Serjeant Thorp, Judge of the Assise for the Northern Circuit, his Charge, as it was delivered at York Assises 20 March, 1648. and taken in Short-Hand.
GEntlemen, Friends, and Countreymen, I do not question but that the Stile, and Title of our Commissions under which we are now to act and execute the Authoritie and Power committed to our hands, being changed from Carolus Rex Angliae, to Custodes Libertatis Angliae Authoritate Parliamenti, works divers effects upon the Tempers and spirits of men, according as the spirits themselves are tempered and affected; and that some of those spirits (like the Sunne upon Wax) it softens into Obedience and compliance, and others of them again (like the same Sun upon Clay) it hardens into stiffnesse and oppression. Proud, Ambitious, and Malignant spirits finding themselves frustrated and defeated hereby of their designed Hopes and hopefull Designes, for obtaining their desired Ends; and being filled with prejudice to others, and self-love to their own opinions, and therefore having turned themselves aside from the use of their own Reason, and from all Overtures and Arguments of satisfaction, and having given up their understanding to blinde Affections,— it startles and confounds with Passions and Amazements, heightned into choller and disdaine; Because looking thorow the false Glasse of their own self-Interest, they finde nothing therein but imaginary shakings of Foundations, overturning of Laws, and confused heaps of Ruines & Distractions. But to these, if any such be present, (especially if they have been formerly ingaged in open Warre against the publike Interest of the Nation, and so are cast by Gods justice for their Transgressions into a mean and low condition) All I shall say (with the poor comfort of calamity, Pitie) is this, That if they have not already tasted enough of the Cup of Gods wrath for their misdoings, let them take heed they ingage not again, for fear that hereafter they be inforced to drink the Dreggs of his displeasure. Other silly spirits there are, who standing unbottomed upon any solid Principles of their owne, finde themselves tossed to and fro with the Winde which blows from others mouthes; one while, listening to the Prophet who bids them go up to Ramoth-Gilead and [Page 6] prosper; and by and by again yeelding to him that bidds them not go up for fear of perishing, and so they are carryed into crosse and oblique opinions and actions, tending to, and endangering their utter Ruine and Destruction. And to these men, all I shall say, and advise, is this, That they will forthwith repair to the School of Reason, and suffer themselves to be guided and led by impartiall and wholesome Lessons and Instructions, to a better Information of their judgements, whereby they may be settled upon undenyable grounds in the knowledge of themselves and the truth, and of their own Right, Interest, and Concernment. But another sort of men there are, who are willing to let their eyes stand in the place where Nature set them, and to make use of that Reason and judgement which God hath given them, and with erected mindes, to apprehend the sense of their own future happinesse, and to hearken to the voyce which calls them to the flourishing actions of a reformed Commonwealth, and therefore do entertain this Change with sutable Opinions and Complyance from these grounds which they thus propound and argue with themselves.
1. That all Power and Authority is Originally and Primarily in God, and comes from God; and this they rest upon as being a Scripture truth.
2. That God, out of his Wisdome and Providence, hath dispensed and transmitted so much of this Authority and Power to men, as is necessary for their use. First, as in relation to the Inferiour Creatures, to Rule and Governe them as Lord and King. And as in relation to one another from a Principle of Nature, [Conservatio sui-ipsius] To seek and endeavour their own preservation and security, which Principle draws them to this Conclusion [Salus populi suprema Lex,] The safety of the people is the supreme Law both of Nature and Nations. And from this Naturall Principle, and supreme Law of Nature, however all men in their Originall Creation are all of one and the same Substance, Mould, and Stamp, yet for preservations sake, they finde a fitnesse in Subordinations and Degrees among them, for the better ordering of their Affairs; and so they appoint Rulers, and authorize Governours over them, as Trustees for themselves. They also elect Government, create Rules, Orders, and Laws, by which they will have their Rulers and Governours to guide and Steer their Actions in the course of their Government, to which they will conform their obedience: and this Truth is ascertained from hence, That there were People before there were either [Page 7] Rulers or Governours of People, and that therefore these Rulers and Governours were but made by the People, and for the people, with this Reserve, That whensoever the people should perceive that their Trustees & Governours did turn potestatem into potenti [...]m, the Power and Authoritie of Government, by Rule and Law formerly agreed upon, and consented unto by the people, into an Armed Force; and that they did alter the Peoples Rempublicam into the Governours Rem privatam, and that their Government ceasing to be free, was made to hang over the peoples heads as a Lordly Scourge to their destruction; Then, and from, thenceforth, and that with good comlinesse of reason, the people betake themselves to thoughts of Reformation; and finding cause to dislike their former choice, being not tyed by any Scripture to any one Forme of Government, they choose againe and take some other Form, differing from that before, whereby they will avoid the evils they suffered under their former choice, and enjoy the good of a more beneficiall preservation; for, like Marriners and men in a Ship at Sea, they will no longer trust an unskilfull or perfidious Stearsman, lest they should be found guilty of their own ensuing Shipwrack and destruction.
This brings me to the next Assertion and Position, which I own as a most certain Truth and my greatest earthly assurance, That the People [under God] is the Originall of all just Power, and that let the Government runne out into what Forme it will, Monarchy, Aristocracy, or Democracy, yet still the Originall Fountain thereof is from the Consent and Agreement of the People. From this Assertion and Position I am led on further, by plain reason to understand, That Rulers and Governours are accountable to the People for their mis-government; namely, when they transgresse the Rules and Lawes by which the people did agree they would be governed. But let me not be mistaken, for when I say Accountable to the People, I doe not mean to the humours and fancies of particular men in their single & naturall capacities, but to the people in their Politique Constitution, lawfully assembled by their Representative.
Touching the Government of this Nation, it hath anciently been Monarchicall in the frame and constitution of it, but yet it never was a pure Monarchie, for a pure Monarchie is a clear Tyranny; but it was a Politicall Monarchie, or Monarchy governed by Lawes, taking in thereto all the goods, and avoiding all the ills both of Aristocracy and Democracie; and so I may truly say, that look upon the Frame and constitution of it alone, and as it [Page 8] were, upon the Theoreticall and contemplative part of it; and supposing it possible that the Practise would answer the Theorie, no man can deny, but that it was a Frame of most excellent Order and Beautie; For, first, it had a King the chiefest Officer, one single Person; and therefore avoiding the proud Factions and contentions usually happening in Aristocracy, as likewise the disordered confusions common in single Democracy; but yet a King bounded and compassed with Lawes above him, being the Rules already made and given him to Rule by; and with a necessitie of concurrence and complyance with Lords and Commons below him, for future Legislative Power and Authority, and so avoiding the danger of Tyrannie usually incident to Monarchies, which commonly makes the Monarchs Will the Law, and so establishing the Government upon this Foundation, Voluntas Imperatoris Lex esto.
But [alas] when I have shewed you the Frame and Constitution of the late Government, I have shewed you all the Beauty of it; for when you come to examine the practical part, you shall find nothing lesse then excellency or perfection in it. Look into your own Stories, and you shall alwayes finde the King and great Lords ( Comites suos, as they were called) incroaching upon the peoples Liberties & Rights, incroaching to themselves superlative Prerogatives, and Dominion over them: On the other side you shall finde again the People struggling to preserve themselves and their own Interest, labouring still to avoid the miseries and to free themselves from the mischiefs of their sufferings.
The Times and Transactions before the Norman William got the Crown, and which past among the Brittains, Romans, Danes, and Saxons, being dark and obscure, I passe by, and therefore I shall onely speak something of the times and transactions since.
First, the Tyrannicall Domination of that first William and his sonne the second William, gave the People to see their ensuing miseries; for though they made choice of the second William, who was but a second sonne, and rejected Robert his Elder Brother, yet they soon found their kindnesse was suddenly forgotten, when once the Crown was obtained, and therefore they refused when he was dead to chuse again, till by ingagements, Oathes, and Royall Promises of better Government, they were cheated into a second Election of Henry the first, who was a younger brother likewise. But it was not long after ere Monarchie plaid Rex, and Pleasure and Will Ruled, the whole Kingdom almost was turned into Forrests; the Lawes which the people were brought [Page 9] to live under, and obey, were the cruell and insupportable Laws of the Forrest, which were made rather to preserve the Beasts, then the People within the bounds of Forrests. Then the people finding no other remedy, betook themselves to thoughts of Reformation, as I told you at the first. And in the time of King Stephen, at Renymeed, they demanded restitution of St. Edwards Laws, for so they call'd that Saxon Edward, who was dead many years before, without any Heir or Successor of that kinde, (for we never read of any St. King since him:) And by those Lawes they say they will be governed, and to those Laws they will conforme. Hereupon a new Compact is made, the Articles of Renymeed, containing most of St. Edwards Lawes, are confirmed and established, by consent in Parliament, & so the people are for that time satisfyed, and think themselves very safe (as they well might think so) under the security of an Act of Parliament. But yet this Act proved no security, for in a short time after all was let loose again, and the same mischiefs and oppressions upon the people were still continued, as before, and many more additions made thereto, to the utter inslaving of the English Nation.
Hereupon the people stand up once more for their Liberties and Native Rights in the ancient Lawes of the Land, and demand the second time to have them confirmed, and to be kept from violation; and so in the ninth year of King Henry the third was the great Charter of the Liberties of England [being but a Declaration of the ancient Common Lawes of the Land, and little differing from the Articles of Renymeed, together with the Charter of the Forrest,] framed and consented unto in full Parliament, and are the first Acts of Parliament now extant in Print. And so the people sat down again under the protection of this second Securitie; but how weak a Security it prov'd, let the practise of the next King, and all succeeding Kings tell you, though it hath been confirmed and allowed by themselves two and thirty times; for in the two next Kings times you shall finde the goodmen of the Land discountenanc'd, and vain, loose, and wanton persons to be the men in highest esteem; nay, Murderers and Robbers and the like, cherisht and maintain'd; and if brought to publike justice, and condemned for their misdoings, yet pardoned again, and set at Liberty, and though [by the Fundamentall Law] Parliaments [the usuall Salve for the peoples Soars] were to bee called and held twice a year, yet were they laid aside, and rarely made use of; and then when they were called, it was but to serve the Kings turn for granting Subsidies, or the [Page 10] like And this when the people perceived, in the time of King Edward the second, they thought fit to question his mis-government by Articles of Impeachment in Parliament against him, and then to depose him from his Kingly Office, and to make his Son (during his Fathers life-time) Warden of the Kingdome, and shortly after they made him King (while his father lived) by the name of Edward the third. And now are Acts of Parliament made against the former mischiefs: first, against the Kings granting Pardons to Robbers and Murderers; and four Acts of Parliament are made in the neck of one another, 6. E. 1. 9. 2. E. 3. 2. 4. E. 3. 13. 10. E. 3. 2. 14. E. 3. 13. and pursuing one another before telling the King plainly, that he may not, hee must not grant Pardons, but where he may do it by his Oath, namely, in case of Homicide, by misfortune, and Homicide in his owne defence. Secondly, for more frequent holding of Parliaments, namely, That they should be held once a year, and oftner if need be. But little effect did these produce, for the mischiefs have continued, and the people have still suffered (by the breach of those Laws, even untill these very times) the very same mischiefs as before.
In the time of King Richard the second, the disorders of the Court, and Oppressions upon the people from thence were so great and unsupportable, that the people Articled against that King, and likewise deposed him; and so they afterward did in like manner Depose King Henry the sixt, & K. Edward the fourth by consent in Parliament. Thus you see how the exercise of Kingly Office within this Nation hath been made use on to the damage of the people, and how the people again have put in ure their Authoritie over their Kings, to call them to an account for their mis-governments. Touching the last King much hath been said, and too much hath been felt by this Countie, in relation to the last Warre. But (pardon me if I tell you so) it was a just punishment of God upon us of this Countie; for, I may truly say, the Warre had its Rise and Beginning here, here in this Countie, nay, here in this Court, for this was the first place in England where any Grand-Juries of the Countie charged themselves and their Countrey men with any Taxe to raise a Warre against the Publike Interest of the people, as they did here when at Summer Assizes in the year 1642. they charged the Countie with a Tax of 8600 pounds, to maintain 1000 Dragoons upon pretence to keep the Country in Peace. But, alas, the Dragoons were no sooner raised, but they were made use on for another [Page 11] Service, namely, to attend the Kings Standard at Nottingham, and from thence were carryed to fight at Edgehill against the Parliaments Forces, for better keeping the Peace in Yorkshire. And though it be true, that this Tax of 8600 pounds was never levyed, yet our own great Lords and Gentlemen made it the Foundation and Rise of another Tax of thirty thousand pounds, which they laid and levyed upon the Countie in October after, for bringing in the Earl of Newcastle and his Forces.
But (as I said before) Gods punishment is just upon us, for as the Warre began here, so it hath ever since continued among us, even at this day, when all the rest of the Kingdome is in Peace and quietnesse, onely we are now upon Sieging, at our owne Charge, of you cursed Castle at Pontefract, which began at first, and continues to be the last of all our Enemies Holds and Garrisons within this Nation.
But to return to the point of the Kings Incroachments upon the Peoples Liberties, and therein I will clearly tell you my own thoughts in one particular, and instance in that one, (but it is to my Apprehension, Ʋnum magnum, and instar omnium) it is as the Lyon said of her Whelp when the Fox upbraided her, That she was not so fruitfull in procreation as the Fox, but brought forth onely one Lyon at once, ('tis true, saith the Lyon) but that one is a Lyon: And so I may say by the Kings Negative Voyce in Parliament, for admit but this one peece of Prerogative to be just, and consonant to the Constitution of the Government, and I dare affirm, that the English Nation were in a possibility (by that Constitution of Government) to be as arrant Slaves and Vassals, as were in Turkie, or among the Moors in the Gallies: For let the King put what Oppression he will upon the People, let their grievances and burthens be never so great, and let him [at the peoples Desires] call Parliaments for redresse thereof never so often, and let never so good Bills be prepared and presented to him, for Reformation, yet still he shall put them off with this Royall Complement, Le Roy Sadvisera, signifying ( quoad the Practise) in plain English, I will not help you, nor release the unjust Burthens and Oppressions I have laid upon you.
But add to this that other Incroachment of the Lords Negative Voyce upon the people, which they also have with much Lordlinesse practised in answer to the Commons Bills, though of highest concernment for their Weale, (however they expresse that Negative in Court Language and good words, We will send an answer by Messengers of our owne; as if the people should expect they [Page 12] meant to return some concurrence with them, when [God knows] nothing is lesse thought upon, or meant by them.)
And now let the people see their own condition, now let them consider how they have been abused by good words and phrases, which if they had clearly & universally understood the meaning of; or if these Negatives had been clearly exprest, in down-right language, [ We will not help you, or, We will not ease you of your Burthens or Oppressions that lie so heavy upon you,] truely then I presume the people would long since have been stirr'd up to help themselves, and to have endeavoured as well to take away the mischief, as to avoid the miserie of such a Government. For mine own part I speak it freely from my heart, That as I am a Freeman both by Birth an Education, and am Inheritable to the Laws and Free-Customes of England; so I do naturally desire the security of Government, and I do willingly submit to the justice of known Lawes: But I have ever adhorred all Arbitrary Powers, or to be subject to the Wils or Passions of men; & therefore I have alwayes thought (since I could think any thing upō grounds of Judgement or Reason) That so long as these two fore-mentioned Negatives remained upon the people, there could be no security or freedome in their Government; and there was no one thing that hath so firmly fixt me in the way I have gone, wherein I now am, and to oppose the other, as the mischiefs I understood to bee in the two Negative Voyces of the King and the Lords. Adding to these two fundamentall Court-Errours, and destructive Positions, maintain'd and held forth to the people by flattering Royalists, and proud and ambitious Prelates and Courtiers, viz. First, That the King had an Originall right to Rule; And secondly, That the King was accountable to none but GOD for his misgovernment: Lay but these two together with the Negative Voyce, and let any man judge what they may and must necessarily produce in point of Tyrannie and Oppression over the people.
Thus have I shewed you the true Originall of all Power and Authority, and from whence it is that the Exercise of Authority and Power is practised among men, over one another; I have shewed you also the justice which lies in this, That Kings, Rulers, and Governours [and particularly the King of this Nation] should be accountable to the People for their misgovernments; and how destructive a Tenent it is to say, That a King hath right to Rule over men upon Earth, and that yet GOD hath not given a Power to earthly men to call him to account for misgovernment; unlesse you will [Page 13] suppose that Kings at first did fall from Heaven, and were sent down from above to exercise their wils, and act their lusts below.
Having said thus much upon this subject onely to give a hint, from whence you may observe (till the Parliaments own Declaration be publisht, which I hope will fully and clearly set them out) what the Grounds and Reasons were that the Parliament hath found the Kingly Office within this Nation to be uselesse, and dangerous, and why therefore they will no more trust the Crown upon the Head of any one Person, nor transferre the custodie of the Liberties of England and Englishmen into the Power of another, who may abuse them; and therefore why likewise they resolve to keep the Crown within its proper place the Cabinet of the Law, and to allow the Law onely to King it among the people, and that the people themselves [by their Representatives] shall be the onely Keepers of their own Liberties, by Authoritie derived from their own Supreme and Soveraign power; which brings me now to the stile of our Commissions, Custodes libertatis Angliae Authoritate Parliamenti.
And touching the King of England his right to Rule, or Title of Law by Inheritance and Descent to the Crown of England, thus much may be safely and truely said, That if it be an Ancient and Originall Inheritance fixt in one Family, it was gain'd at first by the power of the sword, and by Conquest, which Title in Law is but a disseisin and an unlawfull Title, and therefore may bee again as justly regained, as it was gained at first by Force, and by the stronger Arm and sharper Sword; And as it was so gain'd at first, so it hath been ever since either by the like pure force, or else by consent in Parliament upon particular cases kept and maintained; and so you will finde if you look how every King since the Norman William (call'd the Conquerour) came to the Crown; For of all those four and twenty Kings and Queenes which have since that time Kingd it among us, there are but seven of them who could pretend Legally to succeed their former Predecessors, either by Lyneall, or Collaterall Title. I have not leasure to repeat the particulars, and this I have said may serve to give you occasion (if you be so minded) to look further into it, and to satisfie your judgements herein, and by consequence to keep you from ingaging against your selves and the Nation, for a Name, or for a Thing which is not truth.
Now I come to that which is our true businesse, our work of the first magnitude, Opus diei in die suo, the Articles of your Charge which I intend [for the better helping of your memories] [Page 14] to deliver to you in writing, with the Laws and the punishments, and briefly to runne over the rehearsall of the Facts onely, without further mention concerning them; yet with such necessary Expositions and Explanations of particulars as shall be needfull in my passage through them; adding onely this for an Animadversion to you, That you and I are trusted at this time with the administration of Justice in our own Countrey, amidst all the Temptations which our severall Relations of Friends, Kindred, or Acquaintance can Offer unto us; which shews, that they who do so trust us, have great assurance and confidence in us; and then we must conclude, that this confidence puts a greater obligation upon us to fidelitie and integritie in the discharge and performance of that Trust committed to us; adde to this that [Vinculum animae] the Bond of the Soule the Obligation of an Oath, and I doubt not but it will be found, that though Love, Fear, and particular Interest be the usuall Cords which halter Justice, that yet at this time they will be found to be among us but sorry and unmasculine pieces of Rhetorick, either to affright us from, or soften us in our duties.
The matter of your Charge will be to inquire into, and finde out the severall Offences which have been committed and done against the Politique Body of the Commonwealth, as so many severall Diseases and infirmities in the severall parts of the naturall Body of a man, which distemper and endanger the health of the whole, and they are of four sorts.
First, such as are against the Peace of the Commonwealth, or whereby Publike Peace is disturbed, and those I call Diseases indangering the heart of this Politique Bodie.
Secondly, such as are against the Justice of the Commonwealth, or whereby publique justice is perverted, and those I call Diseases indangering the Head of this politique Body.
Thirdly, such as are against the plenty of the Commonwealth, or whereby publike plenty is diminished, and those I call Diseases against the stomack of this politique Body.
Fourthly, such as are against the beauty and good Complexion of the Commonwealth, or whereby this beautie and good Complexion is discoloured and defaced, contained under the Name of Common Nusances, and those I call Diseases against the Senses, the Leggs and the Feet of this politique Body.
Touching those against Peace, they are of five sorts.
1. Treasons, which againe are either High-Treason or Petty-Treason.
[Page 15]2. Felonies, which again are done either against the Person, or Possession of another. 3. Premunire. 4. Misprisions. 5. Trespasses.
High-Treasons are these.
1. If any levy Warre against the supreme Authority of the Nation, or adhere to the enemies thereof. And when I do so expresse it, Supreme Authority, I give you the meaning of the Stat. 25. E. 3. 2. which mentions it thus, If any levie warre against the King, or adhere to the Kings enemies within the Realm; for the name and word King [quatenus the chiefe Officer betrusted with the Government in the Administration of that Government] is frequently used to set forth the publique Interest of the People, so we call it The Kings Peace, The Kings Coyne, The Kings High-way, and the like, all which in truth are the publike concernments of the people, being for their publike use and benefit, and are therefore exprest and exhibited unto us under the notion of the Kings Name, because he is their publike Officer, and trusted for them; so that to levie warre against the King, or to adhere to the Kings enemies, is to levie war against the Kingdom, & the Government of it, and the Supreme Power & Authority of it; or, which is more plain in the expression, to levie war without lawfull Warrant and Authority so to do; & yet this I beleeve was that which hath misled (& perhaps may still mislead) many of our Country men, That because they had the Person of the King with them, [betwixt whom and whom there were mutuall and reciprocall deceivings] and they [never remembring that when in Person hee deserted the Parliament, he left the King and Kingly Authority behinde, him, because he left the Kingly Office, and the Power thereof, and publike Government behinde him) they catcht at the shadow, but let go the substance, and so under colour of fighting for the King, they fought against him. Yet because omnis non capit hoc, every man did not understand this distinction betwixt the politique and naturall body of the King, therefore see how mercifully and favourably the Parliament hath dealt with these men, that they have not prest the rigour of Law upon the Offenders of this kinde, whose Offences being High-Treason by the fundamentall justice of this Nation, and so their Lives, whole Estates, Lands and Goods being forfeited to the Law for the same, yet this forfeiture hath not beene exacted upon them; but, in hope they will at last see their Errours, and repent for their misdoings, the Parliament hath been pleased to carry a more tender hand, [Page 16] and by way of commutation to passe over their Offences with the punishment of a small fine for such misdoings, yet with this silent admonition, like that to the woman in the Gospell, Go thy way and sinne no more, lest a worse thing happen unto thee.
2. If any counterfeit the Great Seal, Privie Seal, or Privie-Signet.
3. If any counterfeit the Coyn of the Nation, or otherwise Clipp or diminish it.
4. If any kill a Judge of Justice or Oyer and Terminer in his Place doing his Office.
5. If any Jesuite or Seminary Priest, born in England, and Ordained and Professed beyond-Sea, by Authority derived from the Sea of Rome, do come into, or abide within this Realm.
6. If any the second time extoll, defend, or maintain within this Realm the usurped Jurisdiction or Authority of the Pope, or any other Forraign Prince.
7. If any bring over and put in ure, or receive from beyond-Sea any Bull or Instrument of Absolution, or Reconciliation, to Absolve the people of this Nation from their Allegiance here to the Sea of Rome, or indeavour the second time to withdraw the People to the obedience of the Sea of Rome, or if any be Absolved, Reconciled or withdrawn. And here you must understand, that in Treasons all Actors and Consenters are Principalls, and there are no Accessaries at all in Treason.
Pettie-Treasons are these.
If a servant kill his or her Master or Mistris.
If a Wife kill her Husband.
Premunire.
Touching Premunire, it is properly a Writt or Processe of Summons awarded against such as brought in Bulls, or Citations from the Court of Rome to obtain Ecclesiasticall Benefices, by way of Provision before they fell void; for of old time divers Acts of Parliament were made, viz. in the times of K. Edward the third, K. R. 2. and K. H. 4. against the Popes exercise of Jurisdiction within this Nation, and against those subjects that did appeale from the Courts of Justice here to the Court of Rome, and who obtain'd Provisions there to have Abbeys, and Priories, or Benefices with Cure here, which proceedings tended (say those Statutes) to the destruction of the Realm, and of Religion; Therefore these being held to be great Offences, and so tending to the [Page 17] disherison of the Rights belonging to the Crown and people of England, and to the destruction of the common Law, are made to be grievously punishable, viz. To be imprisoned during life, To forfeit Lands and Goods, and to be put out of the protection of the Law. Afterward other later Laws were made in the time of Queen Elizabeth against other Offences of like nature, wherewith you have now to do, namely,
If any send over or contribute money or relief for maintenance of any Iesuite, or Seminary Priest, or Colledge beyond-Sea.
If any extoll defend or maintain the jurisdiction or authority of the Pope, (or of any other forraign Prince) within this Nation.
If any bring over any Agnus Dei, Crosses, Pictures, or Beads, Hallow'd (as they call it) at Rome, to disperse among the People, or if any person receive any such, or know of this Offence, and conceal it three dayes.
If any do Aid or Assist those who put in ure any Popes Bulls, or Instruments of Absolution brought from Rome.
Misprision of Treason are these.
If any know another to be guiltie of High-Treason, and doe conceal it.
If any Forge or Counterfeit Forreign Coyn, not currant here.
If any utter Counterfeit Coyn, knowing it to be such.
If any strike, or draw a Sword to strike a Justice sitting in place of judgement.
Fellonies against the person of another are those.
If any commit Homicide, viz. kill or slay another.
If out of precedent malice, exprest or implyed, it is murther.
If upon a sudden falling out, it is man-slaughter.
If in doing a lawfull Action, it is called Chance-Medley, misadventure or misfortune.
If in his own defence, it is so stiled, Homicide se defendendum; and so also Poisoning, Stabbing, and Witching to death are Homicides.
If any commit Rape, viz. have the carnall knowledge of a woman against her Will, or with her Will, if shee bee under ten years old
If any take away, or consent, or assist to take away any Maid, Widdow, or Wife against her Will, she being then interested in Lands or Goods.
If any marry a second Husband, or Wife, the first being alive.
If any commit Buggery, or Sodomy, a crime Inter Christianos non nominandum, sayes the Indictment.
If any Gipsey or counterfeit Egyptian have continued a moneth within this Nation.
If any person appointed by Law to abjure, refuse it, or returne after abjuration.
If any do wilfully and maliciously cut out the Tongue, or put out the eyes of another.
If any receive, or relieve, or maintain any Jesuite or other Seminary Priest, knowing him to be such.
If any incorrigible Rogue, judged dangerous, and banished, return again:
If any dangerous Rogue, branded in the Shoulder, returne again to a Roguish life.
If any person infected with the Plague wilfully go abroad, and converse among company.
Felonies against the Possession are these.
If any break a Dwelling-House in the night, with intent to do any Felonious Act there.
If any robb another by the high way, or take any thing privately from his person.
If any take the Goods of another in his absence, with intent to steal them.
If any servant go away with his Masters Goods (delivered to him) with intent to steal them, being of the value of forty shillings, or above.
If any robb a Church.
If any maliciously burn the House, or Stack of Corn, or Barne of Corn of another.
If any take up a Hawk, and do not carry her to the Sheriffe to be proclaimed.
If any do the second time forge any Deed, Evidence, or Writing, and publish it to be a good Deed.
If any acknowledge a Fine, or Judgement, or Deed to be inrolled in the Name of another, and not being the true person.
If any Rase, Imbezzell, or withdraw any Record of the Court.
If any use the Art of Multiplication of Gold, or Silver.
If any Hunt by night in Parks or Warrens with painted Faces, or other disguises, and deny it upon examination.
If any persons above twelve in number raise any Tumults or unlawfull assemblies.
If above 40 persons shal assemble together to do any unlawfull Act, and shall continue together three hours after Proclamation for their departure.
If any depart out of this Nation to serve a Forraigne Prince, without leave, and before Bond entered, and Oath taken according to the Statute.
If any Soldier, or Marriner, who hath received Prest-wages, according to the Statute, do afterward depart from their Service without License.
If any such Souldier or Marriner do wander and begge, without a Passe, or if they counterfeit their Passe.
If any Person having the Custody of publike Stores of Victuall, or Ammunition, imbezzell or purloin any of it, to the value of twenty shillings, or above.
If any do the second time transport sheep beyond-Sea.
If any perswade another to commit any Felony, or receive and assist any Felon after the Felonie committed, these are Accessaries to the Felonie.
If any rescue a Felon from prison.
if any Felon break Prison, and escape, or be suffered to escape, and be rescued.
Misprision of Felony is this.
If any know another to have committed Felony, and do not reveal it.
Trespasses and Offences against the peace Finable are these.
If any Menace, Assault, Beat, or wound another.
if any make unlawfull entry upon other mens Lands, or unlawfully take away other mens Goods.
if any make unlawfull Assemblies, Routs, or Riots.
If any chide, or brawle, or draw a weapon to strike, or doe strike in a Church or Church-yard.
if any keep a Fair, or Market in a Church or Church-yard.
If any say, or hear Masse
If Papists be absent from Church a moneth together
If any keep a Recusant Schoolmaster, or other Recusant servant in his house:
If any shall voluntarily disturb the Preacher in his Sermon:
If any affirm that the eating of Fish, or forbearing flesh at set times is necessary for our salvation, or for other purpose, then as a politick constitution:
If any frame, make, or publish any false, scandalous, or libellous Writing or Picture against another, or to the disgrace of others, or whereby to move contention amongst men.
And touching this devillish invention of Libelling and Defaming others, in these dayes more frequent then ever, by false and horrible lies and slanders, and Pamphlets publisht even against the Parliament it self and every Member of it, and every man that wishes well to it, your selves can testifie how frequent it is, and hath been of late, and therefore I beseech you be carefull to finde out some of those who have been offenders in it:
And thus you have here mention of the Offences against Publike Peace, which are as so many Diseases in the Heart of the Potique Body of the Commonwealth.