A MITE TO THE TREASVRY, Of consideration in the COMMON-WEALTH, By several Queries, and such like particulars, In reference to Its present State, A Representative, Religion, Law, tithes, Lords of Manors, Taxes and Excise, public debts, Accounts, Liberty, &c. By J. W. a Well-wisher to the public. JOB 9.4, 5, 6. GOD— He is wise in heart, and mighty in strength: who hath hardened himself against him and hath prospered? Which removeth the mountains and they know not; which overturneth them in his anger; which shaketh the earth out of her place, and the pillars thereof tremble. London, printed by T. Newcomb, dwelling in Thames-street over against Baynards Castle. 1653. To the impartial Reader. HAving considered the present Extraordinary Vicissitudes, and that it is acknowledged by most rational men, That the Power is Primarily and Originally in the People, it may not be unseasonable to present to public view the ensuing particulars and Queries, notwithstanding the unworthiness and dis-ability of the undertaker in so weighty a work, for that some small benefit( at least) may accrue to the public thereby, supposing every one is now called in a peaceable way according to his attainments to contribute his assistance. wherein haply something may be brought to remembrance, that others have formerly usefully hinted( for there is nothing new under the Sun.) And somewhat added to that which way have been then published and desired, This being a time wherein such things are expected to be accepted and accomplished. It is not probable that all these particulars will please all People, But that some will dis-rellish many of them. Most Gardens have their weeds incident, and few fields without some flowers. This Treatise submits( so far as concerns that) to the better provisions of the Act for a Representative: so long in agitation not yet published. As also in point of Law, to the briefer, plainer and more equal Rules, which may have been drawn up by the appointed Regulators thereof, And what ever else herein shall be found superfluous or defective, Let him that hath received more time and Talent rather excuse and amend then upbraid( what is tendered, not being laid down with desire of particular damage, but for public advantage, or so much for Position as Question,) Although as times have hitherto been. a Job. 12, 5. He that is ready to slip with his feet is as a lamp despised in the thought of him that is at ease. A Mite to the Treasury. 1. Conservators. WHether it be not necessary for the People that about b Pro. 11.14. ten faithful uninterested, unbiased & able Persons, should be appointed as Conservators, c and 15.22. to manage the affairs of the Common-Wealth, to receive and answer addresses, hear and relieve Complaints, and do such other things as are Just, and may be requisite for them, until about the first of June next, by which time an equal Representative to be chosen. 2. Representative. WHether in that time it be not expedient for the Free-People who have a liberty of choice, to consider of d Pro. 2.2. righteous. fit men for Members. their numbers and e and 28.11. Uunderstanding. Qualifications f Pro. 19.22. no liar. , For as Job saith. g Job. 32.9. Great men are not[ always] wise, neither do the Aged understand judgement: And whether any Members of the late Parliament, Lawyer, or party interested in Tithes be sitting for choice, and how many of those chosen shall have power to debate, and how many to Enact. And whether a Representative may not in course be chosen by the People every second year from this. 3. Their work and time. WHether each Member ought not to receive a Commission from the People choosing, expressing for what time, and to what end they are to serve: That is to say not exceeding twelve months, and therein h M●c. 6.8. to do Justice, Love Mercy, &c. And to be accountable to successors in case of breach of trust. 4. Their power. HOW far are they to be entrusted concerning Religion, laws, and Liberties. In the first to propagate the Gospel, i Psal. 138.2. but not to k Eccl. 8.8. persecute. l Prov. 21.30. In the second not to make any prejudicial Act. And then not to do any thing contrary to the Peoples birth-right, privileges, and proprieties, already in great measure provided for, by The Great Charter of the Liberties of England, and the Petition of Right. 5. Names of good received, and evil delivered from, please not. WHether from such as shall succeed, will the names onely of those good words, Common-wealth, free-State, free People, Iustice, Liberty, privileges, Ease, m Jer. 6.14. peace, safety, &c. please the people, if the things themselves are denied? Or if the names onely of Tyranny, Oppression, Extortion, Prerogative, Monopoly, &c. be removed, and the things themselves remain, will they be satisfied? 6. Those that do best, most honoured. WIll not the names of those that act faithfully, and with indeed public spirits, and do the best years service for the peoples good, be most honoured in their lives and n Psa. 112.6. Pro. 10.7. posterities; and may not those that act contrary, slowly, selfishly and unjustly, remember that when their day is done, they will go out as the snuff of a Candle. 7. Char actors of good and evil Members. WHether are not such as these corrupt members to be o Psal 12.4, 5. & Prov. 28.15. imperious, p 1 Pet. 5.3. to rule by will and power, q Pro. 3.28. & Job 19.7. to delay, and therein to deny justice, to seek & set up themselves, their private interests and relations without desert, supposing themselves accountable to none, r Rom. 9.20. though they condemn others for the same principle; not considering that they are under him who hath the government upon his own s Isa. 9.6. shoulder, for t Pro. 17.23. Esai. ●5 23. private profit and sinister respect, to cherish and countenance u Pro. 24. 2●. enemies, w Job 34.28. to slight and reject friends; and thus to tread under feet the stairs by which they ascend. And on the contrary, are not good Officers, Rulers and Generals thus described? x Job 29.10. &c. The Nobles held their peace, and their tongue cleaved to the roof of their mouth. When the ear heard me, then it blessed me, and when the eye saw me it gave witness to me: Because I delivered the poor that cried, and the fatherless, and him that had none to help him. The blessing of him that was ready to perish came upon me, and I caused the widows heart to sing for joy. I put on righteousness and it clothed me, my judgement was a rob and a Diadem. I was eyes to the blind, and feet was I to the lame: I was a father to the poor, and the cause which I knew not, I preached out; and I broke the jaws of the wicked, and plucked the spoil out of his teeth. Then I said, I shall die in my nest, and I shall multiply my days as the sand. My root was spread out by the waters, and the due lay all night upon my branch. My glory was fresh in me, & my Bow was renewed in my hand. Unto me men gave ear and waited, and kept silence at my counsel. After my words they spake not again, & my speech dropped upon them. And they waited for me as for the rain, and they opened their mouth wide as for the later rain: if I laughed on thé they believed it not, & the light of my countenance they cast not down: I choose out their way, and sate chief, and dwelled as a King in the army, as one that comforteth the mourners. 8. People must be conformable. MUst not the people also be moderate, y Pro. 12.15. peaceable, and conformable to good laws, and diligent to see them executed; not murmuring and saying, z Eccl. 7.10. What is the cause the former days were better then these? For thou dost not inquire wisely concerning this, nor should they lean too much to their own understandings to the augmentation of divisions. Are not all capable of being useful in their place? Is not a Job 15.15. he that doth righteousness righteous; and he that doth otherwise contrary, though of good name. Queen Elizabeth used to say of her Secretary of State, being troubled with the Gout, That she made much of him, not for his bad legs, but for his good head. * William Cecil L. Burleigh, & also L. Treasurer. 9 Work undone. AMongst other, will not the work ensuing lye before a Representative, though it hath been lately answered us, What would we or could we have more then we had from those then in power, which hath not been done hitherto? And if both come in competition for choice, may not the * Matth. 12.1, 2, 3, 4, 5, Way rather then the WORK be dispensed withall? 10. Committee erected to receive and redress grievances. WHether amongst all other Committees to be chosen by them, will it not be necessary to establish one to receive and hear all complaints in course that shall come before them, to recommend such as are weighty for speedy redress, and to cast out such as shall be found causeless and clamorous. That so tedious and chargeable attendance may be prevented, and former unjust and extrajudicial censures and sentences, again considered and repealed. 11. God exalted. WHether prime and special regard ought not to be had to the b 1 Sam. 2.30. Hag 1.4. glory of God, the c Psal 111.9. name of Jesus Christ, d Mat 13.6. Phil. 2.10. his Interest and People in their Peace, Protection, Provision, and privileges, in the good of souls. e Pro. 11.30. 12. Christians united. WHether we are indeed like Gospel Christians while we bite and devour one another, and so little or seldom exercise that golden Rule, f Mat. 7.12. To do unto all men as we would they should do unto us: so far from love to Enemies that many hate their Brethren what little compassion, or bowels amongst professors: in case of offence, that cannot forgive g Luke 17 3. seven times, and yet expect to be forgiven of God though the most Righteous of them sinneth as oft in one day. 13. Hope directed. HAve we not hitherto been hindered: having erred, in expecting deliverance from particular men and Interests, when it is onely in the Lord, who alone can make crooked things straight, i Eze. 21.26.27. mountains level, Exalt valleys. k Eccl. ●. 15. Number those things that are wanting, and bring Order out of Confusion. 14. Errors assuaged. WHether the truths of the Rock of Ages will not still stand, though the black and boisterous waves of that which is indeed heresy and Error may beat against them, Mat. 13.28.29. And whether to violently prevent them in their course, be not to augment them in their force, when as otherwise those waves would beat themselves to pieces against them. 15. People exhorted. WHether we ought not wisely to distinguish between waiting upon God, Hab. 2.3. so as not to force the fruit of his promises before their maturity, knowing, He that believes makes not hast. And neglecting to follow: when God is pleased to go before us and clearly call us. 16. Law regulated. WHether the Law which should be the peoples remedy and preservation, Hath not( as it hath been hitherto practised) been their disease, and( to some) destruction. And is it in itself any other then Equity and Right reason, may not such as understand them, come to apprehended it? If Regulated would there be such ambiguity in Titles, Debts, Tresp asses &c the most material things in it? And whether the Intricasie uncertainty and prolixity thereof was not the invention of that Function, considering, That by that craft they got their livings, though themselves thereby many times and in many Cases, understood it not, The most reputed learned Lawyers, being often of contrary opinions in the same Case. 17. public Register for Counties or Provinces. IS not a public Register in each County( or Province, if such Division shall be found more convenient) of great use and much wanted, And a monthly Court in the same in three whereof at utmost, all suits to be determined equally and impartially, wherein pleading to be permitted by a mans self or Friend, As to matter of debt, wherein the Law is most useful to us: might not the Register rather use a like form to that underwritten, then the senseless writs and other process, late, if not still in use. WHereas A. B. of C. in the County( or Province) of D. being to me 1 That is by himself or Friends, so as not to vexatiously or injuriously complain and not prosecute. sufficiently known, hath complained that E. F. of G. in this county( or Province) doth owe and nnjustly detain from him the due debt and sum of H. l. These are therefore to warn the said E. F. forthwith to pay the said sum, and the charge of this process, and sand or bring the acquittance thereof within I. days next after the date hereof, or else that he do without fail or excuse appear at the next Court to be holden for this County( or Province) being on the K. day of L. next by ten before-noone, to show cause to the contrary which if the said E. F. shall deny or delay to do. 2 2 Respect may be had by the Register to the distance of place, and if the party be absent, whether wilfully or by his real occasions. Charge of witnesses, &c. To be paid by the party in fault. Charge of the summons 4. d. careful Officer for serving it in the Town 3. d. and 3. d. a mile from it. To enter when he delivered it, where and to whom, and the Answer. The said debt will be taken for granted as due, and Issues of distress proceed upon his Goods and Chattels for the same, of which the leaving of these presents at his house is to be sufficient notice. Given under my hand and seal the M. day of N. 1653. O. P. Register Seal. several Books. ALL Process and Orders to be entred in peculiar books, and to have in them a preamble for satisfaction, reciting what is said on both sides, and why so concluded. Form. A Brief and full form of Bills, Bonds, Judgments, Executions, &c. to be agreed upon, such as may be authentic. Wills. WIlls, Inventories and Rentals to be registered within one month after the death of the party, and care taken they may be performed, so that Children, Executors, nor those to whom Gifts are bequeathed, may not be wronged, nor creditors defrauded. Land registered. ALl Land forthwith registered, and claimers of present possession summoned to come in and produce their Right, that the Title may be in the true owner the better confirmed and secured. Book for engaged lands, &c. to be registered. NO Judgement confessed by any, nor Execution or other process; no sale nor mortgage of House or Land, or Ship engaged, to be authentic, unless it be registered. Wherein first the value, then debt the engagement is for, may be registered, and that to be kept secret from all persons but those that are really concerned in the purchase, mortgage, or engagement. The Courts Duty and Power. SHould not the Court be such as ought to have the causes rather then l Pro. 28.21. and Job. 13.10 and 24.23. Ia. 2.2. persons of men in estimation, m Pro. 17.23. free from all bribery and perjury n and 21.3. to do justice and judgement, which is more acceptable to God then sacrifice o and 31.9. ; upon knowledge or good information of just cause, to give time for debts, not exceeding three Courts. As also to suspend forfeitures upon reasonable cause shown, not exceeding six Courts. As likewise, to expel all needless, causeless, and malicious suits. Fraudulent Debtors prevented. THat some real and effectual remedy may be provided against making over Estates to defraud Creditors. 18. Corporations. ANd for such Corporations as shall be found more convenient for public good to be continued, that they may be regulated. And that no liberty or privilege may be granted to any one Company or Society, for traffic and commerce by sea or land, more then another. If every Trade respectively must not be confined to its own due and proper bounds and limit, have not I as much liberty to deal in his Trade, as he in mine? 19. oaths. THat oaths before Rulers may not be made such matters of course, p Jer. 23.10. whereby the solemnity of them is little regarded by many, and that the present way of administration may be reformed. 20 Blood for Blood. SHall any die but for blood q Prov. 28.17. ? Is not the law, An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth? &c. And may not Thieves, Robbers, and Cheaters, &c. make r Levit. 6.4. Restitution four fold, or s Prov. 6.30. seven fold, according as the circumstances of the case may stand? Where restitution cannot be had, are there not many ways of corporal punishment to be found, to them more grievous then death? according to the nature, quality, and circumstances of the offence. t and 21.7. Is it not robbery to refuse to do judgement? 21. goals &c. rectified. THe gross and palpable abuses and deceits in the Goals of Upper-bench, Fleet, marshalsea, &c. regulated and prevented, honest gaolers entrusted, reasonable fees assertain'd, and none therein detained, but such as by Law( grounded on Reason and good conscience) are committed. 22. tithes removed. THat the heavy burden of tithes under which the people have so long groaned, The before name L. Cecil used to advice his eldest son Thomas, never to bestow any great cost, or to build any great house on an impropriation, as fearing the foundation might fail hereafter. may be removed,[ seeing the Tribe of Levi and their work is long since ceased] will it not be convenient to consider them in their temporal original constitution, at what rates they were bought? And whether the profit pulled from the people, hath not already paid unto many much more money then they or their Ancestors paid for the purchase? Will not good men contribute a competent maintenance to deserving good men, without constraint? Or may not the Representative make provisions out of a public Treasury, for them that indeed preach the Gospel? 23. Lords of Manors and Toll. CAn the oppressive prerogative of Lords of Manors( in their past and present practices and power) and a Free-state consist together? Or that pilling and polling by Bailiffs and such like Officers at Fairs for Toll, and elsewhere, when nothing equivalent is done for it? If oppression be a Trade, and such as the people may not be without why is it complained of. 24. Peoples ease minded. ANd for the ease and welfare of the people, and removal of oppression, may not abundance of needless and superfluous Officers( that save not the Commonwealth the salary they receive) be abated? And may not the allowances for those that have cause to be continued, be so regulated, that from the Representator to the meanest employed, none may have more then they justly deserve for the careful and faithful performance of their trust in their employment in carrying on the Warfare of the Commonwealths welfare. 25. Taxes mitigated. ANd if Taxes cannot be yet wholly taken off, Is it not meetest, that the most u Prov. 22.22.23. able men should bear them, as was formerly used in way of Subsidy, wherein some regard may be had to those that have gained with w And 13.11. least pains and most x And 20.21. oppression. 26. Excise Reduced. IF Excise may not be removed; can it not be reduced, and principally lean upon Richest, and most superfluous Commodities, As silver, silks, wine, Tobacco, Sauces, Coaches, Sedans, Bevers, Scarlets, Fine Clothes, &c. 27. public debts paid. FOr the peoples just satisfaction according to their former good affections, And for the future credit of the Nation upon occasion, Ought not the public Faith to be reinbursed to poor and Rich out of the Publigue Treasury. 28. Wounded souldiers, widows and Orphans provided for. THat the wounded souldiers & Seamen, y Mal. 3.5. Widows and Orphans, of such whose Fathers or Husbands were slain in the public service may have Competent maintenance out of the public Treasury, And Greenwich House, with such other like convenient places appointed as an hospital for the bringing up of their male Children for the service, which besides the equity of the Cause, and the acceptableness thereof unto God, would make men valiant for their Country. 29. Army Continued. THat the Army be continued till the Representative be called, real Grievances removed, and the several Counties settled in a peaceable Posture, and then either paid and disbanded. Or otherwise employed as occasion shall serve. 30. Free-Quarter and other public engage. ments allowed. THat those Counties which have suffered much by Free Quarter, and yet have also paid Taxes equal with others may have the Arrears of their Assessments allowed them towards the same, As by the several Acts, Ordinances and Resolves of the late Parliament. And the other debts promised may be allowed. 31. Equity observed. THat no allowance be at any time hereafter made to any person whatsoever, for any loss, damage or injury he hath, may, or shall receive, but what the public Treasury is able, and doth make good proportionably to every one in the like Capacity. 32. account of former Actions and allowances. IS it too late to example how the public past and numerous Estates, Places, profits, perquesites, sums and incomes have been disposed, may not the same be justly esteemed, to be so much as having been well husbanded would with its Revenue have defrayed all the charge the public need have been at, and yet the principal have been preserved still entire to them, And if any shal have been found to have been too well paid may they not be desired for the future to lend the public so much more then others, till it is able to repay them. And if there can be an Estate recovered, Reserved and increased for the public by a Representative, Will not the Revenue of the same be very useful to ease the People, In waging War upon good * Pro 20 18. advice, in relieving the fatherless, poor, wounded, oppressed, and Widow, repairing high ways, Cause-wayes and Bridges, making Rivers Navigable: Increasing foreign Trade, and discoveries. Shipping increased, Seamen encouraged. THat Shipping and Seamen may be increased: encouraged and preserved. 33. Dayes, &c. Reformed. THat a Reformation of dayes, months, Quarters, years, and too great z Job 32.21.22. Titles of men( though great power and places) may be accomplished. 34. Banished Recalled. THat the Banished may be recalled: Considering that what Passion appeared, might proceed from the oppression that was formerly suffered. 35. bank for Orphans portions. THat a bank or Treasury for the true securing of Orphans portions to their sure advantage be established. a Job. 34.3.4.5 36. Jews admitted. THat equal Liberty be granted to those of the Jewish Nation to converse with us. 37. Lands improved. WHether all possible improvement of the Common-Wealths Land, and its public profits ought not to be made and brought through honest hands into a Faithful Treasury for the Real case, benefit and commodity of the whole. 38. Farthings. WHether for the Advance of charity to the impotent, poor, and conveniency to the people, were it not well if at the public charge, Farthings of full or more then the value were coined. So that they might not be counterfeited. 39. Pious policy. WHether will not pious policy, the Dove, as well as the Serpent, and plain dealing in most public proceedings, be most prosperous? And will not b Luke 2 14. Proclamations of Peace to all people upon safe and equal terms, be most pleasing? Are we not required, as much as in us lies, to live peaceably with all men, forgetting and forgiving injuries rather then doing any? 40. Conservators deputed. WHether may it not be requisite for a Representative at their dissolution, to authorize seven persons of known fidelity and integrity, to be Conservators for the managing of affairs, till the succeeding Representative? And in what extraordinary Cases, as of Invasion, Incursion, or alterations, of eminent Laws to call one, to sit no longer then is necessary, and to give place to that which is to come in course. As also five just and impartial persons for chief Commissioners of Appeals, before whom all suits that cannot be determined in the County, or Province Courts may be in convenient time ended. To have no Rules will be Arbitrary, general Rules will a little entrench upon some particulars, which must be submitted to for public good. The Conclusion. THE Author was not able to provide a Banquet, and therefore it may be this Ordinary may onely please the common people: For of a Table so full furnished, can all palates be pleased with every Mess? Surely some dishes must be disrelisht by some. Many other things in and to all these particulars, might be added; but it is now onely desired, That so much hereof as shall be found probable to promote public good, may be propagated; for, Eccles. 12.1 Of multitude of Books there is no End. April 25. 1653. The Declaration of the Esquire at Arms. FOrasmuch as the Barons of the Exchequer and other Judges of the Commonwealth of England have in their Judicature made a doubt whether the Parliament be dissolved or not, It is declared that the Parliament is dissolved, And that all the actions of Oliver cromwell Esquire, Captain-General of all the English Forces, be just, honest, and legal; and that he is a just and honest man in whatsoever he enterprised in the said affairs. And if any person or persons shall, by any colour or pretence what soever, attempt to question the Authority of the Lord General cromwell, or disturb the peace of this Nation, the Free-born persons of England under his protection will call them to a severe account. Witness Tho. Elslyot, Ar. Ar. Conq. Dated the 7 of May. 1653.