off, and went smoothly away with, as we use to say: thus Tully expresses manifestum furtum by clarum & apertum, Pro● Cluentio. and he calls it, Manifesto comprehensum & deprehensum facinus. Hence because Manifestation is the act of light, Authors express every thing of palpability and obviousness by Manifestum; Manifestus Amator, libido manifesta, pietas manifesta, signa manifesta, Budaeus in Pand. Reliq. p. 210. manifesta caedes, etc. These Thefts were (says our Text) differently punished, in old time, amongst the Nations, I suppose with death in the party stealing, and with the bondage of his Companions, Gen. 44.9. to which the brethren of joseph had probably an eye when they willingly proposed to the Lord of Egypt, that With whomsoever of them the money for the Corn be found, both let him die, and we also will be my Lords bondmen. I know there are learned men that make this only a bold offer of innocence, which knowing itself free, condescends to the hardest terms to vindicate itself; and hereupon they rank it amongst the follies and vapours of these sons of jacob, who, as Israelites, would seem to be more abstemious, and not so temptable as other men, but saving their greater judgements I humbly conceive it to have respect to the Custom of the Nations, Si liber furti coarguatur, servire cogitur. Lex Lyciorum apud Nicolaum. lib. de Moribus G●ntium. perhaps Egypt, thus to punish theft, which punishment, though they were strangers they willingly condescend to, nor was it strange they should, Alciat. in Legem 42. p. 121. who knew theft was a notable sin against the Moral Law, and that justice which God has implanted in every man, Plato lib. 9 de Legibus lib. 936. and when it was so manifest as theirs was, could not but expect the punishment of manifest theft, Gajus lib. 7. ad Edit. Provin. which was death, especially, if in the night the thief were taken in the house; Digest. lib. 9 tit. 2. p. 1056. so Plato appointed, and the Law of the twelve tables, and so the theft per lancem & licium, Launce & dicebatur apud antiquos, quia qui furtum ibat quaerere, in domum alienam licio cinctus intrabat, lancemque ante oculos tenebat, propter matrem familia aut virginum praesentiam. Turneb. advers. lib. 30. c. 23. (like our night-robbers, who come in Vizards and with cords to bind men, while they ransack the house,) was punished as manifest theft; now, because theft is often in small things, in which, Acursius thinks, it ought to be prosecuted, modice puniendo, and not capitaliter; therefore the Law a Tholoss. Syntag. Juris lib. 37. c. 1. ss. 23. appoints this fourfold restitution of the thing stolen. Indeed God himself appointed restitution in case of theft, so in the 22 of Exodus and the first verse, Five oxen are to be restored for one Ox stolen, and four sheep for a sheep; Alciat in L●gem 9 De verbor. signifis. p. 27. and the principal with a fifth part of the value in a trespass, Levit. 5.26. etc. 6. v. 5. Numb. 5 7, but in cases of small things stolen, manifest theft was to have a fourfold restitution, so King David determined against himself, that Vriah's lamb taken from him by violence, should be restored fourfold, 2 Sam. 12.6, which was according to the Law in Exodus; answerable to this was Zacheus his protestation, Luke 19.8. Joseph. lib. 16 Antiq. Judaicarum. c. 1. If I have taken from any man by forged Cavillation, I restore him fourfold. This Law continued amongst the jews till Herod's time, when josephus tells us, he altered it, and appointed the thief absolutely to be sold. Grotius says, from this Law of Exod, c. 22 the Greek and Roman Law took their prescripts; Grotius in Luca 19.8 and; that if a thief before he had made away the Matter of his theft did before arraignment repent of it, Manifestum furtum, quod nulla alia probatione indiget. Tholoss. loc● pracitato, ss. 13. and restore it entire, and a fifth part more with it, he was absolved according to the text of Numb. 57 but if the thing stolen were alienated, than he was to restore fourfold, Verbum reddendi, pr● dare. Digest. lib. 3. tit. 1. p. 707 that is, to give him four times more satisfaction than the injury done him comes to. To this quadruple, I think our Lord alludes in the Luke 6 38. Good measure shall men return into your bosom, Mensura justa, coacta, succussata, superfluens. Grot. in locum. pressed down, shaken together, and running over; four degrees of measure alluding to the fourfold restitution that the directed manifest theft was to have. Et furtum non manifestum per dupli compensationem expiari] Gajus lib. 1. ad edictum AEdilium Curulium c. 45. Non manifestum est quod manifestum non est, say the Lawyers, that is where the thing does not prove itself, but needs some other proofs; Digest. lib. 21. tit. 1. for this being capable of evasion and excuse or something in mitigation, In duplum condemnatur. Spelman Council p. 358. 367, 372 is allowed but a twofold compensation. Thus I find it among the Laws of King Alfred, and so it was ever among the Ancients, Arist. Problem. sect. 30. c. 14 Aristotle gives the Law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. If any one stole out of the baths or theatre, or the Forum, he was to be put to death, Plato lib. 9 De Legibus. but if from a private house, he was to restore only twice the value, A Gellius lib. 11. c. 18. so also Plato, and Agellius confirm the law to be. Sed Leges Angliae, neutrum facinorum illorum mitius quam committentis morte puniri permittunt, dummodo ablati valor duodecim denariorum valorem excedat. This I suppose was the law before the Conquest, that Felonies exceeding the value of 12. pence should be punished with death, Cestassavoir que nul ad judgement de la mort, si non larceny, etc. ●e ne passont 12 deniers de sterling. Myrrh. Justic. c. 4. ss. Fleta lib. 1. c. 38 De Far●o for this is grand larceny oustre le value de 12 pence, says the 3. E. 1. c. 15. Answerable hereto is Fleta, who adds, that pro modicis delictis petty felonies, pissories, loss of the ears, and brandings with a red hot Iron were invente●; Ex pluralitate tamen, & cumule modicorum delictorum poterit capitalis scutentia generdri. Idem lib. prevot. for though every little may make a much, or in Fleta's words, many small larcenyes may make a great and capital one: yet for one single theft if not exceeding the value of 12. pence no death of man can be. Sir Edward Cook gives us much learning concerning this, 2 Instit. p. 190 Exposit. of c. 15. of the 1 West. and 3 Institut. pleas of the Crown c. 47 so does Master Stamford, which I have enlarged upon in the notes on the twenty seventh Chapter; for since the Law of England, is a Law of justice, and justice requires defence of property and order, See the Statut. 23. H. 8. c. 1. 32 H 8. c. 3. 1 E. 6. c. 12. which theft violating, and thiefs growing so loose, that they make a mock of sin, and delight themselves tabulis lusoriis, De Tabula Lusoria, & lusu latronum leg● Turnebum advers. lib. 27. c. 3. p. 1007. with which they trifle out the day till the night come, wherein they act their villainy, and Bulas like, are so Proteused, that they by their deluding ingenuity, go invisibly, and care not what mischief they engage in, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dion. lib. 76. p. 865. I say, this, so pestiferous to the property and possession of rightful owners, the law is most severe against, whether it be manifest theft, that is, the thief taken in the fact, or not manifest, that is, proved by witnesses against the accused person, if it do exceed 12 pence 'tis death. For though many offences are clergyable, Stamford. lib. 2. c. 42 yet not felonies of theft; For where people are warlike in nature, and given to theft, not to punish it capitally, Civ●s furibus non parcunt; qui surti fuerit accusatus, vel levem suspicionem habuerit, inauditus suspenditur, ●ec purgandi sui tenepus datur, etc. Ro●ellius in Pymand. De Oppidis, Castris, & Villis, Austriae, lib. 5. come. 11. dial. 5. p. 330 is to favour it more than in relation to order aught, which the Saxons our Ancestors considering, were so rigid against theft, that to be even accused of it was decreed capital, and that by hanging the thief, which a Fartis suspendium addidit, qud poenà nunc per Europam utimur. Lud. Vives lib. 7. De causis corruptarum artium. Vives says, the Emperor Frederick the third first exampled Christendom to. Nor is the Law of England to be accounted cruel herein, for that it does but what the wisdom of Legislation suggests necessary to obviate national impieties, and to secure the order of national justice, which, other Nations as well as ours, have in the very case of theft, so also doomed. Quicquid antiqui operis ex are & murmore suit, quicquid oculos potuit delectare, sublatum aut vi revulsum ad naves deferri jussit, ut plus ornamentorum unus septem dierum spacio urbi detraxerit quam ●arbari 258. annorum spacio. Sabellicus lib. 4. Ennead. 8. For though great and victorious thiefs, that with the Emperor Constantine the third, ransack Rome of all its bravery more in seven days, than the barbarous nations had, or could do in 258 years, go off with the preys of stately Capitols, renowned Arsenals, well arrayed Warderobes, vast Treasuries, and are flattered, when so they do, by the Oratorious Panegyrics of adulating admirers; yet, the thiefs that are masterable by justice, are fatally accounted with: Lib. 6. c. 10. E● lib. 3. c. 5. Nicolaus de moribus Gentium apud Stobaeum serm. 42. Bonfiaius so among the Indians, Phrygians, Scythians, so b A. Gellius lib. 11. c. 18 Draco punished theft, and for it c Alex ab Alexand. lib. 3. c. 18 Fabius adjudged his Son to die, so did Sertorius put to the sword a whole plundering Cohort, and d Sabellic. lib. 8. Ennead. 6 Mark Antony put to death the thief that stripped Brutus his body, and Pescentius Niger, a soldier but for taking away a henn from a woman, and gave her ten hens for it. Fulgosus lib. 2. Capite de re militari Sundry other examples of severe inflictions on theft, johannes Magnus, Ludovicus Vives, jovius, Fulgosus, and others, furnish us with, Is latrociniis infamis esse, Strabo lib. 1. Latrocinari & rapto vivere solitos, sed & fortassis gentis vitium hoc fuit. Alciat. disput. lib. 3. c. 20. p. 189. all which show, that theft is an odious sin, and the Law of England in punishing it with death, doth but what other wise lawmakers have in the like kind done. For since perhaps, our Nation has ever been addicted to theft, and as amongst the Isauriaus, so with us, Laws against theft, as the reigning sin ought to be tart and fatal, the Laws so made and executed, are worthily magnifyed; for as much as theft does not only rob the living, but even the dead, Si quis to●●at de Chrysippi libris quae aliena sunt, vacua illa charta relinquetur. Zuingeri Theatr. vitae human. vol. 16. lib. 2. p. 2389. not of their sheets of worth and wit, in which, if their mortal lives had their due, they would be in a sort immortalised (as Thestorides did Homer's verses, whilst he bribed Homer to be silent in his arrogation of them to be his; and Chrysippus, when from Eurypides he stole those notions that Apollodorus says he got his name by; and Menander, whom Eusebius and Porphyrius charge to be the thief of the ancient Poets; and Flavius the Libertine of Appius Claudius, by purloining his Master's Works, insinuated into the people so far by it, that they made him an Aedile and Tribune.) I say, these and others by theft do not only rob the dead of their sheets of learning, but even of their winding-sheets, as that miscreant a Cook Pleas Crown. 3 Instit. p. 110. Bree●wood. lib de N●mmis judaeorum c 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Waserus' lib 2. de Nummis He braorum c. 16. Haynes did (furto inaudito) in the 10 of King james: good reason is there that such Villainy should doom to death the Actors of it, Dummodo ablati valor duodecim denariorum valorem excedat. Item Libertinum ingratum Leges Civiles in pristinam redigunt servitutem; sed Leges Angliae semel manumissum, semper liberum judicant, gratum vel ingratum. Libertini sunt qui ex justa servitute manumissi sunt. Gajus lib. 1. Instit. Marcianus lib. 1. Instit. Digest. lib. 1. tit. 5. p. 88 Tholoss. Syntag. lib. 14. c. 7. ss. s. This is the last instance wherein the Laws do vary in their sentence, that of an ingrate Libertine. Now a Libertine was such an one as after just service was manumitted, so Gajus defines him: Marcianus makes Libertines to be one of the degrees of freemen, as Ingenuous men are the other. Three sorts of Libertines the Laws of old mention, as there were three degrees of Liberty or Manumission: 1. The Plena Libertas, which was in their being enfranchised Citizens of Rome. 2. Latin Libertines, ex Lege junia Norbana, which after was taken away. 3. The Dedititia Libertas, which was ex Lege Aelia Sentia, which also was taken away: which way soever then they became Libertines, the Law looked upon ingratitude in them as monstrous and pernicious. This should seem to be one of the Laws of the twelve Tables, for Schottus writing on that Law, In Notis ad lib. 6. Controu. Senecz, p. 253. That every man might dispose of his own, mentions this exception, nisi sit nequam & prodigus, & decoctor h●res est futurus, aut parentibus non obediens, aut denique ingratus; cum & servus manumissus ob ingrati crimen in servitutem retrahatur, so Herald Suitable to this are all the Instances of punishment on Ingratitude; Tholoss. lib. 6. c. 119. p. 21. De rebus & feudis. & lib. 12. c. 6. ss. 5. lib. 28. c. 15. ss. 7. lib. 34. c. 3. ss. 4, 5. lib. 32. c. 16. ss. 5. lib. 11. c. 6. ss. 2. for Ingratitude being not only a Rebellion, and so as the sin of Witchcraft, but also an abuse of love and freedom, is therefore so vehemently persecuted, because it is an unnaturality inconsistent with reason and moral justice, which caused the Athenians to enact that memorable Law, Supersedeo, inquit, te habero Civem tanti muneris impium astimatorem, nec adduci possem ut credam urbi utilem quem domi scclestum cerno. Abi igitur & esto servus, quoniam liber esse nescis. Valer. Max lib. 2. c. 1. wherein the party, who did enfranchise any one who was unworthy that favour, did supersede his enlargement, and call him to his bondage as the punishment of abused goodness. For of all the vices none more unpardonable than ingratitude, since it's the womb of all enormity, God himself is offended with it, and therefore reproaches Israel's immemory of his mercies, Deut. xxxii. 18. jer. two. 32. jer. xxiii. 27. Hosea. iv. 6. and his people's wantonness in the high-noon of them, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Sanct. Chrysost. apud Stobaeum Serm. 59 p. 230, and threatens to bring their old miseries upon them, jer. xvii. 4. So amongst men ingratitude is reckoned as the greatest provocation, because it takes occasion to return good with evil; hence becomes it a deformity not in all persons only, Ipsa Respubls. quam ingrata in optimos, & devotissimos sibi fuerit; Camillum in exilium misit, Scipionem dimisit, exulavit post Catilinam Cicero, diruti ejus penates, bona direpta, factum quicquid victor Catilina fecisset. Senec. lib. 5. De Benefic. p. 95. but also in whole Nations guilty of it. The jews God sent his Son to, and that unspeakable mercy they contemned, and cried down the holy one and the just, desiring a Murderer, and God cursed them with blindeness more than Cimmerian. Hereupon, because Ingratitude is so execrable, Seneca indicts Rome of it, as a spot and blemish she could not easily wipe off, which considered, the Persians a wise Nation punished no offence more grievously than this, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Xenophon. lib. 1. de Instit. Cyri, p. 4. & 5. which they thought was an unnaturalness to God, the Country, our Parents, our friends and ourselves; and therefore abominable to all these: which makes me to conclude, That reduction of Libertines to servitude, because they are ingrateful, is a most just and necessary Law for those places and persons over whom it is particularly received to predominate. Yet the Law of England is otherwise, for though it hate Ingratitude, ranking it amongst those sins which are in the very forlorn and main Battalia of Hell; yet when servitude was in being with us, it punished it not with reduction to servitude, because that is an undoing what the Law has done, and a playing fast and loose with the states and conditions of men, which are bond while manumission, and after that continue free. And perhaps our Law is so consistent in this, from the apprehension it has of God's abhorrence of the jews cruelty and hypocrisy in Ieremiah's time; for God having commanded them that every man should let his manservant, jer. 34.10. and every man his maid servant go free, that none should serve themselves of them any more, which they obeyed, and let them go: But afterwards (says the Text) they turned, and caused the servants and the handmaids, whom they had let go free, to return, and brought them into subjection for servants and for handmaids; which act of recess from their lenity and justice to their servants, God took so ill, that he for it, Proclaimed Liberty for them, to the Sword, to the Pestilence, and to the Famine, and I will make you to be removed into all the Kingdoms of the earth, vers. 17. By which sad return of their cruelty and unmercyfulness, we are told that God loves no double dealing, but delights in righteousness persisted in, and mercy thoroughly extended. And this I suppose may be some ground of the reason of the Law, which manumits once for all; for if the Lord does enfranchise his Villain, he must be free, revillained he cannot be, Because the Lord's act shall be construed most forcibly against himself: and no new Villainage can be made, Sect. 172. c. 11. licet gratus vel ingratus sit Libertinus, saith our Text. For as when Villainage was in England, Villains could not out their Lords of their rights in them by a Writ of Libertas probanda, but that their Lords, notwithstanding such Writs, might seize the bodies of such Villains, Stat. 25 E. 3. c. 18. and obtain their servage, 1 R. 2. c. 6. c R. 2.2. so when Villains are libertined to reduce them by a retrospection to their Vassalage, was (I suppose) utterly against the Law, which accounts once well done ever done, and forfeits freedom upon no account but disloyalty. Alii quoque sunt hujusmodi casus, etc.] These and sundry other cases there are wherein the variation of the Laws do evidence themselves; but the Quotation of these, as the Chancellor, so his humble Commentator enlarges not upon, because they are not of very great moment, nor require any elaboration in the treaty of them, but only serve to the compleatness of the Dialogue, in which the Prince is introduced by our Text- Master in the following words. CHAP. XLVII. Princeps. Nec expedit, cancellary, in his multum sudare, etc. THIS Chapter is but as some others before, transitional to what is subsequent; for the Chancellor having in the 46. Chapter showed the discrepancy of the Civil and Common Laws in determination of Theft and Enfranchisement, in which he conceives the Common Laws to be more terrible to Theft and more indulgent to freedom then the Civil Laws are. The personated Prince, satisfied with the main of his assertion, requests his preterition of what might further be alleged in this case; and to proceed to satisfy him why the Laws of England, tam bonae, because so just, tam frugi, because so temperate and suitable, tam optabiles, because so tuitive of freedom, which every man naturally loves, 21 H. 8. c. 13. are not taught in Universities as Civil and Canon Law is. This is the sum of this Chapter. CHAP. XLVIII. Cancellarius. In Vniversitatibus Anglia non docentur Scientiae, nisi in Lingua Latina. AS Mechaniques and Societies of trading-men had among the Greeks and Romans their Corpora, Corpora omnium constituit Vniariorur●, Lupinariorum, Caligariorum, etc. omnino omnium artium, hisque ex sese Defensores dedit. Aelius Lamprid. in Severo, p. 215. or Guilds, or Halls, whereto they resorted, and in which they met for consultation about their Art; so have the Liberal Sciences had their places of Convention, called by some Academies, by others Schools, and here Universities; so Stat. 3. H. 8 c. 11.14, 15 H. 8 c. 5. 13 Eliz c. 12. 18 Eliz. c. 6. 2 & 3. Phil. & Mary c, Tandem in hoc convenerunt communiter, ut Regi nunciaretur ex parte Vniversitatis quod negotium dilationem caperet. M. Paris in H. 3 p. 905. 15. 13 Eliz. c. 20. in which mention is made of Universities, as a name not only of number and multitude, but of that which is unum totum; so Matthew Paris mentions Vniversitas, Tholoss. lib. 35. c. 1. ss. 18. lib. 1. c. 13. ss. 8. lib. 3. c. 1. ss. 2. lib. 23. c. 16. ss. 7. lib. 17. c. 6. ss. 48. and so the Civilians take it sensu complexo & capaci, for Tholossanus his words are, Vniversitatis dicis ca tantum quae Communia sunt municipibus ejus loci, vel Civitatis, ut Stadia, Theatra, Digest. lib. 3. tit. 4. ss. 7. p. 409. lib. 1. tit. 21. p. 55. Bartholus Digest. lib 4. tit. 3. p. 517. Digest. lib. 3 tit. 4. p. 405. Lib. 6. tit. 1. p. 823. & lib. 18. tit. 1. p. 1732 in Marg. Forner. in Legem 15. p. 45. & in Legem 145. p 332. Pascua, Nemora, & id genus similia: so that Universities, in our Texts sense, are places set apart and privileged for learning and learned men, there to reside and study for the service of the Nation in Church and State. And as Universities in general are designed for this use by the bounty of Kings and sovereign Princes (vere carum Parents & conditores, saith a Choppinus lib. ●. De D●manio Francia, p. 586. Choppinus) so have the Vniversitates Angliae been, and accordingly have proved Feraces Ingeniorum & Artium, not only to a proportion with, but to degrees beyond any other Universities (I think) in any Nation of the World. In these, saith our Text, Docentur Scienti● Liberales] These Liberal Sciences the Ancients had a great value of: Meritoria Artificia sunt ha●tenus utilia, si praparant ingenium, non detinent. Ep. 88 Seneca calls them Meritorious Artifices, very profitable if they serve for preparation to greater things, and do not entangle and detain the mind in them, An tu quicquam in istis credis boni, quorum Professores turpissimos omnes ac fla9●tiosissimos cernis. Idem codem loco. prejudicating it against all other necessary acquirements; for though he were a very great Admirer of and proficient in these Liberal Sciences, yet he forbears not to avocate men from doting on them further than is convenient, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, lib. 6. de Moribus c. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Lib. 2. cap. 5. ‛ H 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, lib. 1. Metaph. c. 1. Tamdiu enim istis immorandum est, quamdiu nihil animus agere majus potest. Rudimenta sunt nostra non Opera. Quare Liberalia Studia dicta sunt vides, quia homino libero digna sunt; Caterum unum Studium vere Liberale est quod liberum facit, hoc sapientia; sublime, fort, magnanimum; catera pasilla & puerelia sunt. Senec. Ep. 88 Because they are subject to abuse, and are often inoperative in their greatest Masters as to those ends of virtue which they were primarily intended to promote. For since the Philosopher calls them, Habits and means to demonstrate things, and says, The chief end and noblest perfection of them, consists in their conduct of men to a wisdom of mediocrity in all their actions, they are to be cherished as the fruits of practical experience, by which a right judgement is made of things, and a right method prosecuted to the obtaining of what is excellent in them, or what excellence may be wrought in us by them: for this is the reason why the Arts professed in them are called Liberal Sciences, because they rightly understood and improved, deliver the mind from the bondage of ignorance and the villainage of passion and error, and make it wise, sublime, courageous, generous, and what not, which is excellent and unvulgar. Concerning the number of these, some variation there is between the calculate of Antiquity and later times; nay even in the later computation, * In Muscei usis, p. 401. Claudius Clemens reckons among the Liberal Arts and Sciences Architect, Hunting, Hawking, Printing, Graving, Painting, etc. which I think are not admitted but under other heads by most of the Learned besides himself. The Ancients by the Liberal Arts understood Gymnàstica, corporal exercises preparatory to soulary ones; Lege Muretum in Ep. 88 Senec. p. 390. Edit. Mag. Rhetoric, which made men express their minds aptly; Poetry, which excited and magnified the fancy to all height of conception and variety of fancy; Arithmetic, which taught the use of Numbers; Geometry, which treated of the position and circumference of the Earth; a I. Sarisburiensis lib. 1. c. 6. de nugis Curialium, & lib. 2. c. 18. Music, which taught the use of Notes and Sound; Philosophy, which treated of the whole latitude of Nature, Morality, Ethiques, Politics, Oeconomiques; these were the liberal Sciences which in them we read of. But these I think, though in effect what our Text says, Docentur in Vniversitatibus] are yet not set down in the very method they are mentioned, there professed; for the Liberal Sciences therein are, Divinity, Physic, the Civil and Canon Law, Philosophy, History, the Mathematics, Music, which, together with all the Appendices to them, are professed there and taught therein. Nonnisi Lingua Latina] That is, The Latin Tongue is the most general language in which their Lectures and Authors are read and written; for though Hebrew was the language in which all the Arcana of wisdom was written, as after the Greek tongue, when its Empire flourished, was the most admired: yet in the Triumph of the Latin Empire, and its prevalence over Nations, all applications were in the Victor's language, and all the Sacrifices of Servility to the Idol of Success, though it were really short of that which gave way to it. Seneca seems to avouch this, who, though a pure Latinist, and one whom partiality would have inclined, if ingenuity were consistent therewith, to admire the Latin tongue, which was in a sort his Mother-tongue; Quanta verborum nobis paupertas, immo egestas, nunquam magis quam hodierno die intellexi. Ep. 58. Cassanaeus Catal. Gl. Mundi, p. 508. yet heroiquely professes, That it was but narrow and short, not capacious enough to admit the expression of his mind in. But alas the Latin tongue is since advanced, for to that prisca & condita Latina which the Aborigines and eldest Latines under juno and Saturn used, and that which the Italians used from Latinus and the other Tuscan Kings, in which Latin the Law of the twelve Tables was wrote, and the Roman Latin, which after the determination of their Kings, they used under their Aristocracy, to all these, mixed Latines (which came in, when the Empire had many Nations admitted into it, who brought their Idioms into use with them) made addition by which though the language may be decocted and somewhat abated in the strenuity and elegancy of it, yet is it more capacious and large as those additions have been contributions to it: and though the generalness of speech be not so elegant, yet the Latin of learned men's writing and speaking is yet polite and truly Roman. Itasentio & saepo disserui Latinam linguam non mod● non inopem ut vulgo putarent, sed locupletiorem etiam esse quam Graecam. 1 de Fiv. 15. I know Tully, that Eloquentiae humanae flumen, is no friend to the opinion that the Greek tongue is more copious than the Latin, but calls it a vulgar opinion, asserting the Latin more copious, which whether it be or no I leave to the learned to judge, concluding it in our Chancellour's sense, excellent as it is in the general the learned University-language, In quibus docentur Scientiae. Et Leges Terrae illius in triplici lingua addiscuntur, viz. Anglica, Gallica, & Latina. These Leges Terrae what they are, I have showed in the Notes on the ninth Chapter. In that they are said to be taught and learned in three Tongues, it shows the mutations States are subject to, and the different Methods they take in different times; for the old Saxon Laws were written in the Saxon tongue, and probably the Customs of England, called our Common Laws, being contemporary therewith were recorded in Saxon: but when the Conqueror came and prevailed, then in came the French, with a powder as we say, and every thing was done and said a la mode de France, Non permiserunt ipsi eorum Advocatos placitare causas suas, nisi in lingua quam ipsi noverunt] that is, in French; and this he did to declare his Conquest, since change of Laws and Language are tokens of plenary Conquest● For though I know the Conqueror retained and confirmed the major part 〈◊〉 Common Laws, Sir Ed. Cook Preface to the 3 Re● waving those parts of them only wherein they put any th●●g of his absoluteness in danger; yet in as much as he had them all under his power and they were new christened and had a French name given, whereas they were written in Greek, Saxon, or Latin before, they may well be said to be in this sense changed as to the declaring him a Prevailer over the Nation, and as to the introduction of the French Idiom put upon the Laws, not only in the books, but from the mouths of the Advocates pleading: so that France being brought into England, and the customs of Normandy, which were said to be originally but transcripts from our old Greek, British, Latin, and Saxon Entryes, become currant here, and pleaded as in France in the French tongue, there was a great progress made to the funeral of the English language. ●iliter Gallici post eorum adventum in Angliam, ratiocinia de corum Proventibus non receperunt, nisi in proprio Idiomate. As the Pleas in Courts, so the accounts of their Lands and Offices they would not take or admit but in French; not that they understood not English, for 'tis probable in a short time they did that: but because they would retain the memory of their title to England, and by the old language discarded and a new one introduced, tell the Natives they were Tenants at will, and would reduce their proud stomach to the plyableness of the French Peasant. For though probably they had English Drudg-Bayliffs who did gather in from the several Farmers their rents and incomes, Ipsum etiam idioma Normanni tantum abhorrebant, quod leges terrae, statutaque Anglicorum Regum lingua Gallica tractarentur: & pueris etiam in scholis principia literarum grammatica Gallice, ac non Anglice traderentur, modus etiam scribendi Anglicus omitteretur etc. Ingulphus apud Seldenum in c. 48. and who conversed with the renters of them in the English tongue; yet before the FrenchMonsieur, who was all agog on his native speech, the accounts must be in French terms and in a French method, which had it been because the French understood not whether they had right done them or not, would have been excusable, but when it was purely out of design to dishonour our nation & language would never have been borne but that necessity had no Law. For men being born, must be kept, and living under the regency of providence which circumacts Governments and things as most discovers the absoluteness of God, (who permits their variation as far as he pleases and when he will restrains them,) havin a strong and not to be denied invitation thereto, not to do it were to undo themselves, and to disserve as much as lies in them the future revolutions of good that God had decreed, emergent in their proper season, which considered, the French Masters not willing to receive their rentals but in French terms, their then English Vassals did well to observe them, and thereby to make a virtue of necessity. Venari etiam & jocos alios exercere ut talorum & pilarum ludos non nisi in propria lingua delectabantur As military action in time of War, so hunting in peace is a generous exercise, if it be used generously; for though the venatio oppressiva hominum, which Nimrod used, be tyrannous and execrable, and Maximinus that exercised whole legions in it, that thereby they might be most accurate executioners of torments on his subjects, Solis venationibus Legiones frequenter exercebat. Senatus eum tantum timait, ut vota in Templis publice, privatimque, mulieres etiam cum suis liberis facerent, ne ille unquam urbem Romanam videret; erat enim ei persuasum, nisi crudelitate imperium non teneri. Julius Capitolinus in vita Maximini p. 226 Vnde mos tractus sit, ut proficiscentes ad bellum Imperatores, munus gladiatorium & venatus darent. Idem in Maximo & Balbino p. 242 who by them did so terrific the people, that they prayed he might never return safe to Rome, who thought the Empire could not be held but by cruelty. To use hunting as a hardening of the heart, and an induction to act mercilesness on men by the assuescency of it to the actors of it on beasts, as Capitolinus reports the custom to be, before chieftains went to the wars is justly to be condemned. I say though this kind of cruel and vild hunting has many pretences of plausible advantage in it, which Sarisburiensis a Lib. 1, c. 4. De nugis Curial. mentions, and though men of good consciences cannot use or delight in it; yet, that hunting which is saltuosa, either of beasts of prey, or birds of wing, sive fiat propter necessit atem indigentiae, as a way of livelihood, sive propter necessitatem violentiae,- or to destroy those that would destroy cattle and fruits, Quomodo ergo dignus est vita, qui nihil aliud novit in vita, nisi vanit atis studio saevire in bestias. Sarisbur. lib. 1. c. 4. De nugis Curialium. or propter utilitatem for food to eat, as in those Countries where no butcheries are, but every man kills for his own use, they are all lawful unless immoderately used, Nec canes nec aves ad venandum 〈◊〉 habere agricolae, ne ab agricultura 〈◊〉 tur aut divertantur. Joh. de Platea in I domin. cap. de agricolis lib. 11, and unless municipally prohibited, as in France they wholly are to the peasant, who dare not keep a Greyhound, or mongrel, but must manicle and mutilate them, as in the verge of the forest has here often been. Cass. Catalogue. Gl. M. p. 446. Lege constitutiones Canuti Regis De Fores●a. 23. Eliz. c. 10 Though therefore the husband man is, as before I have showed, kept short, yet the noblesse is left free, venari he may, where and when he will, so he observe bounds, and do no wilful trespass; for as no man of what degree soever, may hunt, when the corn is upon the ground, and the fields closed up, unless in his own ground, or in Chases and Parks by leave of the owner of them: so no man can be (as I conceive) denied to hunt (except within the verge of the King's house, and in destruction of his game, who is the high Lord of the Nation) unless he be of base condition, and not able to live in the state of a worshipful man, for whom only this recreation of hunting is proper, so is as I humbly conceive the intent of the statute of 13. R. 2. c. 13.3. E. 6. c: 17.1. H. 7. c. 7.19. H. 7. c. 11.31. H. 8. c. 12.32. H. 8 c. 11. when ever then Lords and Gentlemen hunted, either with kennel hounds, Fox dogs, or coursing hounds, whether buck or hare (For wild beasts we never had in England, at least not in our Chancellors time, our Text tells us, they did (before E. the third's time at least) use all venatory phrases in French, and this they did to bring their exercises into a French method, and I wish, that nowadays, though the French terms be obsoleted, yet foreign humours did not too much possess many of our young Gentlemen, who think, nothing so generous a quality in them, as to be fierce and indefatigable in the chase of beasts, utinam audiretur à nostris, ut saltemin provection aetate nugis suis reipub. scria anteponerent. lib. 1. cap. 4. ad finem. and I would to God they would consider, that as they are by their sublimity of blood and plentiful fortunes, advanced above others, so in Sarisburiensis his words, They would prefer the solid good of the public, before their pleasurable toys; and lay aside follies, to promote the great consequences of peace and war. Et jocos alios exercere] As their bodily exercise was Frenchly, joca & seria contraria. Cic. 2. D● Finibus. In Praf. lib. 2, in Eutrop. 2 Trist. 113, 89 so their wit's activity was also; for they used to be pleasant and facetious in French. jocus] is by Tully opposed to serium, and therefore all nugatory behaviour, expressed in words, is expressed by illiberalis jocus; hence insanus jocus in Claudian, lassivus jocus, saevus jocus in Horace, jocus venenatus & turpis in Ovid, yea the holy text seems to brand this sinful airyness, as arguing some effrontery and settling upon the lees of sin, Prov. 14. v. 6. with delight and contentment. Fo●les saith the Wiseman, make a mock of sin. Yea, I am apt to think, that because jerusalem did not put on mourning thoughts, and had not an humbled sense of God's visitation, but in the day of her affliction and of her misery remembered all her pleasant things that she had in the days of old; Lam. 1 v. 7 therefore God not only obdurated her enemy's hearts against her, but suffered them to mock at her Sabbaoths. Though therefore there be much folly in this mirth; yet is it that pleasantness of humour which many delight in, and for their excellency in smart and facetious speeches are highly valued: This also the text says was uttered in French, that both earnest and jest might be in that language. Et Talorum & Pilarum ludos non nisi in propria lingua delectabantur] The mind of man being restless, and choosing rather employment, then musing, antiquity invented the disports of Dice and Ball. These dice are by the Latines termed Tali, from Talus the ankle bone of the foot, or the postern bone of a beast, of which, they were wont to make these Dice; whence our Proverb, when one will act cruelty on a man, they are said, to make Dice of his bones: this is near of kin, in the nature of the word to that game of Cock-all, which boys use amongst us, which Cock-all, is as much as win and take all, Proprie ludus in facto, ut jocus in verbis non seriis. L●ur. Valla lib. 4 Eleg. c. 16 L●do & j●co uti quidem licet ut somno & cateris quietibus. Ita si gravibus caterisque rebus satisfecorimus. lib. 1. Offic. Pessimum est genus homicideis, sibi manus injicere▪ quod is facere videtur qui existimat perpetuo animi & corporis motu afftigere debere. Tholoss. syntag. Juris lib. 39 c. 2. ss. 4 as a Cock does who victorying, has not only the praise of all, but wins all that's laid on the match by the Abettors against him. This is Cock-all; hence Talorum ludi, is that cast of the dice that carries the game and wager. Now these Talorum ludi are things of factive, as the other were of verbal recreation, and Tully commends them, when moderately and without injury to grave things; and surely though 'tis good to keep the mind always well employed, and the less levitieses do avocate men from serious thoughts the better is the heart made: yet harmless and decent recreations, whereby release is given to those austerites, is very necessary and lawful, and not to do it, is a kind of homicide and self-felony. For as God in point of duty commands us no more, than we (if we will put ourselves out to the utmost) are enabled to do, nor in point of suffering, lays no more upon us than we are able to bear; so men ought not to be more vexatious to themselves, and put greater burdens and harder laws of restraint on themselves, then may consist with the hilarity, as well as sincerity of piety. And therefore, though I am no delighter in these lusory recreations, but notwithstanding my general and long converse with men of all Ages, fashions, addictions, sciences, am yet designedly and in prosecution of a long determined resolution, a novice in, and stranger to all play, being wholly ignorant of the terms, method and delight of it, and i hope as happy in, and as contented with the ignorance and unsurprisedness of it as any Infant is, or as the most captivated lover of it is with the witchery of it; yet do I not disapprove the recreation that persons of worth and wisdom take in it, but rather believe it as wisely and worthily by them used, to be harmless and practicable. Whereas then the laws do forbid play that depends on chance, Si jocus est ludus honestus a rebus series, quae animum intendunt, requies est, & velut induciá, a quibus nunquam graves & cordati viri loco & tempore commodo abhorruerunt. Tholoss. Syntag. Juris loco pracitato. such as are Dice, Tables, Cards, which are all ceux d' hazard; yet do they so do, upon the account of the abuse of them, and the dreadful events that they have had such as are vain expense of time, and prodigality of fortune, Oaths and blaspheming of God, passions and quarrels amongst men, prostitution of the pudicity of Ladies, who, by too much familiarity contracted thereby, Idem. lib. ●9. c. 3. De Alca lusu vetito. give occasion to their affections and persons surprisal, and voluptuous engagement, which, I the rather note, because I have known much inconvenience really issuing ing from hence, which, those that have by occasion thereof suffered, have never had the happiness to be compensated by, Nun satis improbata ost cuju●que aris exercitatio, qua quantum quisque doictor, tanto nequior aleator quidem omni● hic est. M●ndaciorum siquidom & perjuriorum mater est alea, & aliena concupiscentia sua prodigit & nullam habens patrimonii reverentiam; cum illud effude●i●, sensim in furta dilabitur & rapinas. 1. Sarisburiensis lib. 1. c. 5 Inter Seria sobrii Germani aleam exercent tanta lucrandi perdendique temeritate, ut cum o●nia defecerunt, extremo ac novissimo jactu, de libertate ac de corpore contendant. De Moribus Germanorum. with any thing of honourable balance to it, but have been for the ever of their lives injured thereby, so true is that of some in our days which Tacitus reports of the Germans, that they loved play so intently, and were so besotted to it, that they would not only lose all their money at it, but lay even their clothes and bodies at stake, rather than be disgamestred. I am therefore in earnest against, not the use but the abuse of play, though I think the less any one plays, the less they are in danger to be in love with it, and to be withdrawn from seriouser things by it; yet I dare, and do say, very wise and good persons of both sexes use it, and that with greater grace and honour to it, Quoniam usu compertum est, ut alea ludo, saepe surta, raepina●, frauds, blasphemias, aliaque id generic flagiti● proficisci perhibeant taxillis aut alea ludi. Tom. 9 in Mediolan. Concilio primo. p. 481. Sarisburieus. De Nugis Curialium. lib. 1. c. 4, & 5. than I wish did thereby accrue to the encouragement of others, who, under pretext of their using it, do themselves abuse it, but enough of that, only let the Laws of Nations be ever understood to abhor and decry Dice and Cards, or other Gaming. Themistocles made a Law, that Magistrates should not game, ne respublica ludere videretur, defectum sui relicta gravitate pronunciet; so amongst the Canons of the Apostles, c. 41. Vol. 1 Concil. Gener. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉; etc. Tholoss. lib. 39 c. ● Tom. 5. Concil. p. 337 50. Canon 6. Synod. Tom. 9 Concil. Mediolan●nse 1. p, 481. Concll, Aquileiens. 1. Tom. 9 p 706 A Bishop, or Priest, or Deacon, that is intent on drunkenness, or gaming, either let him lay aside his Coat, or be degraded; so 6 Synod Constantinople, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. No man whether lay or Clergy, must from henceforth (scandalously) play at Cards, if he do, being a Clergyman, let him be deposed; and a lay man excommunicated: and the Synod of Augusta thought constant Gamesters so profane, that they decreed them denial of the Sacrament a Tom. 9 p. 270. by which exactness, the Church did not so much declare them unlawful because sinful, as intend the avoidance of scandal, and confirming of those in it, that from the example of divine men using it, would be prone undivinely to abuse it. And by the stat. 33. H. 8. c. 9 Order is taken for unlawful games, such as there are named Dice, Cards, etc. out of Christmas, which the Law does not to deprive men of fashion of their recreations, for that is saved by the Statute; but to disharbour the lodges of these Gamesters in houses of expense and riot, in which, estate, time, reputation, is besotted to, and wasted by these sports; which therefore the Statute calls unlawful, because they are unlawfully used: and by them so abused, the Magistrate becomes blemished through the insolence of them, whereupon they are declared unlawful and penal, Turnebus Advers. lib. 5. c. 6. & lib. 9 c. 7. etc. 23, lib. 18. c. 12. 1. Pollux lib. 9 c. 7. Sarisburiens. Polycratic. lib. ●. c. 4. & 5. and all licenses to keep houses of Game made void by Stat. 2. & 3. P. & M. c. 9 Concerning these Tali read Turnebus, julius Pollux, johannes Sarisburiensis, Master Gataker, and sundry others. Pilarum ludis] This was one of the repasts, which, within or without doors, Ad pilam se, aut ad tal●s, aut ad testeras se conferens, homines labour assidue & quotidiano assueti cum tempestatis causa oper● prohibentur. Lib. 3. De Oratore the Ancients used their youth to; though it be ranked by Tully with Dice and Tables, yet is thought of a more allowed nature than they, and is one of those quinque games that justinian allows, and which at this day we use, whether Football or Hand-ball, called Stoolball. Four sorts of these the Doctor's mention, Paganicam, Lib. 3. Paedagog c. 10. Arctam, Trigonalem, Follem, Clemens Alexandrinus, a Sipontious & Tholoss. Lib. 39 c. 4. tells us, the gamesters at it did play stripped, and with all earnestness retorted the ball they received either by hand or foot, Pilae proprietas est cum aqualitat●, aequalitatem hanc accipe quam vides in lusoria pila. Senec. Nat. Quaest lib. ●. p. 889. and were accounted good or bad gamesters as they did it nimbly and effectually, which Seneca b De Benefic. c. ●2. Turneb. advers. lib. 7. c. 12. phrases pilam scite & diligenter aeccipere, adding, sed non dicitur bonus lusor nisi qui apt & expedite remisit quam acceperat; the Greeks called this Ball 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, from its sphearical figure, The term Hurly-Burly, whence probably originated. as the Latins pila from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 aequo, because it's on all sides alike. Methinks this sport is kept up liveliest in Cornwall, in their hurling, which is by a round ball plated with silver, and is thrown up for those that bring it away from the many contenders, to keep as their own, and to present to whom they please. One of them I have myself had at my being in that Country, presented to me, accompanied with a mighty concourse of young persons, whose congress may well be called a Hurly Burly. These and other sports managed in some method and with some words, our Chancellor says, were passed in the French tongue, in which the French (flushed with their victory and heightened by the favour of greatness (for our Chancellor has respect to the times in and near the Conquest) gloryed to propagate their Nation's honour, and to enervate and worm out all memory of the English language and manners. Quo & Anglici exfrequenti eorum in talibus comitiva, habitum talem contraxerunt, quod hucusque ipsi in ludis hujusmodi & compotis linguam loquuntur Gallicanam. This is added to show the force and influence of use and habituation, in that it works another nature in men, which is the reason wise Lawgivers have cautioned against ill customs and habits, as the great Apollyons of grave and good manners. For the nature of man being prone to evil, and endeared to the object of its familiar intuition and converse, does not only at first civilly bear, and friendlyly affect what it so familiarly meets with, but at last passionately dotes on even to a delight of surprise by that it so is acquainted with and accustomed to. Which God, who knew the heart of Israel better than they did their own, foreseeing to be the sin of them under their captivity to the Nations, Leu. 18.30. to whom their sins were penally to bring them, forewarns them not to follow the Statutes of abomination which were set before them: God has told them, that because of the evil customs and practices of the Nations, he had made their Land spew them out, vers. 26, 27. and because Israel that came into their Land, and with whom some of the Inhabitants would be left, whom they mingling and treating with, might be entangled in the love of their Idolatry and Immorality; therefore does he forewarn them to keep close to their directory, his Law, and not to observe the Statutes of Abominations, that is, such customs as by continuance has obtained the reputation and authority of a Law, and therefore were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Abominations to God, because practices against his Law and the Prescripts of nature, which he calls vain, Jer. 10.3. because they entertain men in their appearance without any real satisfaction of or reward to them for their confidence. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Hist. Eccles. lib. 5. c. 18. Dion. lib. 36. p. 18, & 19 This then, as odious to God and deceptive to men, the Lord cautions Israel against, Deut. 18.9, 12. and that because they have a nature of insinuation into man, and thereupon drew God's abomination of man. Of this sort besides many others were those customs of Rome to sanctuary Thiefs and promulgate lewdness, which Socrates says were used many hundred years till Theodosius exploded them. Hereupon as all Lawgivers have enjoined severity of manners, so have they looked upon avoidance of converse with and neighbourhood to evil, as the best means to preservation of good manners; for vices come into credit by use, and fashions into request by example and practice: so did the Ambitus for Magistracy among the Romans, for though begging of Votes made servile Magistrates, who did sordid and wicked things, yet when the Lex Ambitus came to reform this ill use; it found notable opposition and was decried, many Factions appearing for it because it had long been in use. So is it in the most enormous things Stories acquaint us with, and therefore more probable it is in things of indifferent nature, as playing for recreation is; yet by them says the Text is the French terms of play and account kept to our Chancellors, and to this day. Et placitare in eadem lingua soliti fuerunt quousque mos ille vigore cujusdem statuti quamplurimum restrictus est. Though Play was not fit or worthy for the State's notice or regulation, I mean, as to the terms and method of it, it being reducible to those things that are rather tolerated then commanded; See the Preamble to the Stat. 36 E. 3. e. 15. yet Pleas in public Courts are, because they concern multitudes of people, and are the defences of learned Advocates in Lawcases, which because the people concerned in them should understand, which they could not when pleaded in French, the Statute of 36 E. 3. c. 15. appointed that all Pleas which be to be pleaded in any of his Courts before any of his justices or before any of his other Ministers, or in the Courts and places of any other borders within this Realm, shall be pleaded, showed, defended, answered, debated, and judged in the English tongue, and that they be entered and enroled in Latin, so that Statute; by which the judgement of the Nation appeared against admitting foreign language into common use, to the dishonour and eclipse of the national one: Ordine placitandi servato servatur jus. Cook on Littleton, p. 303. sect. 534. Little. for it having ever a great respect to plead, (which are chief parts of our Law-art, and wherein the Lawyer as much evidences his skill as in any or all other parts of his profession, and since to the obtainment of right placitare was necessary, because else the cause could never be tried) the wisdom of the King and Parliament ordered Plead should no longer be in the French but English language. Concerning Plead and Pleas read the Authorities cited in 2 Instit. p. 22. Cook on●. 11. Magna Charta. and my Notes on the six and twentieth Chapter, Tamen in toto huc usque aboleri non potuit] Though the Statute took effect as to the language of plead, yet not as to all terms of Art; for they having been purposely form to accommodate the Science of the Law, the abolition of that would occasion a new invention besides that of time and use, and make some rudeness and defect in speech, which men of art delight not to be encumbered with. Therefore, since long custom had riveted French terms and forms into use in forming of Writs and Entryes of books concerning them, the Statute not directing its inhibition to work on those, men and time conspired to continue them as to this day they are, and that I think to keep the Law more secret from the insolence and arrogance of the illiterate and vulgar, who, did they understand these terms of art, or were they so explicated to them as use and business renders them to the learned, they would take upon them to value the Law less, or to understand more than they do, or then consists with their subjection to it, or their charity with their Neighbours; which I think is the reason why that Declaration of November 1650. That all Report-books of the Resolution of judges, and other books of the Law of England shall be translated into the English tongue; Scobells' Collections, p. 148, 149. and that all Writs, Processes, Returns, etc. shall be in the English tongue, and not in the Latin or French, being not more Majorum, is obsoleted by the introduction of the old Method, of which our Text says, Plus proprie placitantur in Gallico quam in Anglico; and the Declarations upon Original Writs, tam connenienter ad naturam illorum pronunciare nequeunt.] Reportantur etiam ea quae in Curiis Regis plaeitantur, disputantur, & judicantur, ac in libros ad futurorum eruditionem rediguntur, in sermone semper Gallico. This relates to the Year-books called the Old Reports, which contain the collection of four or more learned men, who (particularly chosen to, and (as I suppose) feeed for their attendance on the King's Courts, in which they had a particular station, & therein abode all the sitting of the Courts) did observe and take notes of all the Pleas, Arguments, and Judgements that in them occurred, which notes they at the least at the end of every Term did communicate with the Judges about, and rectified them by the Judge's advices, and compared them with the Entryes of the Courts, by which they being confirmed were booked; and of these Entryes are the old Reports of the Judgements in the Reigns of E. 3. H. 4. H. 5. H. 6. E. 4. R. 3. H. 7. Sir Ed. Cook Preface to the ● Report. Hollingshed p. 8. made up and written sermone semper Gallico, that is, not in acquaint French, nor in the French that is vulgarly spoken in France, but in good old Norman French, this is Littleton's French, and the French of the old Year-books; and this we read the Conqueror wrote the Laws in. The intent of which laudable design was to transferr the notion of wisdom to after-ages, and to perennate to after-ages, the memory of venerable Sages, famous for knowledge and justice in their Generation, and to them to bequeath the fair Legacy of honour and uprightness, according to the national Laws, to all that should succeed them in place, and thereby have the opportunity (if they walk worthy of the mercy God vouchsafeth them) to exceed them in profound judgement and dexterity of determination; which happy end truly I think succession has been blessed with arrival at, in the matchless continuation of our Reverend and Learned Masters the Judges in all the Ages since: and may they ever continue so to be, that the Law may flourish, and the Subjects be secure and happy by the protection and favour of it. For though it lisps out French, and some Acts of Parliament are recorded in French, as 1 Westminst. 3 E. 1. Stat. Gloster. Stat. De judaismo. 18. E. 1. & Stat. Mod. levendi fines of the same year, Confirmat. Chartarum 20 E. 1. Articuli super Chartas 28 E. 1. and many others, as a Remembrance of what occasioned its survey and mutilation by the Conqueror, whose English Issue soon restored it to its ancient Demesnes, as I may so say; yet it's full notes are to purposes of English freedom, and in abhorrence of symbolisation with aught that is French, and not naturalised by act of Parliament. And therefore though our new Reports, Dyer, Plowden, Cook, Crook, Moor, and others be in French, as fit they should be, as well as the Authors of any other Art in their learned language are; yet the Acts of our Parliament are published in English, that all may know that every thing that is purely English is the love and study of the English Nation, Sir Henry Hobars and his Companions 13 jac. in Banco Regis. See Preface to 1 In. stit. on Littleton. and of the wisdom, strength, and majesty of it: which surely I am so far in love with, and so professedly a votary to, that should I be in place, when the English language should be disparaged in compare with the French, I should take the confidence to do as those learned Judges did when a Case of Littleton's, Whether a release to one trespasser should be available to his fellow-trespassers, came before them, who gave judgement according to Littleton, Note this well. saying, That they owed so great reverence to him, that they would not have his Case be disputed or questioned; after whom I should be very positive not to have any thing that is English subjected to the French, Concords' sermo tuus cum vita, ille promissum suam implevit, qui & cum videas illum & cum audias, idem est; non delectent verba nostra sed prosunt. Sen. lib. 1. de I●a. whose ingenuity and valour, whose language and laws I honour in all things, but wherein they are Competitors with and derogatory from the splendour of these Excellencies of my native Country, Whose prosperity God continue, whose Religion God propagate, whose Sovereign God preserve, God grace, and God glorify, whose Laws God maintain, whose Rights God defend, the wealth of whose Subjects God increase, and the looseness of whose manners God reform, but I proceed to the Text. Sub tertia verolinguarum praedictarum, videlicet, sub Latina, omnia Brevia, Originalia, & judicialia, similiter & omnia Recorda Placitorum in Curiis Regis, etiam & quaedam Statuta scribuntur. The use of Latin was probably introducted by the Clergy, when sundry of the Bishops and others of the Spiritualty were Judges and chief Officers in the King's Courts of Law, Instit. p. 304. as from after the Conquest to the middle of Edw. 3. time they in a good measure were. And they knowing that whatever the alteration of national languages were, & however the Entryes of judicial matters in them differed according to the language in or out of use, as befell the British, Saxon, Danish, Norman Tongues, Latin would rest currant and be universally understood, caused Entryes of the Courts of Law, and the Instruments to bring causes and persons to appear and stand Judgement to be in Latin. Now those things that the Text here refers to, are Original and judicial Writs; concerning Writs see my Notes on the 25. Chapter. By Originalia I am apt to think our Text means Writs to call men to answer for violation of some Original Law, whence because they are Formata ad similitudinem Regulae juris, they may be called original Writs, Bracton. lib. 3. fol. 413. because they do (as I conceive, yet ever with submission to the Learned) Originem dare Secta, Fleta lib. 2. c. 13. as the original Law violated does Originem dare Brevi; for the rule in Fleta is, Qua consilio totius Regni sunt approbata, ea quidem mutari non poterint abseque eorundem coutraria voluntate. Fleta lib. 2. ●. 13. Tont erunt formula Brevium quot sunt genera actionum, quia non potest quis sine Brevi agere. These original Writs being grounded upon original Laws, that is, either the Common Law or some Statute, cannot be altered or digressed from, but when the Laws themselves can be altered, that is, by Parliament, the common Consent of the Nation, so says Fleta, and Sir Ed. Cook after him. judicialia] So called because they are to bring the party that offends to judgement of Law. Cook on Littleton. sect. 101. p. 73. B. lib. 2. c. 3, Of Escuage. Preface to the 3 Report. These are, if I mistake not, varied according to several occasions being framed by the Cursitors who are the Masters of the Office whence they issue, and thereupon called Magistralia. Both these are by our Text said to be Linguâ Latinâ: so are the Records or Rolls of the Courts of Chancery, King's Bench, Common Pleas, Exchequer, and the several Appendices of them are all in Latin. Etiam & quaedam Statuta] To wit, Magna Charta, Stat. Marlbridg, the Statute de Bigamis, See them in the 2 Instit. We siminst. 2. the Statute of Circumspect agatis, the Stat. 3 Westmin. 18 E. 1. De Tallagio non concedeudo, 34 E. 1. De Asportatis Religios. 35 E. 1. De Frangentibus Prisonam, 1 E. 2, De Militibus, Articuli Cleri 9 E. 2. and the rest. Quare dum Leges Angliae in his tribus addiscuntur linguis, ipse in Vniversitatibus, ubi solum exercetur lingua Latina, conveniexter erudiri non poterunt aut studeri. This clause recollects the force of all the Premises, and answers the Quaere, Why the Laws of England were not taught in the Universities of England as well as the Laws Civil are, to wit, because the Civil Laws are originally writ in the learned Languages, which are common to all Schools and Scholars, and without which the Arts cannot be attained; and the Latin tongue being there publicly spoken, (for the solum refers to the place not to the tongue, as if only Latin were there spoken and exercised and no other learned language, for Greek, Hebrew, and other languages are, in the same sense the Latin is, exercised therein:) but therefore it is said solum lingua Latina, because the Latin tongue is therein more used in discourse and exercise then any other tongue there, or in any other place of the Nation is, Exercises in Latin being as it were entailed to the Schools, and fixed to the Freehold of the Universities, for thither all persons of learning repairing, and there staying to study, thereby merit their degrees. And as all wits and perfections of promptness are there presumed to be; so all Exercises, Authors, and Dexterities in Art are also, which is the reason that the Universities have the only opportunities to institute youth in matters of speculation into Arts and Languages. And therefore the Laws of Nations, The Civil Law, being in the Latin tongue, and being the Law of the Continent, which a Professor of it may practise and own in any part of the Christian and civilised World, (when as the Common Law is but a Topique Law, and serves only for a municipe purpose, being thereupon writ in a municipe language) is proper to be taught in the Universities, and has degrees and honours therein, when our Common and Statute-Lawes have none there. Leges tamen illa, in quodam studio publico, proillarum apprehensione omni Vniversitate convenientiore & proniore docentur & addiscuntur. This Clause introduces the discourse of the famous Societies of the Law, called The Inns of Court. Of which to write to the proportion of their Augustness is altogether impossible for any man, who has so little help to their illustration, as (for aught I see) the learned and generous Professors of them are enabled to communicate to him that has a desire to blazon the Beauty, Antiquity, and Accommodation of them. I confess my hopes and expectations were to have found much assistance herein from my friends of the Long-Robe; but truly, save that the learned and most civil Gentleman Sir Thomas Witherington, Sergeant at Law imparted a discourse which in the conclusion of this Chapter I mean to print verbatim, nothing has been communicated from any of them to me. It is probable at first men that studied the Common Laws dwelled & lodged in diffusion, where being far from the Courts of Westminster, and uncertain to be found by those that desired their skill and advice, How probably the Inns of Court first began. they to avoid that trouble to themselves and their Clients, did associate and join their studies and lodgings each to other, which in time came to be accounted Studium publicum; all of the Profession resorting to the common residence, and so making one public presence of Law and Lawyers. After as they increased, men of name withdrawing themselves for convenience of more room and better air, as their Clients followed them, so also young Students, admirers of them, joined themselves to them; till at last by time and agreement they grew into some proportion of a body, which had so much of Head and Members, Laws and Servants, as are necessary to a subsistence of Honour, and a perpetuation of Being: Study being best carried on in a place of repose, and by numbers that are ambitious to search that they may know, to know that they may profess, to profess that they may gain, to gain that they may enrich their Heirs and Families, and by these riches acquired by the Law, encourage a Continuation of Students in the Law. Thus as I conceive, Qameunque paertem rerum divinarum, humanarumque comprehenderis, in ingenti copia gerendorum, discendorumque fatigaberis. Haec tam multa, tam magna ut habere possint, liberum hospitium. non dabit se in haes augustias virtus, laxum spacium res magna desiderat. Epist. 88 p. 187. rose the Inns of Courts about Edward the thirds time; for before that though the Law of England was ever in high honour, yet was it less celebrious in its public professors and profession then after it became. For when by the influence of the renowned Judges Vere, Glanvil, Lucy, & others, Gentlemen of great families & interest in the Nation, the schools of Canon and Civil before and in that time publicly kept in London and elsewhere, were put down as about the year 1234. 19 H. 3. Ad Fletam dissertatio. c. 8. p. 525. they according to Master Selden were, than I conceive these publica studia of the Law took root, and sprouted out more in a few years then before they had done; And these publica studia, as to the rudimenting and practice of the Law, are (says the Text) Omni universitate convenientiora & proniora. Studium namque illud situm est prope Curiam Regis, ubi leges illae placitantur, disputantur & judicantur. Though time has enlarged the one only society of Law, which our Text calls studium illud into many, yet those many are by our Text called but one study; because though they are lodges of several students, yet tend to one end, the propagation of National Justice according to National Law: which because it is determined in the King's Court (not that of his personal but politic residence, therefore Inns of Court seated so near Westminster, where the Courts of Law are, are said to be prope Curiam Regis. For as in the sense of the Text, all the Inns of Court make but one public study, so all the Courts of Westminster-Hall make but one Curiam Regis, it being the same Great KING whose Laws are administered in every bench of his Court to one and the same purpose of order and justice; to do which (so symmetrious to the administration of God himself, who is the Archetype Justicer) our Chancellor says, the Laws that all persons must submit to and be adjudged by, are opened, debateed and judged there, and there only ubi leges illae placitantur, disputantur & judicantur, says the Text; Placitantur by the parties, disputantur by the advocates, judicantur by the Judges; Placitantur, that they may come to trial, disputantur, that they may appear what they truly are in trial, judicantur, that they may be sentenced as they appear to be upon and after trial; Placitantur, that every grief may have a remedy, disputantur, that the remedies may be rational and according to legal justice and Circumstances of fact, judicantur, that the determination of learning and justice may be subsequent to the matter, Inter se, ita miscendae sunt, & quiescenti agendum & agenti quiescendum est; cum rerum natura delibera, illa dicet tibi se & diem secisse & noctem. Seneca Ep. 3. pro and con; this gradation shows the Law not to proceed furiously, nor to delay slothfully: but to hear, consider, and determine, as the weight of the matter in controversy requires, and that judgement to deliver from, and enrol in, the King's Court, according to Justice and good Conscience. Per judices, viros graves, Senes, in legibus illis peritos & graduatos As the pleading, opening, and arguing of Cases belong to the Students of the Law, who being Barristers or Sergeants, are incipient and perfect graduates in the Law: so the decisive act of the Law, is from the venerable and prudent mouths of the Judges, whom the Text, to the Honour of the Kings and Laws of England, terming Viros graves, who, though men by nature, and graduates by their proficiency in the knowledge and apprehension of the Law in all the attainable latitude of its profession, it raises to all veneration as Heroiques and Divine Sages, from the consideration that they are Graves ment, Nunquam hanc auditorum partem videbis, cui Philosophi schola diverseri●m otti est. Senec. Ep. 108. Ego quidem priora illa ago ac tracto quibus paratur animus, & me prius scrutor, deinde hunc mundum. E● pist. 65. Senes corpore, Fathers of experience, whose youths abused not the Inns of Court by making them otii diversoria, and by trifling out their time in them, but were taken up with incessant studies, profitable conferences, diligent exercises in the houses, constant attendances on the Courts, laborious transcribing of Reports, yea and who when they were called to the Bar, (which they never or rarely importuned) did forbear practice, till they had ruminated well, what the duty of, the requisites to, and abilities for it, were; These Oracles thus ascended to, and the virtue in them thus graduated, have by the wisdom of the Kings of England in their respective reigns been advanced, and by the people of England been accepted, as the ordinary living and speaking Law, that is, Those learned, pious, and impartial dispensers of Justice in all causes, and to all persons, Who are able men, fearing God, loving truth and hating covetousness. But of these, because I have written in the notes on the 24. and 25. Chapters, and shall further, on the 51. Chapter, when I come to it, I forbear to write more; only let me ever remember the Nation of that due gratitude they are to perform to God and the King, for the mercy and favour of furnishing the Courts of equity and Law, with such learned men, and sincere Judges as now sit in them, of whom I must ever profess my thoughts, That I believe they are in all respects of learning and integrity, inferior to no age of their predecessors; nor were the people of England ever better satisfied with the judges of their times, Sola sublimis & excelsa virtus est nec quicquam magnum est, nisi quod simul & placidum. Seneca lib. 1. De Ira. then now the people are with the present judges, who are (for I am above flattery, and despise to prostitute my name and pen by any ungentleman-like meanness) as the Text (written by one of them in every regard) describes them to be Viri Graves, Senes, in legibus illis periti, & graduati,] And as Sir Edward Cook says, Littleton had great furtherance in composing his work, in that he flourished in the times of many famous and expert Sages of the Law; and He himself accounts it of all earthly blessings not the least, that in the beginning of his study of the Laws of this Realm, the Courts of justice, both of Equity and of Law, were furnished with men of excellent judgements, gravity, and wisdom, from whom he confesses to have learned many things which he published in his Institutes, So may the hereafter-writers as well as the present ones attribute much of their happiness and encouragement to the great parts and virtues of these excellent Sages, Note this. who yet (blessed be God) live the life of nature, and ever will live that better and more desirable life of fame: For when the name of the wicked shall rot, the upright shall be had in everlasting remembrance, but I proceed. Quo in curiis illis ad quas omni die placitabili consluunt studentes in legibus illis, quasi in scholis publicis leges illae leguntur & docentur. In euriis illis] That's in Westminster-Hall for there the Courts are fixed when as before they followed the King's Court, II. Chap. Mag. Charta. p. 21. Institutes 2. part. and were removable at the Kings will, the returns being ubicunque fuerimus; therefore the Courts wherein law is debated, considered, and adjudged, being at Westminster, the public lodges of the students so near it, advantage the students to repair more readily to them: and that they that intent to be Lawyers, and make a progression of their study, do, omni die placitabili] that is, every Hall-day in the Term; for they I conceive are only dies placitabiles, when the Courts sit wherein Causes are pleaded. Actor vel reus in judicio contentioso, non admittuntur, ut si feria sacrae & solennes sint, quibus jura edixerunt silere lights. Tholoss. syntag. lib. 49. c. 2. ff. 10 1 Instit. on Littleton. Lib. 7. Belli Gallici 177. 2. Tuscul. 9 2. De Legibus 11. Cic. pro Plancio 68 Cic. 1. De Inventione. Cic. in Sallust. 10 For though in Term times some Holidays are dies non placitabiles, and non juridici, as the common lawyers call them, of which sort in every Term, there are some to be named besides sunday in every week, which is dies non juridicus; yet every ordinary day in Term is reputed dies placitabilis or juridicus] And thereupon pleas are held in the Courts, and thither upon such days the Clerks and the Atturnyes of the Courts, together with the Pleaders and Students do confluere] that is, not barely repair to, but meet and conjoin in, as many waters do refund themselves into one common Panch. Thus Caesar says, consluebat ad eum magnus numerus; and Tully has confluere ad aliqua studia, In unum locum confluere, Ad nos pleraeque causae confluunt; and when he is Seraphic in the praise of one, he says, Laus, Honour, Dignitas, ad aliquem confluit, and Sentina Reipubls. confluit aliquò. And this the Students do, that they may from the arguments of the Advocates, and the dictinctions and declarations of the Judges, hear and understand what the Law is, and by this are the students as much instructed as they are, in scholis publicis leges illae leguntur & docentur. Situatur antem studium illud inter locum Curiarum illarum & civitatem London, quae de omnibus necessariis opulentissima est omnium Civitatum & Oppidorum regni illius. This studium here intended, is (as I said before) not referrable to one Inns of Court, but to all thoses severalties of that one study, all which he calls the Inns of Law. For though I know Master Stow tells us, that the Temples were granted to be houses of Law in the time of Edward the third, when probably other Inns of Court were not so destinated; yet that our Text means these, excluding the other, is not likely. For our Chancellor was a Member of Lincoln's Inn, which house of his study and breeding; he cannot be thought to leave out of his Studium in the Text; Stow's Survey, p. 448. for though before H. 8. time (when Sir Tho. Lovel is said to be a great Benefactor to and enlarger of it) it was not an Inn of that magnitude it now is: yet a most ancient house has it been of the Earls of Lincoln, one of which died there Anno 1310. But rather that he looking on them all as in the Suburbs of London and Confines of Westminster, makes them lie pat for receiving Clients from the City the seat of Trade, applying themselves to Westminster where the Courts the Sphere of Justices are; where all controversies depending on Contract (which brings more sacks to the Lawyer's Mill then any thing else, because it is the general commodity of the Nation) are to be determined. Now this opportuneness to London as it is the Mother-City of England, Opulentissima omnium Civitatum & Oppidorum Regni illius, declares the wisdom of the men in seating themselves so near the greatest, richest, and most populous City of England; concerning which I have, as in duty and gratitude I am bound as it is the place of my birth, written somewhat testimonial of it in the Notes on the 24. Chapter and ¶ In my Defence of Arms and Armony, printed 1660. elsewhere: so should I add somewhat here in admiration of her, but that the Text prevents me when it terms her De omnibus necessariis opulentissima omnium Civitatum & Oppidorum Regni.] Notwithstanding which, many reproaches and detractions daily pass from the mouths of envious and ingrate men against her, The Author's zeal for London. which are so far from effecting any real evil to her, that they do but intend the industry of her Citizens the more to trust to God and their diligence, and by the blessings of them to make themselves and their families happy, which they would soon do to the disappointment of their reproachers, would they match within themselves, and give in Trade not so large credit; for so long as God sets not his face against London, and the River of Thames flows up to London, London will be London when all its contemners are in dust, and will be honourably remembered when they and their names shall be forgotten. For its immortal Genius has so much of an indefinite felicity in it, that as it has hitherto in all Ages been the glory of this Empire, Consol. ad Helviam. Lipsius' in Notis ad Consol. Helviae. p. 816. in Folio. so will it for the future I trust continue to be; for it is Urbs per euncta Maria Genitrix, as Seneca wrote of Miletum; 'tis Civit as Literarum, as Cassiodore termed Rome; 'tis Domicilium Legum & Gymnasium Literarum, and in Lipsius his words Opto sic esse & manere: and therefore the Text does not Hyperboliquely call it Opulentissima, but with relation to the plenty of men, diversities of Callings, abundance of Merchandise, and vastness of wealth, which above and beyond any City in England it hath. Civitas non potes● stare sine jurisperito, cum Leges tendunt ad conservandam Rempub. Civitatis & hominum congregationem. Baldus apud Cassanaeum Catal. Gl. Mundi p. 365. Furthermore our Text says, the Inns of Court placed in the Suburbs, Scorsum parumper, ubi confluentium turba quietem perturbare non possit,] were fitly seated; for had they been in the streets of trade, there had been no conveniency for study which is advantaged by silence; and had they been in the Country, there had been no opportunity to the King's Courts but with much toil and inconvenience, which this situation so accommodated both to the City, the Magazine of money, food, books, men of all sorts and conditions, and to the Courts of Westminster whereunto all men are for Justice to apply themselves, hath prevented. These things, I say, wellweighed, there appears in the situation of them, where they are, much of prudence and convenience. And so I end this 48. Chapter. CHAP. XLIX. Sed ut tibi constet, Princeps, hujus studii forma & imago, illam ut valeo jam describam, etc. THIS Chapter is purposely designed to treat of the Inns of Court, and of all those circumstances in and about them; which the Chancellor, whose delight and stay was much in them, endeavours to impart to the honour and advantage of them. For since our Chancellor was no heady and desultory Writer, (who passes over the solid parts, and treats only of the trifles of his undertaking) but a grave and learned Author, which gives every limb and part its due Emphasis, proportion, and ingrediency, whereby he makes the whole symmetrious. As he had before in the eight Chapter discoursed of the Forma juris, which every good Student should embrace and prosecute; so here he does discourse of the Forma & Imago Studii, of the nature and order of the Inns of Court, wherein the Law, which is so useful to Order and Religion, is studied. Concerning these I must profess my unhappiness not to be able to write as I would, and they deserve; (for that they being no Corporations, but Convents of men who have no sanction from the Prince to incorporate them, but are what they are by mutual Consent and an Order of common understanding, which passes between the gravity and youth of them, who are for the most part so considerate each of other, that what the Bench and Parliaments in them conclude upon, the rest observe; or otherwise must expect not only the scandal of being rebellious, but the disfavour of the Judges who will not hear any Korah's that are disorderly to the Ancients rules: which loss of their practice and reputation makes some as pliable to the Bencher's orders, as the Benchers are obsequious to reason and justice in the dispensation of them to the Youngsters.) I say, concerning these I would more elaborately discourse, but that I yet neither find, nor have communicated to me any thing but what is too narrow to complete such an undertaking. Wherein therefore I am defective herein (as I am in many other parts of this endeavour) as I humbly crave the Learneds pardon for it, so I promise an hereafter-supply if God shall bring this Commentary to a second Edition, and betwixt this and then I shall endeavour such Collections as may most contribute thereto; in the mean time I am to consider these Houses or Lodges of Law as our Text calls them Hospitia. Concerning Hospitia I have written in the Notes on cap. 36. that which I shall add here, is, that the Lodges and places of receipt to Soldiers in their advance to or retreat from the Wars, were of old so called. For though the Soldiers had among the Romans their Hospitia Campestria, Hospitiorum nomine Domini tenentur praebere Hospitibus, qua habitationis causa tantum necessaria sunt. Tholossan. lib. 7. 8, 9 which were their Tents in the Field; yet their Hospitia Militaria were fixed to some settled place or other, from which they departed not, but to which resolutely adhered. These were called Inns for their receipt and charitable accommodation, because what receipt they gave was free and in an orderly and suitable manner to such expectations as strangers could hope to receive upon travel. Hence comes it to pass, that because Hospitia Militaria are properly intended to receive Military men; the Inns of these Military men termed Templars, residing in the Temple, London, gave name to the most ancient and eminent of the Inns of Court, The Temples, which became Inns of Law, as heretofore I have showed. These Hospitia] our Chancellor says, are either Minora, preparatory Lodges of Freshmen; Order of Lincoln's 4 & 5 P & M. An. 1557. lib. 4. p. 317. for none were to be admitted of an Inns of Court, but such as first have been in an Inns of Chancery; and such as probably were forced by exigency of fortune to live near: or Majora, such as received not the Gudgeons and Smelts, but the Polypus' and Leviathans, the Behemoths and the Giants of the Law. Of the first sort called the Inns of Chancery, so called possibly because they contained such Clerks as did chiefly study the formation of Writs, which regularly appertain to the Officers of the Chancery (to wit, the Cursitors,) there were by the Text ten: these were as the ten Tribes, that revolting from ignorance to Clerkship, became men of prudence, diligence, and fortune. Those that of them yet remain are Thavy's Inn, reputed the ancientest Inn of Chancery, Lib. 8. Lincoln's Inn. fol. 64, 87, 97, 99 so named from one Thavy a Citizen of London that therein Temps E. 3. lived; but Temps H. 7. it is said to be purchased by Lincoln's Inn. Bernard's Inn, in the occupation of one Bernard, who Temps. H. 6. dwelled in it, and ever since it has been called so. Furnivals' Inn, so called from Sir William Furnival, Temps E. 2. Idem eodem lib. p. 48, 49, 142, 227. & lib. 4. p. 200. in H. 6. time it belonged to the Earls of Shrewsbury, after purchased Temps Q. Eliz. by the Society of Lincoln's Inn. New-Inns, erected to be an Hostile for Students Temps H. 7. since purchased by the Society aforesaid. Clement's Inn, so called because it pertained to the Parish of St. Clement's Danes. Clyfford's Inn, the house of the Lord Clyfford. Staple-Inn, belonging to the Merchants of the Staple. Lions-Inn, Carter Analys. of Heraldry. before H. 7. time it was the sign of the Black-Lion, whence called Lions-Inn to this day. These eight are all now in being. There was a ninth, Chester's Inn, which stood on or near the place where Somerset-house stood, but it was pulled down Temps E. 6. The tenth Inn of Chancery, which was standing in our Chancellour's time, Stow's Survey. p. 66. is wholly lost in the memorial of it; unless St. George's Inn over against St. Sepulchers Church, which is thought to be the ancientest Inn of Chancery, be it: for Scroop's Inn is not to be accounted one, since it has been reputed to be an house of Sergeants. See Orders for Inns of Chancery in lib. 8. Lincoln's Inn, p. 60, 61, 186, 187, 281, etc. But these eight yet in being are still inhabited by young Attorneys, and Students after the manner of the Inns of Court, and are accordingly governed and ordered; for they do all of them appertain to some or other of the Inns of Court, and have Readers every year sent from them, who do therein read Law to the young Students after the likeness of the Inns of Court: and every one of them, says our Text, contained Centum Studentes ad minus] Who though they resided not therein always, nor had Commons in them but in Termtime, when the Attorneys and others Members of them came up to the Term to follow their Clients businesses; yet were they contributory to the charge, and submissive to the Government of them, and there had their Chambers and were in judgement of Law abiding. And many of them that were young and intended study of the Law, in order to transplantation to the Inns of Court, learned here the knowledge of original and judicial Writs, and read the Elements of the Law, to fit them for remove into the greater and more creditable Spheres of Law, Hospitia Curiae] so called because they are Receipts of the Children of Nobles and Gentlemen, who only of old were admittable into them. These our Text reckons as at this day four, The two Temples, the House of the Templars, wherein they lived in great plenty above an hundred years; Lincoln's Inn, the House of Henry Lacie Earl of Lincoln, Lib. 7. Lincoln's Inn. fol. 317. afterwards it was the Bishop of Chichester's till Henry the Eight's time, when the interest thereof coming to Justice Sullyard, Sir Edward Sullyard in 22 Eliz. sold it to the Benchers and Society of Students therein. Though the Temples have ever been famous for good Pleaders, yet this Inn grew up chiefly in Henry the Sixth's time, when one of the greatest Glories of it was our Reverend Chancellor; Gray's Inn, seated within the Manor of Poorpool, as I conjecture, the Corpse of some Prebendary in Saint Paul's Church; called Gray's Inn from the noble family of the Gray's inhabiting it in Edward the Third's time, near about which it began, inhabited by the Students of the Law, who had it granted to them. All which are Societies of the Cream of the Gallantry of England, each of which in our Chancellour's time contained near 200 Students, which is a vast augmentation since Henry the Fifth's time, of which Mr. Fern says he has seen an Alphabet of the Names and Arms of all those that were Members of an Inns of Court, Glory, Generosity. p. 24. exceeding not above the number of sixty: so great an improvement does a few years produce, that in the very next Reign those Inns had near or full out 200. Benchers, Barristers, and single Students, since all these are contained under the Text's Students, for they do studere optimis disciplinis & artibus, Cic. 1. verr. 4 De Finib. 1 De Finib. as the Orator says; and thereby they do landi & dignitati studere: yea, they do pesuniis, Imperiis, gloriae studere, and in so doing, arrive at that Greatness no Profession, besides theirs, brings the Proficients in them unto. In his enim majoribus Hospitiis, nequaquam potest studens aliquis sustentari minoribus expensis in anno, quam octoginta Scutorum. By this it appears the Honour of being an Inns of Court man was great in our Chancellour's time, because none were admitted of them but men as of blood so of fortune; since to live and study there was so chargeable that a thrifty liver there could not come off for less than 80 Escues, which I take not to be as Mr. Mulcaster makes it to amount to twenty Marks, but casting the Escues into those that are Escue vicil, worth 7 s. 6 d. Sterling a piece, Si vis vacare animo, aut pauper esse aportet, aut pauperi similis; non potest Studium esse salutare sine frugalitatis cura. Frugalitas autem paupertas voluntaria est. Senec. Ep. 17. cometh to near 30 l. a year, which in that time was a good allowance, and this the Chancellor knew to be very competent for a Student that lived in no luxurious pomp, but intended his mind's accomplishment in order to his future profession of the Law. For although most men now repair thither for fashion, and to spend money; yet of old they thither went and there resided to acquire parts of virtue and action, and to complete themselves as good Christians and stout Gentlemen; and this to do, nothing contributes more, next God's blessing, than frugality of living and keeping close to study: for large fortunes and allowances make youth preys to vice and baits to seduction. For when in elder Ages there was more severity conveyed to youth by education and frugality of nurture, than were effeminacies anticipated, and luxury was wholly borne down by the prevalence of resolved virtue; the moderation of which as it directed the affections and desires to God and goodness, so did it take away the necessity of a great fortune, which in this deviation from it, is indispensably to concur with the charge and state of immoderate and high living, which is the reason of the change of times in portions and expenses; for whereas the portion of H. the third, Son to the Conqueror, when he was a younger brother, was but bare 5000 pounds, and that was then thought a good estate, now such a portion is thought but small for an Alderman's Son; In his Character of some Kings of England. p. 150 So much, saith Sir Henry Wotton, is either wealth increased, or moderation decreased. Et si servientem sibi ipse ibidem habuerit, ut eorum habet pluralitas, tanto tuno majores ipse sustinebit expensas. In our Chancellors time, men of honour and worship, sent no children to these Inns of Court, but such as they could honourably and plentifully treat there, which they not opinionating to be done, other then by adding to their convenient Chamber, decent furniture, rich apparel, different Masters for every science, and a full purse for every pastime, a well apparated servant to attend them, enhanced the expense of their stay there, which they very willingly allowed to train their Sons up to generous purposes of recreation and profession, since, as they were the best of the Nation that so placed them, so they having sufficient estates to defray the charge of their conspicuity, expended it on them in their persons and equipage. For as then none but men of estate entered themselves in the Inns of Court; so being there entered, none almost lived but with a servant to attend him when an under-bar student, which was very comely and useful, if the servant were well chosen, and proved well. For though a mean and trifling servant, Servus, perpetuus mercenarius est. Lib. 3. Senec. De Benefic. p. 47. be but a harpy, and serves only to promote a debauched Masters vanity, by the instrumentality to which he takes confidence to become a Quartermaster with his Master, as knowing he must not displease him, lest the secrets entrusted with him take air by his discovery; the convenience of which servant to carry on his secret as it first assisted the Master in his clancular designs of vice, so the awe of his detection upon discontent, makes him so mean a vassal to his servant, as nothing meaner can be. For nothing is more insolent than a necessary servant, which the Earl of Essex found true in Sir Anthony Bacon, whom he made use of in all his secrecies in the difference he had with Cecil, and thereby did so inflame Bacon's mercenary soul, that he covetous to dreyn the Earl of some notable reward, gave out that he could mend his fortune under the Cecilians, which the Earl of Northampton hearing, friendlily discovered to the Earl of Essex with this concurring advice, Sir. Henry Wotton. p. 14, 15. to keep Bacon his confident, whatever he gave him, lest his discoveries should ruin the Earl in his fortune and honour. The Earl of Essex followed the counsel, and gave him Essex house, which he was fain after to redeem with 2500 pounds in money, and 1500 pounds he before had upon a like trick, which shows that servants if not well chosen, and warily trusted, are dangerous attendants. That than which the servant is an advantage in, is when he is sober and sincere, when he understands his duty, and makes conscience to perform it, and both will and can serve his Master to honest and worthy purposes, to excite him to worthy actions, to advise him humbly in doubts, this is a servant that deserves to have patrimonium libertini as well as he has ingenium libertini, Senec. Ep. 27. as Seneca says, not as Lipsius interprets ingenium libertini, humile, terreum & quod saperet stirpem, but in that he has a free and virtuous soul, deserves to be suitably rewarded for his service. Occasione vero sumptuum hujusmodi cum ipsi nobilium filii tantum in hospitiis illis leges addiscunt. It should seem by this clause, that none but Gentlemen of the best quality sent their Sons hither; and by Command of King james, none was to be admitted to the Inns of Court, but a Gentleman by descent, Primo Jacobi, Lincoln's Inn Atb. 6. p. 210. and that not only because they had keenest stimulations to liberal studies, wherein being Masters they might best serve the noble ends of justice and order: but also for that the expenses of their education to the Law being so chargeable, is best borne by them that have plentiful incomes to defray them by: And these by the text are said to be nobiles, and their Sons sent thither nobilium filii] which is to be understood not of the high Nobility, Lib. 7. Lincolns-Inn p. 110. the Peerage (though often their Sons were thither sent, and there have professed the Laws, and been advanced in fortune by them) but the Sons of the lower Nobility, Knights, Esquires, and gentlemen's Sons, who are chiefly the nobiles here; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Plato lib. 5. De Repub. Euphrades Philosophus apud Cressolium Mystag. lib. 2. c. 4. for these, as their Fathers have great estates, and generous blood in them, so do beget and nourish in their children that bravery which may excite them to and confirm them in virtuous emulations, and rouse up their spirits to excellent performances. And this the ancients thought so peculiar to noble birth, that they decried all mean born persons from public trusts and honours, and that, for that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, For the very servility and meanness of spirit which is impressed on them by their genitor; and also, that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that illiberal education that they take by reason of it. I know this is no general rule exempt from all exception, for there is every day's experience of Gentlemen born, that are sordid and mean in nature, and of Plebeians by birth that are Genteeled in disposition; but for the most part, and according to the general dispensation of nature it being so, the learned in all times have judged those fittest for great trusts and honours, who are not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 (as Mercury in Lucian cries out of extemporary Philosophers, who base in birth, Lucianus in Bis accusatus. and breeding, covet to do high things but fail in them.) but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Socrates his words are, Well born, and well employed and improved by virtuous education, who thereby will be able and willing to expedite Justice, and to prevent oppression and violence, which as ill Advocates do promote, so good ones do prevent. This is the reason D'argentre in his account of Brittany says, that by the Laws of Britanny, and according to the old constitution of that Duchy, no man could be an Advocate or pleader of Causes, but he that was of a noble Ancestry of Gentry; because mean spirits do embase the honour of the Laws by serving the ignoble ends of those, who being great would be cruel and disorderly against the counsel and enaction of the Laws: which because men of good families may be presumed not to connive at or approve, but to oppose and reject, therefore they have been ever judged meetest to be bred to the knowledge of Laws that they might be employed in those trusts. Generosi animi & magnifici est, juvare & prodesse; qui dat beneficiae, Deos imitatatur; qui repetit, foeneratores. Lib. 3. De Benef. p. 47. And therefore though some despise blood and parentage (and in some it deserves no less, because their lives and minds are so unlike it in any expression worthy it) yet wisdom thinks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Philo Judaeus. Lib. De Nobilitate. p. 903. the most glorious Temple of the mind only fit to contain it, and that only nobility to be, as Philo's words are, the greatest good and causal of the greatest good, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Idem lib. praecitat. ad Initium. which is solely bend upon and conjured to advance goodness and virtue; which ambition, when the mind of man has, he in whom that mind is, deserves the utmost secular honour. Let these be Kings, says Seneca, though their Ancestors were none; Sint hi Reges, quia majores eorum non fuerunt, quia pro summo Imperio habuerunt justitiam, abstinentiam, quia non Rempublicam sibi, sed se Reipubls. dicaverunt; Regnent, quia vir bonus proavus eorum fuit, qui animum supra fortunam gessit. Senec. lib. 4. De Benefic. p. 72. for in that they preferred justice before their emolument, and when others tore and rend the Commonwealth with factions, these lay still and encouraged no commotion, nor irritated any party. Let these rule, who could so well overrule their own passions; and so benefit mankind by good precepts and principles. This is true nobility, not tincture of blood, & grandeur of fortune, or honour from Princes, but that honour that appears 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Philo. Lib. De Nobilitate. p. 304. etc. in active virtue, when high spirits, put men upon high designs of virtue in deed and truth, and not in word and vapour; For without these, Gentility and Nobility signify just nothing, Is hercle posteritatem deserit, qui antiquitati addictus nihil suae atati concedit. Petrus Crinitus c. 1. De Honesta disciplina. nor is it any addition to our student to be nobilis ortu, if such he be not dotibus & studiis. Whereas then 'tis said in our Text, ipsi nobilium filii tantum in hospitiis illis leges addiscunt, 'tis to be understood that as they are most proper to learn and practise the Law, so for the most part they, and they only do; For tantum is not here exclusive, but accumulative, not an only of impropriation, as if none but such did or might: Non est Philosophia populare artificium, nec ostentationi paratuni, non in verbis sed in rebus est. Senec. Epist. 16. but an only of annumeration, as I may so say, more of them then of any other do, nay the greatest part of those that do in hospitiis illis leges addiscere, are of those ucbilium filii. For this Philosophy is no populare artificium, but those are to study and attain it, who are industrious and not faint hearted, whom no labour and toil of brain will discourage, no voluminousness of Authors will affrighten. Cujus (Hospitii Juris) cum vestibulum salutassem, reperissemque linguam peregri nam, dialectum barbaram, methodum inconcinnam, molem non ingentem solum, sed perpetuis humeris sustinendam, excidit mihi fateor animus. Spelman in Pr●oemio ad Gloss. Non est quod admireris animum meum, adhuc de alien● liberalis sum. Senec. Ep. 16. Qua, sive contineas nihil. tacitam conscientiam juvant, sive proferas non doctior videb●ris sed molestior. Lib. 1. De Brevit. vita. p. 734. For though ingenuity and mother-wit may do much, and may make a great bustle with it; yet books throughly read and understood are the great helps to skill and art: and he that intends them well shall addiscere, as our Chancellour's word is, that is, not operose nihil agere, & in literarum inutilium Studiis detineri, which the Moralist accuses the Greeks to have corrupted the Romans with the love of; but to learn by study what may add to their own ingenuity, addiscere quasi addere ad qua didicerunt, to make an improvement by learning to what God has given them in nature. Cum Panperes & vulgares pro filiorum suorum exhibitione tantos sumptus nequtant sufferre, & Mercatores raro cupiunt tantis oneribus annuis attennare Merchandisas suas. Here the Chancellor shows how it comes to pass that the Gentry only do send, and can maintain their sons at the study of the Law which is so chargeable. For there being amongst men poor and vulgar persons who cannot, Pauperes à parvo lare. and men of Trade who will not be at the charge, those that do and will must be of the Gentry, who are neither of both ranks but a degree above them: and thence are the Nobilium filii sent to these Hospitia as the soli that can and will bear the charge of the breeding to profess the Law. No Attorney to be admitted into any Houses of Law. Order of Lincoln's Inn. 15●7, lib. 4. fol. 317. 4 P. & Mar. Alas, in our Chancellour's time the Yeomen and Country-farmers' were kept low and needy, the Citizens not so full and landed as since Queen Elizabeth's time they have grown; and therefore our Chancellor had good reason to write as he did, that the Nobilium filii only did, because the Pauperes and Vulgares could not, and Burghers the Mercatores here, would not be at that charge, by breaking their stocks and disbursing such sums of money, as in this way of breeding was to be expended. But alas since that time all things are become new: the Peasant grown rich makes his son par cum Thaino dignitate, Tu si filios sustuleris, poteris habere formosoes, poteris & deforms; & si fortasse tibi multi nascentur, esse ex illis aliquis tam servator patria quam proditor poterit. Senec. Consol. ad Marciam. p. 175. and the Citizen descended out of the best families of Gentry in England, having an Elder-brothers fortune for his son, breeds him as high as may be, and yet does not Merchandisas attenuare. For he looking upon men's sons that have risen to be great Counselors to Princes upon the account of good parts well directed and fortunated, hopes by brave education, to see him prove one of them, and thereupon cares not what he spends upon him, so he be sober and diligent: but rather the breeding of a son to this course makes the father more diligent and concerned to get, that he may leave an estate fit for such his sons generous education. So that now not blood is the only good ingredient to an Inns of Court man, but fortune, and Gentlemen in reputation men are according to the latitude or narrowness of their fortune; Haec sanctitate moru● effecit ut puer admodum dignus Sacerdotio videretur. Senec. Consol. ad Marciam. c. 24. p. 779. Lipsius' in Senec. Consol. ad Marciam. p. 191. Nobiles adolescentulos avitis ac paternis Sacerdotiis recoluit. Tacitus. though truly good breeding and brave qualities with little fortune often works greater wonders by its endeavour to obtain conspicuities of life, than the greatest blood or fortune without them has obtained, witness not only Martia's son, whom Seneca terms so rare a lad, that the wisdom and majesty of his demeanour brought him into the Sacerdotal Grandeur, when but a child, and Fabius Maximus, Cnejus Domitius, Sempronius Gracchus, all which when but very young were highly for their wisdom dignified, and Tacitus says, deservedly; but also in that never to be forgotten but ever to be honoured Sir Henry Sidney, a Gentleman, who though he had many Peers to him in fortune, yet had none in his time of almost equal virtue, nor any that I remember of like reputation as he was; for though Queen Elizabeth's time, which was so choice in Ministers of State and public employment, nourished many incomparable Statists and Courtiers, yet did few if any of them overtop Sir Henry Sidney, but that he was accounted the glory of them all: being therefore not full one and twenty years of age, he was sent Ambassador to H. ●. of France, and that not upon Compliment, but matter of great Concernment; which he transacted with so great judgement, that every year after he was on some Embassye or other: and at last was four times Lord-Justice of Ireland, three times Deputy of Ireland by special Commission, Holingshed. p. 1548. and died Knight of the Garter, leaving his son most like him in all renowned qualities, and therefore admired by all the World, learned, eloquent, valiant and courtly Sir Philip Sidney, who yet remains in memory the Darling of the Muses, and the eternal grace of all good Letters: but I proceed. Quò fit, ut vix doctus in Legibus illis reperiatur in Regno, qui non sit Nobilis, & de Nobilium genere egressus. This avoidable follows upon the Premises truth: If none can be learned in the Laws but those that study it, and none can to a latitude of learning study it but they that do it in proprio Study, that is, take the water at the springs head, and attend the Courts in their debates and resolutions; and those that study it must be able and willing to undergo the charge, which few in Henry the Sixth's time were but the Nobiles, that is, the Gentry, who had fair Lands and Offices, by the income whereof they plentifully supported themselves, if by all these Gradations there is ascent to learning in the Law, than the learning that is attained to, must be by the Nobles, that is, the Gentry, who are so docti in Legibus,] that they are Sacrarum opinionum Conditores, as after they have been double Readers or Sergeants they are accounted. I grant there might be some then, as now there are many more who are learned; yet not of the Nobilium genere, which is the reason of the vix to qualify the peremptoriness of the position: but to one that was, twenty were not of any race below that of Gentry by the Father, which is the right line, and so are Nobiles within the Text; or by the Mother, who being de genere Nobilium, her son may by our Chancellor be said to be de Nobilium genere egressus. Vnde magis aliis consimilis statûs hominibus, ipsi Nobilitatem curant & conservationem honoris & famae suae. This is added to show the trust that the Nation puts in men of the Law, and the confidence they have in them from the consideration that they have honours and fortunes to awe them from all fordid and trucking practices. For though every man is, as an honest man, bound to keep himself just and upright, because of God his Judge, and Conscience his accuser or excuser; yet are some seemingly more obliged hereto then others, because they have superadded restraints and favours to those common ones, which the humane nature promiscuously hath, and by which it is circumscribed and confined: and this the Text makes to be Riches and Blood, the two Darlings of all Polities, and those pair of Favourites that accommodate Peace and Warr. Now though no man can endow himself with either of these further than God gives him opportunity thereto, and gives him wisdom to discern and cooperate with his opportunities; yet every man that has the use of reason and the fervour of Justice in him, can choose whether he will be fordid or not, and can (if he will) resolve to keep himself from a just arraignment of dishonesty and injustice. And therefore men, next to the fear of God, should propound to themselves great examples and great exceed of any thing in their family before them, as that which might both keep them in awe of lessening their family by doing any thing minute, and put them forth to do somewhat beyond what is almost effectable: my reason is, because where there is not something of merit and unvulgar floridness appearing in men, the disappointments of life will so lessen and abate them, that they shall have nothing able to cope with or prevail against them, but must take down their topsayls and strike Mast, leaving all that is dear to them to the mercy of those cruel vicissitudes, Sic ●v●nit mihi, quod plerisqu● non suo vitio ad inopiam reda●tis; Omnes agnoscunt, nemo succurrit. Sen. Ep. 1. Non suo vitio] sed temporum fortuna judicat callide in aula sibi tempus perire. Lipsius' in Not. ad Ep. 1. p. 157. In his life, p. 53.56. which often swallow down with more than beastial freity the most lovely fruits of life, great Parts and great Diligence. That passage of Seneca is enough to bid men beware dependence on mortal levity or popular fame, So it happens to me as to many (saith he) who are not by vice, but by a secret providence brought to poverty; All pity, but none relieve: Lipsius has a note on those words, which refers his grief to the Court of Nero, which he having spent much time in, bemoans himself for the loss of it, all his attendance there neither bettering the minds of those he conversed with, nor advancing his fortunes as any compensation to his service. A misery that facetious and generous spirits are so often flattered into and deluded by, that they bemoan themselves too late to be accounted either wise or recompensed. That ingenuous Sir Henry Wotton is one of the livelyest instances of this, for that great soul of his which thought the Emperor's jewel given him, but a narrow present for the Countess of Sabrinah's short treatment of him, was so eclipsed by the disfavour of greatness, that it was forced to publish inability to defray the charge of every day that came upon him; In his letter to the Duke of Buckingham, p. 483. and to bemoan his former greatness, the abridgement of which, caused his face to be wrinkled with care, and on another occasion, to complain that after a 17. years public employment) he is left destitute of all possibility to subsist at home, being much like Those scale-fish, which over-sleeping themselves in an ebbing water feel nothing about them but a dry shore when they awake, which comparison saith he, I am fain to seek amongst those creatures, not knowing among men that have so long served so gracious a master, any one to whom I may resemble my unfortunate bareness. I forbear the sad eclipse of the most ingenious Chancellor Bacon. These things I instance in, to show the instigation men have from noble births to endeavour their conspicuities, and to bemoan the defeats of them, which the students of noble families are best thought to endeavour, who seek nothing more in their profession, then to be able to deserve many and good Clients, and to be great gainers by them, and so becoming honestly and fairly rich, Rhenanus in Notis ad Senec. Ludum. p. 949. and not showing themselves like the Causidici in Claudius his time, Venale genus hominum; but keeping close to the Law, and being faithful to their clients, may be said Magis aliis consimilis statûs hominibus nobilitatem curare, etc. In his revera hospitiis majoribus etiam & minoribus, ultra studium legum, est quasi Gymnasium omnium morum. This the Chancellor writes to show the generous accomplishment of a noble Student, whom, though he knows sent to the Inns of Court to be a professed Lawyer; yet he presents here as apt, by the quaintness of his general breeding to comply with all conditions of life, to which God, his genius and his opportunities shall most incline him to. Now though here I have a fair occasion to humbly suggest my apprehensions of excellent perquisites to the study of the Law, as to live soberly and retired, to study moderately and with method, to keep company sparingly and with choice, to frequent exercises both public and private, to * An old order in Lincolns-Inn, none to come to the bar under 10. years standing. lib. 4, Temps E. 6. p. 345. practise leasurably and not too soon after his call to the Bar, to be not greedy of fees till they be deserved, to counsel in Causes just and lawful, and to discourage prosecution of the contrary, to keep his Chamber, Study, and Courts constantly, to treat his Clients affably, and to hear them calmly, to stick to their interest if just, resolutely, and to settle himself to the consistence in these by a fit and convenient marriage. Though I say I might enlarge on all these, which do account highly to the studium Legum, Plin. lib. 10. c. 29.4. juris praecepta sunt tria, honest vivere, alterum non ladere, jus suum unicuique tribuere. Bracton lib. 1. c. 4. and are in effect but those three precepts of the Law that Bracton mentions; yet I pass them over to avoid tediousness, desiring the Student to remember that all these without Gods blesssing on, his diligence cannot secundate it: For he that endeavours any thing without God, Habes sharissime qua possunt tranquillitatem tueri qua restituere, qua subrepentibus vitiis resistant. Illud tamen scito, nihil horum satis esse validum, rem imbecillam servantibus, nisi intenta & assidua cura oircumeat animum labentem.] Senec. Lib. De Tranquil, ad stuem. does but reti ventos venari. That than which I pass to, is that which besides the study of the Law is learned in the Inns of Court, to wit, Exercises of manhood, of ornament, and delicacy, of Learning and activity. Of the first sort are singing and playing n instruments very great additions to a Gentleman; for though Music seem to be but of an airy and volatile nature, yet in the consequence of it it proves to be a very notable furtherer of the minds delight, order, and composure, which is the reason that the ancients prescribed Music not only in Civil, but sacred rites: and that not to make those mysteries light and jovial, but to draw up the heart and soul by every occasion of joy, and expressive agility to actuate itself upon that divine Opificer, whence these powers and art to improve them come, Cantus est modulatio, se● fluxus & transitus vocis a gravi in acutum, & vice versa, per intervalla concinna, qui aptus est ad animi latitiam, dolorem, aut alium effectum exprimendum vel commovendum. Mersenius Harmonicorum lib, 7 p. 113. In Tabul, proposit. and by whom they are ingenerated in us. This Music the Text respects both as it is vocal and instrumental, Cantare ipsi addiscunt] saith the Text. Now Cantare, is not bare modulation, or transition of the voice from grave to acute notes, and so backward, joining thereto apt intervals and cadencies; Nor is it only as a Canere grandia ●late, jucunda dulciter, & moderata leniter. Quintil. lib. 1. c. 10.20. Quintilian says, a noting of great things loftily, pleasant things sweetly, and moderate things softly, but it is a singing of celebration, and a mirth of grandeur and composedness; Cantare, quasi incantare & fascinare, to do that by the voice which Orators do by words, surprise and captivate hearers, yea work conquests over their own minds and passionss. This dulcimer of the voice, whether it be sacred or civil, is very effectual to excite the mind to all facetious pleasure, and to recruite it of those spirits which are exhausted by intentness and labour; therefore the Holy Ghost by Moses excites the people to praise God by singing Exod. 15.21. And in all the book of God, nothing is set forth as a devouter part of worship then vocal Music, Sing unto the Lord is the exhortation of every Psalm; yea in the primitive times singing of Holy Anthems and Psalms, was the peculiar character of Christians, the Heathens from this practice of the jews uttered most of the praises of their Gods and their Heroe's by singing, which is so harmless and tuneable a token of foulary joy, that nothing can better testify internal contentation and rapture then singing. Whereas then 'tis said, Cantare ipsi addiscunt] it means not rude and artless singing, for that is natural, (being the expression of the air or breath from the lung, which invigorates and sonifies it) but that which they learn is artly, singing by book and rule according to the Gammuth, and the true position and order of sounds, to give every note its height and depth, and time its length and breadth: Omnis Cantus certis pthongis, intervallis & temporibus constat. Mersenius lib, 8, Harmonicorum p. 161. thus to sing, is to divide time into proper portions, and to observe order in the transports of our joys, and this Maphius Vegius thinks so necessary to good institution, that nothing can be more graceful, Musica ad degendum recte in otio vitam, moderandosque animorum motus, leniendasque perturbationes ediscitur, qualis est maxime qua fortium virorum gesta, divinaque landes decantantur; nihil certe cognitione ejus utilius, nihil homini libero convenientius. Lib. 3. De Educatione liberorum. c. 3. Tom. 15. Biblioth. magnae Patrum. p. 863. nothing more worthy a freeman. For that a Suetonius in Nerone c. 20, &c 21. Nero delighted in singing and jovialty was not his reproach, but in that he expressed it by such lewd and vain sing, as savoured of obscenity and immoral lubricity, that was his abuse of singing. And therefore artly singing, as it is a very wholesome thing to keep the breath sweet, and has a taking acceptation with the ear and heart of all auditors; so has it a very useful influence on the content of all actions. For as we are to eat, sleep, recreate, study in proportion; so we are to be merry in due and convenient manner. Nothing more rocks asleep and reposes, Forte inter epulas Aulicis (uti mos est) canentibus. Aurel, Victor c. 5. De Caesaribus p. 512▪ nothing more renders entertainments acceptable then singing, which is the reason that all treatments at meals, all festivals of joy are associated with singing, the pleasure of which does not only in a sort digest the meat, but affablize the nature of the communicants each to other, especially when hereto instrumental Music is added, which the Text calls genus harmoniae. In omni genere harmoniae] This is not so much wind and pipe, as touch and stringmusique; not the Music that is loud, Stentorian, and clamorous, as that which is sweet, silent and undisturbing: Music which goes so soft that it may sweetly note it in a Lady's Chamber, as the Proverb is. This music of the Lute-Viol, and the like, is that which becomes an Inns of Court, and an Inns of Courtman; nor is there any thing in the World more disposes men to sweet and social temper; None hate Music, but rude minds. then Music and Voices, these by a pleasing and harmonious witchery, harmelesly sedate and surprise minds to a delightful comportment with all humours, accidents, companies. Nor are any men more acceptable companions than men of Musical addiction; For if Orpheus as the Poets feign, surprised trees, & Arion fishes by their Harps; If instruments well tuned, lay evil spirits in Saul's; and pacify the distempers of brainless furies; if this be the effect of Harmony, to incline the eye to kindness, the hand and foot to agility, the ear to attention, the whole man to grace of behaviour, Our Inns of Courtman is to be accomplished therewith, and not to stay there, or come away thence without it. Ibi etiam tripudiare ac jocos singulos nobilibus convenientes qualiter in domo Regia exerceri solent, enutriti. As serious things become the manhood of Nobles, so lighter and more active, their youth; for as the year has her season of fruits and weathers, and the sea of ebbs and flows, and the Air of winds and reins: so the Ages of men have their peculiar virtues and vices, and accordingly evidence the fruits of them. Therefore as sedere, silere, studere, are the companions of age; so are active recreations the treatments of youth. Cicero 2 de Divinat. 110. Cato c. 186. Columella lib. 1. c. 6.14. Quia cum pascuntur, necesse est aliquid ex ore cadere & terram pavire. Becman in verbo. This the Text alludes to in the word Tripudiare] that is, dancing or vaulting. Tripudium, of old Terripavium, after, Terripudium, then Tripudium derived from Pavio, which is applied to birds who are light creatures, and who hop up and down when they are lighted the wing, to pick up viands: hence dancing, which is a quick motion of the body here and there, is called Tripudium; so (a) Ac per urbem ire canentes carmina tripudiis solennique saltatu jussit. Lib. 1. ab urbe 83. Livy and (b) Sed illum tot jam in funeribus Reipublica exuliantem & tripudiantem Legum si possit laqueis constringeret. Pro Sestio 77. Tully both render it by saltare. Which dancing perhaps was not as with us, by congees, paces, chaces, boundings, vaulting, turnings, and other such graceful demeanours as obsequious to the Music, make the merriment orderly; but such a dancing as does ter pede in saltando terram ferire, as c Lib. 25. c. 29. Turneb. Advers. lib. 14. c. 12. & lib. 27. c. 17. Turnebus well observes. Of these Tripudia there were sundry sorts, Tripudia solestina and Tripudia sonivia. With us we have only French dancing and Country dancing used by the best rank of people. Morris-dancing is an exercise that the loose and vile sort only use, and that only in fairs and meetings of lewdness: but the tripudare in our Text is that decent, harmless, and graceful carriage of the body in all the motions of it, which answers the exactness of perfect Majesty of gate and grace of comportment, for which men are said to be well-bred and well-fashioned, or of good behaviour, de bonne mean. This in these places is expressed in part by Revellings. Ac jocos singulos Nobilibus convenientes] jocus is properly verbal mirth, telling of Romantique Stories, and proposing Riddles, exercising Questions and Commands, acting passions of love, which therefore is called Courtship. These are joci as to the notation of the word, though when the later clause is made to expound it such as doth Nobilibus convenire, and as in doom Regia exerceri solent,] than it should be something more manly and dispositive to Arms and Activities, as fencing, leaping, vaulting, riding the great horse, running, these seem to me together with cards, bowls, tennis, and the like, which are exercitial of the mind and body, to be joci within the Text; for these are much the repasts of Nobles, and men that but for them know not how to spend their time, and that not unbeseemingly. For as Solomon allows a time for all things, so have wisemen in all Ages mixed with serious, jocose things, as conceiving an amability in the moderate medley of them. Socrates the gravest of Mortals, Socrates cum pueris ludere non ●ruboscit. Senec. the Tranquil. thus condescended to humour youth, Not blushing to bear his part with boys in their boys play, which was such as was that sport, in arnudine equitando, d Lib. 8. c. 8. Ad numeros Satyri movere Bathylli, Persius. Et Scipio triumphale illud & militare corpus movit ad numeros, non milliter seiufringens ut nunc mos e● etiam incessu ipso ultra mulierum mollitiem fluentilus, sed ut illi antiqus viri solebant, inter lusum & festa tempora virilem in modum tripudiare, non facturi detrimentum etiamsi ab hostibus suis spectarentur. Senec. lib. de Tranq. Valerius Maximus writes of; and Scipio is reported to please himself in acting his military and manly body according to the direction of the then Music, keeping time in his motions, Not as effeminate persons use, saith Seneca, to do, but as of old Athletique and Pugillary men did, that is, on Festivals and great appointments of Recreation, they so manly vaulted, leapt, jumped and danced, that they would have been magnified therefore, had their Enemies been Spectators and judges. In ferialibus diebus eorum pars major legalis disciplinae study, & in festivalibus sacrae Scripturae, & Cronicorum lectioni, post divina obsequia se confert. This clause remembers the virtuous and thrifty division of time, which the Law of the Inns of Court in our Chancellour's time directed, to wit, that the study of the Law should not eat out God's portion of time, nor the reading and meditation of Scripture, or converse with History, but that though the most time were allowed the Law, yet those other necessary accomplishments were to be duly and in their proper time also intended. In ferialibus diebus] That is, on common days, the six days of the week, Feria dicuntur dies quibus cessatur ab opere aliquo, sed per extensionem dicuntur feria sex dies post Dominicam, quos nomine Planetarum & Idolorum dicebant Ethnici, Lunae, Martis, etc. Tholoss. lib. 2. c. 15. De Feriis Festisque. Feria dicta sunt dies in quibus ab aliquo opere vacui, dabunt hominos, vel dar● poterunt operam aliis negotiis quales sunt feriae nundinarum, etc. Bruno lib. 6. de Ceremon. c. 6. Lil. Gyrald. lib. De Ann. & Mensibus, p. 593. Apud Stobaeum Sermone de Avaritia. Lib. 2. Syntagm. Juris. c. 15. lib. 48. c. 8. ss. 13. lib. 49. c. 2. ss. 10. none of them being Holy days, which if they were, so many only as were not, aught to be employed in the study of the Law. To write of these Feriae at large were to perplex this Commentary; and to little profit the Reader. That only that is necessary to insert, is, That in Antiquity Feriae were such days as were vacations from all ordinary labour, and had extraordinary indulgence allowed them, it being a chief Prerogative of them to be free and brisk in all disports and recreations that are not absolutely flagitious, the wisdom of Legislators appointing them to be the releases of servants and men of toil from the sowerer practices of life, as the encouragement of them to return to their Drudgery more contentedly: which gave occasion to that saying of Democritus, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. A life without Holy days was a long way without an Inn. Of these Feriae there were divers sorts, stativae, imperativae, conceptivae, nundinae; of which Tholossanus writes at large: so also mention is made of them in the (a) Lib. 2. tit. 12. De feriis & dilationibus & diversis temporibus. Digest, and in (b) In Pandect. prior. p. 43. Budaeus, and (c) Sigonius in Fast. & triumph. Romanor. p. 68.114. , (d) Suetonius in Claudio. c. 22. Plutarch in Moralib. per totum opus. others. That which the Text is appliable to, is the designation of these Feria to reading of the Law: that is, as I humbly conceive, when the Student has laid a good foundation the first three years, and laboured hard at the little Books together with the Register, which I take to be the best pointer out of original Laws, Writs being the remedies of their violation, and thence importing original Laws violated, I say, (with submission ever to the learned) when the understanding is accustomed to the Law, and there is in the Student an habituation to the Law; then to repair on Court-dayes to the Courts, and there to take notes and observe the arguments and carriages of persons and causes therein, is very advantageous to the profit of the Student, who there may learn much, and from thence bring it written down to his after-improvement. For to our Student these Feriae are no relief from study, Legum conditores festos instituerunt dies ut ad hilaritatem homines publicè cogérentur, tanquam necessarium laboribus interponentes temperamentum. Senec. lib. De Tranquil. p. 487. as to other men they are from corporal labour: but they are diversions of the labour from the Students body in repairing to the Courts and intending the causes pleading in them, to his mind intent on his books in his study. For the Text says not, he should by jollity and good fellowship refresh himself, as Seneca says Cato did, Cato vino laxabat animum publicis curis fatigatum. Eodem loco. and therefore by Memmins was railed at for intemperance; but the Text says that the greater part of the Students do on Common and Court-daye devote themselves to the study of the Law, Lipsius' in Notis ad lib. De Tranquillit. that is, if they cannot hear Law at Westminster-Hall, Feriarum festorumque dierum ratio in liberis requietem habet litium & jurgiorum, in servis operum & laborum. Cic. 2. De Legibus 47. they will read it in their own Chambers; for Law they will have that come and intend to be Lawyers, whatever diligence they express and whatever pleasure they deny: for the very days of other men's pleasure is to them a time of great pains and expression of diligence. Et in Festivalibus] Of these I have written in the Notes on the 35. Chapter. These Festivals were the sacred Portions of time in which The honour of the Gods, as the Heathens phrase was, took up all the thoughts and actions of men; and wherein they not only sacrificed in token of Religion, Festi dies erant in quibus vel sacrificia Diis offerebantur, vel dies diurnis epulationibus celebrabantur, vel ludi in bonorem dierum fietant, vel feriae observabantur. Nonius in verbo. 2 De Oratore. 153. Terence Adel. 2, 3, 8. Psiud. 22.7. Casina 17.2. but also feasted and jollited in relation to the sweenting of life, which thence did receive much pleasing entertainment. Hence every thing of delight and plenty they termed Festivum and Festivitas; so Tully calls a man of a pleasant and gay genius and humour, Homo festivus, and Terence says he has Festivum caput; and loci festivi and festivi ludi are frequent in Plautus: when then in the (e) De Claris Orator, 91. Cic. 1. De Invent. 1 De Orator. 12.6. Orator we read of Festivitate igitur & facetiis, Festivitas, Splendour, Concinnitudo in Oratore, festivitate & venustate conjuncta vis dicendi, it is to remember us that the joy of Festivals is no new thing; but that which prudence in all Ages has ordered to associate the plenty of it. And therefore Christianity has allayed the mirth of excess with duties of Devotion in both parts of the day at Prayer hours; and the Student of the Law, though he may keep his Chamber post divina obsequia, yet after he has been at the public prayers (wherein his devotion dictates the most humble and un-pharisaical posture to him) yet even his retirement and holiday recreation must be reading of Scripture and of History, that thereby he may know how as a Christian and a good man, to demean himself. For the word of God being notified to man, as the declared will of his maker, and the Law of his eternal soul, as by reading, understanding, and practising of it, it is able to make him wise unto Salvation; so by reading the Records of past ages, he satisfies himself in the virtues, vices, humours, laws and reasons of the transactions of them, and is thereby enabled to discourse of, and judge concerning the nature and impulses of the same. For as in order to the grace that leads to, and the glory that is in the triumphant world, the Sacred Scriptures are the surest Oracle, and he that trusts to them shall never be ashamed or deceived, because they are not only the power of God to salvation, but the light that shines in the darkness of error and infidelity; and discovers those things, that eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, nor hat entered into the heart of man to conceive or think of, which is the reason Our Lord charges his Disciples to search the Scripture, assuring them that therein they have eternal life, and they are they that testify of him; So in relation to this world so full of sin sorrow and dissatisfaction, Nihil earum rerum scire, quae antequam nasceris factae sunt. hoc est, semper esse puerum, cognoscere vero res gestas antiquitali, exemplorumque memorabilium habere notitiam utile decorum. laudabileque ac prope divinum est. Cic. the study of Chronicles, in which ages long since past, are presented men as in then being, is the second best expense of time wisdom can possibly prescribe, since conversation with wise men's books and actions are no less instructive in wisdom then personal converse with them: which because men who are not contemporary with, or near livers to, or timelily acquainted with them, cannot have, History and Record of them is only able to become supplement to those great defeats, which sin on man's, and judgement on God's part, has incommodated mortality with, and against which there is no compensation but that of continuation, by which the excellent and immortal penns of heroic men, do by Histories in a sort eternize men and ages. Which is the reason our Text makes holy days spent in reading Scripture before prayers in the morning, and History after prayers in the afternoon (for so I understand divina obsequia as referring to the Inns of Court devotion-orders) to be a most notable account of time, and the probablest engine to adorn a Students life with piety and knowledge. Ibi quippe disciplina virtutum est, & vitiorum omnium exilium] This is a notable Character of them, that the Inns of Courts are what luxurious Athens was not, Matres virtutum, novercae vitiorum; for none coming thither but with a resolution to submit to the government of them, the government actuated by learned and prudent Gravities, termed Masters of the Bench, is such as is modelled and conform to virtue, and diametrally opposite to vice: hence is it that as the students were kept close to Chapel; Commons, Exercises, studies, so did they at their leisure, and at their recreation acquire such Genteel qualities, as made their nature manly, their behaviour graceful, their language and writing courtly, and their conversation praiseworthy. To further them in which, by amotion of whatever might add fuel to the fire of vanity in youth, See 5. Book Lincolns-Inn. p. 415. Orders have from time to time been against long hair, hats, greatruffs and excesses of apparel, against riot in meat or drink, quarrelling or fight in the societies, and against all intemperance, by reason of which these studies of the Law may well be written of, as here they are, Ibi disciplina virtutum & vitiorum omnium exilium. Ita ut propter virtutis acquisitionem, vitii etiam fugam, Milites, Barones, alii quoque magnates & nobiles regni, in hospitiis illis ponunt filios suos. It should seem by this, that the Inns of Court were in high esteem in H. the 6. time; for they were then the trains of the flower of our youth, who are termed nobilium filii, hence the Statute that mentions, Prelates, Dukes, Earls, Barons, says also, and other Nobles and great men of the Realm. 2. R. 2. c. 5. which Nobles by 22. E. 4. c. 6. are named Lords, Knights, Esquires, and other noblemen of this noble Realm of England, honourable and noble persons, so 1. Mar. c. 1. For when travel was not so frequent as now it is, our gentry and nobility that then were bred at home in these Inns, were as towardly to all purposes of war and peace, counsel and conduct, as now travel makes them; nay undoubtedly though some are much accomplished by it, yet many more are so tainted, by the liberty they have in it taken, that they never return to a sobriety of principle and practice, but are confirmed in a lawless latitude of doing and speaking their pleasures, to the Confront of all moral and religious restrictions: hence come the frequent debaucheries and incontinencies of life, the vain disguises and transports of fashion, the prodigal expenses and haughtiness of living, the ruining looseness of recreations and gaming, the manless disuse of activities and Tilting, the great decays of Hospitality and housekeeping, these and other such like mischiefs ensue upon the frequent travels of our great men, who learn that liberty abroad that they never after refrain at home. Indeed travel when men are of years, have conduct, and design it an accomplishment to their understanding, and accordingly employ it, is very sovereign to excellent ends; but as it is afforded youth, and they by it are seduced from that gravity and sobriety, that more restrained breeding would acquaint them with, so 'tis dangerously enervative of all future stayedness, which our Ancestors well understanding, chose rather to put their Sons, how well born, honoured and fortuned soever, to these Inns of Court there to learn the mode of living, suitably to their quality, rather than to send them abroad, fearing nothing more, than the infection of foreign toys and the tinctures of foreign vices. Nihil enim moribus hujus atatis publicum, praeter aerem & pluviam censetur. Budaeus lib. 4. De Ass, p. 171. edit. Vascos. But now the times are such, that the Inns of Courts are thought mean lodges for Nobility and the eldest Sons of Gentry, who all go abroad to travel, leaving the younger brothers or gentlemen's sons of smaller fortune to inhabit them: so that the young Inns of Court-men of our age, are such as mostly study to profess the Law, and by it become great and rich, which they well deserve to be who prefer a learned diligence and industry in a profession, before a vain sinful and needy idleness and latitude of life, which is so great a burden to a noble and actively virtuous humour, as nothing can be more, since that only answers the end of God's mercy to our beings, births, and lives, which enables us to glorify him, benefit men, and serve our own fames, in the opinion of those that either knew us alive, or read us dead, which they will hardly] with pleasure delight to do those who studied themselves only as all persons of vice and vanity do. Ibi vix unquam seditio, jurgium, aut murmur resonat.] These Inns of Court consisting of so many Gentlemen of different tempers, may reasonably be expected to be variously acted, as the severalties of them in their predominancy, do incline, but that the ingenuity and gentle submission of them to the government of their society, steers them to a more comely submission and conformity, vix unquam] says our Text, not nunquam; for that has many times been. The youth have been (as we may say) in rebellion against the ancients, and the bar against the bench, but this is but seldom, and not durable, 'tis nubecula cito transitura, soon up soon down; though it be à sede itio, a show of sedition, and seemingly a departure from the rule of subjection, yet when ever it happens 'tis seditio levitatis non pravitatis, Tacit. lib. 20. Hercul. Fur. 3.3. Propertius lib. 4, Eleg. 4. Lucret. lib. 1.114 Cavendum vero ne etiam in graves inimicitias convertant se amicitiae, ● quibus jurgia, maledicta, contumelia gignuntur. Cic. De Amicitia 67. 1 Jacob. c. 8. adolescentiae non malitiae 'tis not seditio malevolentiae sed incogitantiae, not such an one, as being complicated with Tacitus his acria jurgia, and Seneca's rabiosa jurgia, with alta and fera murmura in Propertius, minitantia murmura in Lucretius, these formidable disobediences tending to violence and dissociation, are not the unhappinesses of the Inns of Court; for our Chancellors words are, vix seditio, jurgium aut murmur resonat] that is, there is hardly any whispering or echo of discontent, not so much as that noise of it, that the musical waters have in their gliding, vix resonat] that is, contra sonantem imperium vix sonat seditio etc. As much as if the Text had said, there is not so much hidden displeasure, as amounts to a mouth open against the orders of the Parliaments & Benchers of the houses, but all obedience is given them; for that the Governors are thought to be wise, and worthy, and to do nothing but pro bono societatis, and the governed are orderly and submissive in demonstration of good examples, and civil breeding, which directs them to observe their temporary Governors while they are under Government, as they themselves when Governors would be observed by puisnes, under government. Delinquentes non alia poena, quam solum à communione societatis suae amotione plectuntur. This is introduced to show that these societies are no Corporations, or have any judicial power over their Members, but only administer prudential cures to emergent grievances, which being submitted to by the society, have (by consent) the honour and effect of Laws, and work only upon the contumacious, by way of either discommoning them for light offences, or expelling them for greater, which way of reproaching and discountenancing irregularity was very primitive in the cohabitations of Christians, in relation to religious and civil life; for as they under persecution were inclined by grace to be of one heart and mind, Seld. lib. D● Syu●driis Judzorum. Lib. primus minor Hosp. Lincoln's. Inn. p. 148. Lib. eodem loca pracitat●. Lib. 6. p. 309. 1 Cor. 5. v. 11. the better to propagate their profession, and to adorn it with a suitable and peaceful conversation: so did they in prudence wholly agree the punishment of enormity within themselves, the Civil Magistrate neither protecting nor affecting them. From this dreadful punishment of excommunication practised amongst the Jews, and from them in use amongst Christians, have the societies of the Law and Colleges in Universities, the course to put out of Commons, which the Apostle remembers in those words, If any man that is called a brother be a fornicator, or covetous, or an idolater, or a railer, or a drunkard, or an extortioner, with such a none no not to eat. And this putting out of Commons, or removing from the table, in the Inns of Court is often the punishment of unseasonable playing at Cards and Dice, making disturbances, disrespect to the Seniors, etc. Expulsion is for greater offences, such as are, breach of the peace, and violent assault of members of the society, or for refusal of conformity in payment of Commons, or obedience to orders; This so disgraceful to a Gentleman, to be unworthy worthy company, is so great an awe, that nothing, (no not the fear of death) can be a greater awe almost to those generous spirits, than expulsion is, they well remembering that rule of honour, Honour & vita aequo passu ambularent, since to be cut of from a society of men of worship, is to be infamous, and that remedilessly; for so great a harmony is there between the societies of Law, that a Member expelled any one society can have no admission in any other, since the act of one house is (in these Cases) in construction of the rest, their own act, as far as their cooperation in the allowance of the punishment makes them ratificators of it; so is the Text, semel ab una societatum illarum expalsus, nunquam ab aliqua caeterarum societatum illarum recipitur in socium. Formam vero qua leges il●ae in his discuntur Hospitiis, hic exprimere non expedit. Concerning the formà juris & studii, I have wrote something in the notes on the eight Chapter, though as the Chancellor who knew undoubtedly much of it, discovers it but minutely: so I, (who God knows) know very little in comparison to his great proficiency, dare only offer at it, as I hope I have here done very modestly. That which in this Chapter I shall add, is only to recollect the Chancellors sense therein, to wit, that the way of study in the Inns of Court, is very ingenious, and profitable to generous accomplishment, and that the Laws studied in the famous Universities of France, Anjon, Cane, and others (Paris only excepted) are not entered into, and carried on by such well grown and manly Gentlemen, as the Laws in the Academies of the Inns of Court are, which that they may further appear to be the noble Nurferies of Probity, Strenuity, Honesty of manners, and Law-learning, this following discourse, which I before thankfully owned to the kindness of Sir Thomas Witherington's impartment to me, will more evince, which verbatim followeth. To the most High and Puissant Prince and our most dread Sovereign Lord and King Henry the Eight by the grace of God, King of England and of France, Defender of the faith, Lord of Ireland, and on Earth the supreme Head under God of the Church of England, Tho. Denton, Nic. Bacon, and Robert Cary, His Highness most humble and faithful Servants, wish continuance of health, increase of his most prosperous felicity, and right fortunate success of his Grace's most godly Enterprises and Purposes. WHERE AS, Most dread Sovereign Lord, after that we had, according to Your Grace's Commandment, delivered unto your Highness a book of Articles, containing the chief est exercises of Learning, and Orders now used in the Houses of Court amongst the Students of your Grace's Laws, Your Royal Majesty of a most Princely purpose and Godly zeal minding to erect an House of Students, wherein the knowledge as well of the pure French and Latin tongues, as of Your Grace's Laws of this Your Realm should be attained, whereby Your Grace hereafter might be the better served of Your Graces own Students of the Law as well in foreign Countries as within this Your Grace's Realm: Your Highness therefore gave us further in Commandment, that we with our most diligent endeavours should set forth, and describe unto Your Highness in writing certain other Rules and Exercises whereby Your said Students might, besides the knowledge of the Laws, be also expert and learned in the knowledge of the said Tongues. We therefore, according to our most bonnden duties, for the satisfying of your Grace's expectation in this behalf, have in Articles set forth herein such Orders and Rules both concerning the Corporation of the same Houses, and also the Exercises as we think convenient to be put in ure and practice by Your Grace's Students. And this our rude and simple Device we herewith offer unto Your Grace's hands, most humbly beseeching Your Highness to accept the same in good part. And we further again most humbly beseech Your Majesty not to take it any wise as the doings of them that will presume or attempt to prescribe or appoint unto Your Grace's incomparable wisdom and judgement, any Rules or Orders in this Your Grace's most Godly purpose: But we most humbly beseech Your Majesty to take it only as a Testimony or witness of our readiness and promptitude, according to our most bounden duties, in the diligent accomplishment of such things as Your Royal Majesty shall will us to attempt or take in hand, submitting the correction and alteration thereof to the censure and most expert judgement of Your Grace's most Royal Majesty. Hereafter followeth in Articles the manner of the Corporation and Elections, and of Exercises of Learning, together with certain Rules to be observed in the King's Grace's House. FIRST, The manner of Corporation. The certain number of such as shall be the King's Students, and of his Grace's exhibition to be limited by his Highness. Secondly, One ancient, grave, and learned man, and of no small Authority, which either hath the knowledge, or at the least is a Factor and Furtherer of all such knowledges as are studied and professed there, to be named of the King's Grace to be Chief and Head-Governor over them; and his name of Corporation to be appointed by his Highness. Item, One in his absence to be a Vice-governor, who also would be one as should procure the furtherance of all the studies indifferently, and be bounden perpetually to be resident, saving every year to have liberty of absence two Months, but never passing three weeks together; and that but at certain times when the least exercise of learning is in the House, except the Governor be there. Item, That the Vice-governor in the time of his absence shall always appoint one of the Company to supply his Room. Item, That of these three, that is to say, the Governor, Vice governor and Students, or by such other names as shall please the King's Grace, a Corporation to be made by the King's Letters Patents; and for a further and perpetual establishment thereof, that it be confirmed by Act of Parliament. The Elections and other Ordinances concerning the same. The Election and Nomination of the Governor, Vice-governor, and Students, to belong to the King's Grace. Item, His Grace shall elect P. or as many as his Grace shall think meet, of the most sage, discreet, and learned of all the Students, to whom with the Governor and Vice-governor, the ordering and execution of all the Rules and Ordinances shall pertain, which shall be called the Company, or such like name. Item, That all Ordinances hereafter to be made concerning this House by them, and signed by the King's Grace, shall be as good and effectual as if it had been made upon the foundation and past by Act of Parliament. Item, That all the King's Students be sworn to observe the Rules and Orders of the House. Item, that it shall be lawful for them or any two of them to admit to study, besides the number of the King's Students, as many other young men which shall not have the King's stipend, as to them shall seem meet, undertaking to the Governor or Vice-governor for their good behaviour, so that they may be twenty years of age. Item, That such shall be at a Table and Commons by themselves, and shall be bound to observe all the Rules and Learnings in the House; and also be sworn at their admittance thereunto. Item, That none be admitted the King's Students under the age of two and twenty years. Item, that whensoever the Vice-governor chance to die or be otherwise removed, the Governor and Company shall choose and appoint three out of the same House, or the other Houses of Court, as men most towards; and the King's Grace of the three to appoint one to be his Student. Item, That all Elections and Ordinances to be made as aforesaid concerning this House, there be present the Governor or Vice-governor, and six of the Company at the least. Item, If any of the ten, which is before called the Company, chance to die or otherwise to be removed, the Governor and Company to elect another of the King's Students into his room; and he to be ready the next Vacation after his Election, if he be elected one Quarter of a year before the Vacation, or else the next Vacation after. Item, That in all Elections and Ordinances hereafter to be made, the consent of the greater number to bind, and if they be equal, than that part that the Governor taketh, or in his absence the Vice-governor. Item, That it shall be lawful to the Governor and Vice-governor and five of the Company at the least, to admit any young man of the age of eighteen years and under twenty to be a Student, they being thereunto moved by some singular quality or excellency of knowledge that appeareth in him. Item, That the King's Grace shall appoint every of his Students his Ancienty, and after his Ancienty to go by continuance. The Exercise for the learning of the Law, and first of Moting. First, That every week three times, that is to say, on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, except Festival days and their Vigils, a Mote be had in the House. Item, That the inner Barristers shall plead in Latin, and the other Barristers reason in French; and that either of them shall do what they can to banish the corruption of both tongues. Item, That three by the course of the Company which shall be the most ancient, shall sit at the Motes as Benchers and argue unto them. Item, That every man in Commons shall keep his course in Mote, as well as the King's Students; and this course once appointed by the Governor to continue for ever. Item, That none of the ten, called the Company, shall be bound to mote, but as Benchers to argue in them. Item, That the Mote be always after Supper, as is used in Court. Item, That after dinner every three, as they sit, to have a Case propounded and argued unto, before they rise. Item, That after Supper, if there be no Motes, three Cases shall be propounded to the Company by the other Learners, and the puisne shall choose which of the three Cases he will, and argue thereunto, and after him three at the least of the Company. The first reading Vacation the Vice-governor shall read, Reading of the Law. and after him every of the rest in his Ancienty. Item, That none be called to be a Reader, but only the King's Students. Item, That after the ten have read, one after another, than he that read first to read in the Lent-Vacation; and so every Lent, one to read that hath read before: and every Summer-Vacation one that never read. Item, That any Reader during his Vacation shall deliver to them whose course is to mote, such Cases as shall be moted, new questions or old at his pleasure. Item, If any the King's Students refuse to read being thereunto called, except he have such reasonable excuse as the Governor and Company shall accept, to lose the King's exhibitions. The Exercises are to be observed in manner and form as they here appear by the space of two years, and after in somethings to be altered in manner as hereafter shall be declared. In the Termtime and Vacations, Exercises for th● Latin and French tongue. every Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, (Festival days only excepted) one of the excellent knowledge in the Latin and Greek tongue to read some Orator or book of Rhetoric, or else some other Author which treateth of the Government of a Commonwealth, openly to all the Company, and to all other that will come for the knowledge of both the said Languages; and therefore it seemeth convenient that there be two of these. Item, That this Lecture be in the Afternoon between three and four of the clock. Item, That every Friday and Saturday in the Term, and Vacation at the same hour, one learned in the French, read some introduction, to teach the true pronunciation of the French tongue. Item, That the first two years past, every Mote that shall be brought in, shall in order go after this sort, that is to say, the first in good Latin, and the utter Barristers to argue in good Latin so much as they can, and the second in good French; and this to continue alternatim: and the Benchers to argue in like manner after three years past. Item, That the mean Vacations after two years past, instead of Motes, to have daily Declamations at the same hour in Latin; Proviso, that none of the Company shall be bound to be at this. Item, We think it very convenient that they should have some House not far from the City, where they might lie together and continue their study at such time as the infectiou of the Pestilence or other contagious sickness shall chance amongst them or nigh their House. Item, That during the Lent-season the Latin Lecture to cease, and instead thereof from Thursday after Shrove-Sunday till Palm-Sunday, even the same man to read an open Lecture of Scripture. First, Rules and Orders to be kept in the Mouse. Keeping of Concubines in the House to be the loss of his stipend: fight in the House, expulsion of his part beginneth the Quarrel, and finable for the other. If any be known for a notorious whore-hunter or common Quarrel to be expulsed: playing at Dice or Cards in the House out of the twelve days in Christmas to be expulsion. Absence of any one, one week, at times appointed to be ' resident, without special Licence to be expulsion, except he have a cause thought and judged reasonable by the Governor, Vice-governor and Company. Item, If any the King's Students convey or steal any books out of the Library, or be privy or consenting thereunto, that he shall be expulsed and lose the King's exhibition. Item, if any other of the House consent or be privy to any such act, to be expulsed and committed to the Fleet, there to remain without bail or mainprize as long as it shall please the Governor and Company. Item, All other offences to be punished by the discretion of the Governor or Vice-governor and Company; and that they shall have power to commit any of the House to the Fleet, there to remain during their pleasure. Item, That one of the Butlers every Saturday make clean the Library, and clasp the books, and lay them in their places. Item, That the Governor, or Vice-governor and Company, shall have power to call counsel in the House as oft as they shall think fit for the preferment of good order, and reformation of Offences. Item, Forasmuch as we think it meet, that such as should be the King's Students should be seen expert in all civil things that are requisite to be known to do good and faithful service to the King's Highness in the affairs of his Grace's Realms and Dominions; we most humbly desire that it would please the King's Majesty, that when his Grace doth send any Ambassadors into any foreign Realm, that his Grace would associate or send to wait upon the same Ambassador one or two of his Graces said Students to be assigned by his Highness, to the intent that thereby they may be more expert and meet to serve the King's Majesty in such affairs, when occasion shall serve. Item, Forasmuch as it seemeth no wise convenient, that neither the politic Government of this Imperial Realm, and the noble Acts of the Governors of the same, which undoubtedly are worthy of eternal memory and fame; neither on the other side the detestable and devilish Acts attempted against the Commonwealth contrary to the express Laws of God and nature, and the due and just punishment for the same sustained, should in any wise o●her by negligence or lack of knowledge be drowned in forgetfulness or buried in ignorance, but that they should be rather chronicled and remain in Histories for ever, whereby our posterity seeing (as it were before their eyes) the goodly access of so noble a Government, should better provide for the security of this Realm, We therefore most humbly desire, that it would please the King's most excellent Majesty to appoint two of his greatest Students to put forth in writing the History and Chronicle of this Realm; and they that shall be so appointed, to take an Oath before the Chancellor of England and the King's most honourable Council truly and indifferently to do the same without respect of any person, or any other corrupt affection: and also that those two or one of them when any notable arraignment or high Treason shall be, to give openly evidence for the King's Highness by the Councils appointment, whereby they being so made privy to the matter, may the mor● truly and lively in their Chronicles set forth the same. And whereas we think it very expedient, that such men should also besides their studies aforesaid, have some knowledge and practice in martial Feats, whereby they may be able to do the King's Grace and the Realm service both in time of peace and war also. First therefore, That it shall be lawful for every the King's Students to occupy and exercise at his pleasure shooting in a Cross-bow and Longbow without Licence and Placard; so that it be not prejudicial to the King's Highness gamés. Item, That whatsoever War shall hereafter chance between any foreign Prince, that a certain number of the activest young men, and of no small discretion and soberness, to be appointed by the King's Majesty, which shall amongst others repair into those parts not only to view themselves the order and fashion of their Camps, and assaulting and defending, but also to set forth in writing all the whole order of the Battle, and this to be registered in their House and to remain there for ever. To the most High and most Excellent Prince our most Gracious and most Redoubted Sovereign Lord and King Henry the Eight, by the grace of God, King of England and of France, Defender of the faith, Lord of Ireland, and supreme Head on Earth immediately under Christ of the Church of England, Tho. Denton, Nic. Bacon, and Robert Cary, His Grace's most humble and faithful Servants, wish prosperous health and continuance of felicity. PLeaseth it Your most Royal Majesty to understand, that whereas Your most godly disposition and tender zeal impressed in Your most noble heart, both towards the advancement of the Commonwealth of this our Realm, and also towards the furtherance and maintenance of good Learning, and the study thereof hereafter to be used in the same, Your Highness now of late commanded us, to our inestimable comfort and consolaetion, to assemble ourselves together, and upon the diligent search and perusing of all the Orders of the Houses of Court, compendiously to set forth unto Your Grace the best form and order of Study practised therein, and all their Orders and Rules meet to be used and observed amongst them that profess study and learning: We immediately considering the godly effect and intent of this Your meaning, tending only to the right institution and education of Your Subjects of this Your gracious Realm, whereby they shall be undoubtedly as much unto Your Grace as to these natural Parents, did not only render hearty thanks to Almighty God the only Author of this Your Princely purpose, in that it hath pleased him to send us such a King and Head to reign over us, that is not only endued and adorned himself with all kinds and sorts of good learning as well divine as profane, and exact judgement in the same, but also to send us one that most endeavoureth and purposeth to set forward, and as it were to * Revive I suppose it ought to be, but it is ruin in the Copy. ruin the study and perfect knowledge thereof of long time detested and almost trodden under foot; that this His Realm in short time shall not be equal with other but far excel them, whereby not only we that are in this present Age, but the whole Realm for ever, and all our Posterities shall be most bound to him therefore. For in times past, yea in our days (alas for pity) how many good and gentle wits within this Your Grace's Realm have perished, partly for that in their youth (the chief time to plant or graft good learning in) they have not been conversant nor trained in the study thereof; but chiefly for that the most of them in their tender years, indifferent to receive both good and bad, were so rooted and seasoned as it were in barbarous Authors very Enemies to good learning, that hard it was, yea almost impossible to reduce them to goodness, but even like a fertile ground overgrown with thorns and briars produced no good fruit at all. The Redress therefore undoubtedly, most Gracious Sovereign Lord, shall be the noblest and Princelyest Act that ever was enterprised or attempted in this Realm. We therefore according to our most bounden duties have endeavoured ourselves with all our wits and power to satisfy Your Highness said desired purpose and expectation. And now having concluded Your Grace's Commandment in all things as nigh as we can, we do offer the same here unto Your most Excellent Majesty, most humbly beseeching the same to accept in good part this rude thing, submitting it to the most excellent wisdom of your Majesty, whereunto we do and shall conform ourselves, as to our most bounden duty appertaineth. The manner of the Fellowship and their ordinary Charges, besides their Commons. FIrst it is to be considered, that none of the four houses of Courts have any Corporation, whereby they are enabled to purchase, receive, or take lands or Tenements or any other revenue, nor have any thing towards the maintenance of the house, saving that every one that is admitted fellow, after that he is called to the Master's Commons, payeth yearly 3. shillings 4. pence, which they call the pension money, and in some houses, every man for his admittance, payeth 20. pence, and also besides that yearly for his Chamber 3. shillings 4. all which money is the only thing they have towards the reparations and rent of their house, and the wages of their Officers. That what sorts and degrees the whole Fellowship and Company of Students of the Law is amongst them divided. Benchers. The whole company and fellowship of Learners, is divided and sorted into three parts and degrees; that is to say, into Benchers, or as they call them in some of the houses, Readers, Utter-Barresters, and Inner-Barresters. Benchers, or Readers, are called such as before-time have openly read, which form, and kind of reading shall hereafter be declared, and to them is chiefly committed the government and ordering of the house, as to men meetest, both for their age, discretion, and wisdoms, and of these is one yearly chosen, which is called the Treasurer, or in some house Pensioner, who receiveth yearly the said pension money, and therewith dischargeth such charges as above written; and of the receipt and payment of the same is yearly accountable. V●ter-Barresters, Utter-Barresters are such, that for their learning and continuance, are called by the said Readers to plead and argue in the said house, doubtful Cases and Questions, which amongst them are called Motes, at certain times propounded, and brought in before the said Benchers, as Readers, and are called Utter-Barresters, for that they, when they argue the said Motes, they sit uttermost on the forms, which they call the Bar, and this degree is the chiefest degree for learners in the house next the Benchers; for of these be chosen and made the Readers of all the Inns of Chancery, and also of the most ancient of these is one elected yearly to read amongst them, who after his reading, is called a Bencher, or Reader. All the residue of learners are called Inner-Barresters, which are the youngest men, that for lack of learning, Inner-Barresters. and continuance, are not able to argue and reason in these Motes, nevertheless whensoever any of the said Motes be brought in before any of the said Benchers, than two of the said Inner-Barresters sitting on the said form with the Utter-Barresters, do for their exercises recite by heart the pleading of the same Mote-Case, in Law- French, which pleading is the declaration at large of the said Mote-Case, the one of them taking the part of the Plaintiff, and the other the part of the Defendant. The Order and Exercises of learning. The whole year amongst them is divided into three parts; that is to say the learning-Vacation, the Term-times and the mean and dead Vacation. They have yearly two learning-Vacations, that is to say, Lent-Vacation, which begins the first Monday in Lent, and continueth three weeks, and three days, the other Vacation is called Summer-Vacation, which beginneth the Monday after Lammas-day, and continueth as the other, in these Vacations are the greatest conferences, and exercises of study that they have in all the year; for in them these are the Orders. The Exercises of Learning in the Vacation. The manner of Reading in the Inns of Court. First, The Reader and Ancients appoint the eldest Utter-Barrester in continuance, as one that they think most able for that Room, to read amongst them openly in the house, during the Summer-Vacation, and of this appointment he hath always knowledge about half a year before he shall read, that in the mean time he may provide therefore, and then the first day after Vacation, about 8. of the Clock, he that is so chosen to read openly in the Hall before all the Company, shall read some one such Act, or Statute as shall please him to ground his whole reading on for all that Vacation, and that done, doth declare such inconveniences and mischiefs as were unprovided for, and now by the same Statute be and then reciteth certain doubts, and questions which he hath devised, that may grow upon the said Statute, and declareth his judgement therein, that done, one of the younger Utter-Barresters rehearseth one question propounded by the Reader, and doth by way of argument labour to prove the Readers opinion to be against the Law, and after him the rest of the Utter-Barresters and Readers one after another in their ancienties, do declare their opinions and judgements in the same, and then the Reader who did put the Case, indeavoureth himself to confute Objections laid against him, and to confirm his own opinion, after whom, the Judges and Sergeants, if any be present, declare their opinions, and after they have done, the youngest Utter-Barrester again rehearseth another Case, which is ordered as the other was; thus the reading ends for that day: and this manner of reading and disputations continue daily two hours, or thereabout. And besides this, daily in some houses after dinner, one at the Readers board, before they rise, propoundeth another of his Cases to him, put the same day at his reading, which Case, is debated by them all in like form, as the Cases are used to be argued at his reading, and like order is observed at every mess, at the other Tables, and the same manner always observed at supper, when they have no Motes. Of those that have read once in the Summer-Vacation, Lent-Vacation. and be Benchers, is chosen always one to read in Lent, who observeth the like form of reading, as is before expressed in the Summer-Vacation; and of these Readers in these Vacations, for the most part are appointed those that shall be Sergeants. In these Vacations every night after supper, The ordering and fashion of Motying. and every Fastingday immediately after six of the Clock, boyer ended (festival-days and their evens only excepted) the Reader, with two Benchers, or one at the least, cometh into the Hall to the Cuboard, and there most commonly one of the Utter-Barresters propoundeth unto them some doubtful Case, the which every of the Benchers in their ancienties argue, and last of all he that moved; this done, the Readers and Benchers sit down on the bench in the end of the Hall, whereof they take their name, and on a form toward the midst of the Hall sitteth down two Inner-Barresters, and of the other side of them on the same form, two Utter-Barresters, and the Inner-Barresters do in French openly declare unto the Benchers, (even as the Sergeants do at the bar in the King's Courts, to the Judges) some kind of Action, the one being as it were retained with the Plaintiff in the Action, and the other with the Defendant, after which things done, the Utter-Barresters argue such questions as be disputable within the Case (as there must be always one at the least) and this ended, the Benchers do likewise declare their opinions, how they think the Law to be in the same questions, and this manner of exercise of Moting, is daily used, during the said Vacations. This is always observed amongst them, that in all their open disputations, the youngest of continuance argueth first; whether he be Inner-Barrester, or Utter-Barrester, or Bencher, according to the form used amongst the Judges and Sergeants. And also that at their Motes, the Inner-Barresters and Utter-Barresters do plead and reason in French, and the Benchers in English, and at their reading, the Readers Cases are put in English, and so argued unto. Also in the learning-Vacations, Exercises of motes in the Inns of Chancery, during the Vacation. the Utter-Barresters which are Readers in the Inns of Chancery, go to the house whereunto they read, Either of the said Readers taking with them two learners of the house they are of, and there meet them for the most part two of every house of Court, who sitting as Benchers (do in Court at their Motes) hear and argue such Motes as are brought in, and pleaded by the Gentlemen of the same houses of Chancery, which be nine in number, four being in Holborn, which be read of, Grayes-Inn, and Lincolns-Inn, And Lincolns-Inn have Motes daily, for the most part before noon, which begin at nine of the Clock, and continue until twelve, or thereabouts, and the other five which are within Temple-bar, which are of the two Temples, have their Motes at three of the Clock in the afternoon. The only exercises of Learning in the Termtime, The ' exercises of Learning in the Term time. is arguing and debating of Cases after dinnet, and the Moting after supper, used and kept in like form, as is heretofore prescribed in the Vacation-time, and the Reader of the Inns of Chancery to read three times a week, to keep Motes, during all the Term, to which Motes, none of the other houses of Court come, as they do in the learning-Vacations, but only to come with the Reader of the same house. The whole time out of the Learning-Vacation and Term, The Exercises of Learning in the Mean-Vacation. is called the Mean-Vacation, during which time, every day after dinner, Cases are argued, in like manner as they be in other times, and after supper Motes are brought in and pleaded by the Inner-Barresters, before the Utter-Barresters, which sit there, and occupy the room of Benchers, and argued by them in like form as the Benchers do in the Termtime, or Learning-Vacation The Readers and Benchers at a Parliament or Pension held before Christmas, if it seem unto them that there be no dangerous time of sickness, The manner of Christmas, used amongst them. neither dearth of victuals, and that they are furnished of such a Company, as both for their number and appertains are meet to keep a solemn Christmas, then do they appoint and choose certain of the house to be Officers, and bear certain rules in the house during the said time, which Officers for the most part are such, as are exercised in the King's Highness house, and other Noble men, and this is done only to the intent, that they should in time to come know how to use themselves. In this Christmas time, they have all manner of pastimes, as singing and dancing; and in some of the houses ordinarily they have some interlude or Tragedy played by the Gentlemen of the same house, the ground, and matter whereof, is devised by some of the Gentlemen of the house. The manner of their Parliament, or Pension. Every quarter, once or more if need shall require, the Readers and Benchers cause one of the Officers to summon the whole Company openly in the Hall at dinner, that such a night the Pension, or as some houses call it the Parliament, shall be holden, which Pension, or Parliament in some houses, is nothing else but a conference and Assembly of their Benchers and Utter-Barresters only, and in some other of the houses, it is an Assembly of Benchers, and such of the Utter-Barresters and other ancient and wise men of the house, as the Benchers have elected to them before time, and these together are named the Sage Company, and meet in a place therefore appointed, and there treat of such matters as shall seem expedient for the good ordering of the house, and the reformation of such things as seem meet to be reform. In these are the Readers both for the Lent and the Summer-Vacation chosen; and also if the Treasurer of the house leave off his Office, in this is a new chosen. And always at the Parliament holden after Michaelmas, two Auditors appointed there, to hear, and take the Accounts for the year, of the Treasurer, and in some house, he accounts before the whole Company at the Pension, and out of these Pensions all misdemeanours and offences done by any Fellow of the house, are reform and ordered according to the discretion of certain of the most ancient of the house, which are in Commons at the time of the offence done. First they have one called the Steward, whose office is to provide the victual of the house, The Officers, and their wages. and hath for his wages five mark. They have three Butlers, whereof the chief Butler hath 40. shillings, every of the other hath for their wages 20 shillings. They have three Cooks, of which, the chief Cook hath yearly 10 pounds. The Manciple, or Steward's servant, whose office is to convey the provision of the house home from the market, and hath yearly 26 shillings 8 pence. The under-Cook hath yearly for his wages 20 shillings. The Laundres of the Clothes for the Buttery, hath by the year 6 shillings 8 pence. And besides this wages, the three Buttlers' have in reward at Christmas of every Gentleman of the house 12 pence, and some more. And at Easter, the Cooks and Manciple have in reward, of every Gentleman 12 pence, or more amongst them. The Diet of the House. The whole Fellowship is divided into two several Commons, the one is called the Master's Commons, and there is the Clerks Commons. The Master's Commons amounteth yearly to 20 nobles, or thereabouts, which is after the rate of 2 shillings 8 pence the week. The Clerks Commons amounteth by the year to five pounds six shillings eight pence, which is after the rate of 2 shillings 2 pence a week. These, most redoubted Sovereign Lord, are the most universal and general things concerning the Orders and Exercises of learning in the houses of Court, which we thought meet to describe, and to present into your Grace's hands; and having regard to other particular or private things, we thought it not convenient to trouble Your Highness with them, partly, because of the multitude of them, and partly, because they are things of no great importance, or weight. CHAP. L. Sedeum tu, Princeps, seire desideres, cur in Legibus Angliae non dantur Doctoratûs & Baccalaureatûs gradus, sicut in utroque jure in Vniversitatibus est dare consuetum, scire te volo quod licet gradus bujusmodi in Legibus Angliae minime conferuntur, & c. THIS Chapter begins with a reference to the conclusion of the 47. Chapter, where according to the order of the Dialogue, the Prince is introduced querying, Why the Laws of England are not taught in Universities, and why Degrees inchoate and consummate are not conferred in them. Now the Chancellor being willing to let no Query of the Prince pass unresolved, after he has written of the Academies of the Law, (●Inns of Court and Chancery) which are the subjects of the 49. Chapter, proceeds in this, to a replication in satisfaction to him; that though the Laws of England do differ from the Civil Laws in the names and kinds of their Degrees: yet in the import and signification of them, they are suitable in every notation of desert and dignity, Licet gradus hujusmodi, etc. saith our Chancellor. Datum tamen in illis, nedum gradus, sed & status quidam gradu Doctoratûs non minus celebris aut solennis, qui gradus servientis ad Legem appellatur. Nedum status sed & gradus] Concerning this honourable Degree, see my Notes on the 8. Chapter. Fol. 138, 139, 140. Lord Coventry's Speech Creation of Sergeants 12 Carol. 1. Anno 1636. The Honour of Serjeancy, as it is a state and degree in the Law conferred by the King's Writ or Patent, is not only (saith the late learned and honourable Chancellor the Lord Coventry) A very ancient state and degree, so ancient that Books are as silent in it as in the Commencement of the Common Law; but also a very honourable one, the high reward of profound Learning, spotless integrity, and notable fortune, and whatever tends to a Jurists accomplishment. For besides that it is coupled in the Stat. 1 Mar. Sess. 2. c. 8. with the great men of England, and has place next to Knights; Sir Edw. Cook 2 Instit. on Stat. de Milit. p. 595. the clause of Status & Gradus in the Writ amounts to some honour like that of Knighthood, and conveys an Addition of Gentility importing Name and Blood: and this makes it non minus celebris aut solennis then the Doctorship of the Law is. For though it has not been said that this Degree has 130 grand privileges attending it as Ludovicus Bologninus has computed those of a Doctor of the Law, (thanks be to him, who being himself a Doctor has generously amassed and propalated the dignity of his degree.) Which none of the learned Sergeants has ever, that I know, done to the lustre of their Dignity (being more intent on gain by it, than glory from it, which truly I beg their favour to say, is none of their greatest praise and emeritingest commendation,) yet is there much undoubtedly to be said and written in exemplification of the renown and worship that is due to this state and dignity of the learned Long-Robe. Now though I cannot serve them here in to the proportion I would, because to write of it strenuously and to the non ultra of the nature of it, would become a distinct work of some largeness, and a noble Compiler of some more than ordinary industry and exactness, learnedly and with judgement to do it; though I say I cannot undertake to write to the amplitude it calls for, yet so far as my tenuity can contribute thereto I readily shall, being a servant to all and a particular friend to some of them that are dignified with this state and degree: in testimony whereof, I shall crave leave according to the method of my Comment, to write what I find suitable to the matter of our Chancellour's Text, and apposite to be insisted on in the illustration of his language and meaning. The form of which solemnity of Creation he thus describes. Capitalis Iustitiarius de Communi Banco, de Consilio & Assensu omnium justiciariorum, eligere solet, quoties sibi videtur opportunum, & c This Clause shortly abridges the ancient (and yet in the main practised) form of calling Sergeants, from their travel and retirement in study to their reward and conspicuity; which excellent men in our Chancellors, as in all good times arrived at, not by any means less ingenious and worthy, then by the merit and reputation of excellent parts, constant diligence, staunch integrity, approved fidelity, which, because they best appeared to the Judges, who best know and judge of them, therefore is the nomination, approbation, and presentation of such fit persons referred to them (that is) to the Chief justice of the Common pleas. For that is the peculiar constellation of Sergeants, and therefore the presentation, etc. is by the Chief Justice of that Bench, with the advice and consent of all the Justices, these all so concurring, do eligere] That is, the Chief Justice of that Bench in the name of all his company, doth nominate and present such as he accounts meet to be Sergeants; For eligere here has not a notification of fixed designation, but of discreet presentation, upon which, though acceptation be usual, The Author not ashamed to acknowledge his defects. 1 Verr. 24. yet I take it as in the Case of the Speaker of the house of Commons, to be gratiae not debiti, ordinis, non juris; for the eligere solet here] seems to me (but I ever beg pardon for, and shall recall, when I know my mistakes, which without God's mercy and men's pardon, will be many and injurious to me) to be rather Optionem alicui facere, at eligat utrum velit, as Tully's words are, than any necessary cause of call thereunto, since I think persons so presented may be refused to be called, which they could not be, were the eligere soles unavoidably to be answered with acceptance. This than eligere solet (as in the Text referred to the Chief Justice) is to be qualified with a quantum in se, juxta posse officii, and salvis praerogativis Regii beneplaciti, and argues rather a favour, that accepts for order's sake the persons presented, then right and necessity of Law and usage so to do. Quoties sibi videtur opportunum] This is to be understood when the degree of Sergeants grows thinn by death, or other disablement, when there are not enough to serve the King and his people in the great affairs of Law; For Sergeants of old (saith the Lord Chancellor Coventry) were men of Learning and great cunning, who did love the Law for the Law's sake, and intended their Client's Cases for God, and a good Conscience sake, in order to which heretofore Counts and Plead were received at the Bar, and every little doubt was prepared and cleared by a debate there openly before either Demurrer or Issue were joined, such was the care of the Sergeants not to disadvantage their clients cause, Lord Coventry's Speech in Chancery. 12. Car. 1. Anno 1636. at the creation of Sergeants. by any sudden or indigested conceptions, or by omissions or neglect, and then the Prothonotary entre●it on record, thus that Sage. Whence I conclude that Sergeants being so judicious and careful of men's Causes, no Causes were well handled without them; and so there was a necessity of them in their number suitable to their consequence, to be continued: and therefore quoties sibi videtur opportunam refers to the discretion of the Court where they plead, to certify the decay, and present a supplement of it, which succession (though it may be in the numerical persons declined) yet in the intent of it, to furnish the Courts with able practisers, and the people with learned Advocates is never departed from, but for the most part those very men called by writ, who are presented by the Court, as fit for that state and degree. Holingshed p. 667 1. Stow p. 716. Septem vel octo de maturioribus personis] Here I conceive is a definite number put for an indefinite, 7. or 8. for so many as shall be wanting, and shall be necessary to be supplied, to the furnishing of the Bar with Sergeants; for in the call of 4. E. 4. there were but eight, In Anno b Idem p. 779. 1494. Temps 10, 11. H. 7.9. In Anno c Holingshed. p. 791. 1503 20. H. 7.10. In the d Stows Survey p. 426. 23. H. 8. Eleven, in the 1. E. 6. six. e Holingshed. p. 1210. In the 9 Eliz. only 7, f Idem p. 1314 In the 23. Eliz. eight, so all King james, and King first's time, and so in the late call, All which shows, that the number of them was not only 7. or 8. but as many more or less, as the King pleased; for there being calls of grace as well as of necessity, Lib. 4. Hospitii Lincolus Inn. p. 178, 179, 180. the number purely at the pleasure of the King, for He it is that is the fountain of this, as of all other honour, and by His writ only it is that the Sergeants are called ad statum & gradum. De Maturioribus] As the duty of Sergeants is, to counsel the King and people aright, as heretofore I have shown; so are their abilities to be suitable to this great trust and confidence the King and his●people have in them; which that they may well discharge, the Text says, the persons presented to be called, are de Maturioribus,] that is, those that by being docti & periti, as other where he calls them, are able and willing to counsel according to Law and good Conscience; for though Maturus in Authors sometimes signifies festinus and repentinus, Maturè, citò & ante tempus, saith Donatus, Soon ripe (as we say) and soon rotten: yet here de Maturioribus] denotes that settlement of judgement and ballast of solidity that poises a man against every extreme, Cic. 7. Verr. Celsus lib. 5. c. 25. Agellius lib. 3. c. 7. Ut enim insirmitas est puerorum, & ferocitas juvenum, & gravitas jam constantis atatis, sic senectutis maturitas naturale quiddam habet quod suo tempore percipi debeat. Cic. the Senect. 30. that which full ripeness and taking in time is in fruit; thus Maturitas Senectutis as Tully calls it, which is as much of perfection as nature can bear or arrive at: which is so much the glory of every thing in the apprehension of wisdom, that whatever is omnibus numeris absoluta is phrased by Maturitas, thus a Cic. Sulpitio. lib. 4.4.14. Maturitas aetatis, b De clar. Oratorib. 4. Orationis, c Pro Caelio, 60. Virtutis, d C.I. in Catil. 22. Sceleris, is used by Tully. This Maturity applied to time is called a proper season, or a fit time; and it is that virtue in men by which they do every action in weight and measure, Maturare, accelerare, ita ut adhibeatur industriae celeritas & diligentiae tarditás ex quibus duobus contrariis sit maturitas, ut neque aliquid citius, neque serius fiat. so as neither too much haste, nor too great sloth dulls the visage and flats the edge of its design and success; but that it is carried on in an orderly and advisive way, and has all the advantages that art, nature, and experience can contribute to its production. This is the sense of de Maturioribus] when as a man's ascent to honour is expressed by maturè extollere aliquem ad summum Imperium per omnes honorum gradus, Cic. 1. in Catil. 20. so this learning of Intellect in the Law is the result of many years study and practice, whereby the student is perfected to become a judicious and well-advised Advocate in all points of Law-learning and right Judicature, Speech at the Call. 12. Car. 1. Anno 1636. which the Lord Chancellor Coventry terms The approved and best-worthy in every Inn of Court; and our Chancellor by Qui in praedicto generali studio majus in Legibus profecerunt. Et qui eisdem justitiariis optimae dispositionis esse videtur] This eisdem justitiariis explains the former clause, Capitalis Iustitiarius de consilio & assensu omnium justitiariorum] For because the Chief-Justice is the first and most eminent Justice, therefore his act, when he delivers what he does with their consent and privity, is the act of them all; which the Law and Custom of England purposely does to avoid error and iniquity in Judgement, and to transact judicial things with all their appurtenances by consent and concurrence of all those that are concerned in and entrusted with it. For since a Sergeant is a person public, Cook 2 Instit. p. 422. Upon the Stat. 2 West. c. 30. and his qualifications, if such as they ought, are extensive in the good or evil of them, good reason many wise and worthy men should consider and report his fitness that is to that state and degree to be promoted, and that fitness in his government over his passions and his severeness of virtue and sobriety of life, which is optimae dispositionis videri within the Text, and to be most worthy in the Stat. 42. E. 3. c. 4. see my Notes further on this in the 24. Chapter. Et Nomina corum ille deliberare solet Cancellario Angliae in scriptis, qui illico maxdabit per Brevia Regis cuilibet Electorum illorum, quod sit coram Rege ad diem per ipsum assignatum ad suscipiendum statum & gradum servientis ad Legem, etc. A convenient number of grave and learned Apprentices or their Fellows chosen by the Justices out of the Inns of Court, the Studium juris,] the names of them are to be presented to the Chancellor; who being the Primum Mobile of a Subject, is the sine qua non to all good warrant and dispatch. Ossirium Cancellarii est sigillum Regis custodire simul cum controrotulis suis de praficuo Regni. Flera lib. 2. c. 29. Therefore since all things that pass by the Great-seal, are passed by this High Officer of Estate, all Acts of Parliament mention him the first in Commissions; and when any thing is to pass by the Broad-seal, application is to him, who, under the King, has the power and custody of it; and as the He, that according to his great and grave judgement, can either pass or stop it, as it seems good or evil to him: See Sir. Ed. Cook 4 Instit. c. 8. O● the Court of Chancery. which considered, the usage upon Creation of Sergeants, to present the Lord Chancellor with the names of such in all or most of the Inns of Court as are de Maturioribus, and can best perform the office of counselling the King and his people in gravioribus Legis, is well declared by our Text to be Cancellario Angliae; for as he only can, so he readily will (no cause of the contrary appearing to him more than discovered itself to the Judges that present them) send forth Writs to summon them to appear at a certain day, to take the State and Degree of a Sergeant at Law. Mandavit per Brevia] This shows how the persons presented as fit for Sergeants, are summoned to appear to take their State and Degree, to wit, by Writ: not by paper-order, or word of mouth, or Message; but Mandato Brevis, that by a legal Command, see the Notes on the 36, and 37. Chapters. Which summons is not general to them all, as in case of witnesses many are put into a Writ; but for the greater publication of the King's regard to them, as to men of value and learning, a Writ is sent cuilibet Electorum: concerning this also see the Notes on the 8. Chapter. That which I add thereto is, that so public does the Law and usage of England account the honour of Serjeanting, that the duty and solemnity of it is in no sort to be clancular and in hugger mugger, but openly at the Court, and that in the due Solemnities; which when the Sergeants of 3 Caroli did not observe, Termin. Pascha in Com. Banco Crook 3 part. Reports p. 67, 85. but whereas they ought to have presented themselves to the Justices in Robes of Brown-blew, al. Black-coloured, they came in their particoloured Robes, for which cause they were sent back again; also they came into the Hall, each of them having his Servant bearing his Scarlet Hood, his Coyff and Cap before him: but that also being against course, (for every Servant ought immediately to follow and not precede his Sergeant) they were directed to go back again and return in their Gowns of Brown-blew, Part 3. Crook's Reports p. 2, 3, 4, 5, 6. and then they recited their Count, and had their Writs read in Termtime, by solemn procession of the Inns of Court with them: so I read the resolution of all the Judges was I Caroli. For as they are to take Oath publicly, and Count, and have their Robes and Coyff publicly put on; so are they to keep their Feast publicly, that all men may be witnesses of the King's grace to them, and their fitness for and resolution to discharge their place, Remembering the modesty, Lord Coventry's Speech Creation Sergeants. 12 Car. 1636. fear, care, and conscience of those excellent men that were their Predecessors, and endeavouring if possible to succeed them. Et quod ipse in die illo dabit aurum secundum consuctudinem Regui. As Kings at their Coronations give Medals in token of their Entrance on their Government, and in memory of the lustre of their triumphs; so have they indulged men of worth in favour with them to symbolise with them in such partial imitations of greatnnss, as are compatible with their being Subjects. Thus did * Viris claris permisit ut eodem cultu, quo & ipse, vel ministeriis similibus convivia exhiberent. Julius Capitol. 145, 146. Edit Sylb. Antoninus Philosophus out of his great respect to learned and brave men; so probably did Alexander, who loving Ulpian and other learned men at his meals, and being pleased with the Music of their wisdom and science, Cum inter suos convivaretur, aut Ulpianum, aut doctos homines adhibebat, ut haberet fabulas literatas, quibus se recreari dicebat & pasci. Aelius Lamprid in Severo p. 215. Edit. Sylb. thought no donary too magnificent for them. From this use of good Kings and chiefs so to do, probably grew the example of our Ancestors, and the use to our Chancellour's time (as I think) for Sergeants upon Creation-dayes, to bestow pieces of gold, artlyly formed and inscribed, in token of their admission to honour by the King s favour, which I ground upon the former insinuations, and that which is additional to it in the Text; for notwithstanding there is mention of Rings after in this Chapter, yet here 'tis said, Dabit aurum secundum consuetudinem. But of this, as of all other the Solemnities of Sergeants, because our Chancellor who was long an Ancient of Lincoln's Inn, under the name of Fortescue signior, and I take to be serjeanted about the 12. of H. 6. thinks it too tedious to discourse, Cum Scripturam majorem illa exigant, as his words are; I thereupon restrain my pen the labour to enlarge, referring the plenary satisfaction in it to such discourses as are purposely intended for illustration of it. One of the most punctual accounts whereof, that I have seen, Lib. 4. Hospitii Lincoln's Inn p. 178, 179, 180, & seq. is that of the manner of proclaiming Edward the Sixth, and making Judges and Sergeants, with the proceeding of the Sergeants Feast kept in Lincoln's Inn Hall 1 E. 6. Scire tamen te cupio, quod adveniente die sic statuto electi illi inter alias solennitates festum celebrant & convivium, ad instar Coronationis Regis. Though our Chancellor waves the less material Solemnities, yet the main and most conspicuous he here describes, as first, the punctuality of the day of their appearance being the return of the Writ, Die quidem Dominico mercata celebrari, populique conventus agi, nisi flagitante necessitate, planissima vetamus; ipso praterea die Sacrosancto a venatione & opere terreno prorsus omni quisque abstinete. Inter leges Eccles. Canuri c. 22. Spelm. Concil. p. 546. See the Statute 3. Car. c. 1. which is called dies statutus; for as God did set apart Diem statutum, his Holy day, as that sacred time of his especial Worship, which was in the end and mystery of it moral, and after by positive Laws directed other times for other services, yea as Solomon from the light of nature tells us, there is a time appointed for all things under the Sun: so all Lawgivers in all ages, have consecrated set times to particular occasions, and from them not receded but upon grounds equivalent to the reason of their first appointment. In order to which our Laws have Set days for Set purposes: Days of Lent, rather Leanth, when men ought to intend devotion, and other works of Charity, for remedy of their souls, as the words of the statute 31. E. 3. c. 15. And the keeping whereof is rather in ceasing from sin, and abstaining from fleshly lusts, which fight against the soul; then in bate abstinence from flesh, and so is expounded in the statute of 2. & 3, E. 6. c. 19 Holy days, for calling men off corporal labour, and recreating them by the service of God, and pleasure of recreation 5. & 6. E. 6. c. 3. Set days for Rent those mentioned 32. H. 8. c. 48. For keeping Courts 9, H. 3. c. 35.31. E. 3. c. 15.2. E. 6. c. 25. For the Assizes of novel disseisin, Mortdauncester and Darrein presentment 3. E. 1. c. 48. These together with days limited for payment of bonds, election of Officers, determination of nonage, as the Law precisely looks upon the observation of: so also of appearances to answer suits, give evidence, and accept dignity, which day statuted by the return of the Writ, the summoned do observe and appear at, and then and there after Oath taken, Robes and Coyf put on, and Count rehearsed more consult & solenni, they return to some place of receipt and convenience, Festum celebrant & Convivium] That is, as we say, they make Holy day, and give up their study in sacrifice to the disports and entertainments of their friends; they feast, and that convivando, as a testimony of their friendly amity, respects, and civility each to other, as common slips from one and the same stock, the Humane nature. For though Convivium, in the latitude of it be any familiar meeting, Deipnos. lib. 5. p. 192. 5. In Verr. Lilius Gyraldus lib. De Annis & Mensibus p. 601. Festum quiequid latum & feriatum. Nonius. Lavamur & tondemur & convivimus ex consuetudine. Quintil. lib. 1. c. 12. suppose for service of the Gods, (in which sense Atheneus tells us, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Every Convivation was of old in honour to the Gods, and was celebrated with Songs and Hymns, sacred to them: and Tully tells us of Gladiatorum Convivia, which Lollius was placed in.) Though I say, Convivia signify this at large; yet here in the Text it imports meeting only for eating, drinking, and friendly delight each of other, and thus 'tis applied to the Sergeants Feast. Which Hospitable reception of the Sergeants friends, and the great states of the Nation called Serjeants-Feast, is a solemnity answerable to antiquity in all Nations upon great occasions, whether particular or public. Thus we read of a Gen. 19.3. Lot's feasting the Angels, and b Gen. 21.8. c. 29. v. 22. Abraham's feasting at Isaac's weaning, Of Labaus at his Daughter's Marriage, and c 40. v. 20. Pharaoh's on his birth day, of d jud. 14.10. 1 Kings 12.32. 1 King. 8.65. Hestar. 1.3. Samson, when he went to his wife, and Ieroboam's feast, of Solomon's Feast at the Dedication, and of Ahasuerus his feast, of these feasts the Holy story tells us. Profane Authors also tell us of Feasts, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is mentioned in Homer, which Turuebus comments upon, Credo quod feriis hominum conventus celebris epulantium latitiâ coire soleat. Advers. lib. 27. c. 7. Grave and Great Plutarch confirms this, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. Feasts are the communions of serious and merry words and actions, and therefore not all are admitted thereunto, but only friends, who pleasingly and pleasantly eat, drink, and talk over their good Viands. The same Author recites to us Feasts that they had upon all great occasions, Moral. p. 748. 527. 715. 717. 293. 362. 276. 671. 310. 280. 446. 355. 655. 334. 715. 293. 280. 715. 275. as their Agrionia & Amatoria festa, their Bacchanalia, Carina, Carila, Charmosyna, Consalia, and almost twenty others of like nature; and he brings in one rarely marshalling Feasts, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Symposiacon lib. 1. p. 618. Edit. Paris. Convivia agitant & ampla & assidad, it a fere patentissimis locis ut sexcenteni simut discumberent. Id Claudio c. 32. that is, not placing young and old, rich and poor by themelves, but so placing them, that those that abound may give to those that want, and they that want may be filled with the plenty of those that have more than they know well how to want or how to have. The Latins also had their Convivia upon great occasions, & those opiparous, and extravagant; thus Suetonius mentions Claudius his Feasts, not only copious to the capacity of 600 guests at a time, but very often and very publicly, So e Sueton in Augusto c. 1. Augustus, f Lamprid. p. 203. Edit. Heliogabalus, g Vopiscus p. 303. Sylburg. Carinus, (h) Jul. Capitol. 145. c. 65. Pertinax, (i) Lamprid. In Severo. p. 215. Severus (k) J. Capitol. p. 151. Marcus, and the rest, abounded in feasting, yea that famous or infamous feast in Vitellius his time, in which there was (as (l) Genial. Di●rum. lib. 5. c. 21. p. 763. Alex. ab Alex. tells us) 2000 dishes of choice fishes, and 7000 of ●owle. From these, Feasting came in use among the Germans and Us, who celebrated all Solemnities with feasting, yea not only the Coronations of Princes, Installations of St. George's Knights Deliverances from evils, and victories over them, Commemorations of Magistrates anniverssaries, Consecrations of Bishops, Calls of Sergeants, and such like Great things are celebrated with feasting; but even Marriages of Children, choice of Officers in Corporations, and every thing that is of a more than ordinary nature, is accompanied with feasting: And that not without much advantage to love, and riches moving to and fro in the Nation by reason of it. Amongst these notable feasts our stories remember us of that of H. 3. Anno 1236. kept in Westminster-Hall, for entertainment of the Emperor's Ambassador, who came for Isabel the King's Sister, and at Christmas the same year, Hollingshed p. 219. the Treasurer Havershill, by Command of the King, caused on the Circumcision day 6000 poor people to be fed at the same place But above all feasts, Stow's Survey p. 520. E. Rotul. Turris London. Loco codem. M. Paris. p. 606. Stow's Survey, p. 521. Holingshed p. 579. Stow's Survey p. 426. 427. famous is that Marriage-feast of Richard Earl of Cornwall, King H. 3. brother, with the Countess of Provence her daughter, where there were told (saith Stow) thirty thousand dishes of meat. Add to these the feast of Pentecost held by E. 2. Anno 1326. and that notable Christmas one Temps R. 2. at which there was spent 26. or 27. oxen, 300. sheep every day, besides Fowl and other provision without number. So at the Coronation of the Lady Katherine, Temps H. 5. These and the like of later times have been great Feasts. Also of Lord Mayor's Feasts, not only the yearly ones, of his as it were Coronation, but that famous one of Sir Henry Piccard, in Anno 1363. is honourably remembered. So are the Sergeants feasts (the discourse of which occasions the mention of all the rest) those of 4, E. 4.10, & 11, and 20 H. 7.23. H. 8.1 E. 6.9 Eliz. 23 Eliz. and these latter in King james and King Charles, the blessed Father, and King Charles' our now beloved Sovereign's reign, are not beneath any of the former, being full of the Noblest persons of the Nation, furnished with the best cheer, graced with the best order that wit, Legum conditores festos instituerunt dies ut ad hilarihomines invitarent Varius nobis sermo fuit, ut in convivio nullam rem usque ad exitum adducens, sed alii aliunde transiliens. Ep 64. art, and cost could set them out by. For as on feast-days, men have ever been cheery, recreative, and gay, wholly giving up themselves to pleasure and pastime; so at Meals of these days they have had all recreation imaginable, not only that Rodomontado prittle prattle (as I may call that chat which comes to nothing) making only noise, which Seneca describes, but also sundry other, more pleasing and jovial freedoms, They eat freely, being entertained by those that did (m) Tibullus lib. 1. Eleg 9 Propertius Epigram. 44. Lib. 1. c. 7. facere lauta convivia, yea and those plenâ mensâ, They drank freely, taking it for granted that it was a rite due to feasts Hilerare convivia Baccho, they had Singing and Music in their feasts. And though gravity ever discountenanced obscene Canting, and such loose sport as did obscenitate convivium obstrepere, as Quintilians phrase is; yet joviality and mirth that was not purely vicious, all ages allowed, as that which repetita convivii laetitia does ornare & apparare convivium, Lib. 13. Cic. 6. Verr. 39 Lib. 5. c. 21. as Tacitus expresses it. I know the Gymnosophists declined this, for they, as Alexander ab Alexandro tells us, appointed at feasts, that every one should make forth some action of theirs, advantageous to mankind; and he that could not, went away unfeasted, and the Persians before meals did discourse of modesty, the Grecians proposed riddles, and he that best unfolded them had the reward, the Spartans' sang and played on the Harp the praises of brave and dispraises of base men, the Sybarites brought in horses so musically trained, that they would keep time with the instrument, and the Indians and Samnites were wont to fence and try skill and valour at sharps, Yet the Romans bringing in Jesters and Actors of mirth and abuse, probably occasioned our custom of having Music, Singing, just, Tilting, Interludes and Misrule at and after feasts. Thus publicly as during their eating our great feasts have ever Music and Singing; Holingshed p, 392. 646. 219. so after, Dancing and Exercises. So our Stories tell us 34 E. 3. the Mayor and Aldermen of London, jousted against all comers in Rogation-week, so 36 H. 6. in Whitsunday week, at the Tower, so 12 H. 3. at the Marriage of Q. Eleanor, so at Richmond, 7 * 774. H. 7. the like, 8 n p. 818. 873. 892. 14, 18 H. 8. and o P. 1316. 1317. 1318. 23 Elizabeth, to welcome the French Lords, Tilting and other exercises were; and to this day upon grand days, Music, Masques, and Comedies are: and all this to express the fullness of the joy and the liberality of the welcome, which is further advanced by what follows. Quod & continuabitur per dies septem] This shows that Sergeants Feasts are not Misers ones, one meal and have done; but as noble in their nature and plenty, so in their repetition and continuation, for a whole week, per dies septem] Concerning the sacredness of numbers I have discoursed in the Notes on the 25, & 26. Chapters. The number 7 of all other is most sacred, not only (as before I have showed) from God's sanctification of the seventh portion of time to himself, Fulgentius lib. 3. Mythologia. Turneb. Advers. lib. 19 c. 31. which occasioned the jews to put a great value on the seventh Month and seventh year; but also for that this number was in their opinion a most complete number, having a double three (& tria sunt omnia) and one over and above in it, and so seeming to be the peculiar number of excellency and weight, a number of capacity and emphasis. Thus in solemn Oaths they obliged each other by 7. so Abraham said to Abimelech, These seven Ewe-lambs shalt thou take at my hand, Gen. 21. 2●. that they may be a witness unto me that I digged the Well, wherefore he called that place Beersheba, because there they swore both of them: thus in reverences, Gen. 33.3. Gen. 50.10. Exod. 13.6. Exod. 29.30. Leu. 8.11. c. 12.2. c. c. 13.5. c. 23.39. c. 25.8. c. 26.28. Numb. 8.2. c. 28.11. c. 31.19. Deut. 16.3. etc. Seven times jacob bowed to Esau: thus in Mourning. So joseph made a mourning for his father seven days: thus in eating of unleavened bread seven days, the last of which shall be a feast to the Lord: so in sundry other things which are quoted in the Margin. From this opinion of the number 7, the jews kept their great Feasts for 7 days; so did Solomon the Feast of Dedication mentioned 1 King. 8.65. which 'tis said he kept 7 days and 7 days, that is but 7 days in time, though 14 in the Solemnity, because as much bounty and great entertainment was shown in that short time, as would have taken up twice the time had it not been extraordinarily improved; this I collect from v. 66. where 'tis said, The eighth day he sent the people away: which he could not have done had he kept the feast longer than seven days. Heptas, coleber apud Persas numerus. Grot. in loc. Drusius in cap. 2. v. 12. Ezr. 7.14. And the Nations hence observed 7 days to betoken the Grandeur of Feasts; so Ahashuerosh his Feast was for 7 days, Esther and the Eunuches that stood before him being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as josephus' phrases them, were in number seven, with whose counsel the King feasted himself: which with other such things considered, the Sergeants feast continuing for a week, which is 7 days, is in the nature of it very sumptuous and costly. So it followeth. Nec quilibet Electorum illorum sumptus sibi contingentes circa Solennitatem Creationis sua, minoribus expensis perficiet, quam mille & sexcentorum Scutorum, quo expensae quas octo sic electi tunc refundent, excedent summam duodecim millium & octingentorum Scutcrum. Herein the account of the whole, and every particular's expense at his call to be Sergeant, is set down, 1600 Scuta, which here if he means half-rose Nobles at 3. s. 4. d. a piece, comes to 266. l. 13. s. 4. d. to each of them, which being multiplied by 8. the number in the Text mentioned to be called, it makes up the 3200. Marks here in the Text; which sum being in pounds 2133. 6.8. at 20 s. to the pound, makes a great sum of money, especially in our Chancellour's time, when though things were risen higher than in H. 2. time they were, (when a Measure of wheat for bread for 100 men was by the King's Officers valued but at one shilling, Spelman in Gloss. ad vocam Firma. the carcase of a fat Ox, 1. s. of a Sheep, 4. d. and for Provender for 20 horses but 4. d) I say, though in H. 6. time things were raised above this proportion; yet were things then so cheap that this sum amounts to near as much as 7000. l. now, and declares the state and degree neither cheaply come by, nor cheaply to be maintained, and therefore to become only those who have Law in abundance to answer the learning and duty, and estate enough to support the dignity and equipage of it. And therefore if it so happened that some were returned to be Mature men, Cook on Stat. de Militibus. 2 Instit. p. 597. fit for their skill and integrity to be Serjeanted, if fortune they had not, they could upon refusal but be fined, and that but once, which they were better to submit to, then take a degree to impoverish their family. For as Honour is a beauty when it has fortune suitable thereunto; so in the absence of it, is it a great burden, which did men well consider, they would not when they have Honour, squander away their Estates the support of it: or when they have it not, desire Honours to dishonour those Honours and themselves by want of perquisites thereto. Expense than they must be at, and a great one too, rather more than nowadays; for then Sergeants (as all other Honours) were fewer then now, and those only had calls to them who were men of great estates, able to live like themselves in all points of greatness suitable to their Degree, which was expensive not only as to the quantity predescribed, (which I take to be the charge of their Robes, Attendants, Diet, and Equipage:) but also further in Donaries of Rings which they are to give: so the Text proceeds. Quilibet corum dabit Annulos de aur● ad valentiam in teto quadraginta librarum ad minus monetae Anglicanae. This (as I said before) is to show that public inaugurations into Honour, as it is accompanied with feasting friends; so those feast are attended with Donaries, probably pieces of gold to some, and certainly Rings to others. For as Sovereign Princes gave gifts at their Coronations, Esther 2.18. as 'tis said of Ahasuerus, That at his Feast he gave gifts according to the State of a King; so he gave to his Queen 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a City Regis Persarum uxoribus in Calceamentum data, Grot. in loc. ex Herod. lib. 2. as Grotius notes, that is, to buy her shoes and shoestrings, like our saying, To buy pinns with. And as Princes to this day do give Medals and other money, and equivalent rewards at their Coronations; so do they indulge Subjects honoured by them to bestow some such rays of bounty as testify their admission into Greatness, and their minds prepared for and fitted to it. These gifts our Text names proper for the Sergeants feast to be Rings. Plutarch in Questionibus Romanis, p. 269. Eutrop. lib. 1. Breviarii. p. 559. ad Initium. Messala Corvinus, lib. de Augusti Progerie p. 337. Annulus from Annus the computation of time consisting anciently of ten Months, whereof March was the first; whence perhaps it follows that the Reigns of Princes, whose Governments depend much on Martialness, are computed from March the Month of Mars: or twelve Months, as after the Romans concluded it, making january the entrance into them. Dedit Annulum in signum potestatis quam ci faciabat, cujas moris exemplum habes. Gen. 41, 42. Grot. in loc. Esther. 3.10. I say this Annulus the diminutive of Annus being round as time in its motion is, is the Emblem of amity, acceptation and honour. In this sense the giving of Rings is not, but it is understood as a remembrance and token of friendship and love, (a) Sueton in J. Caesare. p. 7. jure Annulorum, a letting them into relation, Budaeus in Pandect. p. 52, 53, 54. Edit. Vascos. and into a kind of participation of honour with them. In Authors I read of many Rings, the (b) Fl. Vopis●. in Aurelian. ad sinem vita. Annulus sigillaricius which Aurelian made for himself and his daughter; the Annulus fatidicus and the Annulus pensilis fatidicus in (c) Lib. 29. in Valentin. p. 481. Marcellinus; their (d) Turneb. Advers. lib. 20. c. 2. p 678. Annuli aestivi & hyberni, which were heavier or lighter as the season of the year was hot or cold; Lib. 33. c. 1. & lib. 20. c. 2. and their Annuli Samothracii, which were of Iron inlaid or welted with gold; the Annulus signatorius, which (e) Sit Annulus tuus signatorius non ut vas aliquod, sed tanquam ipse tu. Cic. In quae verba Turnebus. Ne passim sinat Annulum suum signatorium à quovis, ut domestica vasa tractari, sed eo solus utatur. Advers. lib. 27. c. 1. p. 1005. Alciat ad Legem 74. p. 180. Brechaeus loco codem. Turneb, Advers. lib. 6. c. 22. Majores nostri Imperatores superatis hostibus, optime Republ. gesta, scribas suos Annulis aureis in Concione donarunt. Cic. 5. verr. Tully relates to when he gives the charge it should not be made common, but be trusted in no hands but either our own or those we know to be faithful, and as such, love them as ourselves. These were of old engraven with the device of figures in appropriation to families, like Arms at this day; and they were of Iron to Servants, of Silver to Libertines, and of Gold to Freemen Hence was it that the chief Servants of Conquerors had from them gifts of golden Rings; and Ambassadors from the Romans, though they wore Iron-Rings; at home, yet abroad wore Gold-ones. By which appears, that as Rings were tokens of Relation, and Rings of Gold of Nobilitation; so these Rings of Sergeants import love, bounty, and freedom to all those they are sent to: nay, they imply an expectation from them to witness his Marriage to the Law, and his disposal of Rings as his wedding-favour. For as women are wedded to their Husbands by Rings, and Doctors to their Profession by Rings; so is the Sergeant evidenced to be wedded to the Law by his donation of Rings, as the Ensign of his Creation in the state and dignity of a Sergeant. And these our Text says cost the Sergeant at least forty pounds sterling, which is as much as near 200. pounds now, And no less do I think the Sergeants at this day do spend annulis aureis, in their old-fashioned joint rings. Et bene recolit Cancellarius ipse, quod dum ille statum & gradum hujusmodi receperat, ipse solvit pro annulis quos tunc distribuit quinquaginta libras, quae sunt trecenta scuta. This the Chancellor introduces to show that as he was not made a Judge without the feast and charge of giving Rings, when he was made a Sergeant; so he did not sparingly, but to the full proportion of his degree bestow those his Sergeants Rings: For though, when he was Serjeanted, I yet cannot find, yet I guess it about the 12 H. 6. which was 8. years before the 20 year of that King, when I find him by Writ of the five and twentieth of january, Pat. 20. H, 6. parte prima memb. 10. in Turri. 25. Lond. part. 1. M. 12. 32. M. 9 Claus, 2● M. 21. 25 M. 24. 27 M. 24. 28 M. 26. 29 M, 31. 31 M. 31. 33. M. 31. 38 M. 30. 31 M. 29. constituted Chief Justice, and so summoned 25, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 33, 38 years of that King, yet that he was Serjeanted is plain from this bene recolit Cancellarius ipse, and from this charge he was at in it, which though it were great, coin not being above 1/3 value of that now it is, yet may easily arise to the mentioned sum, when presentment of rings are as followeth. Solet namque unusquisque servientium hujusmodi tempore Creationis suae, dare cuilibet Principi, Duci, & Archiepiscopo in solennitate illa praesenti, ac Cancellario & Thesaurario Angliae, annulum ad valorem octo sontorum. This Clause shows the orderly distribution of the rings, made by the Sergeants, according to the nature and quality of the personages they have to invite, and entertain. For the ancients, and we when we do wisely and well after them, do not account our entertainment good, unless it be every way complete, tempestivum convivium; and Varro as (a) Lib. 13. c. 11, 1. Si belli homunculi collecti. 2. Si lectus locus 3. Si tempus lectum. 4. apparatus non neglectus. Turneb. Advers. lib. 6. c. 16. 24. H. 8. c. 13 31. H. 8. c. 10 A. Gellius quotes him, makes four things to go to the perfection of a right entertainment, good company, a fit place, a fit time, and order and plenty of every thing, all these are notably met at our Sergeants Feast; for here are lecti homines, non homunculi, but hominum magnates, primaria capita, Cuilibet Principi saith the Text.] That's of the King's family, either Sons in descent or Cousins, and of the Blood Royal, who are all in the Text intended; For Principes intends somewhat more than Deuces, or Archiepiscopi, which none are in England, but those of the Blood, unless we'll understand Dux & Archiepiscopus to be the species of Princeship in our Chancellors sense, which may and may not be; yet I confess the Arch Bishop of Canterbury his Grace, as he has the title and place of a Prince, so, as first after the King's Children and his Vicegerent has the Chief place, and so in the Statute 21. H. 8. c. 13. 'Tis every Archbishop and Duke, which precedency the Religion of the Nation has ever given, in ordine ad sacra. To mind them no doubt that as the Nation honours them for God's sake, so they should love, watch over, and instruct the Nation by holy life and sound doctrine for God's sake and the people's salvation; which while they do, they will be worthy double honour for their Callings sake. Cancellario & Thesaurario Angliae] These are the high Officers of England, those that have custody of the seal by which Charters, Patents, and Offices pass, and of the rents, incomes and profits of the Crown, by which the expenses of the Kingly office is defrayed, These the Statute of 31. H. ●8. c. 10. says, being of the degree of Barons, shall sit and be placed on the hither part of the form on the same side, above all Dukes, except only such as shall happen to be the King's Son, the King's Brother, the King's Uncle, the King's Nephew, or the King's Brothers or Sister's Sons. As they are of the great Officers of England, and have pre-eminence and place accordingly, so are by our Text, if at the feast they be present, but if not 'tis sent them, (and happy the Sergeant whom they are pleased to accept it from) a Ring of 26. shillings 8. pence according to the value of our Chancellour's age. Et cuilibet Comiti & Episcopo] Earles, Barons and Bishops are ranked here together, and their Rings are according to the abatement of their degree, a noble abated in their value, which is done for order's sake, that the Presents may suit with the persons, and to reduce the charge into reasonable bounds; for of the former rank there are but few in number, possibly ten may be the most in any time, not so many in most reigns, but of Earls, Bishops and Barons many are, and therefore those present, or whom of them the Sergeants please, have their Rings sent them, to the value of twenty shillings. Custodi privati Sigilli, Capitalibus justitiariis, Baroni de scaccario, ad valorem sex scutorum. These, though no Barons, yet are of Chief note and high honour in the nation, and brought in under equality of Present with the former, and that for the height of the honour and trust they have in the transaction of judicial things. Hence the prementioned Statute 31 H. 8. c. 10, ranks the Lord Privy Seal (whom I take to be the Custos privati Sigilli here, amongst the great Officers next after the high Chancellor, and high Treasurour; 25 H. 8. c. 16. And the Chief Justices, and Chief Baron, being the Proto-Iudges of the High Courts at Westminster, deserve accounts with the best of subjects, no Barons, and so are in all public Instruments of state declared; and therefore when as in the Statute of the 21 H. 8. c. 13. omission was made of some of them, as to a Chaplin, supplement was made by the 25. c. 16. and they allowed a Chaplin to attend them in their house. Omni Domino Baroni Parliamenti, & omni Abbati & notabili Praelato ac magno Militi tunc praesenti, custodi etiam Rotulorum Cancellariae Regis & cuilibet justitiario, annulum ad valentiam unius marcae. Because differences there must be in Rings, as there are in the quality of the persons to whom they are presented, and that Rings of that breadth as Sergeants Rings are, cannot be in weight less than a mark; therefore are all these particular persons here nominated, Omni Domino Baroni Parliamenti] that is, to every Member of the Upper-House, under the degree of an Earl, and that sits there en son proper droit, and is thither summoned, there to sit as one of the Peerage, Omni Abbati] which intends not only Abbot's Sovereigns, 16 R. 2. c. 6. (as they were called who were subject to no Bishops but were within their Monastery absolute, and were Lords of Parliament, and thither came as Bishops did and do) Of this rank in the Parliament 49 H. 3. there were 102. in E. 2. time only 56. in E. 3. time, Spelm. Gloss. p. 4. decrescente Cleri potentia & aestimatione, only 33. so they continued under 40 from E. 3. time to the dissolution of Monasteries; For though there were in 6 E. 3.23 more than the old 33. yet the Roll of 23. says, Istis Abbatibus & prioribus subscriptis non solebat scribi in aliis Parliamentis. 13 E. 1. c. 41. Et notabili Praelato] This term might take in some remarkable person that is comprehendable under none of the former notions, other Prelates stat. 14 R. 2. c. 4. perhaps some Deans that had government, such as were those five, called by Writ to Parliament in 49 H. 3. These or such like Governors of some Royal Hospitals, being in a remote sense Praelati notabiles, may be within the intent of our Chancellor, as magno Militi] may be either a Knight of great office in Court, such as the honourable offices of the Court were fitted with temps H. 6. (For then Lords and Knights were rare and and unordinary) or else such as were magni opibus & proficuis, men of great fortunes, families, and revenues; Custodi etiam Rotulorum Cancellariae Regis] See the notes on c. 24. fol. 331. whereby it appears how great an Officer this is, when as in the absence of the Lord High Chancellor, he is the first Precedent (as I may so say) in the high Court of Chancery, and in the Rolls in afternoons, orders causes that in Court are not dispatched by reason of multitude of businesses, and interposition of circumstances of delay. Similiter & omni Baroni de seaccario] These are the King's Justices or Judges, though otherwise named then those of either Bench are; for that the Normans, who introduced that Court into England, do call their Judges and Magistrates, Solum judices Scaccarii vocamus Barones ex prisco Gallorum usu, qui judices & Magistratus quoslibet Barones appellabants & hoc quidem in causa est, quod cateri apud nos judices non sunt dicti Barones quia sola hac Curia è Gallia scilicet Normannia suum ad nostra duxit specimen. Spelman. Gloss. p. 85. Barons, as we in England called them Judges and Justices; which Sir Henry Spelman instructs me in, not without great probability of truth: for the word Baron signifies freedom and power to judge and determine matters within themselves, as it is understood in the Title of Court-Barons, Barons of London and the Cinque-Ports. 3 Instit. p. 147. These Barons then of the Exchequer are the same in power and honour with other * justitiarios suos in Scaccario. Fleta lib. 2. c. 25. Crook 3 part. Report. 6 Carol. Term. Mich. p. 203. Judges, and hold their places quamdiu se bene gesseri●t, which Chief-Baron Walter, that prudent and learned Judge held his place by to his death, though he were under displeasure, which if he had been patented durante bene placit●, he could not have done. Barones] eo quod suis locis Barones sedere solebant. Fleta lib. 2. c. 26. Capitalis Baro Scaccarii locum illic obtinet Capitalis justitiarii Angliae, cujus ●lim in hac Curia sedes erat Primaria, maximus hic utique Baro, & ex potentioribus Regni magnatibas. Spelman in Gloss. ad vocem Bar●. The Chief-Baron of this Court was in Edward the Third's time a great Peer, which is the reason that by the 14 E. 3. c. 7. he is named next after the Chancellor and Treasurer, before the Cheif-Justices of either Bench: but when he became a Lawyer, as in our Chancellour's time he was, than he comes, as in the Statute of 33 H. 6. c. 1, next after the Cheif-Justices of either Bench. Regis Camerariis] This I take not to be so much the Great Officers of the King's Household, 2 Instit. p. 332. 1 Instit. sect. 153. 2 Instit. p. 380. Lib. 2. ●. 70. Edit. Seld. Officium Camerariorum in recepta consistit in tribus, clav●s arcanum bajulant, pecuniam numeratam ponderant, & per centenas libras in sorulas mittunt. Ockam cap. quid, sit Scaccarium. the High-Chamberlain or Vice-Chamberlain mentioned in the Statute 13 E. 1. c. 41.16 R. 2. c. 6. as the Chamberlains of the Exchequer mentioned in the Statute 7 E. 6. c. 1.51 H. 3. called now Receivers, anciently Chamberlains; Fleta intends these in those words, Habetis per hoc Statutum de servientibus Ballivis Camerariis, & aliis quibuscunque Receptoribus; these giving daily attendance on the King's Revenue-affairs, are taken notice of by the Sergeants, and presented Rings to, as all other notable Officers and men are in the King's Courts, as Registers, Clerks of the Crown, Protonotaryes, Philizers, and eminent Attorneys, who if they do not all come under the notion of Officiarii in Curiis Regis ministrant, yet are introduced under those words Notabiles viri, and have Rings according to their quality presented them. Et ultra hos ipsi dant Annulos aliis amicis suis] Still this augments the charge, for because the Sergeant cannot invite all to their Feast, and there present them with Rings, therefore he supplies the omission of one part of his friendlyness by addition of the other part, presentation of Rings, which they make to those of their acquaintance, Clients and others as they call and treat as friends; these, if any, are the true meriters of Rings and hearts too, if truly friends they be. Which our Text intends not of that severe and solid friendship, which the Moralist calls A most matchless good which works prepared hearts in each other to gratify with all their might and main those they love, Nihil tamen aeque oblectaverit animum quam amicitia fidelis & dulcis; quantum bonum est, ubi sunt praeparata pectora in qua tuto secretum omne descendat, quorum conscientiam minus quam tuam timeas, quorum sermo solicitudinem leviat, sententia c●nsilium expediat, hilaritas tristitiam dissipet, conspectus ipse delectet. Lib. the Tranquil. p. 681. and to be wanting in no kindness and representation their power reaches to, whose truth is so intense and conscience so upright, that a friend has cause to mistrust himself rather then them, I say, our Text by Amicis does not intend these, for these are none Such'ss; should Rings be restrained to these, our Sergeants would present but few: for I presume they, as other men, Amicos primos habaerunt & secundos nunquam veros. Lib. 6. De Benesic. p. 116. may say over Seneca's words of Gracchus and Livius Drusius, They have many great and rich friends but few true ones: But Amicis suis] imports acquaintance by ordinary civility and treatment of courtesy, friends of breeding and study with them, of kindness and respect towards them. These friends (as common notions of friendship pass and are understood) are they for whom, besides what is ex debito as it were, (as to the prementioned are to be given) supernumerary Rings are provided, and that according to their dignity and degree. Which brings to my mind the Analogy of the use in London, where the Liveries of the Societies feasted by the Lord Mayor & Sheriffs (whom they present more Civitatis with gold, some more, some less, but the least to the proportion of two pieces a Head) have in the end of their year returned them a Donary of a gilt spoon, either an ordinary one or a 3. l. one, or more, according to the magnitude of the present in return turn whereof it is. From whence, as well as from the Sergeants Feasts and Presents, I collect, that feasts were anciently accompanied with gifts, and those gifts of gold or gilt, as most pure, rich, and orient, betokening the wealth, integrity, and good will of the Presenter. And in the Serjeant's case surely the Ring bestowed by him on his friends being of gold for the matter, and of orbicular form, which is the figure of perfection, imports constancy and uninterruptedness in the study of the Law; to enable themselves whereunto, Lord Coventry's Speech at Creation of Sergeants 12 Car. 1. Anno 1636. They should not only content themselves to have read the Year-books, but to read them again, that they may learn them better: and as they attend the King's Courts for their practice, so to attend them for their learning, remembering still that the degree they have is the highest in their Profession, and their learning ought to be suitable and proportionable to their Degree, which is superlative. They are the words of a Dictator in their study and learning, whose advice is apposite and serious. Similiter & liberatam magnam panni unins secta, quam ipsi tunc distribuent in magna abundantia, nedum familiaribus suis, sed & amicis aliis & notis, qui eye attendent & ministrabunt tempore solennitatis praedicta, etc. As they please the eyes of some with the show of their proceeding, and the ears of others with the gravity and learning of their Counts and Speeches, the Fingers of some with Rings, and the bellies of others with good cheer; so do they clothe the backs of sundry with good and grave Liveries. Which Liberatae, though they are not displays of Enfranchisement and Independance, as * 5 R. 2. c. 15.21 R. 2. c. 5.27 H. 8. c. 10.32 H. 8. c. 1. Livery is, which is frequent in the Law; yet are badges of such graceful service, as men of great and good rank that are Masters of themselves and of others too, notwithstanding submit to. And therefore though in the Statutes 1 R. 2. c. 7. 16 R. 2. c. 4. 20 R. 2. c. 1. 1 H. 4. c. 7. 8 H. 6. c. 4. 8 E. 4. c. 3. 11. H. 7 c. 3. 19 H. 7. c. 14. 2 E. 6. c. 2. Liveries are Badges of service, when we call a servant's coat his Livery. Yet in regard that in the Statute of 2 H. 4. c. 21. mention is made of the King's honourable Livery to the Lords Temporal, and to Knights and Esquires, and in the 13 of the same King, c. 1. mention is made of Liveryes to men of Law. And in as much as at St. Georg's Feast, the Lord Mayor's Show, and Sheriffs appearances at Assizes to attend the King's judges and deliver the Goal, men of very good quality do put themselves for the Honour of the persons they pretend to, in their Liveries; yea even Princes themselves when at Marriages and in Camps they wear the Bridegroom's favours or General's colours, are in a sort in their Livery, as part of their train. And as it is part of the honour of the created Sergeants, so no dishonour to their Attendants, to attend them at this Solemnity; which is so much the more lustrous and complete, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Athenaeus lib. 5. Deipnos. p. 192. The grace of Feasts. by how much the more numerous and well-instructed the Attendants be▪ because accordingly is the show and glittering of the pomp; for according to the old English Calculate, nothing became a great Entertainment better than capacity of Room, choice of Guests, plenty and good Cookery of Diet, neatness of Linen, grace and agility of Attendants, orderly service of Tables, mirth and repast at them, kindness and sobriety after them, and a free and open welcome from the Master of the Feast. These are the gradations of pleasing Feasts, to which if a great train of Attendants upon motion of the Master be added, All's Noble. As than it is Liberata and unius sectae, that is, as it is a Livery of one colour and kind, to show the state and degree of the Master of them that wear it; so 'tis Panni, to signify not only that wisdom favours and promotes native Commodities, as woollen cloth is: but Panni, to continue the memory of it for some time, and for some benefit to the wearer. For the Sergeant looks not only to his seven day's wonder, and that done, cares not how few and small Pennyworths the wearer has afterwards out of it; but desires it may reside with and rest by him, as a monument of his Creation. Therefore it has been known that Liveryes given upon this occasion have stayed by the meaner sort of men many years, though the better, after the Solemnity, give them away; for when their service (by the expiration of the Solemnity) determines, than also their Liveryes grow with them out of season. Quare licet in Universitatibus, etc.] This is written to show the Charge, Worship, and Solemnity of a Sergeant, which though it be answered by the solemnities of a Doctor of the Laws, who has a Creation as the Sergeant has, Birretum quasi bis rectum, quia his rectum decet esse Philosophum & Doctorem, scilicet, in docendo & operando. Luc. De Penna Murileg. lib. 12. and who makes a Feast, and of old might give bonnets [birreta] round like his own, in token of sanctity and truth, as those virtues he is by his degree remembered of and required to express, and wears scarlet, Cassanaeus Catal. Gl. Mundi. p. 38-388. 389. etc. yet our Chancellor says, He does not give gold and other presents as Sergeants give. Which though it be most true, and declares a greater and more popular splendour in his Creation, Salmasius in notis ad Tertull. Lib. De Pallio. p. 22, 23. then that of a Doctor hath; yet is the Doctor's Creation to his degree very significant and solemn in every Circumstance of it, as First, In signum carentia sordium, quia ubi angulus est, ibi sordes esse dicuntur. Cass. Catal. Gl. Mundi. p 388. 389. He is as it were crowned, with a round Cap in signum sanctitatis & veritatis, by the figure of which he is taught to be sincere and unsordid, generous and scientifique; Then he has the books of the Law delivered him, that he should remember to read, observe, and practise according to the Wisdom and Justice of it: and this the Doctors generally agree so necessary after the example of Scripture 2 Chro. c. 23.11, where 'tis said, They brought out the King's Son, and put upon him the Crown, and gave him the Testimony, which refers as by the marginal note appears to Deut. 17.18. where 'tis said, when he sitteth upon the Throne of his Kingdom, that he shall write him a Copy of the Law in a Book or out of that which is before the Priests, etc. I say, the Doctors agree this so consequential, that without the delivery of a book of the Laws to him, he can be no Doctor, quia in librorum lectione consist it Doctoratus; Then he has a ring put on his finger, Luc. De Penna lib. 12. cap. De Professoribus. Cass. l●co prae●itato. implying that by his degree he is sponsus factus verae Philosophi●e & scientiae quam profitetur. For as by a Ring given and taken, betokening faith and troth plighted each to other, Marriage is solemnised between man and wife; so by a Ring at Creation, the Marriage of a Doctor to his art is intimated: only there is a difference of fingers between these two wear of their Marriage Rings, the woman wears her Ring on the fourth finger of the left hand, in which there is quaedam vena sanguinis, quae ad cor hominis usque pervenit, but the Doctor wears it on the thumb, ut facilius testificari possunt sub suo s●gillo, Then the Doctor is set in a chair, and has his duty represented to him in Pathetic words, Proceed and go out worthy and virtuous men, sit ye in the seat of virtue and science, not of vice and pestilence, And the chair he is created in has many notable depictions in it, all significant, In the inward part of it two young men, Cass. lo●● pracitat●, p. 288. referring to Love and Labour, In the latter part of it, two Virgins representing Care and Watching, In one of the sides thereof a young man girded about the loins, carrying little ordinary things, intimating poverty or contentation with a little, as if humility were the only way to seek and find wisdom of science, In the other side is the portraiture of a man presenting a figure that flies away, noting, that life is short, and art long, and that if we would attain learning, we must banish all diversion and pursue it eagerly, then there is presented him a girdle of gold, and he is bid to gird his loins with the girdle of faith, that is, to be faithful to the Laws, and to his Client, and not to betray his trust, no more than a soldier should solvere militi● cingulum, which he cannot honourably do Quia indecens omnino probatur, prius solvere militiae cingul●m quam cedat victori adver sitas praeliorum, Then he is kissed on the cheek with a kiss of Love, to mind him foedus pacis in facultatibus jurium servare perpetuum, These and such like rites and attendants there are to the investiture of a Doctor of the Laws, which show him in his degree not to be inconspicuous, but the contrary in all the degrees of Scholastic lustre; for of this rank and breeding of men, are the great Counselors, Ambassadors, and Ministers of state, almost of the World, and to these do the names of Grotius, Budaeus, Tholossanus, and others, famous for all good learning contribute honour, the Doctors of the Civil and Canon-Law, being as great masters of learning, as any or all other besides them have been, or are, which I mentinon as heretofore I have, not to claw them (For that is odious to me, who proposing to write the words of truth and soberness, Note this well. need not fear the brow, or, by any soft and adulating prècarinesses, beg the smile of any men) but to clear to the World, that I prosecute nothing but integrity to all men, and all things of worth, and to own my Collections in this and other my studies, from many Authors, Civil-Lawyers; By reason whereof I cannot but aver the Doctors of the Laws, most eminent Graduates and great Masters, although that of the Text here cannot be denied. Nec est Advocatus in universo mundo qui ratione Officii sui tantum l●cratur ut serviens hujusmodi. Though Servicus ad Legem be a term of State and Degree, yet Advocatus is of office and employment, Digest. lib. 3. tit. 1. gl. B. contradicere p. 329. lib. 12. c. 8. lib. 4. tit. 6. ex quibus causis lib. 10. tit. 6 concerning this see the Notes on the eighth Chapter, wherein the nature and honour of advocation is set forth. Whereas then the Chancellor here magnifies the Sergeant at Law, he is to be understood not to do it in relation to himself, (He being one of that degree, and a very learned one, I believe, as ever was before or since him,) nor as vituperating and lessening the degrees of Doctors, in which there are and ever have been as renowned Wits, as serious Judgements, as Heroic minded men, as in any profession in the World; no such pedanteriness is our Great and Grave Chaucellour herein guilty of: but he sets out the oriency of the dignity, thus to advance the reputation of the Law and the Love of the Nation to it, evidenced in that it has instituted, continued, and augmented, such an honour for men of great worth in the National and Country Laws as is no where in the World, neque in reguo aliquo orbis terrarum datur gradus specialis in legibus regni illius praeterquam solum in regno Angliae] As if he had said, as England is by itself in its National Law, which is favourable to freedom, tuitive of Government, promotive of ingenuity, more than other Laws are; so has it a peculiar honour for those that excel in the knowledge of it, above other Nations, and suitable to the honour, indulges it a support, paramount, to that of any Advocate in the World below. For though the Advocate with the Father, Our Glorious Lord JESUS, Remember this O My Soul, and be thankful. (whom all the Angels of God worship and to whom my Heart in all humility asoribeth all the Grace and Glory it has or hopes for) hath this Name above every Name, his Advocation transcending all Advocations, though He is ascended above the Principalities and Powers of Mortal Merit, and Mortal Glory, and has gained by his Advocation, all Power both in Heaven and Earth, all Praise from Men and Angels, Though He, that Only Precious and Prevailing Advocate, Who is at the right hand of God, comes within the tantum lucratur, which no eye can see, no tongue language, no pen discourse, no thought conceive, Though He be in nature, perfection and exaltation, as far above all the gainers in the World, as Heaven is beyond Earth, and no Mortal is to be mentioned in compare with him, the Immortal, Invisible and Only Wise Advocate; yet in all other respects, wherein Mortal Advocates have the greatest encouragements, this Sergeant at Law is not matchable, Advocati salarium deb●t dari pro facundia ejus & fori consuetudine. Digest. lib. 3. tit. 1. De Postulando A. 330. & lib. 2. tit. 14. De Pactis, p. 307. nec est Advocatus in universo mundo, qui ratione Officii sui tantum lucratur] For as He is the only pleader at the Common Bench, and the only requested one in great plead elsewhere, in Chamber-Counsels, and Circuits, which makes his cunning as a fountain ever full of the water of Life, Silver and Gold fees, so that the Circuits of some one of them have been more profitably valuable, than the practice of a great Civilian all the year long, so have they by custom of the Nation great fees, that their proficiency in learning and procedure in integrity may be encouraged; and the best love they can express to their present renown and future peace, is to be earnest in prayer to God not to permit, and steadfast in resolution, not to take any temptation to the contrary, Nunquam tuta est liumana fragilitas; & quando virtutibùs crescimus, tanto magis time▪ re debemus ne de sua limit corrua▪ mus. Sanctus Hieron. in c. 2. Joelis. but to fear the blind of a gift, and the terror of a frown, as that which God hates, and men execrate, and always to remember the tragical ends, and amazing deathbeds of covetous caitiffs, who having not the fear of God, boggled at no villainy that was gainful. While Achan's wedge, and Balaam's reward, Haman's honour, and Absolon's rule, judas his treachery, and Simon Magus his profaneness are upon record, there will never want monitors to great gainers to be wary. That only is sweet and found gain that is Godly gain, and hath the promise of a God's blessing in a life of repute, and a death of hope. And to that end, the Sergeant best endeavours that most follows the wise counsel of a Chancellor, Lord Coventry's Speech Creation Sergeants. 12 Car. 1. Anno 1636. who to the Sergeants gave this in charge; Strive and study to be more and more learned unto your degree, your Advocateship is inseparably united, and that for whom and for whose use? but for all the King's people, many millions of men: and for what? For all their inheritances, their properties and their interests: and than what exactness and multiplicity of learning ought to be for the conscionable discharge of so great a duty? Thus that wise Sage, which well observed by the Sergeants, is the best way to preserve them well worthy of the great gains their care, skill, and fidelity accumulate to them above any other Advocates in the World. Nullus etiam, nisi in Legibus Regni illius scientissimus fuerit, assumitur ad Officium & Dignitatem justitiarii in Curiis Placitorum coram ipso Rege & Communi Banco, quae sunt supremae Curiae ejusdem Regni Ordinariae, nisi ipse Primitus statu & gradu Servientis ad Legem fuerit insignitus. As no man ordinarily is Serjeanted till he be de Maturioribus, 4 Instit. c. 7. of the King's Bench. p. 75. that is, above sixteen years standing, or rather has read, (I write according to the wont course and the usual rate of men, allowing Provisoes for extraordinary praecocious wits, or men of great birth, fortune and favour;) so no man, though he be de Maturioribus, can be a Justice in the King's Courts till he be Serjeanted: for Serjeancy is the sine qua non to Justiceship, upon the presumption that that degree obtained, learning, gravity, and integrity is sans dispute. This the Kings of England have pleased to method themselves in, In Prooemio Digest. p. 50. as the only probable means to produce Justices, justitioe Satellites, & judiciorum optimi tam Athletae quam Gubernatores, that is saith the Gloss, Athletae in advocando, Gubernatores in judicando, that is, every way complete, both to a solid conception, a ready delivery and a sincere Judgement. Concerning justices I have written in the Notes on the 25 Chapter, & in fol. 523. also of their Courts which are called here by our Text Supremae Curiae Ordinariae, as they are by the Act of 25 H. 8. c. 16. I have discoursed in the same Chapter. That which the Text gives occasion to add is from the word Insignitus, which being a clarissimation or an illustriorating of him that has soulary virtue and professional merit, renders the Sergeant, as step to a Justicer, a most eminent person, especially when consideration is had that he and none but he, is admitted to practise and plead in that Court, 2 Instit. p. 22, 2●. which one calls the Lock and Key of the Common Law, Ubi omnia realia placita placitantur, saith our Text, when all Pleas therein flow from those nigri, purpurati, & coccinei Seniores, who are no Puisnes, but have exceeded two Apprenticeships at the Law, sexdecim annos ad minus complevit.] Not but that great learning may bring a man to the Degree before that standing (as it did Scaliger in not much above ten years after his entrance at Leyden to be a Professor;) but nullus huc usque to our Chancellor's time has been called, but he that has intended so long the general study of the Law: and that because as the duty requires learning, so the Degree and State gravity and poise, which is seldom in youth how towardly soever. For surely if any one deserved to be Serjeanted before this standing, Preface to the 1 Instit, 'twas famous Littleton; yet he was not called before he had read, but some time after, and so was no Precedent for being Serjeanted before sixteen years standing in study: though he was a man of ancient blood, great fortune, noble parts, and general approbation, and therefore in 15 E. 4. with the Prince and other Nobles he was made Knight of the Bath; yet notwithstanding all these excellencies, he was not called to be Sergeant till he had fulfilled and passed his sixteen years. Et in signum quod omnes justitiarii illi taliter extant graduati, quilibet eorum semper utitur, dum in Curia Regis sedet, Birreto albo de serico quod primum & praecipuum est de insignibus habitus quo servientes ad Legem in eorum●reatione decorantur. Herein the Sergeants degree is to the office of a Justice necessarily precursive above that of a Doctor to a Bishop; for he that is a Graduate in the Universities may be a Bishop, though a Doctor he be not: but no man how learned soever he be can be a Justice, but he that is already a Sergeant; nor can he sit in the King's Courts but with that particular habiliment of a Sergeant, which (with reverence to that noble Dignity) is in a kind nailed to his head, I mean so fixed that thence it is not to be removed, no not (I beg the boldness to say) in the King's presence, this is the Caul on his head called the Coyff. The Chancellor words it by Birretum, others by Birrus or Birreta, tegmen capitis, De liabitu quo ●● oportet extra ●r●om. Pileus saith the Codex Theodos. It was permitted servants of old as a token their servility was On its last legs, as we proverbially call service that is determining, aftertimes adopting the use of these Nightcaps or women's gear, as we may call them, into credit. These Coyffs or Caps became Emblems of Mastership, to which Clemangis alludes in these words, Epist. 74. Non Cappa ut in Proverbio Monachum efficit, nec Cappae etiam aut Cathedra birretiuè impositi●, Magisterium. In aftertimes they grew vary-coloured, Spelm. Gloss in vocem Birretum. Cardinals had Birreta coccinea, scarlet or purple Bonnets or Caps, Bishops black, but Sergeants at Law these white ones: which though they now have impropriated to them, as one of the Insignia of their Degree, was of old purely Sacerdotal: Varro pedigrees it from the Women-Priests, who amongst the Romans used it to cover their heads in Sacrifice, Capital quod Sacerdotula nunc in capit● solent baber●. Varro lib. de Lingua Latina. so Pompeius; and Turnebus makes it to be that Coyff or Caul that women do to this day tie up their hair in, their night-linnen called a Coyff. Advers. lib. 22. c. 30. The Priests taken with these, used at nights to lie in them, or on travel to cover their rasure, Vt rasuras sive coronas capitum bujusmodi Cappis defenderent. and protect their heads from cold; other then in these cases, by the Constitution of Othobo●, our Priests might not wear them: but that they did wear them, and that to cover their rasure was plain from that which M. Paris writes of W. de Bussey, Cl●rici nonnis● in itinere constituti unquam aut in Ecclesiis, aut ●oram Praelatis suis, aut in conspectu communi hominum publice infulas suas, vulgo Coyffos vocant, portare aliquatenus andeant vel prasumant. Lindwood. p. 68 B. 11. the evil Counsellor of W. de Valence, who when he was apprehended, and brought to make answer to the accusations against him, when his guilt made him answerless, and his impieties were not to be defended, Voluit ligamenta sue Coyffae solvere (saith Paris) ut palam monstraret tonsuram se habere Clericalem. Matth. Paris. p. 985. in H. 3. From Priestly men Judges in Courts of Law about Edward the Third's time this Coyff descended with Justiceship to Laymen, and from being made of open Cancell-work, Cutwork, Pagnin. in verb● p. 2828. (such as in my memory women wore Coyffs of, which in regard of the bars and network of them, were what the Hebrews call by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) it was made of silk Birreto albo de serico in our Chancellour's time; but after, it became to be of Cambric the next to it in transparency, and thus to this day it continues. From which covering, white in colour, and pervious in the nature of it, we may conjecture the scope of it to signify protection of the head to purposes of sanctity and sincerity, minding the Sergeant to not only fill his head with learning, but employ that learning to the establishment of Justice, and the support of Innocence against powerful oppression and fraudulent subversion; and it calls them to own themselves Freemen from the frowns of Judges, Primum 〈◊〉 quod ante se aliud habere non potest. Reg. Juris Civil, Digest. p. 46. who sometimes browbeat Puisnes, and gives them liberty, as Brothers of the Long-robe, to speak boldly because weightily in a good matter. And this is the reason why the Coyff being such an instance of sacredness and authority is called by our Text, Primum & praecipuum, de insignibus habitus. Nec Birretum istud Iustitiarius sicut nec serviens ad Ligem, unquam deponet, quo caput suum in toto discooperi●t, etiam in praesentia Regis, licet cum Celfitudine sua ipse loquatur. This is subjoined as a notable instance of this Sergeants dignity, to wit, that whereas of old no man might come capped into Princes or Great men's presences, without a particular grant so to do, which I collect from the use till Henry the Eighth's time, when I read one Mr. Brown had Letters Patents, Fuller Church History. part. 2. p. 167. confirmed by Act of Parliament, to enable him to put on his Cap in the presence of the King or his Heirs, or any Lord Spiritual or Temporal in the Land, Whereas I say no man might come capped into the King's presence without special leave, the Sergeant Privilegio statûs & gradûs might; and the reason perhaps might be, for that the head of a Sergeant, so full of law and learning useful to the King and his people, should suffer no injury by cold, nor appear no not with the defects of old age, or other accident, which might injure or diminish his reputation: but that he may retain that reverence that becomes so venerable a Profession as the Law is, and so grave a Sage as He the Sergeant is presumed to be. This may be one reason why Princes permits these worthy Persons to wear that in their presence to which they thereby command reverence from others, who are much ruled by the practice of their betters, especially of their Prince, who not only suffers these to appear before him Coyffed, but often speaks with them and is counselled by them in matters that concern his Crown and Dignity; and even then when they are nearest him, Licet cum Celfitudi●e sua ipse loquatur] they do stand capped and coyffed Which Considered, and the Laws of England (so conform to the Law of God, the Law of nature, and the condition of England and the nature of the people of it, so prosperous in the peace, plenty, honour, riches, and universal advantage that it has in all ages produced) while it is studied by brave men of parts and parentage, pleaded and distributed by learned and aged Sages, and judicially declared by the upright and well advised Masters of it, the Reverend Justices of the King's Courts. All this I say premised, the Chancellor humbly not only conjures the Prince non hae ●itare which of the Laws to love and choose, but from the result of what the premises discoursed upon produce, to conclude, That for the Piety of them they are pretiosae, being as the Queen's daughter, all glorious within; and for the reason, judgement and gravity of them Nobiles, sublimes ac magnae praestantiae, and in the effect of them to the Glory of God, Honour of the King, and comfort of the people. Maximaeque scientiae & virtutis, So He; and I after him humbly conclude this Chapter. CHAP. LI. Sed ut justitiariorum sicut & servientium ad legem status tibi innotescat, eorum formam officiumque ut potero jam describam. HAving shortly described the material parts of the manner of Creating Sergeants, He proceeds from the Step to the Throne, the Investiture of Justiceship, which though it be no State and Degree, justitiarii r●gis jurati, sunt omni exceptio●e majores. Leg● Cook 2. Instit. p. 422. 449. Fleta lib. 2. c. 34 but an express of State and Degree in an office judicial; yet is so far an advance of dignity, as in worship and honour is not in the Law to be exceeded: and therefore to what of it I have under favour of my Lords the Justices written of their dignity in the five and twentieth Chapter, and in fol. 523 I shall add only that which the Chancellor here gives me the invitation in the Comment on him to do, reserving the more plenary treating of them to some discourse purposely on that subject. In the mean time I follow my Text. Solent namque in Communi Banco] Hear the Chancellor begins by a modest condescension with the Court of Common Pleas, so called because of the Common-Pleas there holden; Now though this Court he presided not in, (being Chief Justice of, and so placed in, the King's Bench, which according to the learning of time and usage has the priority) yet to evidence how little his merit stands upon punctilios, and how trite he accounts rivalty between those pair of Sisters that are to serve the King and his people in decisions of Law and Justice (I would to God the same were the ingenuity of the members of both Universities, and then they would honour not derogate from one another) He writes first of the Common-Bench, which undoubtedly is not only a most ancient Court, not only before Henry the third's time, but before R. the first, or even the Conquerour's time. 4 Instit● c. 7. of the King's bench p. 72. 73. And as in the King's Bench, pleas of the Crown, and things concerning the King and Subjects were and are tried; so in the Common-Bench real actions by original Writs, are to be determined, and also Common-Pleas mixed and personal: And therefore as there being the high matters of Law judged in it, so are the plead to be performed only by Sergeants. There is usually in this Court, for the greater weight and more substantial carrying on of right judgement, Quinque justitiarii vel sex ad majus says the Text] Ma●y, for in the multitude of Counselors there is safety, and five an uneven number, that the balance may be preponderated by the odd voice, and so decision of the Courts judgement be. Of old it should seem by our Text there may have been six, which Master Cambden does not deny in those words, 4. Instit. Jurisdict. of Courts. c. 10. p. 99 Britania p. 178, of the Courts of England. 1 & 4 Carol. 5. justitiarii 3. Rep. Cook temps Car. 1. The judges there, are the Lord Chief justice of the Common-Pleas, with four justice's assistants or more, as the King shall think good; but that there have been in late reigns any more than five with the Chief justice, I cannot find, but sometimes there have been fewer. Et in Banco regis quatuor vel quinque] This Court is the first of the high Courts Ordinary of Law, called the King's Bench, because the Kings of England have there sat as Precedents in proper Person, Cambden's Britania of the Courts of England. p. 178. P. 177. which is the reason the returns in it are coram meipso, and because also it peculiarly holdeth pleas of the Crown and such other Matters which pertain to the King and the Weal-public, and withal (saith Master Cambden) it sifteth and examineth the Errors of the Common-Pleas. Anciently this Court followed the King's Court, for it was kept-in Aula regia, whence the prementioned Cambden tells us, they were called Lawyers of the Palace, and Justices of the Court, and justices assigns de nous sure. Cook 4 Instit. p. 71. P. 73. 9 Rep. p. 118. 119. Pat. 20 H. 6. parte prima M. 10 25 H. 6. parte prima M. 12.32 H. 6. M. 9 Spelm. Gloss. in verbo justitiarii. Cook 4 Instit. p. 74, P. 75. 5 E. 4. fol. 137. Of the Court of King's Bench. The Justices of this Court Sir Edward Cook calls the Sovereign justices of the Oyer, and Terminer, Goal-delivery and conservation of the peace in the Realm, so was the resolution of the Judges in the Lord Sanchars' Case, and the Chief Justice of it called by the Patents of Kings Capitalis Iustitiarius Regis, & Capitalis Iustitiarius ad placit. coram Rege tenend. the King's Chief Justice of England; so in the Statute of 34 & 35 H. 8. c. 26. 37 H. 8. c. 12. But the stile and authority which this high Officer, called justitia Angliae in H. the third's time had, was altered temps E. 1. not only in the power, but in the name and ground of his power from justitiae Angliae, to Capital. justit. Regis, and from Patent to Writ; so that though the rest of the Judges of the King's Bench have their offices by Patent, the Chief Justice is constituted by Writ, and therefore when in 5 E. 4. 'tis said, that a man cannot be Justice by Writ, but by Patent and Commission, it is to be understood of all the Judges, saving the Chief justice of this Court, see more of this in the 4 Instit. c. 7. Now in this Court there has been, says our Text, Justices quatuor vel quinque] So has the number mostly been 3 besides the Chief Justice, both in the Reigns of King james, the last King, and such the number now is; Which Justices of the King are of so great sway with the Nation, that they not only settle all suits and causes in their Benches and Circuits, but their resolutions are of high authority, 2 Instit. p. 267. resolute. Judges 3 jacob. upon the Stat. Articuli Cleri. 2 Instit. p. 601. not only Inducements to Parliamentary declarations, as in the Stat. De Bigamiis 4 E. 1. but also in arduous scruples upon Laws, and the interpretations of them, which appears in the quotations of them every day as Law, and in the allowances of our Kings in all times, that their resolutions are Law. Which lessons all men to honour the Judges, and all Pleaders before them to demean themselves with judgement, sobriety, and Law-learning; For as much as they are the Ordinary Lex loquens, and next to the Books, according to which they (having the morning light, which is the defecate light of knowledge) do speak, and therefore are to be diligently heard, and reverendly observed. Ac quoties eorum aliquis per mortem vel aliter cessaverit, Rex de avisamento concilii sui eligere solet unum de servientibus ad Legem, & cum per literas suas Patentes constituere, justitiarium in loco judicis sic cessantis. 2 Instit. p. 447. 4 Instit. c. 7. of the King's bench fol. 75. As life, merit and choice makes a Justice; so death, demerit and disfavour discharges him. When therefore any of the King's Justices do die by age or sickness, being perpetuo languidi, or otherwise are superseded, as by Writ under the great Seal, I suppose they may, though made justices, they are (a) Lib. 5. E. 4. fol. 157. Preface to his 3. part. Rep. temps Car. 1. p. 52. 375 said not to be by Writ, but by Patent or Commission; and as that learned and upright Judge, Sir George Crook upon his humble Petition, by reason of his very great age honourably was, and as Sir Randal Crew 2 Car. 1. Sir Robert Heath, and Sir Edward Cook 10 Car. and others have upon sundry reasons been, which is per mortem vel aliter cessare] Then the King, whose the Justice's places are, and in whose place, and by whose power they administer Justice to his people doth elect new ones cum avisamento concilii] For the King having divers Councils his Commune Concilium, Cook on Littleton sect. 164. p. 110. his Magnum Concilium, his Privatum Concilium, his judiciale Concilium, is said to do what ever he does ex avisamento Concilii, that is, by advice of his Council, secundum subjectam materiam, as in state matters out of Parliament of his Privy Council so in Law-matters by counsel of his Judges. Now this avisamentum concilii sui being referrable to the choice of a Judge, who is a person of Law, and proper to be scanned by men of Law, though the Councils of the King in the former notions are not excluded; yet avisamentum concilii seems to me chiefly to respect the Judges, from whom the King understands the fitness of persons in that office to serve him, so as he be (and other than such, 4 Instit. c. 10. p. 10●. they will not nominate) unus de Servientibus ad Legem. For though I know the Patent or Writ to make them, does not term them Sergeants that are so, Or make them Sergeants if th●y be not such; 4 Instit. p. 75. c. 7. Of the King's Bench. 7 Car. Sir R. H. Serjeanted Octob. 24. & Octob. 25. advanced. Crook 3 Rep. So Idem p. 65. Idem. p. 215, 403. yet no man can be a judge unless he be a Sergeant of the degree of the Coyff, Vnum è Servientibus] if not a Sergeant long before, as of old the Senior-Serjeants in regard of their great experience were (I presume) advanced; yet a Sergeant when advanced, though but so created the day before advancement. Et cum per Litter as, Patentes constituere] These Letters Patents are Writs under the Great-seal; directed to him or commanding him to attend the office of Chief-Justice, or Justice; and they are called Letters Patents, because the King's pleasure and judicial Command and Power is patefyed in them: and they issue forth from the Chancellor who is termed Secundus à Rege in Regno, and according to Fitz-Stephen, is enabled, Vt altera parte Sigilli Regis, 4 Instit. c. 8. Court of Chancery. quod & ad ejus pertinet custodiam propria signet Mandata, they are the words quoted by Sir Edward Cook. And this being done More Solenni, and to preserve the King's Power in a due exercise of it towards his people, is a very provident Supplement to Death, Decay, or Discharge. Et tu●s Cancellarius Angliae adibit Curiam] What the Chancellor has sealed privately he owns publicly. And that the Justice to be made may more seriously consider the King's Grace, and the people more respectfully reverence the King's Justice, the Great Chancellor, Cambden. Brit. p. 181. What the Chancellor is. who is Keeper of his Seals (for in H. 6. time there were three Seals in the custody of the Chancellor who is) The Signer of his Grants, the Presenter to his Promotions, the Judge of his Equity, the general Oracle to all Orders of men condescends to come from his High Court the Chancery, which is always open when other Courts are shut, out of Term, to the Court where the Justice is to be placed, 4 Instit. c. 8. Of the Court of Chancery. p. 81. Ad gubernacula Reipub. sedere. Cic. pro Roscio. Persarum Satrapae pro dignitate cujusque sedes habebant apud Regem, idque ex Cyri instituto. Drusius in c. 1. Esther. jer. 22.4, 30. adibit Curiam ubi Iustitiarius sic deest.] Et sedens in medio justitiariorum] 'Tis not stans for that's a posture of ministration and request, but sedens; for as that is the station of Pleaders, so this of Judges: Advocates stand at the bar to plead, but Judges set on the Bench to judge, Sedere, quasi seorsum erectè caeteris seperari, so Tully uses the phrase. Sitting is a posture of consideration and intentness, hence Servius renders that of Celsa sedet Eolus arce by id est curate; and Plautus when he brings in the servant saying to his Master, Sine ut juxta Aram sedeam, & meliora consilia dabo, hints to us, that sitting is a posture of solidity and judgement, post designatas Coeli partes à sedentibus captantur auguria. Hence is it that in Scripture God is phrased to set upon his Throne, Is. 6.29. jer. 17, 25, etc. and Christ jesus is said To sit at the right hand of God, and his Apostles and Martyrs are promised To set upon Thrones judging the twelve Tribes of Israel. Ille ergo possidet qui sedere, id est, sedem ponere potis est à sessitando. Alciat. ad Legem 203. p. 441. De verb. signific. 1 De Orat. 7. Cic. 1 De nat. Deorum. Plutarch lib. 1. Sympos. p. 617. Edit. Paris. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Idem p. 616. joel 2.27. Zeph. 3.5. So that the Texts Sedens] imports possession by a kind of temporary right: as the King's high Delegate He Sits, to betoken judicial Prerogative; and in medio justitiariorum because of official excellence. For as if there be but two, the right hand is the place; so when there are three or more, the middle or centre is the place of dignity: because it is that whence, as from the centre, the lines of circumvallation move, and wherein they are united. Therefore the Latins oppose in medio esse to obscurum; so Tully, dicendi omnis ratio in medio posita, and Ponam in medio sententiam Philosophorum. And surely when the Moralist has written much of placing at meetings, and determines the propriety of Primacy, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, To virtue and dignity; yet in that he brings in Democritus choosing the middle place, he intends the notification, that the middle being his choice was by him accounted the best, quia virtus in medio. From the consideration of this dignity of the Middle, as the most conspicuous, we read that God is often in Scripture expressed to appear in the midst, so Out of the Bulb, Exod. 3.4, 20. & c. 24.16. so In the midst of the Camp, Numb. 5.3. Out of the midst of the fire, Deut, 4.12, Out of the midst of the darkness, Deut. 5.22. God is in the midst of her, Psal. 46.5. Thou O Lord art in the midst of us, Jer. 14.9. The Holy one in the midst of thee, Hosea 11.9. When our Lord jesus, the Judge of quick and dead, is said to be In the midst of them that are gathered together in his name, Matth. 18.20. and In the midst of the two Thiefs on the Cross, John. 19.18. and when he appeared to his Disciples after his resurrection, He stood in the midst of them, John. 20.19. when he is said to stand, Rev. 1.13. c. 2.3. c. 4.2, & 3. and walk, and set his Throne in the midst of the seven golden Candlesticks: sure all these signify not only special and eminent presence, but also Authority, Majesty and every thing that is transcendent. And therefore sedens in medio justitiariorum] here, is enunciative of the Chancellour's dignity, in that he sets in the Courts of Law not as a stranger, who by the courtesy of the Court has the best Seat; or as Parning Chancellor to E. 3. did, 4 Instit. c. 10. p. 99 to debate matters of Law: but as the King's chief Minister of State to dispense the King's Grace in a graceful and majestic manner; that from the Solemnity people see in the constitution of a Judge, they may learn to reverence him: and the Students of the Law may be excited to diligence and virtue, that they may be in due time honoured with the Bench, as well as fitted for it by the Barr. But it follows. Introduci facit Servientem sic electum, cui in plena Curia ipse notificabit voluntatem Regis de officio Iudiciario sic vacant. Till the Chancellor be sat in the Court, the Sergeant appears not; for the intent of the Solemnity being to magnify the grace of the King and the office of the Judge, the best means thereto is to do it plena Curia, when there is the greatest appearance both of Judges, Officers, and Auditors, which then being, when the Chancellor is fat, the to be promoted Sergeant appears, and then the Chancellor, who is always a man of learning and oratory, declares the King's favour to his people in supplying them with Seats of Judgement, and with judicious and just Sitters on them: and that in such a number as suits best with the expedition of justice, and the prevention of delay, error, or iniquity; yea, who continually provides against the supersedals of death, impotency or demerit, by additional Justices to complete the necessary and usual number. And this as an act not more of policy then good will, for 'tis Voluntas Regis that determines the office and altars the persons officiating as Judges in the Courts; Voluntas Regis per justitiarios suos & Legem suam. 2 R. 3. fol. 11. 3 Instit. p. 146. and that because the Courts are Curiae Regis, and the Laws are Leges Regis, and the Justices being justitiarii Regis nothing is more reasonable and just, then that the King should do, as to this, what he will with his own, that is, what he Kinglyly and legally by matter of Record (his legal will) pleases to do with his own. Which though it be in this case contrary to the Tenants of disorderly times and tempers, such as were those Temps H. 3. where the Provisio Magnatum says contrary to this Text, ravelling out the good pleasure of the King into the pleasure of the Subjects; M. Paris p. 641. 744. yet the very Author that relates this, adds a notable censure of it, as usurpation upon and injury to his Sovereign Grandeur and Propriety, Tot enim in Anglia Reguli, ut videantur in Anglia antiqua tempora renovari: Pag. 904. but enough of this. The language of the Text is more Law and reason when it tells us, the Chancellor does Notificare voluntatem Regis de officio Iudiciario sic vacant. Et legi faciet in publico Litter as praedictas] This is done to show the reason of his coming to the Court, and the warrant for this his performance in the Court; for as the King calls a man of worth to a public charge; so he signifies this pleasure of his by a public Instrument, publicly read, that all may witness the lawfulness of his Title, that being sworn and placed, Sits and Judges. For as the Patent read declares what the King's will is; so the Oath read and administered which is that of 18 E. 3. shows him what he is to perform in duty to the King and his people, To the King he takes the Oath of Allegiance kneeling, Crook 3 Rep. Regni Carol. 1. p. 403. according to the Stat. 3 jac. To the King he takes the Oath of Justice standing: which done, Cancellarius sibi tradet Literas Patentes] Before he be qualified by taking the Oaths previous to his trust, he has not his Patent delivered, and so no admission to his judicial office. For though the sealing of the Patent seems to give him jus ad rem, that is, an inchoate right as it is explanatory of the King's favour, and an allowance of his conceived fitness; yet till he have testified his subjection to the King and the Law, and bound himself by the Oath of God to be true to his trust in all the particulars of it, the jus in re commences not, for that is perfected by the delivery of the Patent to him: but when he has to his submission to the terms of his acceptance and duty, satisfied the Chancellor and the Court, that he is the man he is taken for, than his Title is delivered him, and he enters on his Charge. Et Capitalis Iustitiarius Curiae assignabit sibi locum in eadem, ubi deinceps ipse sedebit. When the King's Chancellor has performed what for the King's Honour and his people's good is, to be as far as prudence and piety can secure and render them in their honest performance undoubted, than he recedes leaving the formalities that are purely local to the order of the Court; the Chief justice, who is the chief actor in the Court, than places the new Judge (but here is nothing preposterous, but every jota appointed in the solemnities) in the place where he must sit, which being according to the seniority, for I take it, the vacancy ordinarily advances the next to it, the Judge is to sit there till he have room made higher for him, by which, emulation is prevented, and love between the justices of the Court preserved. Sciendum tibi est, Princeps, quod justitiarius ifte inter caetera tunc jurabit, etc. This is a summary of the juramentum justitiariorum 18 E. 3. and it consists of those heads, which comprehend the pious and plenary dispatch of Justice, freely without sale, fully without denial, speedily without delay, which though it were declared in those words, Nulli vendemus, nulli negabimus aut differemus justitiam vel rectum; yet is more fully here charged on the Judges, who as the King's distributers of it to the people, Vet. Magna Charta. 29. Chap. M. Charta. by the force of their Oath are to do as followeth Well and lawfully to serve the King and his people in the office of justice, to warn the King of any damage, to do equal Law to all his Subjects, to take no reward of gold, silver, or any other profitable thing, (meat and drink only excepted) To give no counsel where the King is party, to suppress breakers of the peace and contemners of the Law, to maintain no suit or quarrel, to hearken to no letters or commands to delay or deny justice, to procure the profit of the King and his Crown, with all things where they may reasonably do the same. This is the sum of the Oath which our Text insists on, as that which must not only be the bridle of restraint to Judges; but the confidence of the people, that they shall live under a Law so dispensed in all Godliness and Honesty. For therefore is the subject of England rich, free, secure, and what not that is emulable; because his Prince pleases to rule by the Laws, which Laws are distributed by such Justices as fear God, 3 Instit. c. 6●. p. 146, 147. and reverence man no further than they reverence God in Heaven, and the Law on Earth, which is the true and during support of Sovereignty and subjection. Sciendum etiam tibi est, quod Iustitiarius sic creatus, Convivium solennitatemve aut sumptus aliquos non faciet tempore susceptionis officii & dignitatis sua, cum non sint illa gradus aliqui in facultate Legis, sed offi●ium tantum illa si●t & Magistratus ad Regis nutum duratura. Here the Text tells us, that there is no cost of Presents, entertainment or equipage at this advancement of a Sergeant to a Justiceship; and the reason why none there is, to wit, that the cost of solemnities attends Degrees, Dignity and State of Honour conferred on a person, Hac est voluntas Regis per justitiarios suos, & per legem suam, & non per Dominum Regem in Camera sua vel aliter. 2 R. 3. fol. 12. 3 Instit. p. 146. from the result whereof others, attendants, relations and friends are seen in service and gratified for it: but Justiceship being only delegation to an office executable by and determinable at the pleasure of the King, there is no Degree proceeded in beyond that of Sergeant, but an additional faculty to express Magistratiquely and with judicial authority, the learning of Law, that in the Sergeant was seen in pleading, and now may further appear in judging. It is true, in the Case of Bishops it is otherwise, for though when they were Doctorated they kept Feast; yet shall that not excuse them, but at their Consecration, they so shall do also, because they are admitted into a superiority of order, Episcopatus est Sacerdotium completum & perfectum, inferiores ordines sunt antececedentia ad Sacerdotium ex congruitate, sed non ex necessitate. Durandus lib. 4. dist. 24. Q. 1. art. 8. p. 809. and have a dignity of temporary Baronage, though not personal, yet in the rights of their Sees, and are therefore to gratulate the King's favour and their friend's kindness in attending the Ceremonies of their Consecration with preparation for, & entertainment of them with gloves, and good cheer, and with sober, hearty and generous welcome, the cream, marrow and Music of all entertainments: but in this of a Justice, the official Improvement of a Sergeant, there is no cause of further joy and triumph, then as it is an opportunity to glorify God, serve the King, and his people, honour the Law, his study and profession, nor is the reward of it more, if so much, as by a good round practice is gained; And therefore when it comes to a Sergeant of years that has plied hard at the oar when young, and has feathered his nest well, it comes very seasonable to alleviate his toil and to be a port to his old age and a help to his retirement. These are the motives to good and grave men's inclinations to observe the King's pleasure, and to serve him as Justices. Pride, popularity, covetousness, idleness, are no jewels or ornaments in a Judge, but rather the treacherous Syren-notes that make the Achilles of Learning, piety and truth in them self-felons, 30 E. 3.4. Instit. Chap. 8 p. 79.3 Instit. c. 68 of Bribery p. 147. accessaries to their ruin and defamation which had Thorp considered he would not have so dishonoured the Law, and his singular judgement therein by bribery, nor Tho. De Wryland Chief Justice of the Common-Pleas, for an accessary in Murder, or Stratton Chief Baron, For Felony; and all the Justices in E. 1. time (except Mettingham and Beckingham) have deserved for their bribery and corruption to be removed, M. Paris p. 904. fined, and imprisoned: Qui non amoverentur nisi clarescentibus culpis, as Matthew Paris his words (of some such delinquents) are. Habitum tamen indumenti sui in quibusdam ipse extunc mutabit sed non in omnibus insigniis ejus. The Coyff called the Pileum in the Roman Stories, being a Priestly habit, and so by Saint jerom owned under the name of Pileolum, as the fourth kind of Sacerdotal habiliment, Romani Saturnalibus Pileum gerebant, aliis diebus nudo capite erant. Turneb. Advers. lib. 8. c. 4. Sanctus Hieronymus ad Fabiolam. lib. de Veste Sacerdotali. the Judge continues; so doth he his long Robe and Cap, only habitum in quibusdam mutabit. Now a habit we know is a token of Regency in Universities, It's to accompany the Hood, when Masters of Arts go to Congregations, It is an old Philosophers short cloak, of which I have written in the notes on the precedent Chapter; that which is to be added is, that as men of honour in the Heroic ages, either covered not their heads at all, (Which is the reason why Homer makes no mention of Pileus, nor any of the ancient Statues are seen other then bare headed; or if they did cover them, yet only but when need was, and that with some lap of their garment) so did they not then wear covering for shoulders longer than necessary, Lege Salmasium in Tertul. lib. De Corona Militis. Turneb. loco praecitato. nor them longer than either cold or rain required it: which though we (now accustomed to more delicacy and trimness) have altered, yet so much of the antique vest as intimates gravity and learning is retained, and this our Text makes to reside in the habit of a Sergeant in Common with a Judge, who wear long Robes Priestlike, for so the long Robe is reckoned 39 Exod. 22. Cum Capitio penulato circa humeros ejus & desuper collobio] with a furred cape about his shoulders; so is the Translators reading; Robes were the best of garments, and those that signified excellency and State. And therefore as they were long from the collar to the foot, to import the extent of dignity over the whole person of the wearer, according to that pattern which I believe the Christian Church took for her long robe, from that Text, Rev. 1.13. wherein we read in the midst of the seven Candlesticks, one like the Son of man, clothed with a garment down to the foot; So was there a shorter robe, which the Priests wore from the pattern of old, pallium superhumerale 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Exod. 28.4.21. verses, which Pallium or short cloak signified a vest, panno out pelle suffultâ, whence the lining of the Judge's robes with silk in summer, Cunxus lib. 2. c. 2 De Republ. Hebraeorum in Tom. 8. Critic. Bibl. p. 854. Spelm. in Gloss. p. 138. Capapro scrinio ad conservandas reliquias. Idem codem loco. and fur in winter, hence the furred Cape, Capitium] anciently mamillare foeminarum, a stomacher, or rather a short cloak, like those women heretofore wore, when they road, or were ill, and yet do wear in Childbirth, which is now worn only by Country old women, and Country Midwives, which Capitium, because it was a guard to the breast and shoulders, which cabinetted and secured the entrails of life and tenderness, things of security from weather were called Capes, thus the Seamen call a port where they touch for relief, and put in for safety a Cape. Our Chancellor then by Capitium penulatum] means not that tegmen Capitis which Varro mentions, but that penulatum Capitium, Tunicas neque capitia neque strophias neque zonas, etc. lib. 4. De vita. Pop. Romani. that vest or loose garment which is worn in rain and storms over the close garment, which Ulpian reckons amongst the garments that are in common between men and women, and are used indifferently by them, Penulata vestis quae nebuloso & pluvioso tempore supra tunicam assumitur loco pallii ad arcendas a corpore pluvias. Alexandrum constituisse ut senes penulis intra urbem frigoris causa uterentur, quum id vestimentum itinerarium aut pluvia fuisset. Lampridius in Severo. both call penulas, or as we call them Caped rockets or short Cloaks not much longer if so long as the middle; Severus is accounted the first that allowed this garment, yet only to old men, and that on their journeys, and in cold and wet weather; (a) Cic. ad Attic. lib. 10. Ep. 138. Lib. 6. c. 3. Tully terms it penula viateria; Galba made so much of this garment that Quintilian tells us, when one of his favourites asked him to bestow his penula upon him, he refused to do it, saying, Si non pluit non est tibi opus, si pluit ipse utar. Paysius tells us of many Penula's, Quantum humilitatis putamus cloquentiae attulesse penulas istas, quibus astricti, & velut inclusi cum judicibus fabulamur. In Dialog. Orator. the Penula scortea which the Pegasarii Cursores used, the Penula Gausapina which we call the Gossip's Mantle, the Penula Oratoria which Tacitus alludes to, all which were several habits for several persons on several occasions, such as the Capitia Penulata for the Sergeants, who being men of years, weakness, and dignity, do as well for security as state, wear these short Cloaks furred in the Cape. From these furred Capes on their Capitia Penulatia came probably Semi copes and Copes used in Cathedrals and Churches under the name of Capae Canonicae & Capa Chorales; and from this the term of Festa in Cappis, Matt. Paris in vitis. p. 123, 127. Observandum est interim has cappas Chorales olim pellibus ●ariis fuisse furratas, suffultas, & duplicatas, ut dicimus nunc, lineatas. Gloss ad Matth. Paris in voce Cappa. Milites Cappati Cappis Regiis, nihil praeter Camisiam de Sacco, Calceos de 'Bove, & Capam de Cilicio secum gerant. M. Paris. p. 610. Cod. Theodos. lib. 4. tit. 10. which because they were lined with fur or silk on the inside according to the season of the year, the Sergeants, that in their Robes are Sacerdotal, continue to wear Robes lined according to the seasons, Et desuper Collobio cum duobus Labellis.] This Collobium does not here signify a short Coat or a Tabard, like that we call Soldiers Mandils, or Mantles of the fashion of Coat-Armours, such as our Herald's Coats are; for that the Codex Theodos. forbade Senators and men of worship to wear: but it imports that Cowl that was proper to Monks, Hermits, Soldiers, and Countrymen, who because they were encounterers with hardships, had these Superhumeralia to defend them. Thus the learned Knight understands these very words of our Chancellor; Spelm. Gloss. in Collobio. and thus we all know, that though the Hood or Cowl be worn about the shoulders, it is the proper tegument of the head and neck. And therefore julius Firmicus reckoning those that are defective and impaired in health, Morientur autem aut Spatici, aut Apoplectici, aut Collobiet. Lib. 3. c. 14. and thereupon die, mentions among others Collobici, that is, such as by reason of infirmity are fain to keep their heads in cases, and bide them in a hole as it were, lest the wind blow upon them. Collobium then was as a hood for warmth, so cum duobus Labellis, which Lips, longer than ordinary, might be convenient to close up that room in which their trinkets were carried, Perae Oratoriae, that in which Advocates carried their Papers; Ovid 1. Amor. Eleg. 8. Sallust. 1. Catil. for as Priests and Priestly men did by severe penance and study portare rugas in vertice frontis, and auxilium portare Clientibus, so did they portare fasciculum librorum sub ala: and so our Advocates ordinary do, save only Sergeants and the great (within Bar) Counsel; for these have their Bags carried by their Clerks, but of old 'twas otherwise. For as the Collobium was used for the Head-case, so the duo Labelli joined to it might render it capable to be useful for stoadges. And thus in the habit and some other solemnities the Sergeant and the Doctor of the Laws agree, and little or no dissimilitude is between them; for though the Sergeant has in England more Honour than the Doctor of the Laws: yet the Doctor of the Laws is more generally honoured and owned in the World, because he is a Professor of the Laws of the Continent, when the Sergeant is only of the municipe local Laws. Sed Iustitiarius factus Chlamyde inducetur firmata super humerum ejus dextrum, caeteris Ornamentis Servientis adhuc permanentibus. As the office of a Justice is an advance to the State and Degree of a Sergeant in the person of the Officer; so is there an advance in the Nobility of that Vest, which in a Justice is superadded to that of a Sergeant. The Long-robe and Cap, the Hood and Coyff are the same, and the colours of black, purple, and scarlet, for the respective days are the same; but the Chlamys which the Justice has, makes the difference. Now this Chlamys, Suidas in verbo. Suidas calls ' 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a Military Garment, and he says Numa was the founder of it, who learned it from the Albanians, whom he being Victor of, Lib. 6. De Lingua Latina. Quaeramus quid optime factum, non quid usitatisimum. & quid nos in possessione felicitatis aterna constituat, non quid vulgo. veritatis pessimo interpreti, probatum sit. Vulgum autem tam Chlamydatos quam Coronam voco; non enim colorem vestium quibus pratexia corpora sunt aspicio, oculis de homine non credo, habeo certius meliusque lumen, quo à falsis vera dijudicom. Senec. de vita beata. c. 2. and liking their Vest, from them used it. It was called by the Romans, Paludamentum; and Varro says it had its name, quod qui ea habent, conspiciuntur ac fiunt palam: to this Seneca alluded when he says He does not loek upon men for their gay Garments and rich Apparel; but accounts of them as he believes their minds are crowned with virtue and tissued with generosity, and the noble and virtuous pride of well-doing. This Chlamys Imperatoria was that which the (a) Fornerius ad Legem 100 p. 236. Roman Chieftains put on when they led forth their Armies, as the Toga was their garment in peace, when they stayed in the City. Virgil describes Pallas by this; Aeneid. 8.115. — Ipso agmine Pallas In medio Chlamyde pictis conspectus in armis. This Garment after grew so requested that every Nation had of them, Valer. lib. 1. de Crasso. and those of divers sorts: hence is it that we read of Chlamys aurata, crocea, purpurata, intexta variis coloribus; also of the Chlamys Phrygia, Sidonia, Spartana, Tyria: Cum ad bellum exit Imperator ac Lictores mutaverunt vestem & siqua incinnusrunt, dicitur proficisci paludatus. Varro lib. 6. De Lingu. Latina. Breviarli lib. 9 p. 127. Edit. Sylburg. Xiphil. Epitome. Dionis in Caro Caligula. p. 249. E 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. In Vitellio. p. 311. In Severo. p. 408. In Caracalla. p. 429. Herodianus in Severo. p. 524. Idem in Caracalla. p. 546. yea, all the Roman Emperors and Military Magistrates gloryed in it, as in that which was the very 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and specification of absoluteness and Majesty, so Eutropius says, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, etc. That the chief token of Maximinian' s absoluteness was his rich Cassock, or rather Robe; so of Caligula 'tis said, He put on, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a silken purple Robe studded with precious stones; so the same Author tells us of Vitellius, That he was on a Kingly well-mounted Horse, adorned with a rich purple Chlamys; so Severus, Antoninus, Caracalla, (a) Herodian, lib. 7. in Maxim. p. 595. Maximinus, (b) Zosimus lib. 5. p. 809. Honorius, and Theodosius, are storied to wear this, which originally (according to (c) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, In Cómmodo p. 382. Xiphilinus) was a Greek Vest: but Cassiodore says, by Dioclesian it was first introduced in the Embroideries of gold and precious stones, and the reason that he would have such a glorious Vest was, because he would be accounted a God, and as such adored, Cum ante eum omnes Imperatores, etc. When before him all the Emperors we looked upon and saluted as judges, and had nothing to distinguish them from the habit of Citizens but their purple Robe. Cassiodor. in Chronicis. p. 628. Edit. Sylburg. Jornandes lib. 1. De Regnor. & Tempor. Success. p. 651. Xiphilinus in Epist. Dionis, p. 428. From these and the like instances and received customs have the use of the Chlamys, which was first Military, then Imperial, and thence Judicial and Magistratique (in not only primary but subaltern and derivative Magistracy, as is that of the Justices here in the Text) been derived to us; and not only been the distinction of them when living and sitting on their Benches, Statue Scipionis cum Chlaveyde Cic. pro Rabirio Postbumo 6. but also their Ornaments and honourable Remembrances when in their graves: witness the Sculptures of the Roman Statues Chlamydated, and of our Knights and Judges in their Pictures and Monuments. Now this Chlamys is in our Text said to be firmata super humerum ejus dextrum, ● to tell us, that Judgeship is a thing of burden to an honest man, Humeris Rempub. sustinere. Orat. pro Flacco 72. Vt Comitia suis, ut dictitabat, humeris sustineret. Cic. pro Milone. and one that makes conscience to know and perform his duty; and that he that buckles to it had need to lay his right shoulder, his best abilities of mind and body to discharge it wisely and fully. Hence it is that Sipontinus derives humerus from Humus, because as the ground complains of no burden that is laid upon it, but supports it because itself is of solid substance; so a good public-spirited Heroic, whom God has endowed with parts and piety, goes through stitch, as we say, with his duty, and having put his shoulders to the yoke, flinches not, but is firmatus super humerum dextrum, that is, goes on in his work indesatigably, as if he were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as our Lord jesus is said to be so adapted to it, * Isaiah 9.6. c. 22.22. That the Government which was laid upon his shoulders, Quamuis puer sit habet humeros aptet and Imperium sustinendum. Forner. in Is. 9.6. Grotius in Ezech. 28.13. he bore up valiantly and victoriously. As our Judge must pray and endeavour, he (according to his opportion and ability) may, that the Magistracy he has virtute Chlamydis data & impositae, he may peragere digné & debitè without any gap, chop, or breach in justice; for therefore is this Chlamys closed on his right shoulder, that he may learn to be always uninterruptedly courageous for, and in the truth: and that the firmness of his faith in God and to the King, may appear in his service of them both, and their people for their sakes, with might and main. Excepto quod stragulata veste aut coloris bipartiti, ut potest Serviens justitiarius, non utetur, etc. Sergeants always, till within this late time of distraction, I think wore their particoloured Robes, and their Attendants party-Liveries, for the first year after they were Serjeanted; and that not as a token of diminution, but of their tenderness and new entrance on their State and Degree. Genes. xxxvii. 3. 'tis said, jacob loved joseph more than all his Children, Tunicam polymitam ex variis liciis confectam, tunicam figuratam, & pictam. Fagius in loc. Omne ovum volucrum bicolor, lib. 10. Nat. Hist. c. 52. judges 5.30. 2 Sam. 13.19.20 Ezek. 16.10.13. c. 27.24. Psal, 45.15. and he made him a coat of many colours. And this was done not only to comply with the nature and humour of youth, which delights in variety and novity, in which regard that allusion of Pliny's may not be impertinent, That every egg of birds is particoloured, which signifies youth to be an unsettled thing, this and that, and neither yet either, etc. but also to instruct us, that party-colour in garments signifies honour and victory, so, To Sicera a prey of divers colours, a prey of divers colours, of divers colours of needlework, on both sides meet for the necks of them that take the spoil. In which words there is not only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vestis Phrygionica, that embroidery in many colours set out to the life, which makes the garment glorious, gaudy, and delightful, of which the Prophet Ezekiel and other Scriptures speak; but that party colouredness that is by tincture or die, as the Rabbins expound this place by vestes factae diversis speciebus colorum, so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies: For though the Plural. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies what has as many kinds of colours as there are days in the year, yet in the Singular it signifies only vary colours. Stragulata vest is coloris bipartiti] Though our Sergeants colour is black and purple, party per pale; Quod in Festis ante altare sternunt in pavimento stragulum rite vocabimus. yet stragulata vestis, is in Authors any thing that is rich and delightful; Stragula] * Valla lib. 6. c. 46. Dico te maximum pondus auri & argenti, eboris, purpurae, plurimam vestem Melitensem, plurimam stragulam, etc. Cic. 4. Vetr. 127. & 33. genus vestis, sive quicquid vel insternitur lecto, vel equo, vel alii rei; so Tully also computes stragulatas vestes amongst the greatest jewels, and (a) Liv. 4. Belli Maced. 34. Livy; so Budaeus tells us, that tapetes & tapetia, tapestry as we call that part of rich furniture, was brought by the Army out of Asia to Rome, and accounted an advance to the luxury of Rome. Whereas then our Text uses stragulata vestis, for bipertiti coloris vestis, it is not to signify as if Sergeants vests were like Heralds-Coates, embroidered with silk and gold, but were only of two different colours of cloth, to signify his initiation by gravity and learning into grandeur and lustre: and thus sable and purpure make a fair display of a Sergeants qualifications suitable to his trust, Learning and Generosity; by the one to know what justice and honesty is; and by the other to be enabled with courage and resolution to serve and propagate them. This then being a Companion and Emblem of incipiency and mere entrance and Freshmanship, as I may so say, in the State and Degree of Serjeancy, the Justice is not to be alloyed by, and therefore the ensign of it not to wear, justitiarius non utetur] saith the Text. Capitium ejus non alio quam Menevero penulatur] This is another difference; as the Sergeants Cape is lined with Lambskin, which is in token of tenderness: so the Justices is with Menever, that is, as I take it either the skin of a little beast bred in Germany, or of a Russia squirrel, but it is that which is spent in lining hoods and garments of graduates in arts, as black and yellow furs are for the linings of Liveries of Men of Societies and Mysteries. With this Menever, as the Caps of Judges and men of honour were lined, so the attires of Ladies and persons of quality, as somewhere I have seen in an ancient Picture. Qualem habitum te plus ornare optarem cum potestas tibi fuerit ad decorem status, Legis, & honorem regni tui. This clause is insinuative to the Prince why, and upon what reason Formalities were established, and civil Ceremonies first nourished, to wit, in order to the great and more consequent ends of stability and government. For as hedges of thorn and briars preserve fields of Corn and Grain, and locks of Iron on door of wood defend Carcanets of jewels, and Treasuries of gold, as Soldiers that have hardly a tatter (as we say) at their breeches, protect rights that have Kingdoms depending on them, and farthing Candles help men to find a gemm that is invaluable, and without them would be lost; so the little things (as they are thought) of forms and methods, habits and proceedings, do so conduce to the greater and nobler parts and portions of administrative prudence and virtue, that without them and their punctilios in every thing duly observed, Errors and Inconveniencies will ensue. This is the reason our Chancellor minds the Prince, when God shall do well with him, to do well by the Law, not only in the greater and more considerable matters of securing it from all encroachment upon it, but also in the very circumstantial and ritual appendances to it, qualem habitum te plus ornare optarem] and that not so much for love to me, your Chancellor who have followed your misfortunes and disasters, and resolve to live and die your Votary, who though now a Banished Person from the Bench, and from the Country I love because I was born in it; yet cannot but wish well to the Law my study, Cic. pro lege Manilia. Cic. 2. De Finibus. Flos Italiae, firmamentum populi Romani. ornamentum dignitatis. Cic. ●. De Finibus. Our Chancellor is worthy of admiration, even for this, which is a public spiritedness well becoming a Gentleman. to the Professors of it my Companions, whom I would beseech you to favour highly, and in all things to promote, defendere, amplisicare & ornare, as Cicero's words are, magnificentius augere & ornare as the same Author. I say Our Chancellor does not here barely desire their esteem, but somewhat more decretis ornare, to declare favours to them by Law, Aedificare & ornare classes, to enlarge the borders and boundaries of houses of Law, and to make the habits of Lawyers, vestitum pulcherrimum, & ornatum Regalem, to account the professors of the Law as the Orator did Eloquent men of his time, The Flower of the Nation, the Firmament of the Roman splendour, the Ornament of the City's Dignity; This is the generous temper, and supereffluent cataract of his love to his profession and study beyond any private and narrow emolument of his own. For He presents not to the Prince his Fidelities and Sufferings, his Eclipses and hazards, his Relations and Country, whom for his Sovereign's sake, he has quitted and is dubious ever to see, He beseeches him not to remember his Family when He comes into his Kingdom, and to set one Son of his at his right hand, and another at his left in the glory of his restitution, no such mercenary sallies of a mean soul does he in these words discover; but all that He remembers him of as a grave Counsellor and Father to his youth, so winnowed and chaffed to and fro by the Euroclydon of a distracted Nation, Orat. pro Milone a potent Antagonist in a possessed Throne, and his doubtful victory over his present dislustre, Orat. 3. in Catiline. All that I say he craves of Him, is that he would make the Law which he counted lumen & ornamentum Reipublicae, as Tully styled Hortensius, in all the Ceremonies of it honourable, and the habit of it Honoris ornamenta, monumenta gloriae & landis insignia, Orat. pro Domo sua. as the Orator said against Catiline. And this he does, not from a spirit of opposition or in remora to the conspicuities of other artists; but as a brave and true spirited Englishman pro bono publico, this (says he) will make men esteem well of the Law, and the professors of it, & ornatissimam de illis sententiam dicere, as the Orator's words are, and this comes to our Texts ad decorem status Legis, that men by the honours and riches they attain to by study of the Law, may be invited to apply themselves to it, and acquire excellent knowledge in it, and in the Conclusion fill the Nation with learning and skill, which accomplishes that which the Chancellor here presses, honorem regni. Thus the Chancellor evidences in his advice to the Prince, his love to the Law, which yet as a wise man he desires not exhibition of, till a fit season to show itself in, is effectually administered. He, Good man, is not all agog, for he has learned patience and submission by the things he has suffered; but resolves by a holy and humble obsequiousness to serve Providence, and submit to the Regency of it. Therefore while he shows his Love in this Advocation for the Law, he also manifests his submission to God for the time when his pleasure shall most advantage itself in the discovery of it, so it follows. Cum potestas tibi fuerit] Those are his modest limits. Princes as well as Subjects are in and under the power of God, and he will have his will on them as well as on meaner men; for they are all but clay in the hand of the Potter, and the vessel he makes to honour is but still a vessel, the work of his hand. 'Tis not for us worms, who crawl on a soil of dust, and are busied in a World full of shadows and snares, to stand upon terms, and be dictatorianly haughty. God that is above us can worry our folly, A good Monition and launch our Tympany; yea and with the humorous matter, let out also the lifeblood of our beings, and then what are we? O what a madness is it to fret and fume, to sacrilegiously resolve not to wait upon the Lord any longer. Such arrogant Nebuchadnezars, who rant and rave in their Sultanish bravadoes, and consult not with God, build on tottering foundations that shatter down in a moment, and the place of them is no more known. Better and firmer is that foundation which is laid on faith in God, and obedience to God which resolves to wait till God return and have mercy; and when that season of his is come, then welcomes and walks worthy of it. This is the scope of our Chancellors cum potestas tibi fuerit] For his purpose being to press upon the Prince courageous Prudence and generous Patience under his present condition, when he presents the Law and its artists as meet objects of his favour and kindness, and wishing his benefaction to them, as meet to promote the main design of Government, Peace, and Order, Religion and Learning, Industry and Riches, he so intends his advice to take place, as God's providence in the favour of a worthy issue to his adventures shall permit; for till God's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is come, all's but talk and bustle, vanity and vapour that is put on by the spurr of the keenest mettle, and laid a-soak in the ripeningst prudence and the most effectual conduct. Men may pray and project, form and sight, but can never overcome their fears and obtain their wishes, Petrus Crinitus lib. 5. c. 3. De bonesta disciplina. till God's counsel be answered in every punct of it: and then his figure has all the perfection that weight and measure can accomplish it by. For as in the computation of life there are four Aeras, the Spring of Childhood, the High summer of Youth, the Autumn of Manhood, the Winter of Old age, and each of these have their proportions of the sum of life, dividing the eighty years of man into four twentyes', Not sumus apud quos usque udeo nihil ante mortem etiosum est, ut si res patitur non sit ipsamors otiosa. Seneo. de otio sapientis. p. 962. and allowing to each pass a twenty years, before the absolving of which no ordinary avenue is possible to the privilege and benefit of the gradation that is before it; so in the series of God's operation, which is infallible, there is such an exact harmony and Sorites of concurrences, which are not to be abated or promoted beyond the proportion of God's endowment and situation of them, that there is nothing more to be done in the entertainments of God's pleasure in productions, then to be subact in our minds to God, and to be thankful that he gives time as the season, and men as the instruments to their production. Scire te etiam cupio quod justitiarii Angliae, etc. Here in the promiscuity of Titles (justitiarii Angliae here, as well as justitiarii Regis in the former Chapter) our Text-Master shows the unity and inseperableness of King and Kingdom, Non potest aliquis judicare in temporalibus, nisi solus Rex vel Subdelegatus. Fleta lib. 1. c. 17. Sine Warranto [Regis] jurisdictionem non habent neque correctionem. Lib. 2. c. 34. De Iustitiariis de Banco. both which make up but one and the same great Good, which completes the Head and Members of Government and Order. And therefore as respectu fontalitatis the Justices are the King's, for he only does, as he only can commissionate them to judge the people, whose the people, they be to judge, are; and that by the Law, whose the Law they are to judge the people by, is: so respectu utilitatis & finis the Justices are the peoples, that is, distribute justice in the place of the King for the peace of the people, which circumaction of appropriation in this reciprocal line of endearment, ties that Gordian knot that nothing but necessity unavoidably can loosen or dissolve. Non sedent in Curiis.] That the Justices sit argues their authority, that they sit in the King's Courts displays and declares the publickness of it; but that they sit not above three hours, and that in the first and clear part of the day, when there is time to prepare for the Court before it sets, and to dispatch the subsequent business in the Afternoon when the Court sits not, is contrived with great prudence. For Lawing is not the Totum Regni, but the Plough and the Axe, the Shop and the Barn, the Field and the Market is to be tended as well as the Study and the Barr. Therefore as there are but certain times which are called Terms, wherein the Courts of the King sit, and by them causes in dispute can be determined: so are there in those Terms certain hours in the day, in which only those Courts sit to hear causes, which hours are the hours that are neither so early that weak and sickly persons cannot rise at them, nor men, when they rise be without sleep, and drowsiness not shaken off them, fit presently to come to the Court: but they are the three middle hours in the forenoon, which in the time precurring them, gave way to devotion, and preparation for the Court by consultation with Counsel before the Court sits, and takes the wits of both Clients and witnesses in their coolness and keenness before they be loaden and surcharged with visceration, which the antecession of meat burdens the After-noons hours with. I say, the order of the King's Justices sitting those hours, from eight to eleven, that is, from that time more or less as emergencies require, (for strict minutes, no nor hours in this case are precisely stood upon, that Maxim of the Law being true here, Apices juris non sunt jura,) argues a prudent appointment of experience to avoid the temerity and drowsiness, the indisposition and unfitness, that After-noons clog dispatches with. For though as to Formalities and Entryes, as to matter preparatory to Trials and Courts of Law, the fallows of Afternoons do well; yet as to the judicial and wise determination of affairs of life, reputation, and estate, the Morning judgement is most subtle, sincere, and undisturbed: which is I believe the reason that the chief service and devotion of the Church was ever accounted her Morning Exercise. And surely if the Morning had not been as Musis amica so Devotioni, David would never have attributed so much to the Morning as he doth, Psal. 130.6. Psal. 92.2. Psal. 143.8. Psal. 5.3. Cum indulget judex indigno, nun ad prolapsionis contagium provocat universos? Fleta lib. 1. c. 17. Thou shalt hear me in the Morning, In the Morning will I direct my prayer unto thee, nor would he speak so much of God's loving kindness in the Morning, if he did not attribute much of furtherance to sanctity and seriousness to the Morning. Now the Morning being, in a large sense, any time before noon, and arguing sobriety and freedom from repletion and luxury, which declines prudence of forecast and deliberation, the hours here limited though but 3 in number, yet being in the best and clearest time of the day, are enough to dispatch much business in; especially considering the Judges are aged, whose infirmity as it often disables them in their decay of strength and tenacity to sit long: so after meals do the same infirmities engage them to repose, Fleta lib. 2. c. 35. De diebus constitutis in Banco. and therefore saith our Text, Curiae post meridiem non tenentur.] For as there are Dies non juridici (as before I said) not only every Lord's day, but some days in every term; so are there Horae juridicae & non juridicae, which our Text warrants: whose Authority the great * 2 Instit. on c. 51. of Stat. 1 Wesim. p. 265. Chief-Justice quotes in the very words of our Text. Sed Placitantes tunc se divertunt ad pervisum & alibi, consulentes cum Servientibus ad Legem & aliis Consiliariis suis. This refers (not to the Pleaders repairing to the Pervise-Exercises of Academic Origen, Selden notes on this 51 Chapt. the same in Law that those Exercises in Oxford are, called Pervisiae, or sit general in the Schools in the Afternoon (which Mr. Selden says he understood first out of Mr. Wake's Musae regnantes) and to which not only young Lawyers repaired to learn, Pro ipsa subsiantiola cogebatur ille panperculus multis diebus Scholas exercens, venditis in pervisio libellis, vitam famelicam & Codrinam protelare. M. Paris p. 798. but old Sergeants to teach and show their cunning,) I say, this clause turns us not to that Pervise, from whence the little place (whereof teaching of School was) in the lower part of the Church, was called Pervisium; but this refers to the consultation that Clients use to have with their Counselors and Sergeants about their Plead, Bills, Demurrers, Rejoinders, special Verdicts, Orders, the reading over of which judiciously and with intentness is called Pervisum, or as we say, perusal of them, that is, considering the legality of them, comparing them with Originals, making Briefs out of them, marshalling the evidence and preparing for trial in Court. Quare justitiarii postquam se refecerint totum dici residuum pertranseunt studendo in Legibus, sacram legendo Scripturam, & aliter adcorum libitum contemplando, ut vita ipsorum plus videatur contemplativa quam activa. This clause, from so true and knowing an Oracle as our Chancellor was, informs us of the piety and wisdom of the Law, that therefore calls the learned age of Lawyers off practice to justicing, Et caveat sibi [Rex] ne in sede judicandi, qua est quasi Thronus Dei, quenquam loco suo substituat insipientem & indoctum, corruptibilem vel severum, ne pro luce ponat tenebras, & manu indocta modo furioso gladio feriat innocentes, culpabilesque prece vel precio utetur illegitime reddere quietos, ne per malitiam, vel ejusdem substituti imperitiam, simul cum ipso aterno luctus maesiitiam sibi comparet. Fleta lib. 1. c. 17. that they may the better do justice to the people when they are taken off from all action of diversion, and wholly set apart to read over their books again, which they had in a good measure forgot; for practice though it adds to the stock of coin, yet it abates the stock of reading; therefore the Judge being taken from pleading, is wholly to betake himself to read over his Law-books, to peruse Scripture-directions, and to contemplate moral prudence. This if the Judges had in that latitude that our Text speaks of, they had not that trouble with multitude of persons repairing to them, that now they have: for then the tricks and sharks of men were fewer than now they have found out, which multiplies the trouble and diversion of the Justices; though that time they have free from business contributive to the expedition of the Court, and from visits and conferences with friends, together with the affairs of their families and fortunes, they spend in meditating upon the Law, and on the word of God, and in such methods of wisdom as becomes their years, dignity, and learning to evidence themselves versed in. For a good Judge that does employ his Vacation as our Text describes, Lib. 1. Serm. Domini in Monte. does not as Acindinus in St. Augustine, abuse power to oppress his underlings till they have quitted their right and sacrificed it to his lawless and sinful pleasure; Lib. De Vera Religione c. 31. but so demeans himself in the use of humane laws, ut secundum aeternae legis immutabiles regulas, quid sit, quo tempore jubendum vetandumque discernat, Non eadem oft sententia tribunalis ejus & anguli susurronum, multae hominibus viae videntur justa quae postea reperientur p●va, Sanctus Hieron. in Epist. ad Virgins Hermonenses. considering that of Saint jerom, That the judgement of God and Man is not alike, nor is the same plea available in the assize before the judge of quick and dead, assessed with by Saints and Angels, that will be acceptable here before us men, with whom many things pass for virtuous, which there will be rejectedas vild; Studium est animi asiidua & vehemens ad aliquam rem applicata magna cum voluptate occaepatio. Cic. 1. De Inventione. And this our Text sets forth not so much as matter of recreation and pleasure as pain and study of the mind studium, est dedita opera voluntatis hominis attentior atque impensior says Donatus. Hence is it that men of study do wholly retire themselves from avocation, Quid tam populare quam otium, quodita jucundum est, ut & vos & Majores vestri & fortisimus quisque vir, maximos labores suscipiendos putet, ut aliquando in atio posiit, esse, praesertim in imperio & dignitate. Idem codem loco. and intent their thoughts and speculations ultimis viribus, giving no sleep to their eyes, nor slumber to their eyelids; but rising with the light, and sitting on the Eggs of their conception constantly, till they have hatched their designs. This David calls in his holy soul Meditation in God's Law day and night, celebrare per otia recta studia as the Orator's words are. And this study, the occupation of the mind in Contemplation and Invention, being properly the work of age, when the mind wearied with the seeming gaudery and real nothing of objects pleasing to light and credulous youth, retires itself in penance to time misspent in fruitless action and sinful delight, returns to consistency, and to preparation for higher fruitions, and more real and solid contentments. I say when the mind of man in the age and serious temper of it, dwells at home, and is abstracted from the objects of its vageness and insolidity. Then, Then, is it best at leisure and most pleased with the repose of study and the delights of contemplation. For as in youth the glory of it is action, so of age the honour thereof is contemplation. A good employment of old age. Then they do quietam vitam agere ab omni solicitudine ac mundi turbinibus semotam their passions are ebbed low, and their curiosities satiated, with desire defeated, and expectation glutted, turns them upon more real objects of captivation, the contempt of the World, the preparation for death, the appropriation of the joys and comforts of the Almighty, the Communion with God and Christ, by the assistance of the Holy Spirit. These, These alts and elahs of Holy Music, Militum Christi perfectio est exutā mentem habere a eunetis terrenis negotiis & tumultu seculi. Sanctus Hieron. Com. in c. 3. Lamentat. Tom. 5. Oper. which attol the soul above wont endearments, and heretofore surprising juventutis lupanaria, are the only blessings of age, and the noblest compensations of life's infirmity. When men can defy the sinful fear of men, as Gascoigne did, and dare own truth in the day of hazard for it, than they do as those that are remoti à mundi turbinibus, than they do quietam vitam agere, which Hankford Chief Justice to * Anno 1470. 10 E. 4. Holingshed p. 677. E. 4. (though he was a most learned man in the Laws, had never a Son, and had a great estate) yet never attained to. For had he not feared difficult times and the issue of them more than he ought, he had not been his own Murderer as he was, nor had Sir james Hales that honest Judge, who stood alone in the Integrity of a lawful judgement in the Case of the Crown Temps E. 6. and who therefore highly deserved of Queen Mary whose Champion for her right in succession to the Crown he was (though She requited him ill, in suffering him to be imprisoned for his Religion, which owned so constantly her Supremacy and Sovereignty) I say had that good Judge feared less the terrors of men he had not made himself away to avoid them as he did. P. 1091. I say had these, though other wise worthy men, been à turbinibus mundi remoti, had they the quietae vitae actio, which as good Judges and grave Sages they are described in the Text to have, they would have kept themselves from this great Offence. Nec unquam compertum est corum aliquem, donis aut muneribus suisse corruptum. This is not in the strictness of the letter to be understood. For our Chancellor right well knew, that Sir William Thorp Chief Justice of the King's Bench 24 E. 3. cepit munera contra juramentum suum, 5 Instit. p. 145, 146 & Chapt. 68 and 20 E. 1, all the Justices except two, 27 E. 3. Justice's Itinerant took bribes of berner's, and were fined for every pound a thousand marks, and so others, which Sir Edward Cook nominates, I say our Chancellor knowing these errors and misdemeanours in Judges, could not be thought to write thus confidently in a matter of apparent questionableness; but whereas he says nec unquam compertum est, he is to be understood, none frequenter; Raro unquam, as Quintilian expresses it. Lib. 5. c. 7. For though there have been such persons and precedents of misdemeaning Justices, who have been donis & muneribus corrupti; yet not often, as seldom as next door to never, Good justice administreed in England. have such been, The Justices of England being for the most part the most approved and impartial Judges of any in the World, nor is there any place under the Cope of Heaven, where I think so little iniquity in judgement judicially is, as in England. Unde & hoc genus gratiae vidimus subsecutum; quod vix corum aliquis sine exitu decedat, quod justis magnae & quasi appropriatae benedictionis Dei est. This inference is to have a modification to reduce it to rectitude in the Court of experience and truth. For because in outward things, the Wise man's caution is safe, not to conclude good or evil, Eccles. 9.2. love or hatred by them, for as much as they have unequal events and various catastrophes; therefore is the hoc genus gratiae, and vix eorum aliquis to be gently pressed as an argument of benediction on men in their way and procession as rewarded by them for it. For though true it is, that Children are the gift of God, and that posterity to preserve a name, is much the delight of men and the mercy of God to many, that are in their families eternised by it, as has been our Royal-Family, in which, Speech White-Hall. 1607. p. 520 of his works. in which, King james said he was in descent to the Kingdom of Scotland 300 years before Christ, and may it so continue in them I beseech God, and so is the suffrage of all true Englishmen, till Shiloh come, that is, for this Worlds ever. And as many others of ancient extract have by it been long in Nations and in honours, yet falls it so out often, Nominem Dioclesiane Auguste prope magnorum virorum optimum & utilem filium reliquiste satii claret, denique aut sine liberis viri interierunt, aut tales habuerunt, ut melius fuerit de re bus humanis sine posteritate decedent. Lege plura apud Aetium Sparrianum in Severo. p. 176. Edit. Sylburgii. that brave men either have no issue at all, or those not Monumental to them, unless it be for wickedness and dissimilitude of manners to their Genitors, which Aemilius Spartianus makes good in Romulus, Numa, Camillus, Scipio, both the Cato's, Homer, Demosthenes, Crispus, Terence, Plautus, Caesar, Tully, Trojan, Antoninus Pius, Severus, and may be instanced further in thousands of others; and therefore this is no infallible instance of God's favour, no more than other things are, which are commonly distributed, of which the Father says dantur bonis, ne videantur esse summè mala, dantur malis ne videantur esse summè bona, but that which I would have our Chancellors sense herein is, that God hath so approved the integrity of the Judges in England, and so rewarded it with living Memory, that very seldom they being Men of good Families, Breed, Fortunes, and courages, do deny themselves the content of Marriage (as Justices did when Priests and under vows, as till E. 3. time, they often were) but in their lusty and liberal youth, bestowed themselves to women of quality, and thereby gained additions of fortune and relations, and as a consequent of their natural vigour, and conjugal content, prolificated. For though I know all the vigour and kindness nature has in her Repertory, and the most endeared expression of it parties can testify each to other, avails nothing to increase without God's fiat, and his benedictive Amen; yet where those are, and are properly expressed, issue may come as the work of nature, as well as from a more hallowed cause, which our Chancellor calls here God's grace, magna & appropriata benedictio Dei. And therefore, though I concur with Sir Edward Cook, Preface to Littleton. who to this of our Chancellor adds another Crown to Judges, That they die not will-less; yet do I think both these if they be peculiar blessings, yet are only so to Judges as to other wisemen, who walk humbly before God, are diligent in their callings and advice, and act for the peace and plenty of their families living and dying. For though I know to be Childless is a curse as in the case of Coniah, and to have no Male Children is a death to a family, daughters with their persons carrying all they are and have into their Husband families; yet is it better to have no Sons then lewd and for did ones. For as a wise Son maketh a glad father Prov. 10.1, for such an one gathereth in summer, verse the fifth, such an one heareth his Father's Instruction c. 13. v. 1. so a foolish Son is a Son that causeth shame c. 10. v. 5. c. 17. v. 2. is a grief and calamity. And if wise Sons the Justices of England have eminently had, as truly I think, they more conspicuously than any profession of men have had, because they have given them better breed then others have done, 'tis much towards that our Chancellor intends in that clause, quasi appropriate benedictions Dei est. Quod ex judicum sobole plures de Proceribus & Magnatibus Regni huc usque prodierunt, quam de aliquo alio statu hominum Regni, qui se prudentia & industria propriaopulentoes, inclytoes, nobilissimosque fecerunt. This clause gives much confirmation to the precedent assertion, that the Judges of England have the rewards of justice in God's benediction on them consisting in the increase and continuation of their issue; which is so great a felicity that job accounts it amongst the rewards of God's beloved ones, whom he corrects to their emendation, and thereby dignifies by this special testimony of his love, job. 5.25. jer. 22. ult. & 28. jer. 36.31. That their seed shall be great, and their offspring as the grass of the earth. For if it be a judgement to die issueless, as in the case of Coniah, and to have one's seed cast out, as in the case of jehoiakim and his seed whom God threatens; Prov. 20.7. Ps. 85, 1●. Prov. 11 210 if God threatens to pour out his wrath upon the children of wicked men, then surely to have children, and to have those children blessed after them, to have them inherit the earth, to have them delivered in the evil day, is the peculiar honour of God to the piety and justice of Ancestry: which the Chancellor here takes notice of to fix on the Prince's mind a love of the Law, which has been the raiser of so many excellent Siers, whom God has made the extern instruments and the natural causes of so fertile a Peerage and Nobility, as from them Lawyers by Profession and Judges by office have arisen. For though true it were that when the Justices were Clergymen, Rot. Parl. 45 E. 3. Rot. 22. M. 15. 4 Instit. c. 8. of Chancery. p. 79. there were no Magnates or Proceres that came from them as their lawful Soboles; yet when Laymen came to be Justices, and they married and had issue, the issue of them inheriting such fortunes as they left them honestly gained and thriftyly improved, made them sit and worthy of the King's Honour, Barones dixerunt posteri quos antiqui Heroes & Proceres. Spelm. in voce Baro. Pag. 968, 970, 971, 974, 979, 982, 990, 991, 993, 999, 1000, 1003, 1004, etc. whereby they were not only made men of Honour, but Proceres & Magnates Regni,] that is, Barons, and of the high Nobility of England; so Proceres & Magnates are frequent to express Earls and Lords by, c. 38. Magna Charta, Stat. Merton, W. 1. Gloster West. 2. Quo Warranto, West. 3. and so in M. Paris, and so in all Acts of Parliament, when the Lords Spiritual and Temporal are named, those the Text calls Proceres & Magnates, are intended. And that these have in a great measure (many of the Ancient Baronies of England being extinct and determined) been the supplements and rise of the growing Nobility, no man can deny that has any skill in Antiquity, though because to avoid inconvenience I forbear to instance in particulars; Leaf next after the Epistle to the 2 Report. yet a truth it is from our Chancellor, seconded by Sir Edward Cook, who has numbered near 200 great families risen from Lawyers, The Professors of which Law by the blessing of God, hath obtained a greater blessing and ornament to their family and posterity than any other Profession; Ps. 92.13. for it is an undoubted truth, That the just shall flourish as the Palmtree, and spread abroad as the Cedars of Libanus, thus Sir Edward Cook. Not that our Text-Master attributes all ascents to honour by Riches, and Virtue, to the Law in the science and practice of it; for there are many courses of life and ways of profession, wherein diligence, crowned with success, makes rich, and riches had, procure Titles and Dignities, such as are Offices, Physic, Trades, Husbandry, Plantation, Buying and Selling of Land, all which have raised great estates and made families rich and honourable by them, especially the City, which how much soever it is vilified is no infrequent or unfruitful womb of Honour, Though I say the Chancellor allows these to have their respective shares in the pleasing returns of Conspicuity on their issues; yet the persons that have risen to be Opulentoes (that is, divitiarum pleni, 2. Offic. Senec. in Herc. Furent. 3. as Tully renders it, Pecunia opulenti, rich as they are who do componere opes nullo sine, and who get what they have Ex sanguine & miseriis Civium, as Sallust accused some; like that Clericus Militaris whom Lichfield's Chronicle mentions in a short time to have grown from the inheritance of an Acre to an Earldom, and Mansell that greedy unconscionable Clerk, that had fifty Promotions at a time, being able in H. 3. his time to spend 4000 Marks a year. These are, as the Text says, Opulentoes, inclytoes] that is, Inclyta justitia religicque ea temipestate Numa Pompilii crat. Lib. 1. ab Urbt. eminent fulgore fame conspicui, preferred above the vulgar, non tantum titulo sed merito, not for their fortune having genus inclytum magnis titulis, but virtue, as Livy stories Numa, whom he terms inclyta justitia: Nobilesque] that is, having fortune to support, and virtue to become Honour and Peerage, are preferred to, and blessed in it above others,) he accounts the issue of the Justices. Quanquam Mercatorum status, quorum aliqui sunt, qui omnibus justitiariis Regni praestant divitiis, numerum in millibus hominum excedat. This our Chancellor grants, that by how much the greater improbability of it is, the greater may appear the blessing of it, to improve it to so unlikely an end. For though I think it well-becomes the Chancellor to advance his purpose by all the plausible arguments, that art with truth can form to so noble a tendency; yet that thus he magnifies the estate of Merchants beyond that of Judges, and yet concludes the Judge's children to be more durably fortunate & worthily honoured then the sons of Merchants are, seems to me high-wracked, perhaps beyond the proportion that can be made out in confirmation of it. For though I believe in H 6. time the Justices were not so great gainers as since they have been, by reason whereof they might be so much excelled by Merchants as now they are not; yet, that either they then should be so mean in estate, that one Merchant should in wealth exceed them all, or that any Merchant should be so great, as that he should so vastly exceed ordinary calculates, seems to me strange I confess Trade is a thing of gain if well followed, and timelyly left; (for there are Apoplexies in Trade, and men sometimes had they known well when to have given over, had died great in estate, who persisting in it have died beggars:) but that it operates such Mountains and Mines of wealth, as one man of the number may thereby get twelve men's estates, and those Justices, who are for the most part men of great years and great fortunes, is to me strange, and as in the Text, Hyperbolique. Yet in that our Chancellor says what historially I will believe rather than dispute, unless I could think his age produced what Queen Elizabeth's Reign, the rise of riches and trade, did, a race of Sir john Spencer's, Sir William Cravens, Sir Thomas Greshams, to which may be added Sir Baptist Hicks, Sir William Cockain, Sir Thomas Middleton, and Sir Stephen Soams, unless I say these were matched by men in our Chancellour's time, I see no reason he should so advance the gains of trade above that of the Law, when as there are instances of late as well as former Judges, Judge Gawdy, Mounson, Cook, Popham, and the Chancellor Coventry & others equal to them. So that in what Profession soever, if God move the heart to ingenuity and diligence, and fortunate them to a prosperous event, there may be great increase as well as in the Profession of the Law; for it is God alone that maketh men by his blessing rich, and addeth no sorrow to the riches he blesses men to get, Prov. 10.22. Prov. 11.25. For the liberal soul shall be made rich, and he that watereth shall be watered also himself. Dilige ergo justitiam, Fili Regis, quae sic ditat, colit, & perpetuat foetus colentium eam, & Zelator esto Legis quae justitiam parit, ut à te dicatur quod à justis scribitur, Et semen eorum in aeternum manebit. Having in the prementioned passages shown the worth and eminency of the Law, and commended it in the fruits of God's blessing on the labour and posterities of the chief Lawyers the Justices, whom he acknowledges to be the great meriters of respect, and the great stakes in the hedge of Government, who as they have Primorum Ordinum Sacerdotia, id est, Doctrinae, virtutisque praemia, as B●daeus his words are, so are every way accomplished to it: and therefore are by the Chancellor, as Promoters of Justice, to be beloved. For in as much as the Law is the rule of English Justice, and the Justices, 4 Instit. c. 7. King's Bench. p. 73. the ordinary speaking rule of the Law, do answer all motions in the Courts, even in the presence of the King, by reason that the King's Judicature is committed to them by the King, according to the Law; and that Answers and Declarations of theirs from the Courts are the Law and Justice of the Nation, by which the Order, Wealth, and Peace of the Nation is preserved, Our Chancellor, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Acts. 21.20. Zelari significat amulari, cupide aliquid imitari, vehementer amare, adeo ut nullam amoris in partem admitti patimur. I say, upon these persuasions that the Law is so beneficial to not only the Professors of it, but to their Posterities, whom the blessing of God gives and preserves estates and honour to, for that is the sense of ditat, colit, & perpetuat foetus colentium eum,] counselling him well to not only love the Law, but Esto Zelator Legis] to be a passionate doter on the Law, as a Suitor is on his Mistress, whom he desires to keep from all lovers but himself, and that for that one and only reason, that it doth ducere ad virtutis viam & praemium, that the promise may be fulfilled in you, Their seed shall remain for ever. And so he ends this one and fiftieth Chapter. CHAP. LII. Princeps. Vnum jam solum superest. HERE the Prince is personated as formerly convinced of the wisdom and fitness of the Law of England for England, and of the unreasonableness of all Arguments produced against the prevalence, honour, and continuation of it; yet that he may be fortified to repel all Applications of diversion, he further craves the Chancellour's solution of that which chiefly sticks with him, and somewhat demurs his plenary consent and resolution. Vnum superest solum] That's but a little punct but of huge import, like the One thing our Lord says is necessary, Mary's choice, the better part, and the One thing David desired of the Lord, and the One thing that is first to be sought, the endeavour after which has promise of all things to be added. One thing says the Prince, one numero, but all pondere, for it unresolved, does fluctuare mentem & inquietare, that is, fluctuando inquietare; for as Seas are disturbed by the agitation of waters from the wind, Lib. 8. Aeneid. Lib. 4. 217. v. Fluctuari animo Rex putabatur, & modo suum modo Parmenionis consilium expendere. Curtius. Quod sine nervis & articulis huc & illuc se habet. Author ad Herennium lib. 4.147. so is the mind of man hurried this and that way when 'tis unquiet, this Virgil terms magno curarum fluctuat aestu, and Lucretius, Fluctuat incertis erroribus ardor amantum; yea Curtius setting out Alexander's distraction, not knowing what way to go, or whose counsel to follow, expresses it by this, That the King was at a stunn which advice to follow, whether his own or Parmenio's: and as a man severed from all consistence and with the wind hither and thither acted, as it altars its blasts, so the Princes owns himself to be discomposed; and therefore as he prays relief from his wisdom, so promises he not to raise more scruples, non amplius te quaestionibus fatigabo] says he. This premised he produces his debate. Dilationes ingentes, ut asseritur, patiuntur Leges Angliae in processibus suis plusquam Leges aliarum Nationum, quod petentibus, nedum juris sui prolatio est, sed & sumptuum quamdoquidem importabile onus. etc. Because Delay of justice is one of the great errors of men in power, as being a kind of Denial of justice; therefore the Laws are said pati not infer Dilationes. Patiuntur Leges] says our Text, thereby intimating that Laws do permit rather than approve of Delays, and account them rather necessary evils then desirable goods. This Dilatio Authors interpret by Prorogatio, Lib. 18. c. 2.10. Phil. 3.12. In Art 35. de Senibus. Maximum remedium irae dilatio est. Lib. 3. de Ira. p. 591. Seneca lib. 1. de Ira. p. 546. Commentar in loc. p. 554. so Pliny in those words, Nec ulla segetum minus dilationem paetitur; so Livy, Per Dilationes bellum gerere, that is prorogare bellum, Pedetentim & per Intervalla bellare; thus Cicero uses Temporis dilatio, and Horace, Dilator, spe longus, iners, avidusque futuri: thus the Moralist tells us that Delay is the best remedy of wrath, and as it impedes precipitations and advantages, truth and justice in the ripening of discoveries; so the Laws of Nations and the wisdom of Lawmakers did encourage petere advocationes, which Lipsius on that phrase in Seneca writes, Significare moram & tempus deliberandi, which is suitable to Seneca's expression lib. 2. where his words are, * Lib. 2. de Ira. p. 569. Alciat. in leg. 99 Fornerius in Leg. eandem. p. 232.233. Utrique parti dares advocationem, dares tempus, nec semel audires; magis enim veritas elucet, quo saepius ad manum venit. Thus for the good of men in the clearing of justice in all the lineaments of her beauty and truth, the Civil Laws allow Delay, and hard it would otherwise be, nay impossible it would in some cases be to make out truth where the act of God or other occurrence inevitably intercepted, if time should not be indulged men either to use that help whence the hindrance should be removed, or to think of some other way equivalent to that which by reason of those demurs, is not obtainable. For the Law being Ars aequi & boni, and intending nothing but justice, as it allows Delays for such a time as the Judge, who is presumed just and wise, shall allow, ubi spatia non cadunt in certam regulam, for then there is no waving the prefixed time of the Law; Fornerius loco pracit. so does it abhor that those well-intended conveniences and prudent remedies should be misapplyed, to softer injury and delay of shift and dishonesty; for they account such execrable, crebrae dilationes quibus res in longius tempus extrahuntur frustrationis & calumniae suspicione laborant, Fornerius. Loco praecitato. say the Doctors; and therefore though the Law allow time or prorogation upon petition, yet does it do that purely upon the pre-asserted grounds, and if second days of delay be desired, In pecuniariis causis omnis dilatio singulis causis plus semel tribui non potest, in Capitalibus autem reo tres dilationes, accusatori dua dari possant, sed utrinque causá cognita. Paulus Lib. 5. sent. it judges of the justness of them, and grants and denies as it sees fit, so are the authorities which confirm the rule of Bartolus, Ex causa potest judex dilationes prorogare, yea and minuere too, as he in wisdom and justice finds the reason so to do, Digest. lib. 2. tit. 12. p. 239. which considered since this which our Text calls dilatio, is the constitutio vel extensio spacii temporis ad aliquid agendum vel dicendum per consensum quorum interest, Digest. lib. 2. tit. 12. p. 238. in margin. vel per legem vel judicem facta, and that ordinary and extraordinary ones, Digest. lib. 5. tit. 1. p. 694. De judiciis. & p. 709. are in their kinds allowed necessary and convenient for the accomplishment of the ends of justice, Syntagm. juris lib. 48. c. 8. De actionibus & dilationibus. 14 E. 3. c. 5. as Tholossanus clears out of the Civil Laws. The Laws of England which allows Essoine-dayes, does not exceed the proportion of other Laws, nor herein gratifies the gain of Officers, who by these delays, multiply to themselves fees, which the Prince here calls by importabile onus, but does in whatever the Law is slow and the proceeding favourable to any excuse that may plausibly and with colour of reason be granted in prosecution of a gentle and religious tenderness that it has to all men's conditions, and with an eye to that general rule of doing to others what we would have others do to us, and because no man ought to go beyond, 2 Thess. 4.6. and defraud his brother, since the Lord is the avenger of all such: these things being by the Prince well ruminated, the Laws of England are by him charged (through misinformation) with that which they are not guilty of. For notwithstanding that in all Governments and Laws, some inconveniences will fall out, and some persons be aggrieved, by reason that delays are occasioned by difficulty, divers opinions of the judges, and sometimes for some other cause, as the words of 14 E. 3. c. 5. are; yet is there as little fault to be found with the Law of England for this, as with any Law in the world. For though the Law of England does think it unreasonable to condemn a person unheard, especially where he is not able to appear, the act of God, or other impossibility of appearing, intervening and crossing him; yet does the Law, as delay savours of fraud, oppression, of ill will and perverse humour, utterly decry and disapprove it: witness the Statutes of 14 E. 3. c. 5. etc. 14. 20 E. 3. c. 2. 27 E. 3. c. 1. 27 Eliz. 5.8. Eliz. c. 2. which together with sundry others have in all times been enacted against it And thereupon, though there may and are several excuses on good and reasonable grounds allowed; yet is not the Law light or therein Favourable to unnecessary delay and prorogation of spite: but purely inclined so such lenity and latitude upon the prementioned reasons, which protects both Laws and men from sin and guilt for legally practising it, according to that rule of Bartolus, Digest. lib. 2. tit. 14. De Pactis. p. 307. non est in mora qui potest exceptione legitimâ se taeri. And so he ends this Chapter. CHAP. LIII. Cancellarius. In actionibus personalibus extra Vrbes & Villas Mercatorias, etc. IN Actionibus Personalibus] Of these I have discoursed in the Notes on the 25. and 26 Chapters. Extra Vrbes & Villas mercatorias] That is, without Corporations, which are Counties and Staples of trade within themselves. (For Corporations being the most secure residencies of men of art and mystery, have private local Laws reserved and indulged to them, which are distinct from the general Laws of open places,) which is the reason the Text says extra Vrbes & Villas mercatorias, the processus sunt ordinarii] That is, all matters of Justice, whether in actions between man and man, or in matter that concern the peace, are tried in the Hundred, County-Court Leet or Assizes, 2 Instir. p. 73. c. 35. Magna Charta. Rot. Par. 1. H. 4. Memb. 2. num. 1. 2 Instit. p. 51. according to the Custom of them respectively, and that as part of the Lex terrae, which though it cannot avoid some delay; yet so long as it is in any degree moderate, is very tolerable and useful. So was the judgement of Parliament in Justice Richel's Case, wherein it was determined that a reasonable time may be taken to deliberate upon answer to interrogatories: but when they are excessivae, such as are unsuitable to Justice either in men to desire, or in the Law to grant, when they are merae subtilitatis & ingeniosi doli molimina, and tends to the mortifying of a cause, (for so excessus, whence excessivus, is by * Lib. 1. De Legibus. Tully rendered) then the Laws of England never have, Certe non longe à tuis adibus inambulans post excessum suum Romulus, Julio Proculo dixit se Deum esse. never can, never I hope will endure them, but have discovered them; hence allowed they by the Statute 13 E. 1, c. 12. no Essoine in appeal of the death of a man, no Essoine De malo lecti, where the Tenant is not sick and produceable to appear before the Justices, Legitime summonitus f● non venerit ad diem litis, secundum quod fuerit summonitu●, puniendus erit, nisi excusationes habeat legitimas per quas sua absentia merito debeat excusari. Fleta lib. 6. c. 7. 13 E. 1. c. 17. no Essoine after a day given prece partium; yea in that the Statute of Essoines does allow Challenges of Essoines in certain Cases, it clearly appears that Essoines as delays in obstruction of Justice the Law allows not. For the Law of England being a Law of virtue, loves nothing that is, excessive, which virtue is not; for in medio consist it virtus. In Vrbibus vero & Villis illis potissimum cum urgens causa deposcit, celeris ut in aliis mundi partibus fit processus. Because men of trade as well Strangers as others, are the inhabiters of Towns and Cities of trade, and their affairs will not permit them long stay; therefore the Law of England has allowed them a speedy course for the obtainment of right against detainers of it from them, so Stat. Acton Burnel 13 E. 1. 9 E. 3. c. 1, and other Statutes, the execution of which being in Corporations (where of course by the local custom and Law there are weekly Courts, in three or less of which judgement may be obtained) Delays are in a great measure out of doors. 3 H. 6. cap. 1. For those Chapiters' and Assemblies of men having much of contract and contest, and of Buying and Selling for great sums upon barely the Royalty of the faith of traders, without Bond, Bill, or Witness, if it should not be speedily and without delay be made good by the Law of the place, so great inconveniences would follow, as the Law thinks not fit to permit, but to prevent the fatality of them, has by act of Parliament ever saved the rights of them, and that for the better carrying on of Justice, Honesty and Civil living within them; yet is not the haeste (as we say) a cause of waste, for though the trials are speedy, yet not quicker than is convenient, both for the Plaintiff to prove his charge, and the Defendant to provide himself of defence; for if there were nimia praecipitatio it might cause Quaerentis partis laesionem, as well as in the nimia cunctatio there would be. That than which is by our Text aimed at is to present the Justice of England, in the legal Administration of it, admirable both as to the allowance of delay as a moderate and proper assistant to ripeness, and the disallowance of it as a dissipation of those ill humours speedy trial would draw to an head and expel. Rursus in Realibus actionibus in omnibus fere mundi partibus morosi sunt processus, sed in Anglia quodammodo celeriores. This is added to show that the greater and more valuable the nature of the thing is that the Law is to determine, the more time does the Law allow to the trial and decision of it. Real Actions what they are I have touched in the Notes on the 25 and 26. Chapters, yet as to the mention of them here, this is to be added, that the Laws of all Nations esteem them the greatest and most valuable of things Civil, not in the sense that the actiones extraordinariae in the Civil Law are, which do wholly depend on the Judge's pleasure, Et hae extraordinaria actione imploratar officium judicis nobile, quia in ejus arbitrio situm est ad agendum admittere vel non, cum Magistratus sit custos bons & aqui. Tholoss. Syntag. juris lib. 21. c. 8 ss. 10. who can make them what they will. No such notion of real actions are we to have; for in that they are extraordinary actions, and cause more delay than other less consequent ones do, arises from the value, intricacy, and difficulty of them, since title of Land and the fees of Estate are much more weighty in their nature and value qua such, than Debts, Damages, and the like. This is the reason why in all Actions that are to try and determine solid parts of Estates, Lands, Vsque eo difficiles ac morosi sumus ut nobis non satisfaciat ipse Demosthenes. Cic. in in Oratore 56. Offices, etc. every where in the World, Morosi sunt processus, says our Text, that is, not only tedious and crabbed, but difficult and hard to bring about; Difficiles ac morosi Tully couples, to show, that all things that are of Concern are leisurably to be transacted, and capable by many pauses and slugs on them to be retarded: Sed in Anglia sunt celeriores,] For that the Law, as has been heretofore made good, hates delay as it is opposite to justice, which ought to be free, full, and speedy as far as may stand with reason and convenience. For though Essoines upon solid reasons are allowed, and Protections in case of service to the King and Kingdom against the enemies of it been given some time, but ever by allowance of Law: yet did Queen Elizabeth, who maintained many Wars, grant few or no Protections, and her reason was, Note this well. That he was no fit Subject to be employed in her Service that was subject to other men's actions, Cook on Littleton. p. 131. B. lest she should be thought to delay justice. Which added to the former instances, accommodates the Chancellour's purpose with Confirmation, That speedy execution of justice is the glory of England; and that no delay can be in trials if there be not neglect in prosecution, or combination in Adversaries to spin out suits in infinitum: Contemptor propriae vitae, Magister tuae. and then, as in all cases so in this, he that values not but contemns his own quiet, may disturb another man's. For though no Law can well hinder turbulentness, which is a sufficient vexation to its self; yet the Laws of England do as much to discourage and punish it as may be, 3. Instit. p. 143. c. 66. Of Conspiracy. etc. 74. Of Perjury. p 163 c. 75. p. 169. c. 77. & 78. p. 175. and that by punishment of Conspiracy and Perjury, Forging of Deed's Champerty, Barratry: and this to prevent Delay of justice, and to promote the fruits and felicities of love and charity. Which the Law doing to outlaw those liars in wait, whose only work and wages it is to do mischief, does contribute much to the expedition of justice and to the absorption of unnecessary delays, which are faults and errors of men, not of the Law, for that decrees righteous things, and proceeds according to evidence, allowing no delay but what is contributive to discovery and determination of right; if the indulgence of the Law to these purposes be abused by one parties industry, and not opposed by suitable vigilance in the other party, the Law is not to be blamed, but the party whose the remissness is: for the Law gratifies always the diligent Prosecuters, presuming those have ever good desires to come to issue, who prosecute the means thereunto most vigorously. Now that it may appear that the Chancellour's averrment, that proceedings legal in England are more speedy then in other parts they are, he quotes his own experience while he lived in France. Sunt in Regno Franciae, in Curia ibidem suprema, quae Curia Parliamenti vecitatur, processus quidam, qui in eyes plusquam triginta annis pependerunt. etc. This instance acquaints us with the misery of seeking justice where justice is hard to be found; Cum Parisiam venisset Ludovicus conventu generali habito, Rempubls. reformavit, statutis optimis Legibus de jure à judicibus dicendo, & de officiis non emendis. Gaguini Hist. in Ludovico Divo. lib. 7. for though true it be, there were of old good Laws and brave Parliaments in the constitution of France: yet, since Absoluteness has been affected, and Armies necessary to support it, since these must live upon the spoils and sharks from the poor Peasant, and all Offices must to sale to raise Revenues and to maintain the equipage of Favourites, Causes that come into Advocate's hands must be so lengthened out, that not years of Apprenticeship but even of life must be the measure of them. This the Chancellor makes out in instances of great oppression and excessive delay; which though it may perhaps in some few cases be paralleled, some Lawsuits being hereditary and continuous: yet is that not because judgement of Law has not been effectually given in them, but for that the parties have resolved an incessancy of suit, and bequeathed the Christianless legacy of persistance to their Children and Successors, whereby they have immortalised the suits and differences in their families, to the ruin and disquiet of one or both parties of them. This indeed has sometimes fallen out in England, but that has been in case of Honour and Arms bearing; as in that matchless memorable Contest between Reginald Lord Grace of Ruthen and Sir Edward Hastings, which lasted undetermined from R. 2. Bissaeus in Notis ad Spelmanni Aspilog. p. 95. time to 11 H. 4. when judgement I think was given in it, from which there was Appeal to the King, by reason of which it rested litigious till Henry the Sixth's time: but this being but in a case of Arms, reaches not the instance of our Text, which charges France in the High Court of Parliament (which ought to be the readiest and more effectual Court of dispatch) to be in so great a degree dilatory, that Plaintiffs had better lose their cause then sue for it, and Defendants answer the Demands of it then defend it in that Court, where not only there are detentions of suit without Judgement thirty years in some cases and ten in other, but those chargeable evils brought upon Subjects, for seeking remedies of small evils, the remedies whereof have been worse than the diseases, witness the allegation of the Chancellor, who in the Text recites a case of one in Paris, who for a right of eight pence English in Rent, eight years in the Parliament of Paris prosecuted the detainer of it, and all in vain, for as the words are, Nec speravit se in octo aliis annis se judicium obtenturum. Many other such cases of ruining Delay I have myself been acquainted with from those, whom I could name if it were convenient, who have been undone or at least unrepairably maimed by Suits in the Parliament of Paris: so that true our Chancellor conceives it to be Angliae Leges non tant as ut mihi visum est dilationes sortiuntur ut faciunt Leges Regionis illius] which is confirmed by the prementioned Statutes made against Delay, 4 Instit. p. 67. c. 6. and particularly by the 14 E. 3. c. 5. Which Statute though it erected a Court for redress of Dela●● of Judgements in the King's great Courts; yet was the inhibition and punishment 〈◊〉 ●nnecessary and unjust Delay before that Statute at the the Common Law, which required, that plena & celeris justitia fiat omnibus; so in the Writs of Praecipe quod reddat, are quod just & sine dilatione reddat: and so in the Writ de executione judicii, and the rest: all which, pleno ore, do confirm, That the Laws do abhor delay as it is an obstruction to justice. Sed revera pernecessarium est, dilationes fieri in Processibus Actionum omnium, dummodo ipsae non fuerint excessivae. This the Chancellor asserts not to gratify delays of Subtlety, but delays of Security and Discovery; for many things are either composed or conquered by time, which in Post-hastes are lost and infeasible: which is the reason that there are such steps and gradations to judgement, that when ever it is gained it may appear to be after Consideratum est per Curiam, and after all, that diligence on both sides could inform the Court by, has been used. As therefore the Law does grant Essoines in certain cases, as hereafter shall be specified; yet those because they are in view of Law Delays (though not evil-intended ones) shall be restrained as much as possible. Item, It is accorded and established, that it shall not be commanded by the Great-seal nor the Littleseal to disturb or delay common Right, so says the Statute, 2 E. 3. c. 8. By the 6 E. 1. c. 8. If the Defendant Essoine himself of the King's service, and does not bring his Warrant at the day given him by the Essoine, he shall recompense the party's damage for his journey, and shall be grievously amerced unto the King. For the Law, as I said before, though it tolerates necessary and reasonable Delay, which does not endanger the freehold, and very life and soul of a cause; yet it abhors needless and vicious Delay, which the Text styles excessive. Nam sub illis, parts & maximè pars rea, quam saepe sibi provident de defensionibus utilibus, similiter & consiliis, quibus aliâs ipsi carerent. Though the Law provides not for the guilty person, as he is an offender against the Law, to answer which the Plaintiff compels him; and therefore aught and is rather favoured in trials then the Defendant: yet that the equity and impartiality of the Justice of the Law may appear, the Text says, that Delays are useful and good as they steed all parties, even the guilty side with discoveries and improvement of men and things to its vindication and defence. For as it is the noblest victory that is obtained in a field fought, and against an enemy disputing terms ultimis viribus; so is that the most creditable decision and judgement on causes and persons, which is after the causes and persons have not been surprised, and had all convenient latitude to free and evince their sentence and condemnation: Then than the sentence of the Law is most clear and justified. And hence come the unavoidable Delays of the Law, Delays do I term them, rather deliberations of the Law. (For delay being a word taken in the worst sense, is not properly attributable to the Law, which is ars aequi & boni) but when the Law seems to be guilty of it, 'tis to be charged on Men the Lawyers, not on their Mistress the Law, for the Law is precisely against delay, wherein then it does not speed processes, as eager persons desire, proceeds from the wisdom resident in it, which dictates to do all things by deliberation, to a just and not to be repent of conclusion. And Magistrates who are in love with Justice, as that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which becomes the wearing of reigning Darius'. (I allude to the Story in Strabo, which tells us, that because Syloson having a garment that Darius when a private man loved, Lib. 14. Geograph. Vnius vestis munus tam opulento vegno compensans. Valer. Max. lib. De Mirabilibus. gave it him freely, in recompense thereof Darius when Emperor gave Syloson the whole Island and City of the Samnians) when I say Magistrates are virtuously entangled with the love of justice, and put on righteousness as a Garment, justice not only helps them to, but continues them in, and graces them by her largesses. This is the Chancellors sense, that the Law of England, and the judges in it, are therefore so blessed by God in the accommodation of their integrities, with Monuments of temporal eternity, their posterities in Name, Fortune, and Honour, because they do not, either precipitate or retard justice, but so proceed upon Trial to Sentence, that during the pendence of the cause, there is time given recte consulere, perite defendere, utiliter consummare, what is pertinent, if not to their total vindication, yet at least to their mitigation in point of judgement. Nec unquaem in judiciis tantum imminet periculum quantum parit processu●festinatus. This is in other words, To err on the right side, rather by being something too slow, then in any degree by being too quick; and that because we men dwell in a valley whence we can take but a short prospect of things, and being fallible by reason of our imperfect judgement, Mult●s fortuna liberat paena, metu neminem, quia infixe nobis est ejus rei aversati● quam natura damnavit; ideo nunquam latendi fides fit etiam latentibus, quia coarguit illos conscienti●. Sen. Epist. 57 Erasm. Adag. p. 401. are so apt to err and mistake, because poised and gravelled with so many partialities and frauds; what we want in perspicacity and certainty of judgement, we are to supply by integrity of watch and diligence of search and enquiry, to which since nothing more contributes then time and experience, therefore too much haste making waste, is to be in all reason declined. For thereby conscience is not galled nor innocence injured, or if it be, yet in a less degree, and with a better excuse and defence. For however the passions of men may ruffle them into vehemencies, and no pace in judgement pleases them, but the Carrere, and full swoop, to ride as desperately upon their opposites ruin, as rage and cruelty can prick them on to; yet a wise and worthy Genius, such as that in justice is, likes not those Manilia Imperia, those hot headed and fierce spirited proceedings, Magnanimi motum tardum docet Philosophus, vocem gravem, locutienem tardam stabilemve. Lorinus in Eccles. 5.2. Eccles. 5.2. c. 7. v. 9 Prov. 14.17. Festinare praecipitanter & come subit● quodam pav●●e & solicitudine. Lorinus in Eccles. 5.2. Dan. 2.15. but follows the method of God, who waits that he may be Gracious, and the exhortation of the Apostle, to be slow to wrath, and to judge nothing before the time: yet this not so much out of timorousness, irresolution, or disaffection to justice, as in care and providence to conduct her into her proper channel, and to preserve her pure to the purpose of her institution. For because nothing is so perilous in judgement as hastyness, the Wise man's Counsel is, not to be rash in our words, nor to let our heart be hasty, and in another place, G●e not forth hastily to strive lest thou know not what to do in the end thereof. Since as in private actions nothing is more injurious to men's fortunes and fames, then sudden and rash evidences of themselves, so is it in public sanctions and judgements of Law, which Daniel intimated in that Stigma he gave the unjust and sanguine decree of Nabuchadnezzar, which he call a hasty decree, why saith he to Arioch the King's Captain, is the decree so hasty? The word in the original is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hasting righteousness Isaiah 15.5. nor 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Psal. 55.8. where David speaks of a prudent and warrantable haste, Vid●tur his verbis Daniel oblique perstringere Regis iracundiam & simul ingratitudi nem, quod non sa tis diligenter ingussi●rit, antequam prosiliret ad crude l● illud supplicium, Calvin, in lecum. I would hasten my escape from the windy storm and tempest, nor 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Prov. 29.20. Seest thou a man that is hasty in his words, there is more hope of a fool then of him, it's none of these words, but it's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Chaldee word signifying crudelis, festina, id est, crudelis faith Grotius and Lorinus, yea Calvin says that Daniel does in them perstringe the King for not deliberating on the tart nature of his decree, but passing that so lightly which concerned the lives of innocent persons. This mischief in judgement our Text tells us the Law avoides by halting in processes. Nec unquam in judiciis tantum imminet periculum quantum parit processus festinatus. Vidi nempe quonda● apud Civitatem Sarum coram judice quodam ad Goalam ibidem deliberandum cum Clericosmo Assignato, etc. Here the Chancellor produces an instance of injury though not murder committed by a justice his quickness, in showing the extremity of his power; and 'tis an instance not by report or hearsay, but whereof the Chancellor was himself an ocular witness. Vidi says he] that is, vidi personam & andivi sententiam, for he being a practiser of the Law in his youth quondam] and riding the Western Circuit, did then at Salisbury, where the Assizes for the County of Wilts was holden, see one tried before a Judge and condemned to be executed by burning, and the Clerk of Assizes in Commission with him. 4 Instit. c. 30.31 2 Instit. on c. 30. Westm. p. 422. Ad deliberandum Goalam] as there are Justices of Assize, Oyer and Terminer, & nisi prius, according to the Stat. West. 2 c. 30. so are there of Goal-delivery, and that to expedite justice, and deliver persons by execution or discharge of them from unreasonable burdens, which delivering of the Goal concerning the life and Members of man ought to be performed with great caution, and from a judicious Bench, 4 Instit. c. 27. p. 160. which Sir Edward Cook well remembers me of in those words, By the original institution of justices of Assizes and of nisi prius, the trial should be before two at the least, and it were much for the advancement of justice and right, to have the Law put in execution, for plus vident oculi quam oculus, and especially in Pleas of the Crown concerning the life of man so that grave Judge; which tells us, that the Law does not only take care that there should be plena & celeris justitia; (and therefore commissions, Goal deliveryes, ne homines diu detincantur in prisona) but also that they should be before Judges, Few but effectual words saith Sir Edward Cook 4 Instit. p. 68 4 Instit. c. 28. p. 167. bone gents & Sages autersque des places: and that because the Law would have. Justice and Mercy fairly mixed and marshaled together, that there may not be more haste then good speed, which that Judge of whom our Text speaks should have better considered than he did, and then he had avoided the terror he fell into. For though true it be that Justices of Oyer and Terminer may upon indictment found, proceed the same day against the party indicted, as appears in 2 H. 4. in the Case of Marks, the resolute Bishop of Carlisle, of Empson the turbulent executor of the penal Statutes 1 H. 8. of Bell 3 E. 6. of Bonham, 10 Elizabeth, and Felton in our Memory, and yet not be festinatum judicium, but as the enormities and proofs may be, prove though so speedily executed, most serious and good justice. Yet in a dubious Cause, and in that which concerns the life of one unnatural to their relations, where neither confession nor direct proof is, there upon presumptions, though never so vehement, or positive oath of suspected credit, as to the credit and veracity of the Affirmer, to adjudge and warrant execution is very hard, because the Judge is discernere per Legem quid sit justum, and the Law having entrusted him with a power of reprieve, to the next Session, that then better proof may come if any be, or favour be showed them, if the proof be not found enough to take away the life. This I say a Judge being enabled to do and not according to his enablement doing is much to be blamed. And this our Text instances in, to mind how dangerous suddenness is. For here was a woman accused and condemned for murder of her husband, and burned therefore, who was clear of it, and that by the confesson of a servant that did it, and owned afterward the fact, who besides that he charged himself only with it, and was deservedly executed for it, did purge the woman executed from all hand in and all knowledge of it; Magistram suam uxorem ejus tunc combustam innocentem omnino fuisse de morte ejus] So are the words of the Text which show not only a plenary purgation of her, that was so speedily concluded the Murderer; but also a sad sentence on himself for suffering an Innocent person to be condemned for his offence, which was accompanied also with such a terror to the Judge, that he never clawed it off (as we use to say) but had the memory of it before his eyes, as his daily terror and amazement. The consideration of which should make all men study temper and restraint of violence, and not indulge anger and fierceness of mind and action; for that our Lord reproves it in the Disciples that would have called for fire from Heaven, in those words, Luke 9.54. Ye knew not of what spirit ye are, and instructs his to be slow to judge, and to bear with offences, as far as wisely and safely we may rather than revenge them; which Augustus considering as great a piece of wisdom practised it towards Timagenes, whom though he knew to be an intemperate and rude reviler of him, yet he permitted to be in Pollio's house; and though he charges Pollio 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Pollio thou nourishest a wild Tiger or Savage to me: yet he seizes not on the miscreant, Seneca lib. 3. de Ira. c. 25. nor disfavours not Pollio, but says Fruere mi Pollio, fruere, by which condescension he avoided all severity against him, Securitatis magna porti● est nibil inique facere, confusam vitam & perturbatam impotentes agunt, tantum metnunt quantum nocent, nocens habuit aliquando latendi fortunam, nunquam fiduciam. Ep. 105. and did not burden himself with the blood of a Subject. Nor shall any man have cause to repent of his lenity in a dubious cause, because it proceeds from goodness and likeness to God, and has his approbation of, and benediction on it, which the contrary has not; for rash and sudden severities are the bats of rage, which are repent of too late, if ever: witness the hard sentence on the good Earl of Lancaster, which cost the House of Valence E. of Pembroke, Hic consentiamus mala facinora conscientia flagellari & plurimum illì tormentum esse cò quod porpetuo illam solicitudo urget atque verberat. Senec. Ep. 97. that had so deep a hand in it, Extirpation; and * Holingshed. p. 1100. Judge Morgan who ran mad, and cried continually to have the Lady jane taken away from him. O, 'tis good to be slow in doubtful things, and not to suffer passion to precipitate; for though it be suitable to jezabels' rage and Ahab's covetousness, to Cain's envy and David's lust, to the jews malice and judas his treachery: yet it is agreeable with no virtue in man, no love of or likeness to God, Genes. 18.21. For his judgements are always just; and in that he is said To go down & see whether the men of Sodom and Gomorrha have done altogether according to the cry of it which is come unto me, and if not I will know, so is the Text, God as the Chief-Justice of the world teaches Judges to consider their Judgements before they deliver them: for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, that temperament that is equally averse to rashness or sloth, is the best humour of a Justicer, without which no learning or fidelity in a Justicer can be meritful or valuable, Nihil minus in duce perfecto quam festinationem temeritatemque convenire arbitrabatur. Sueton, in Octavio. The experience of which is the reason of that position and rule of the Law which Sir Edw. Cook quotes from this Chapter, and the Editor of Forteseve sets out in another Letter, Epistle to the 8 Report. to show, not that it is a transplant (as I conceive) from some Author unnamed, but that it is a golden sentence of his own, Crebro in deliberationibus judicia maturescunt, sed in accelerato processu nunquam, which is as much as if he had wrote, That moderate and prudent respite may dilucidate and clear up the way to a just determination, which in a speedy and heady course proves abortion of all profitable discovery. Hence is it that our Law being a Law of Justice and Judgement, allows Essoines as approaches thereto, so the Chancellor says in the next words. Quare Leges Angliae Essonium admittunt, qualia non faciunt Leges aliae mundi universae. As the Laws of England are for freedom Laws by themselves, as we call those things that have no fellows; so are the Laws of England particular and singular in this point of Essoining: for though other Laws, as heretofore I have showed, have what is in proportion (as it were) the same to these Essoines, yet Essoines in the nature and diversity of them they have not. The word Essoin is purely French, signifying want of ability in Soldiers to hold or take a place; thence Essoiner, to excuse or discharge an absent or impotent person. In the Assizes of Clarendon Temps H. 2. Essoniare is a word made Latin by our Historians, and used at large for any excuse; Nulli liceat hospitari extr●neum aliquem ultra unam noctem in domo sua nisi Hospitatus ille Essonium rationabile habuerit. Hoveden in Annal. p. 449. in H. 2. so Hoveden, No man was to lodge any stranger above one night in his house, unless he that is so entertained have a reasonable Essoin and Excuse: but the Lawyers restrain it to such excuses as in real Actions guilty persons make in the King's Courts, Hengham Parva c. 2. p. 85. Edition. Seldeni. or in the Courts of their Lords. These Essoines at the Common Law are reported to be five, 1. De ultra Mare. 2. De Terra sancta. 3. De Malo veniendi. Fleta lib. 6. c. 7.8.9, etc. Glanvil. lib. 1. c. 12.19. Spelman. Gloss. p. 241. Probabit quodlibet Essonium jure jurando propria & unica manu, etc. Glanvil. lib. 1. c. 12. 4. De Malo lecti. 5. De Servitio Domini Regis. Of Essoines the Stat. of Marlbridge c. 19 writes, and * Cook 2 Instit. on c. 19 Stat. Marlbridg. p. 137. Sir Edw. Cook tells us on it, That they were instituted upon just and necessary causes; and because they should not be used in feigned causes of delay, he that casts the Essoin ought to be sworn that the cause thereof was just and true. It should seem at the Common Law Oaths were not of old required, but men growing bold to misapply the just remedy of the Law unjustly, the Statute restrained Oaths to extraordinary not ordinary Essoines, that the reason of the excuse was necessary not dilatory, I mean, in Essoines of great delay, such as were those of the service of the King, etc. which had great delay; and therefore he that alleged that, was to swear, though in common Essoines, which were but for a small term, no Oath was required by the Statute: for the end of these being the promotion of Justice, Fines dilationum sine dubio multi sune & aperts, ut deliberatio, probatto, exhibitio, instructio, auditio, productio, conclusio & similia, Tholoss. Syntag. Juris lib. 48. c. 8. ss. 20. de Dilattonibus. if it appeared the party obtaining it otherwise designed it, 'twould benefit him little, and injure the party as little; for the Judges, who hate delay, will admit excuses in no case without Oath, but in in common Essoines. Besides these Essoines there are other stops to Proceedings at Law, and those profitable ones, the Text styles them Vtiles vocationes ad Warrantiam] Of these (a) Lib. 3. c. 1.2.3. Glanvil writes, and (b) Cap 13. Sect. 697. Littleton; and the reason of the Law is, that if I be bound to defend the title of another, as the Tenant is to defend the title, than he that has the reversion, fee, or term, must not only furnish him with Deeds, if any he hath, but with such a proportion of money as is reasonable to that end; Cook on Littleton. c. 13. sect. 733. p. 383. Lib. 3. Instit. c. 1. p. 174. Fleta lib. 6. c. 4. and that because if my term which precedes his futurity fail, his expectance also fails: and he warrants to me, and warranty draws supply and recompense for all damages. The like is the reason of Coparceners, Quiréddent pro rata, si tenementum comparticipi allottatum evincatur] saith our Text. This is I suppose the sense of learned Littleton, Sect. 203. upon this reason, that where all have a joint title, the eviction of part shall have contribution from the rest after an equal rate and proportion, because they all are of equal title and aught to be equal in profit and loss, according to that rule, Cujus est lucrum ejus debet esse damnum, & è converso: and where many are concerned, their profit and loss shall be proportioned and allotted to them indifferently. And these are therefore called by our Text Res utiles, because they do not only engage parties to join in defence, that estates be not recovered from the Possessors of them; but after recovery oblige to recompense the damage that contrary to the nature of their estate they sustain: and this being but rational and just, is therefore profitable to be effected. All these the Laws of England admitting, do not further thereby delay of pretence, Vt ille qui cum 130. dierum essen● cum hoste pacta induci● noctu populabatur agros quod dierum essens pactae non noctium induciae. Liv. 4. ab urbe 127. In amore hac omnia insunt vitiae, injuriae, suspiciones, inimicitiae, inducia. Terenco in Eunuch. 1. which we call spinning out of time, which the Text terms Frivolae & infructuosae induciae] like the Parlyes of crafty Soldiers with those that besiege them, whom they pretend discourse with in order to rendition, when 'tis but to cease hostility till they be relieved, or have otherwise diversion: or like crafty and selfended Creditors, who pretend offers of composition with their Debtors, whom by the hopes of it they keep from prosecutions of extremity, when as all the while they are designing escape and withdrawing themselves from them: or like cunning Mistresses, who pretend correspondencies with men whom they have designs upon, and them served, slight and desert them. The futility and fraudulent rottenness and inanity of which, operating nothing but frustration and circumvention, is the reason why frivolae & infructuosae are joined with these Induciae, and why the Text explodes them allowance in the Law: which further then they are ampliative of the truth, and not unreasonably prejudicial to the adverse party, the Law allows not. And if time and vice of man shall usher in any subdolous error, by which the good intent of the Law becomes void, than the Law has a remedy ready for it, In omni Parliamento amputari ipsae possunt.] For that is the felicity of England, that Parliaments are frequent, and the King in Parliament by that serious and effectual power that resides in Parliament, can either sweeten or reform the inconvenience; or if those seem not good to his Sovereign and Parliamentary Judgement, amputari possunt, that is, they may be damned by a Law, and cut from that root of inconvenience they to that time sprung from: so Festus uses Amputare for resecare vel abscindere ramos Arborum, and Tully Amputare ramos miseriarum; 3 Tuscul. 21. so Amputata * 1 De Finib. 70. 8 Philipp. 244. circumcisaque inanitas pro sublata: and the reason is, because amputation is the remedy of pestilency, mortification, and gangrening, hence in Tully, Amputare quicquid & pestiferum. So that when our Text tells us of reasonable Delays, it intends such as not fraud but favour, not craft but justice has introduced and continued; but when of such as are Minus accommodae] that is, which are occasions of injury to particulars, and of loss to the whole which is composed of particulars, as the former it concludes proper to be continued, so these latter it judges necessary to be discharged, by that Grand Maul and Battery of Injustice and oppression, Parliaments; wherein not only new risen and emergent evils are to be remedied prece subditorum, & consilio Membrorum: but also any Laws in being, when they do claudicare, that is, when by reason of age they grow dull and dispirited, as to the activity of their first Creation. When they have either Corns on their toes that make them tread gingerly and tenderly, or Gouts and Palsies that render them wholly unable to follow offenders smartly and quickly, when they do claudicare] that is, do as Plantus his Tailor does, Quasi clasidus Sutor domi sedet totos dies. Plautus Aul. 4.34. lib. 2. De Oratore. De Claris Orator. 120. sit cross legged, still as a stone all day, when they are Badger-footed and wont endure trial but fall short of the end, ex vulnere accepto claudicare as Tully's words are, when Laws do not tenorem servare aequabilem, as Budaeus translates Tully's actio claudicat, then are those Laws fit for Parliaments, (and blessed be God) these Physicians are of value to such valuable purposes. For from Kings, Lords Spiritual and Temporal, with Commons in Parliament, have the good additional Laws of England been made, I mean those wholesome Statutes, which either restrained, explained, or added to the Common-Lawes, and which thereby have been, are, and I hope ever will be the daily cure of growing inconveniences, which minds me daily to pray, in the words of the Psalmist though in a variation of sense. Give thy judgements, O Lord unto the KING, and thy righteousness to these the King's Sons and Subjects, See the Prayer for the High-Court of Parliament. that as the KING delights to be a fountain of Mercy and Justice; so his Subjects as Politic Sons may be dutiful and aidant to him therein, that the Nation may evermore bless and pray to God for This High Court of Parliament, under Our Gracious and Religious King assembled, and enjoy good and beneficial Laws by their in strumentality. For by the means of Parliament is it that England ever has, and ever will be happy; since by them, the best Laws of the world have been either actually made, or possible so to be made, when they shall see cause of addition to or explication of the Laws made, which is that which our Text intends by optimae in actu vel potentia. For as he can want nothing that either has actually every thing, or has that in his power which will procure every thing when his will pleaseth to apply his power thereunto; so can that estate be defective in no point of good Laws, which either has good Laws in actu exercito, or has power to make the acts that are not, such as it would have them, since frustra est potentia quae non reducitur ad actum. And therefore the Law being, that Parliaments are frequently to be held, and those enabled to make Laws of all sorts, recte concludi potest says our Text, that if good Laws there be not to answer all emergences, men are to blame, not the Government; for in that there is that sacredness which conveys optimacy to Laws, if not in actu, yet in potentia, if they be not already the best, they may be bestead further, per potentiam reductam in actum. For the Kings of England have been ever so Gracious Lords, that they have yielded to all good and just Laws that their Subjects in Parliament have humbly presented them; Regum proprium est facere judicium & justisiam, & liberare de monu calumniatorum vi oppressos, & peregrino, pupilloque & vidua qui facilius opprimuntur à potentioribus prabere auxilium. Sanctus Hieronymus in c. 22. Jeremiaes. yea and the Subjects of England have ever (when themselves, and not seduced) been so dutiful Liege's, that they have desired nothing that their Princes have had just cause to except against, but have so been principled with Religion and Order, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Aristot. Politic. lib. 3. c. 6. that the Law has been acknowledged by King and Subject the just Arbiter: and that conducted both King and people to happy improvements of good and durable advantages in prosecution of the Oath of God, both on Sovereign and Subjects. So ends the 53 Chapter. CHAP. LIV. Princeps. Leges illas nedum bonas, sed & optimas esse, etc. THIS Conclusive Chapter is designed by the Chancellor in the Person of the Prince, as the recollection of all that has been written concerning the Laws in the former Chapters of the Dialogue, wherein the intent of the Chancellor being, to present the Laws of England to his love and judgement, as not only Good but best for England, and that in whatever kind time or men necessarily call for either Change or Explication; what, in those Cases, is fit to be done, may be wisely and seasonably done by Parliament, which considered, the Prince is brought in acknowledging what heretofore the Chancellor had written in the 15 Chapter in those words, Legem illam bonam esse & efficacem adregni illius regimen] which was in replication to his doubt Chapter the fourteenth; and which he seconds Chap. 28.30.33.45.47. Adding, that the Kingdom of England being governed praestantissimis Legibus] His discourse of so superexcellent Laws cannot but be acceptable to the Kings of England in all times; and that because, as the knowledge of them is non inutilis doctrina] so the exercise of such knowledge is the Grace and Peace of Princes, who do delectare regere legibus praestantissimis] and who have then their regal care in a good degree lessenned, when they are instructed by equal Laws, and by them indifferently administered, and thereby thrive in the blessing of God, and the love and acclamation of their Subjects. For as no end is attained without proper means conducing thereunto, Via inepta, incommoda, dissicilis. Cit add Attic. lib. 16.337. which is apparent in Mechaniques, wherein a good figure is not form without good tools, but be the designer the skilful est man in the World; yet ineptio instrumenti] that is, the incongruity and unhandiness of the tool indisposes to a complete artifice. (For ineptio & ineptus signifies every thing of defect and imparity; Thus (a) Terent. And. 15.22. Causa inepta in Terence, (b) 2 Epist. 11.54 Chartae ineptae in Horace, (c) Plin. Ep. 9 Labour ineptus in Pliny, (d) Ovid. 2. Tristib. 45. Lib. 4. Belli Macedon 26. Lusus inepti in Ovid, and thus ineptire pro facere aut dicere, quod neque loco, neque tempori, neque rebus, neque personis conveniat, are to be understood.) I say our Text mentioning ineptio instrumenti, as that which does fastidire, not only not make work pleasing to the Workman, but tedious, for so fastidire aliquem signifies, hence fastidire preces in Livy, and Aestus fastidit amictum in (e) Epithal. 46. Claudian, implies that fitness to every purpose makes men excellent and acceptable in it. Et militem ignavum reddit debilitas Lanciae & mucronis] That is when a man dare not trust on the strength and toughness of his weapon, and the truth of its edge, that it will do execution and keep off an enemy, though he press hard on him. For Lances, the weapons of H. 6 time, Bonum integritas corporis, misera debilitas. Cic. 5. De Finibus 145. if they were not of well grown, well seasoned, and stiff materials, if they would bend this and that way with the body of him whom it touched, yet dismounted not or took off from further trial of honour; or if the point of it would not pierce the clothes and light defences of Antagonists, but when they come to close fight, their edgeless arms, drew no blood, did no execution, such disanimations eclipse men of valour, and make them disappear on action: so do Laws that are unfit and not congruous to people, toil out a Magistrate, and make him live and govern displeasingly, because the engines whereby he should do, move not agilely, nor evenly, but have unequal pulses, being either too short or too long, too severe or too lax, too merciful or too just. Which since the Laws of England are not but every way fitted to the Government of England, so that in the safety and preservation of them, all honest men do think the welfare of their Country doth consist, so said * Eicon Basil. p. 176. the best and knowing'st Immortal Mortal of his time. The Monarches of England have ever had great encouragement as to rule by the Laws, so to know the Laws they are to rule by. For as that of Vegetius quoted by Saint Thomas, Lib. 3. De Regimine Principum: cap. 21. p. 322. or Aegidius Romanus is true, that a Soldier is heartened on to battle when he has fit arms, and competent knowledge to use them, when he knows what he enterprises and delights in it, as it is the object of his intellect and by reason thereof is not strange to him, quia nemo facere metuit quod se bene didicisse confidit as the Text's words are] So is it in Government. No Magnetic is more potent, no inducement more cogent, than Laws of reverence to Princes and punishments of the contrary, than power to defend, protect, order, reward, punish, all which being due to Princes by the Law of England, they have great encouragement to adorn their Province, to go on courageously, and to proceed to know more and more of the Law, which is thus a buckler to them, and a beautifyer of them. For though as I wrote before in the Notes on the eighth Chapter, a Prince is not to be expected so furnished with discreta determinataque peritia & scientia] as a Justice has need to be; yet in the nature and form, in the general and inchoate knowledge of it, he must have insight. For as those passages of Fathers and Scriptures which require in a Prince Scripturarum Divinarum peritiam] and ascribe to a Prince infallible knowledge, Prov. 16.12. according to that of the Wiseman A Divine sentence is in the lips of the King, therefore he shall not err in judgement; yet are to be understood not of profound and indeterminate knowledge of Scripture, but only of such proportions as are convenient for direction and judgement in conducts and administrations of piety to God and men, Hoc igitur officium Rex se suscepisse cognoscat. ut sit in regno sicut in corpore anima, & sicut Deus in mundo; qua si diligenter recogtet, ex altero justitia in eo zelus accenditur, dum considerat ad hoc se positum ut loco Dei judicium regno exerceat, ex altero vero mansuetudenis & clementiae lenitatem acquirit, dum reputat singulos qui suo subsunt regimini sicut propria membra. Sanctus Thomas lib. De Regiminè Princip. c. 12. I say; as these are then answered according to Scripture-requiries, when there is the Day-starr from on high visiting Princes in holy and serious resolutions of walking humbly before God, and prudently in the sight of men; then a Prince that does it may well be said to know the Scriptures like a good Christian, though not like a Workman that needs not to be ashamed, that is, to the proportion of a thorough-read Divine. For though it tends much to Prince's lustre and admiration, that they, as Christians, know much of the depths of holy Learning, Vt decet sacra Theologiae Professorem] as our Text's words are, Learned Princes in matters of Reformed Religion. and as King james and King Charles the First, Princes of eternal memory, to the admiration of all men are acknowledged to excel in, and it to evidence in their writings, which are memorable and matchless remains of their regal judgement and piety in the knowledge of the mysteries of our Holy Religion, and of the Law of God the rule of it. I say, though to be scientifique to this proportion be the glory of them; yet, Earum in confuso degustare sententias] less proportions in our Chancellour's sense would have creditably adorned them, because they have Councils in Sacris, whose place it is to know the more cryptique parts of Scripture knowledge: Ci●. ad Attic. lib. 1.13. 1 Offic. 118. so that Princes need not Vitam profundere, omnes nervos intendere, & omnem ingenii vim applicare, as Tully phrases it; not are Princes to be put upon such exactnesses as reside in those who endeavour to do by sacred science, as he in Plautus is brought in, saying, Ejus nunc Regiones, Panul. 2. Theologia ut nomen pra se fert est scientia de Deo, hujus autem scientia perfecta traditio & earum rerum qua Deo per se competunt, & illarum quae eidem ex eo quod mundi opifex & finis est, conveniunt, exacta notitia continetur. Arragonius in Prafatione ad 2. secundae Sanct. Thomae despe, fide & charitate. limits, confinia determinabo, & rei finitor factus sum ego. Thus Spiritu & arte determinare, which Pliny makes the Meta ultima of Criticalness, is that which the Text presses not to; for it mentions only In confuso sententias degustare, which is leviter & intranscursu attingere, as (a) Lib. 4. c. 1.10. Quintilians note is on those words, Degustanda tamen haec prooemio non consummanda; and as (b) Tacitus lib. 5. Tacitus translates it in that speech to Galba, Imperium, & tu Galba, quandoque degustabis, and (c) Cic. pro Cluentio. 56. Tully in that passage, Aliquid speculae ex sermone alicujus degustare, id est, aliquantum spei concipere. As thus then the Prince, as a Christian, being versed in Scripture-learning, may be well accounted in * De Morali Institutione Principum. lib. 15. Belvasensis his words quoted in our Text, Scripturarum divinarum habere peritiam:] so by understanding the Law in the sense we have in all humility (and under pardon of our betters) prediscoursed of, (respect being had in the plenaryness of knowledge and learning thereof to the Reverend Judges, the Great Masters of that Science, who are the Prince's Counsel, and by whom he distributes his justice to his people) the Prince may be said to understand the Law, his interest, and preservation, and accordingly to be encouraged to undergo the great and Godlike charge of Government cheerfully; for that the Text's rule is, Nemo facere metuit qui se bene didicisse confidit. For since ignorance causes fear, and knowledge confidence, the Chancellor presses the Prince to know the Law, that he may trust in it, as that which best warrants Government, and most enables him to a courageous managery of it, Observe this. which That holy Miracle of Devotion and Magnanimity, whom all Generations for it shall call Blessed, our late blessed Sovereign King Charles, had so much the conviction of, that he applies to his Great Son, our now Gracious Trajan, this counsel, Rather to be Charles le Bon then le Grand, Good then Great; for the true glory of Princes consists in advancing God's glory, Cap. 27. To the Prince of Wales. in the maintenance of true Religion and the Churches good, also in the dispensation of civil power, with justice and honour to the public peace. Piety will make you prosperous, at least it will keep you from being miserable; nor is he much a Loser that loses all, yet saveth his own Soul at last. Sic & fecerunt Carolus Magnus, Ludovicus filius ejus, Robertus quondam Rex Franciae, qui hanc scripsit sequentiam, Veni Spiritus, adsit nobis gratia. Here the Text precedents the Prince by the great examples of France, which he is so much taken with, Cujus exempluns imitati omnes sere qui secuti sunt Francorum Reges, magnis atque excellentissimis factis cum Religione & fidei Christiana dignitatem conservarent atque ampliarent. Lege Gaguini Hist. in Carolo Magno. Grimston. Hist. France. p. 50. to be excellently accomplished both in the knowledge of God and the Law of his Government; and that upon the account, that Princes great in reputation and glory, have thereby attained those eminencies, by name Charles the Great, Charlemagne as the French Historians call him, who, as he was the founder of the French Empire, so did excel in all those gifts and graces of mind which were requisite to make a Charlemagne: For he was carefully instructed in Religion, which he honoured and loved with reverence all his life time, and likewise the Church's Pastors, charity, temperance, equity, care of justice, relief of the poor, to keep his faith both to friend and foe, to use victory modestly, were the notable effects of his excellent knowledge; he by nature loved learning and learned men, be called humane Sciences his Pastimes, he built the Universities of Paris and Pisa, he honoured the Laws of the Land, nothing would he do without advice of the three Estates, He took not the Empire but with consent of the Romans who elected him, Pag. 52. P. 61. P. 63. the good old Laws of the Empire he confirmed, and excellent new ones he added, Church-affairs much disordered he settled by five Councils, Mentz, Tours, Challons, Rheimes, Arles, all congregated to settle and reform it, Imitator erat in hac Caroli Magni Imperatoris & filii ejus Ludovici Imperatoris qui per semetipsos lectionibus pasiebantur. In Fragmento Historia Aquitanicae, p. 81. p. 64. which settlement he caused to be published in a Book called Capitula Caroli Magni, when he was 68 years old, and had ended the Wars, he spent three whole years in his study, reading the Bible and Saint Augustine: thus says the story of Charles the Great. Good things also record they of Lewis his son, named in our Text, who was called Ludovicus Pius, not in * Grimston. p. 64. reproach to his Kingless sloth, for which, losing all his Dominions, he was styled Lewis the Gentle; Ob morum mansuetudinem Pii nomen est consecutus. Gaguini Hist. in vica ejus. but for that he was of most excellent temper, and did patrizate though not in fortunateness, yet in intentness on meditation of Scripture and good books: as long after did Lewis the Ninth, whom Historians call the Saint, History of France. p. 130. Leading a life worthy a King, loving and honouring Religion with much zeal and respect, taking delight in reading the Holy Scriptures, Bonis moribus spectatissimus Rex nec minus optimis Disciplinis eruditus. Gaguinus lib. 5. fol. 42. B. the which he caused to be translated into the French tongue, He had a good, just, and sober soul, etc. Et Robertus quondam Rex Franciae] This Robert was the 37 King of France, Son of Hugh Capet, and was so noted for piety, that he is called Robertus Pius. Erat in eo jugis & frequens ad Deum oratio, genuam flexio innumerabilis ad humana conversationis exemplum, per laboris genera universa, vir provectus ad summa, sist●nt in consistorio clientem se esse libentissime fatebatur, nunquam injuria accepta ad ulciscandum ductus, etc. Helgaldus in Epitem. vita ejus inter Historias Francorum ab Anno Christi 900. ad Annum 1285. p. 63. Helgaldus in his life says so much of him, as more of admiration and super-superlative character cannot be written, That he was the Standard-example of civil life, the patient embracer of all the casualties of mortality, devout to God, making the Church his content, and the humility of a sinner in it his daily delight, simplicity of soul he loved, contemned and pardoned injuries, avoided excess both in dress and diet, was a man of notable eloquence, taken up wholly in reading and meditating David's Psalter, a great Benefactor to the Church, having a Priestly mind in a King's Estate and Person; which so contributed to his acceptance in what ever he said or did, that the responsals, which our Text calls the sequence, Grimston Hist. France. p. 96. Spiritus sanctus adsit nobis gratia, etc.] are said to be his this and much more is he famed for in Chronicle. These, together with other Princes of France famous for piety, Philip, Lewis the Seventh, and Lewis the Ninth, who reigned all long and desiredly, Isagoge Moral, Philosophia. are by our Chancellor from Belvacensis presented to the Prince, as the notable examples of piety and probity, which are the chiefest ornaments of Princes, and which being efficacious and in very truth in them, disposes them to the right use of power; which is not more to consider themselves placed by God and the Laws in an uncontrollable height, (which no Subjects must or aught, to dare to set themselves to insolently confront or abate, the rule being in the Doctors, Imperator gerit omnia Iura in scrinio pectoris, (by which they are made sole Lords of Laws) whereby to incline them to do what they in the latitude of such power may, as men of might in the full swoop and swinge of their absolute power do) then to solicit and remember them, that though they are accountable to no man or Tribunal here, yet to God and the Majesty and Jurisdiction of his Divine Absoluteness, whose Vassals the mighty Monarches of the World are, they are responsible. And therefore as the Chancellor began, and has hitherto prosecuted this Discourse of the commendation of the Laws of England, to beget in the Prince a desire to know what is just and unjust by the Law, and that Law the Law of England, and the measure of that Justice by the Law, has acquainted him with, and earnestly invited him to make the object of his love and choice; so does he here in this conclusion inculcate the sense of these prementioned designs of his love, evidenced in those familiar, friendly, and loyal applications to him, which the Prince in the Dialogue is brought in so to resent, that he not only yields to the Chancellour's suasion, as appears in those words, Quia, cancellary, ad Legum Angliae disciplinatum mihi jam conspicio sufficienter esse suasum, etc. but subjoins a relaxation to the gravity and goodness of his love and learning therein from any further travel or argument in satisfaction to his youth, Non te amplius hujus praetextu solicitare conabor] saith he: and as a towardly and grateful Prince, who well understood the profit and benefit of his Discipline, entreats him to a further procedure in methodizing the Law, and in regulating his studies therein, that so he may attain to the knowledge of the English Law, which is the glory for English Princes to know that they may love, and love that they may conform their public administrations thereunto. This is that which the personated Prince is here mentioned obnixè deposcere, Quem ego credo manibus pedibusque obnixe omnia facturum. Teteut. And. 1.1.134. Caesar Comment. lib. 7. Belli Gallici. 5. Cic. 3. Philipp. 147. Vt illa flamma divinitus extitisse videatur, non quae deleret Jovis Optimi Maximi Templum, sed quae praeolarius magnificientius que deposceret. Cic. 6. Verr. 61. that is, not faintly and formally, but cum conatu, instanter, totis viribus, to desire and long after; (for deposcere is a verb of vehemence, so Caesar uses Deposcere omnibus pollicitationibus ac praemiis for earnest and not to be denied attacking, leaving no stone untried and unremoved: Non modo non recusem, sed appetam atque etiam deposcam is Tully's.) And that upon resolution of conviction, that as the Chancellor was no * Chil. 1. Cent. 8. p. 277, 278. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, no Gracchus, making a great noise to no purpose, or in our Proverb's language, A great cry and a little wool; nor did he in his discourse and the arguments of it, Apologum Alcinoi introducere, as they do ingratefully enough to wise men, who frame arguments from impertinent fabulosities, no such trite, nugatory, Theatrique trifler was our Text-Master: but as one that had himself imbibed the Law, and by the practical science of it had connaturalated the reason of it to his mind, which was fully possessed of it, and was able to possess others with the love and understanding of it, he draws off the Prince from his prepossessions, and makes him a Convert of that courage that he bids defiance to all other Laws in competition with it; for his approbation of its fitness to the temper and people of England, the incomparison between which and it he makes as wide and impossible to be rationally reconciled, as to compare the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which precedes the Sun and has the pre-eminence of all stars in the influence of the World, De Privilegiis Luciferi. Lege Ro●sellium in Piman. Mercurii. Tom. 1. lib. 2. Com. 9 c. 4. Lucifer] to the other stars, which are as far beneath it as Heaven and Earth, or the utmost opposites in nature are remote from each other. Not but that the Prince approves other Laws as highly for other Countries, as the Common and Statute-Lawes for this; but that he would conclude as he began, being still the same he was in the fixedness of a well-ballasted judgement, he supersedes his further address to him and progress in this Dialogue, giving humble and hearty thanks to God who is Alpha & Omega, qui ea incipit, prosecutus est, & finivit, as his words are.] For God alone it is that excites us to, encourages us in, preserves us for, and crowns us with ability to serve his glory in all honest and worthy undertake: and to him, As the only giver of every good and perfect gift, does my prostrate and grateful soul ascribe the only praise and power of this my weak enablement to finish this undertaking. For notwithstanding those flattering Hyperboles which vain men are apt to excurr in, Commandinus in Epistola Dedicatoria Cardinal. Farnesio ante opera aliqua Archimedis. Impres. Venetiis Anno 1558. as he vapouringly did who encomiated Archimedes in those words, Quod ad Geometriam attinet Deum aliquem in ea fuisse Archimedem, There is too too just cause for all men to debase themselves before God, and to acknowledge all that they know is but ignorance to the light of his Omniscience: and that whatever is theirs in the clarity of speculation, is but mutuated from that primaeve and Architectonique light, which enlighteneth all that come to, and live in, the World. This, This, being the Mercy sprung from on high visiting me in the darkness, error, and ignorance of my sinful mind, and raising me up from the grave into which I was almost * By reason of a great sickness. Vbi dum operi suo invigilat operi suo intermoritur. Ribadeneira Catal. Societatis jesu. p. 134. gone while this was composing, and from which this goodness and favour of God (which I beg may be ever legible in my heart and life) raising me when others have miscarried, as did Father Pradus in his Comment on Ezechiel, Continuis tandem la●oribus fractus & magni operis mole veluti oppressus, pestilenti morbo Romae succumbit. Idem p. 1●4. Quem tametsi scio imperfectum esse, semper en●m accessio fleri poterit, utilem tamen sore existimo magnoque aliis incitamento, ut dugeant inchoata, liment rudia, impolita perpoliant, & novis accessionibus suppleant quae à me praetermissa, vel ninots comparta sunt. Ribad. idem loco praecit. p. 226. and Villalpandus, who perfecting Pradus his unaccomplished endeavour, died also at Rome, what remains, but that as God has given me a new life to perfect (though in a weak and worthless measure) this endeavour; so I hope he will give me a will to improve every advantage his providence ministers to me to his glory, and the good of the men with whom, and Age in which, I live. The Author's Conclusion. I Shall conclude all with the Epilogue of the grave and learned Littleton, Que ieo voil que tu croys, etc. I would not have thee (READER) believe, that all which I have said in these [Commentaries] is Law, or apprehended by me void of mistake,] for I will not presume to take this upon me, but of those things that are not Law, inquire. And albeit certain things which are moved and specified in these Commentaries be not altogether Law, nor in every particular such as men of deeper judgement would produce: yet what is in all love and humility offered Thee may make Thee in some measure more apt to understand and apprehend the reason and arguments of our Text-Master, drawn from, and quoted for, the honour and establishment of the Laws. For my intention is not to blazon an ambition to seem to know much, or by a Dictatorian confidence to impose upon Thee any thing against thy reason and better skill, but to continue some memorial of what the learning of former men and times has instructed me in to the benefit of those that shall live after me. And I pray God I may attain to that high and only to be emulated degree of learning, to know how to be truly humble and generously modest, 4 Jacob. Ad calcem justitutionem in Littletonum. considering that of the Apostle, God resisteth the proud but he giveth grace to the humble, which Sir Edward Cook comments well upon in that Aphorism, which on Littleton's Epilogue he recites, Nulla virtus, nulla scientia, locum suum & dignitatem conservare potest sine modestia. Scripsi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Operam da ut vivus laudabilis, mortuus autem beatus judiceris. Antagenes apud Stobaeum, Serm 69. Literarum scientiam justam, juveni morum temperantiam, seni solatia vitae afferre, in rebus secundis ornamentum, in adversis subsidium esse. Budaeus in lib. De study Literarum recte instituendo. A TABLE of the principal Heads and material things contained in These COMMENTARIES. A ALlegiance due to the King's Person. Page 15 By the Law of nature. ibid. Due to Kings qua-such, and not only when good, but when evil also. ibid. Danger of limiting allegiance to one capacity of the King, excluding the other p. 16 Affliction good for men. p. 74 Acclamations of people to good Princes. p. 81, 82 Aristotle the Philosopher worthily so called. p. 85 The subject of envy at home. p. 86 Ill used now dead. ibid. Arts derided by Ignorance. p. 88 None can rightly value Arts but Artists. p. 89 Every Artist loves his own art best. p. 90, 91 Absit] What it imports. p. 97 Adjuration, what it imports. p. 99 Apocryphal Books not divine. p. 109 Apprentices at Law. p. 138, 547, & seq. Absolute power has no limitation. p. 159, 160, 161, etc. Absolute Government instituted first as a punishment. p. 175, 176 The Original of Absolute Monarchy. p. 179, 180 Of it. p. 214 Angels have more power than men, in what sense. p. 220, 221 Attaint of juries for Perjury, the great punishment of it. p. 346 ad 352 Altum Mare, What the Admiral's power on it is. p. 408, 409 B BIshops, Governors of the Church, aught to know more than other men. p. 127, 128 Kingdoms, Bodyes-politique are compared to Bodyes-natural, the King the Head, the Law the Heart, etc. p. 197, 198, 199 Brute the first Monarch probably. p. 201 Bailiwicks what. p. 323, 324 Bastardy. p. 466 ad 475 C CAtholique and Catholici. p. 31, 32 Roman Church no more Catholic then any other Church. p. 32 The Countenance is the glass of the soul. p. 42 Good Counsel welcome to good men. p. 76 Custom to do acts of virtue will make virtue delightful to us. p 103 Good Counsel despised, dangerous. p. 114 Children to be educated according to their Genius. p. 113, 114 On their breeding depends ordinarily their proof. p. 114, 115 Customs what they are and import. p. 119, 120 Causes, Elements, and Principles, What. p. 125 Charity. p 126 Corporations, how first, very ancient. p. 208, 209, 210 Civil Law highly respected as in right it ought. p. 213, 214, 224, 228, 236 Conquests of us by Romans, Saxons, Danes, and Normans. p. 231, 282, etc. Conquests change Laws and Language. p. 233, 234, 235, etc. Common Law and Civil Law not to be hostilely compared. p. 236 Chastity a Fresident of it. p. 271, 272, 273, 274 Contracts what. 320, 321 Counties what. 231, 322, 323 Criminal Causes how the Law of England proceeds in. p. 359, & seq. Cardinals, when created, what they are, and how difficult 'tis to accuse them though never so facinorous. p. 405, 406 Corpus Comitatus what, and how Altum Mare is Extra Corpus Comitatus. p. 409 Clandestine Marriage forbidden. à p. 412 ad 417 Commons of France miserably poor. p. 440 ad 448 Children bond or free as their Mothers are by the Civil Law. p. 485 Courts of Princes, when good Nurseryes of Youth-Nobility. p. 506, 507, etc. Cards and Dice how to be used, and how not. p. 518, 519, 520 D PRinces as well as others have their Delights. p 9 Deuteronomy why prescribed to be read by the Prince. p. 34 Doctus, what sense it has. p. 95. Depilatio, what it signifies. p. 168. Daemons, what. p. 314 Dispensations when lawful in matters that relate to Conscience. p. 4●1 Many things dispensed with, that are n●● legitimated. p. 471 Delays hated by the Law. p. 585 ad 590 E THe Eye the chief Organ in man. p. 41 Escheats, what in our and the Civil Law. p 96. Elements, what they are in the Law as well as other Arts. p. 118, 125 Elders evil. p. 271, 272, 273 England, the commendation of it. p. 367 ad 390 England a free Government compared with that of France. p 421 ad 440. & 451 ad 456 Essoines allowed by Law, how and why. p. 584 ad 590 F FOrtune does not ever favour worth. p. 10 Fear of God what, and the different natures of fear with the effects of it. p. 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, & seq. Felicity, wherein it consists. p 58 Felicity, wherein it consists. p 58 Felicity and Beatitude all one. ibid. It consists in virtue. p. 59, 60 Faith, Hope, Charity. p. 126 French Government tends to misery of Subjects. p. 419, 420 ad 450 Father of the child he is whose the Marriage is, and whom such to be, that declares. p, 483 & seq. The denomination of the child as to bondage and freedom, follows the father. p. 487, etc. French tongue much prevailed till the 36 E. 3. See the mischief. p. 515, 516, 517 G GReat men ought to have great minds p. 10 Gratitude is quick and sure in repaying kindnesses. p. 41, 42 Grace of God must make the Law effectual to teach justice.. p. 65 Grace of God what and how called. p. 69 It must conduct us to and concur with us in all good. p. 70, 71, 72, 73 Greatness had need of grace 77, 78 Grammar, the parts of it, and what they import. p. 131, 132 Gentlemen, famous by virtue p. 397 Intemperate and deceitful Gaming forbidden. p. 518, 519, 520 H HOpe. p. 126 Humane Laws, either the Law of Nature, Customs, or Statutes. p. 224 ad 227 Heritage and Heirs. p. 322, 323 Husband and Wife, one flesh, how. p. 488 I IGnorance of the Law, a fault in the Prince. p. 27 justice defined by the Law of every Government. ibid. judges, their Charge and Honour. p. 53 justice, what it is, and how excellent. p. 63 64 justice of the Law makes the Law amiable. p. 67, 68 justice of the Areopagites. p. 68 justice is the soul and life of all beauty in things and men. p. 65, 66 Instruction given Princes by God. p. 75, 76, 77 Vicious minds hate Instruction. p. 76 Instructions and Counsel in Scripture for all occasions. p. 79, 80 judges judgements, in a sense, the King's judgements; in what sense better by judges then by Kings in Person. p. 133, 134, 135 Industry what. p. 144, 145 judges, what manner of men they are to be. 134, 135, 136, 137 And what degrees of learning to have above Princes. p. 148, 149 justices of the King's Courts their habits, appointment to their Office, and placing by the Lord Chancellor. p. 560 ad 580 Impositions not to be laid but by Authority of Parliament. p. 165, 166, 167, 168 judges are not to see Offenders tortured p. 310, 311, ● seq. Injuries. p. 321, 322 juryes. p. 335 ad 346 & 356 juryes how kept in integrity. p. 392, 393 Impositions upon every thing in France. p. 429 ad 440 Illegitimate children who. p. 467. & seq. Inns of Court what, and how ruled and ordered. p. 526, 527. & seq. None but Nobiles were to be of them, that is, Gentlemen of blood. p. 528, 529 All Gentile qualities learned in them. p. 534, 535, 537 The Order and Government of them. p. 536 ad 546 K KIngs ex Officio manage their people in War by conduct and courage, in Peace by right-judging them. p. 11 Kings have great Prerogatives. p. 14 Kings make the Law their wills. p. 14, 15 Kings and Tyrants differ. ibid. King's should divide their times between Arts and Arms. p. 19, 20, 21 Kings subject to God, though to none but God. ibid. & p. 76 Kings in what sense Absolute. p. 20 Kings ought not to be ignorant of the Law. p. 27 & 95 Kings have great cares with their Crown. p. 64 Knowledge of the measure of our love to the Law. p. 82, 83, 84, 89, 90, 107, 108 Wisemen love no Kickshaws in words. p. 115 Knowledge of faith, hope, and charity, the knowledge of the whole Law of God. p. 125, 126 What Knowledge of the Laws is necessary for a Prince. p. 133, 141, 142, 143, & seq. King's cannot do what by their Laws they cannot do. p. 152, 154, 155, & seq. Kingly Government an happiness. p. 168, 169, where the rule is not by the will but by the Law. p. 170, 171 Kings how useful and sovereign they are to their people as Heads of them. p. 191, 192, 193, 194, 195 Kingdoms compared to natural bodies. p. 197, etc. L LAW the King's will in what sense. p. 15 The King's will the Law, how and how not. ibid. The Law of God is to be written by the King out of the Copy with the Priests, Why? p. 26 The Law ought to be known by the King. p. 27 Laws, Civil, of Nature, Nations, Common Laws. p. 28, 29, 30 Civil Laws where, and in what Authors contained p. 29 Laws of England whence originated. p. 30 Martial affairs ought not to steal away the Princes love from the Law of his Country and Government. p. 30, 31 Levitical Priesthood what, and how different from the Evangelique one. p. 31, 32 Literati qui. p. 31 Humane Laws where just, have God their Author. p. 43, 44, 45, 46, 62 Lawgivers venerable. p. 37 Laws, what the Ancients styled them, and the reverence they gave to them. p. 45, 46 Laws ought to be just, and holy, and good; and those that are not, lose the desert of being sacred Laws. p. 46, 47, 62 Laws are to be accommodated to men and things. p. 46, 47 Laws of men when just, are in a sense the Laws of God. p. 53, 54 Laws are to be taught the People from God's Law p. 56 Lawyers in what sense called Sacerdotes. p. 49, 50 Some Laws of men are unjust. p. 61, 62 Laws are rules durable, immovable. p. 63 Law makes men in a civil sense happy. p. 67, 68 Not to know the Law, is in a Prince a kind of enmity to it. p. 97 Knowledge of the Law prevents inconveniencies. p. 100 Knowledge got by time and industry. p. 143 Laws of England how, and how not, to be altered. p. 153, 154, & seq. 164, 165 Laws of England the best for England, as the Civil Laws are the best for the Empire. p. 222 etc. Laws of England have nothing cruel in them. p. 365 Laws of England not contrary to the Law of God in the case of juryes. p. 403 Laws of England favour liberty. p. 491 Law, though it grants Essoines, yet hates Delay unnecessary and injurious. p. 580. etc. M MOses a famous Law giver and Captain. p. 21 His Excellencies above those of the Caesars. p. 22 God's endowments extraordinary of him, suitable to his employments extraordinary. p. 23, 24 Ministers are to be, where they may be, Episcopally ordained. p. 33 Man being in the Image of God, aught to affect learning and knowledge. p. 96.97 Maxims, what they are. p. 121, 122 Mysteries of Religion. p. 127 mixed Government, Regal with Politic, God's Government and Moses his Government. p. 172, 173, 174 Absolute Monarchy when, and in whom began, together with the fierceness of it. p. 179, 180, 181, 182 Marriage of Ministers lawful and convenient, where, and where not. p. 279, 280 Marriage Clandestine unlawful when 'tis such, and why forbidden. p. 413, 414 Marriage subsequent legitimates not Antenate children. p. 469, & seq. Mothers by the Civil Law being bond or free, make the child so. p 485 Music, learned by Inns of Court men, how excellent in them. The praise of Music. p 533, 534 N THE Nobles in France trample upon the Peasantry. p. 448, etc. Natural Sons who, and what. p. 475 Nobles, how best bred. p. 502 ad 510 Number of judges in the King's Courts. p. 563 O Orator's make good Prefaces. p. 1 Ordination according to the reception of the Catholic Church, necessary to a Minister. p. 33 Obedience due to the Higher Powers by the Law of God. p. 52 Orphans to whom by both Laws committed. p. 495, 496, etc. P A Princely virtue, Serenity. p. 5 Warlike Exercises the delights of Princes. p. 6 The Ancients thought no virtue so proper to Princes as Chivalry. p. 7 What Exercises of Manhood are Princely. ibid. Powers are to be obeyed for God. p. 52 Philosophers who and what they were. p. 57 Philosophers, though they differ in the names of things, yet agree in the main. p. 59 Princes great Authors of good to people. p. 81, 82 Peritus, what signification it has. p 95 Principles, what they are. p 117, 121, 122, 125 Parables why and what. p. 128, 129, 130 Princes may attain Law-learning in a short time, if they please to intend it. p. 148, 149 Politic Government mixed with Regal, what, and how Excellent. p. 157 Power absolute may do any thing. p. 160, etc. In what sense Quod Principi placuit legis habet vigorem, is true. p. 162, 163 Polling and Peeling of Subjects, what. p. 167 Parliaments only lay legal charges on the people. p. 166, 167, 168 Politic Government with Regal, the Government that would have been in innocence if man had stood, and that which was the Government of Moses and the judges. p. 173, 174 How Politic Governments began. p 190, & seq. ad 200, & add 207 Princely Spirits act Greatness in Exigencies. p. 210 Power is then only Power, when it acts virtously. p 213, 214, etc. Parliaments, their number and nature. p. 239 Acts of Parliament, when durable and when not. p. 241, 242 Parliaments are Senates of wisdom. p. 244 Priests, where misguided, apt to do evil. p. 278, 279, 280 Purgatory, an Invention. p. 313, 314, 315 Public spiritedness, as well as Learning, the virtue of Fortescue. p. 572, etc. R RIghteousness, the darling of Christ, eminent in him, and rewarded by God. p. 105, 106 Rules and Maxims, what they are. p. 121, 122 Restitution of the King, Lords, and secluded Members, a Mercy. p. 277, 278 Racks usual in France, not here. p. 288, etc. Revelling or Dancing used in Inns of Court. p. 534 Robes what, where read of long Robes. p. 569 Respite of Appearance called Essoines, allowed. p. 580, etc. S SErenissimus, the Title of Sovereign Princes. p. 1 Serenity, what it is. p. 2, 3 Solomon a wise King, and a Precedent to Kings. p. 16, 17, 18 Subjects free, how and how not. p. 21 Servants ought to know, that they may do their Master's will. p. 36, 37 Sacerdotes, who. p. 49, 50 Sciences have a connexion and dependence each with other. p 93 Wisemen vilify Science in no man. p. 94 Sacraments of Christ, which. p. 126 Sergeants at Law. p. 137, 138, & 547 Sergeants at Law their Ceremony, Habits, etc. p 547 ad 562 Study in the Laws well methoded for the time of it. p. 150, 151, 152 Scotland, an homage Kingdom to us. p. 204 Security of Subjects a great end of Government. p, 211, 212 How Subjects are well pleased. p. 213 Statutes how passed in Parliament. p. 237, 238, 239 Not to be revoked by the same Authority that established them. p. 245, 246 Spirits of men in great actions excited by God. p. 275, 276 Schools. p. 312 Satan how suffered to torment good and evil men. p. 316 Sheriffs what, and how chosen. p. 325, etc. Sheep abundant in England, the profit of them. p. 377, & seq. Good Rules for a Student of the Law. p. 532 sing what, and to what end taught in the Inns of Court. p. 532, 533 Sudies of Law or Inns of Court, the nature and manner of them in a Discourse purposely about them. p. 539 ad 546 Sitting, a posture of Authority, therefore the justices do sit on the Bench. p. 565 Solemnity of placing a justice in the King's Courts. p. 566, 567 Set times for sitting in the Courts. p. 573 Slowness sometimes an help to justice.. p. 580, etc. Sanguinary severity odious in a judge. p 586 T TIme, what it is. p. 144, 145 Tallages not to be imposed but by consent of Parliament, and what Tallages are. p. 161, 162, 166, 167, 168 Trials by witnesses, by Civil Law: Trials by juryes and witnesses per Legem Communem. p. 247, etc. Trials by the Civil Law. p 249, 250, 251 Treason, what. p. 283, 284, 285 Torments usual in France, not here, punishments by Canon Law. p. 290, 291, 292 Torments allowed by the Civil Law in criminal Cases where witnesses are wanting. p. 296, 297 Truth is not always discovered by them. p. 297, 298, & seq. Torments are Hellish furies. See the effects of them. p. 300 ad 310 Terrors of God in the soul. p. 316, etc. Theft manifest and not manifest. p. 510, etc. Time well spent in the Inns of Court, Hallda●es in the Morning at the Courts, in After-noons at the Sudy, on Festival days in reading of Scripture and the Chonicles. p 535, 536, 537, & 575 Travel when dangerous for youth, and oftener occasion of ruin then advantage. p. 537 V VIrtue the way to felicity and beatitude. p. 60 Virtue much the effect of Custom. p. 103 Universities, the places wherein Sciences are taught. p 512, etc. W Readiness of wit will do much to get art. p. 146, etc. Witnesses how in danger to be corrupted, see examples of two Witnesses suborned in several Cases. p. 255, etc. Wisdom of the children of this World, and of the Children of light. p. 262, & seq. Women good and bad. p. 268, 269 What Witnesses the Law allows not. p. 357 Women are in account of Law as their Husbands are, except in certain cases. p. 485 ad 488 Wives are only conspicuous as their Husbands illustrate them. p. 489, 490, etc. Women should have a care to marry brave men that may honour them. ibid. Writs Original and judicial. p. 522, 523 FINIS. The Author's request to the Reader. THough I have endeavoured by an unusual inspection, to avoid all mistakes in the Press; yet some have unhappily intruded themselves, which if thy ingenuity incline thee to pardon and correct, thou shalt highly oblige me, who, what ever this may prove, intent well in it to thy benefit: Be pleased therefore to rectify the Erratas as followeth. Page 8. lin. 56 read it. p. 10. l. 42. r. also. p. 28. l. 33. r. had. l. 41. r. vivendi. p. 29. l. 4. r. detrahimus. l. 8. r. for we. l. 30. r. Sempronius. l. 53. r. England, p. 32. l. 1. r. 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