From The Early
Stuarts, 1603 to 1660, by Godfrey Davies, Oxford University History of
England
ELIZABETH I died early on 24 March 1603, but not before she
had signified that James VI of Scotland should succeed her. The privy council at
once issued a proclamation of the Scottish king's accession as James I of
England, in a form to which he had previously assented. His peaceful accession
was welcomed with practical unanimity, and, we are told, 'the like joy, both in
London and all parts of England, was never known'. The king spent a month on his
progress from Edinburgh to London, and the first impressions his new subjects
gained were favourable. His familiarity and courtesy were praised on every side,
and his zeal for hunting endeared him at once to many. The gentry who flocked to
see him were rewarded by knighthoods, with a profusion far in excess of any
previous grants.
James VI, born in 1566 and crowned king of Scotland the
next year, began to reign formally in 1578 and actually in 1583. Educated by
George Buchanan, the Scottish humanist, he became one of the most learned of
kings, especially in theology, his main interest. His knowledge did not broaden
his mind but made him pedantic and pedagogic. Throughout his life he aspired to
instruct his subjects and wrote treatises and delivered speeches to teach them
the obedience they owed to God's vicegerent on earth. His precocious
self-conceit increased with his success in suppressing the disorders in the
Western Isles and along the Border and in attacking presbyterianism. He accepted
the presbyterian doctrine but hated the discipline as incompatible with his
theories of divine right. His confidence in his statecraft grew after his
peaceful succession to the English throne because he attributed it to his
intrigues with English statesmen and continental rulers. It was really due to
heredity and the absence of any suitable alternative. From an early age in
Scotland until his death in England he felt a strange infatuation for favourites
chosen for their youth, graceful and handsome figures, and willingness to
flatter their master. His habit of fondling them, and especially Buckingham, in
public gave rise to suspicions of baser intimacies in private, but these are not
proved. Naturally indolent, he could concentrate on business only for short
periods. He was at best in a small circle of intimates when his learning and
pawky wit enlivened conversation: he was at his worst on state occasions because
he wholly lacked kingly dignity.
James determined to make no radical changes among the
ministers who had served Elizabeth. He had already assured Cecil that he
regarded him as his principal upholder, and continued him in office as chief
adviser. The choice was the best possible, and until his death, in 1612, Cecil
restrained the king from such graver follies as then followed. Unfortunately,
however, Cecil, for all his integrity, tireless industry, and administrative
skill, could do little more than project into the future the worn-out ideals of
the past. He was, like his royal master, totally unable to appreciate the aims
or principles of those who differed from him, and could never understand either
Bacon or Raleigh. In common with most sublime mediocrities, he distrusted
original ideas of every kind, and never perceived that a changing world demanded
policies far different from those in which he had been trained at the court of
Elizabeth. At a time when the centre of political gravity was rapidly shifting,
he left no mark at all upon constitutional history. An observation his cousin,
Francis Bacon, is reputed to have made to James I exactly sums up his place in
the national annals: 'I do think he was no fit counsellor to make your affairs
better; but yet he was fit to have kept them from growing worse'.
It is highly significant that one consequence of the king's
retention of Cecil as his chief minister was the dismissal of Raleigh from his
post as captain of the guard, though a generous pecuniary compensation was
provided. Disappointed ambition prompted Raleigh to listen to, though probably
not to take an active part in, a wild project of Cobham's to supplant James by
his cousin, Arabella Stuart, an English-born descendant of Margaret, daughter of
Henry VII, from whom the king's title was derived. For this Raleigh was tried,
found guilty, and condemned to death, but reprieved and confined in the Tower.
From a modern standard his trial was unfair, and posterity has reversed
unanimously the contemporary verdict. Most of the blame must be laid to the
procedure then followed in criminal trials, but Sir Edward Coke conducted the
prosecution with a ferocity perhaps unequalled in English courts of law until
the time of Jeffreys and the 'Bloody Assize'.
Another sign of the times was revealed at the beginning of
1604, when James issued a proclamation for the choice of members of parliament,
because in it he directed that all election returns should be made into
chancery, where any found contrary to the proclamation would be rejected as
unlawful. This order was responsible for the first of many disagreements between
king and parliament. When the houses met, the unusually large attendance
testified to the importance men attached to the occasion. From James's opening
speech the future of the reign might have been foretold, for it disclosed at
once the wide gulf fixed between the royal policy and public opinion. After
eulogies on the peace with Spain and the union of the crowns of England and
Scotland, the king passed to religion. He praised the church of England, but
regretted the existence of two bodies that refused to live within its folds. The
puritans and 'novelists' he denounced for 'being ever discontented with the
present government, and impatient to suffer any superiority; which maketh their
sect unable to be suffered in any well-governed commonwealth'. Turning to the
Roman catholics, he acknowledged theirs to be the mother church, although
defiled by some infirmities and corruptions. The leniency he had already shown
proved that he was against persecution, but he could not tolerate priests within
his kingdom so long as they upheld the papal claim to dethrone princes and
approved the assassination of heretical rulers.
Before proceeding to other business, the commons took up
two cases of privilege. The one finally secured freedom of members from arrest
except for treason, felony, or breach of the peace. Shirley, a member, had been
arrested for debt and held in the Fleet, and it was not until the warden of that
prison had been committed to the Tower and acts of parliament asserting that
members had always enjoyed this privilege had received the royal assent that
Shirley was released to take his seat.1 The other was of greater importance, for
it produced the first clash between king and parliament. In the Buckinghamshire
election Goodwin, an outlaw, had defeated Fortescue, but the court of chancery
had declared the election void, and Fortescue was then chosen at a by-election.
The house at once summoned Goodwin, and after hearing his statement ordered him
to take his seat. James thereupon intervened and told the commons that, since
all their privileges were derived from him, he did not expect them to be used
against himself. Under the law, the house ought not to meddle with returns,
which should be sent to chancery and there corrected if they needed it. The
commons then realized that the question had suddenly assumed a new
significance--that Goodwin versus Fortescue had become the case of the whole
kingdom. The commons therefore maintained a firm but conciliatory attitude, and
at length James, after commanding them 'as an absolute king' to hold a
conference with the judiciary, gave way and admitted that they were the proper
judges of their own returns, while they in gratitude ordered the issue of a new
writ for Buckinghamshire. There can
be no doubt that the commons had won their first skirmish with prerogative.
The commons then passed to the discussion of some practical
grievances, such as purveyance and wardship. Both were relics of feudalism and
both had long survived the reasons for their original existence. In a petition
the commons summed up at length the case against purveyance, of which Bacon said
to James: 'There is no grievance in your kingdom so general, so continual, so
sensible, and so bitter unto the common subject.' 4 They mentioned that, in
spite of thirty-six or more laws prohibiting the abuse of this privilege, there
were still many grievances: that those responsible for requisitioning carts
habitually demanded a number far beyond the requirement and exacted money before
discharging those not wanted; that victuals and firing were taken at a price not
greater than a fourth part of the true value, and that not in ready money; and
that warrants were sent for excessive quantities of hay, straw, and oats of
which the carriage alone often cost the subject twice as much as he received for
his produce. In seeking the support of the lords, the commons struck a snag, for
they found that there the opinion was held that compensation to the amount of
£50,000 per annum should be granted.
1 This raised a most important question of principle, for the commons
felt that, if purveyance was abused, there was no reason why compensation should
be granted for the surrender by the Crown of these abuses; while the lords,
voicing the opinion of the Crown, assumed that, as the royal revenue was already
inadequate for the king's needs, no source should be abandoned unless an
alternative were offered. There was much to be said for both sides, for
unquestionably the Stuart monarchs, although extravagant, were never in
possession of sufficient revenue to perform the functions pertinent to their
office. On the other hand, instead of presenting the issue fairly to parliament,
they preferred either to try to drive a hard bargain with the national
representatives or to rely upon extra-legal devices to fill their coffers.
Wardship was in a position somewhat different from that of
purveyance. The right of the king to the wardship of tenantsin-chief who were
minors, to take the land of a minor into his own hand, to pocket the profits,
and to arrange the marriage of an heiress under age, was unquestionable in point
of law. But, here again, the legal right flourished long after the feudal duties
that had once justified it had vanished. The court of wards had already become
an obnoxious anachronism and a source of annoyance and expense to landowners.
Fathers, in making their wills, had to face the difficulty of providing for the
purchase from the king, or his officers, of the wardships of their children;2
and a faithful servant of the Crown, like Strafford, hoped that he might be
rewarded with the wardship of his own son.
1 Moreover an odious traffic in the rights of wardship developed, often
to the enrichment of greedy courtiers. In this case the commons, recognizing
that the system was legal, offered to provide, in another way, a larger revenue
than the king had ever obtained from the court of wards, but, instead of thanks,
received one of the frequent scoldings that the king, 'as a father to his
children', was wont to inflict upon them.
2
The result was the Apology of the House of Commons, which
is a statement, couched in firm, dutiful language, of parliamentary privileges
and a defence of the proceedings in the lower house. It deserves the closest
study, both because it reveals the position the commons took up and maintained
for the next forty years--that their privileges were the general liberties of
England--and because it was an authoritative pronouncement of the reforms or
changes deemed necessary at the beginning of the new reign. After the statement
that their privileges had been 'more universally and dangerously impugned than
ever (as we suppose) since the beginnings of parliaments', the commons point out
that freedom of election had been attacked and freedom of speech prejudiced by
reproofs. Therefore they must protest, they say, because 'the prerogatives of
princes may easily, and daily grow [while] the privileges of the subject are for
the most part at an everlasting stand'. They declare that the liberties of the
commons of England consist chiefly in free election, freedom from arrest during
parliamentary sessions, and freedom of speech, and assert that these privileges
are their right and due inheritance. As regards religion, they deny that the
king could make any alterations or laws except by consent of parliament. They
had not come, they say, in any puritan spirit to attempt the subversion of the
ecclesiastical status quo, but, for the sake of peace and unity, ask that 'some
few ceremonies of small importance' might be abandoned. After mentioning
purveyance and wardship, they conclude by stating that 'the voice of the people,
in the things of their knowledge, is said to be as the voice of God'. 3
Apparently the Apology was never presented to the king, but it stands on record
as an undelivered 'lecture to a foreign king on the constitutional customs of
the realm which he had come to govern, but which he so imperfectly understood'.
1
On the other hand there is little doubt that a copy of the
petition reached the king's hands, for, in his speech at the prorogation, he
scornfully observed that it was easy to make apologies when no man was present
to answer them. His main complaint was that in the parliament there was 'nothing
but curiosity, from morning to evening, to find fault with my propositions', and
that he had not been accorded due respect. Here, like all the Stuarts, James was
treating expressions of national grievances as if they were personal insults. He
seems to have regarded parliamentary complaints as breaches of good manners, and
persistence in the redress of grievances as disloyalty. His attitude towards the
national representatives was both paternal and contemptuous. Like a father, he
wished his people to believe that whatever he did was for their good; but the
thesis that their representatives should decide what was good or bad for the
country was rank sedition to him. Criticism seemed to emanate either from 'idle
heads' or disloyal hearts. There was thus no sympathy between king and
parliament because there was no understanding.
Disagreement on religion was greater than on any other
question. 2 Probably the sentiments of the majority in parliament were voiced in
the puritan appeal, presented to the king on his first entrance into England,
which has become known as the Millenary Petition. At the resultant Hampton Court
conference James's determination not to accede to the moderate demands for
relaxation of ceremonial, and his declaration that he would make puritans
conform, were fatal obstacles to a good understanding with parliament. In the
Apology the commons had hoped that the relinquishment of a few ceremonies of
slight importance would secure a perpetual uniformity, but James and Bancroft
(who was nominated archbishop of Canterbury in October 1604) meant to achieve
unity by the rigid enforcement of the law. 3
Another difficulty in the way of a good understanding
between king and parliament was presented by the catholic question. James,
hankering after a union with Rome, was averse to gratifying his protestant
subjects by a uniform enforcement of the penal code, and treated catholics
according to dynastic or personal, rather than national or religious,
considerations. By alternately permitting and relaxing persecution he created
distrust among protestants and failed to win the confidence of catholics. The
occasional martyrdom of priests 1
and the more frequent exaction of recusancy fines
2 made some of the bolder catholics despair of any lasting alleviation of
their cruel lot. The result was the Gunpowder Treason or Plot. A small band
headed by Robert Catesby hired a cellar under the houses of parliament, had it
well stored with barrels of gunpowder, and arranged for Guy Fawkes to apply the
torch. They hoped that if king, lords, and commons were all blown up, they might
profit by the inevitable confusion among protestants to seize the reins of
government. 3 Their plot failed
completely, but it inevitably deepened the national hatred against them, and
increased the severity of the penal code.
The next parliamentary session began under the shadow of
the Gunpowder Plot, and was adjourned immediately after a speech from the
throne, in which James tried to enlighten his hearers by enlarging upon the true
nature of monarchy, declaring that kings were God's 'vice-gerents on earth, and
so adorned and furnished with some sparkles of the Divinitie', 4 and upon the
function of parliament: 'Neither is this a place . . . for every rash and
harebrained fellow to propone new lawes of his owne invention.' 5 Nevertheless,
when parliament assembled again, there was an unwonted harmony between king and
estates: a generous financial grant was made, and an act, passed in the previous
session, to appoint commissioners representing England and Scotland to treat of
a union between the two kingdoms, was extended. 6
The proposed union was the main topic of discussion in the
third session ( 1606-7). In his opening speech James strongly urged the
importance of the union, and stressed three essentials: that all existing laws
framed to provide for possible hostilities between the two kingdoms might be
abrogated; that free trade should be established; and that those of his subjects
born before his accession to the English Crown might be considered naturalized.
When these preliminaries are completed the two nations 'shall ever acknowledge
one church and one king; and be joined, in a perpetual marriage, for the peace
and prosperity of both nations, and for the honour of their king'.
1 The ideal that James set before parliament was not destined to be
realized for another century. The old hatred between England and Scotland had
become less vehement but was still strong. Englishmen knew little of Scotland
and cared less. 2 Many of the
English despised the Scots as a nation of beggarly peasants or pedlars, or
simply as men living by robbery or treachery. James's generosity to favourites
whose sole merit was their nationality had made Scots more unpopular than ever,
and it was easy to represent them as greedy adventurers who would devour the
land like so many boars. 3
The debates naturally turned on the question of free trade
and naturalization. The London merchants protested that they would be ruined by
the competition of Scots, who would be on hand whenever a bargain was to be made
but would disappear across the border when taxes became due. Similarly the
trading companies would soon be filled by Scots, and Englishmen deprived of a
living. These and other arguments were utilized in the commons, where violent
speeches abusing the Scots were listened to without disapproval until the king
protested. In vain Bacon urged that England was not so overpopulated that the
influx of a few Scots would make any real difference, that naturalization must
precede any attempt to assimilate the laws of the two countries, and that to
join them had been the lifelong effort of Edward I, one of the greatest English
kings. He cited examples from classical as well as modern European history, to
prove how beneficial unions similar to the one in question had proved, but his
hearers remained unconvinced. They closed their ears to the opinion of the legal
advisers of the Crown, that by the common law the Post-nati (the name given to
those born in Scotland after James's accession) were ipso facto naturalized.
They took up the position that they would have a 'perfect union' or nothing. By
this they meant, as Sir Edwin Sandys stated, an incorporating union under which
there would be one parliament and one law for both kingdoms.
1
In view of the strength of the national prejudice, James
had perforce to abandon his well-meant plan, and be content with the verdict at
a collusive legal action, usually known as Calvin's case, 2 by which it was
declared that the Post-nati were naturalborn subjects of the king of England.
Coke recognized that the action was 'the weightiest for the consequent, both for
the present and for all posterity'; and in fact, as the historian of English law
states, it made 'a uniform status for natural-born subjects, not only in England
and Scotland, but also in the many lands which, in the succeeding centuries,
were added to the king's dominions'. 3
This use of the law-courts to declare as already existing
law what parliament was unwilling to enact, was capable of dangerous extension.
Both the first Stuarts were prone to appeal to the judges for confirmation of
their own interpretations of legal points, and to regard them as natural
upholders of the prerogative. This was the more serious inasmuch as there were
many vital questions about which the law was not clear, for precedents might be
cited on both sides. An example of extreme importance was now afforded of the
prejudice a subject might suffer by the legal interpretation of a disputed right
of taxation.
The case was that of John Bate, a merchant, who refused to
pay a customs duty on currants. The previous history of this duty is somewhat
complicated. Elizabeth had first granted a monopoly for the importation of
currants from Venice, which then largely controlled the Levant trade. Later,
when the Levant Company was formed, it had permitted non-members to import
currants on payment of 5s. 6d. per hundredweight, but the company did not
prosper, and, after various schemes had been tried, its charter was surrendered,
at the beginning of James's reign, and the trade thrown open, though an
imposition was levied upon importation. Even so, the king had to remit arrears
of duties amounting to C 13,000 to the merchants. However, when Bate had a
cartload of currants driven from the waterside before examination by the customs
official and declared to the council that he had so acted because he believed
the imposition to be illegal, the government decided to bring the whole question
formally before the court of exchequer. The decision of Chief Baron Fleming is
worthy of the closest analysis, inasmuch as it presents a theory of the royal
prerogative widely held and long continuing. The impositions, he said, were
duties newly levied by the king, without parliamentary authority, in order to
augment his revenues. A king's power is both ordinary and absolute, and differs
according to the ends it serves. The ordinary power concerns individuals, the
execution of civil justice, and the determining of meum; is exercised in the
ordinary courts of law according to common law; and is subject to parliament.
The absolute power exists for the general benefit of the whole people, is
governed by rules of policy, and varies according to what the wisdom of the king
thinks is for the common good. Since all customs duties, be they old or new, are
simply 'the effects and issues' of foreign trade, and since all foreign affairs,
including commerce, are controlled by the absolute power of the king,
impositions are rightly levied by this extraordinary prerogative. So far as
foreign commodities are concerned, no act of parliament or petition was ever
made against an impost upon alien goods, but the tax had been paid.
1
On the whole, although Fleming's statement about the
absolute or extraordinary prerogative of the Crown was capable of dangerous
extension, he seems to have made it clear that this power was reserved for the
regulation of foreign commerce, and his decision did not countenance its use
solely for taxative purposes. The distinction he drew, by inference, between a
duty to raise money and one to control trade, was probably sound according to
precedent. Both Elizabeth and James had clearly been more concerned to foster
trade with the Levant than to raise a revenue from it. And the judgement in
Bate's case apparently gave a legal justification for their policies. It was not
the fault of the legal authorities concerned if James stretched the decision to
cover additional impositions that were levied merely in order to increase the
royal revenue.
To Salisbury, the treasurer, this decision seemed a
godsend, and he proceeded to lay new impositions on merchandise, 1 though he was
careful to make them as little onerous as possible and acted only after
consulting the chief city merchants. Since the estimated yield of the new levies
was £70,000, and the possibilities of raising further revenue from this source
were not yet exhausted, the danger that the king might secure an adequate income
independent of parliament was very real. Therefore it was natural that when
parliament reassembled in 1610 impositions should be called in question.
Salisbury explained in some detail the state of the national finances: that in
spite of unparalleled exertions by which £700,000 of debt had been paid off,
there was still owing £300,000, and that the revenue fell short of the
requirements by £50,000, without allowing for extraordinary expenses. Members,
however, were not impressed and they evinced more zeal for checking the
prodigality of the court than for voting additional taxes. Wentworth's 2 speech
is probably typical of the general sentiments: that it was useless to grant any
more supplies unless the king would resume the pensions he had given to
courtiers and reduce his own expenses. 'For his part . . . he would never give
his consent to take money from a poore frize jerkyn to trappe a courtier's horse
with all.' He was in favour of petitioning His Majesty to practise economy and
to live of his own without further exactions from his poor subjects, especially
in a time of peace. Otherwise, a precedent of Richard II's reign might be
followed, when the king's excessive gifts and extravagance caused the
appointment of a council to inquire into these excesses.
Other speakers were more eager to remove grievances, such
as monopolies, purveyance, and wardship, than to suggest ways to make good the
loss their abolition would entail. The unwillingness of the commons to grant an
income that would have made the
king largely independent of parliament was probably increased when attention was
called to a law dictionary, The Interpreter, compiled by John Cowell. In this
book the royal authority is enhanced to the highest point, and its writer leaves
the impression that in his opinion the king is absolute and above the laws, and
only admits the concurrence in legislation of the three estates through his
benignity or by reason of his coronation oath
1. Before there was time to prepare an address, the king prudently sent a
message to the two houses in which he disavowed the theory of the prerogative,
as set forth by Cowell, and acknowledged that he had no power either to make
laws or levy subsidies without parliamentary assent. He therefore ordered the
suppression of the obnoxious volume.
2
After this interruption, attention once again centred on
the state of the royal income. The commons were now willing that compensation
should be given to the king in return for his surrender of all he received from
feudal tenures except aids, but they offered only when twice that amount was
demanded by the court. They declined to proceed, and, instead, began to consider
grievances (among them impositions). Forbidden to discuss them and told by James
that he would not have his prerogative called in question, the commons engaged
in an animated debate, in which claims were advanced that members might discuss
any subject that concerned the welfare of the kingdom. Accordingly a petition
was drawn up and., unlike the Apology, entered in full in the journal. The
commons now asserted that parliament enjoyed the ancient and undoubted right to
debate freely all matters affecting the subject, and sought permission to make a
thorough examination of the new imposi tions. Thereupon James. drew back,
admitting that impositions were proper subjects for parliamentary inquiry.
Accordingly a discussion of unusual length and gravity ensued, in the course of
which the issue was fairly stated by a legal antiquary, William Hakewill: 'The
question now in debate amongst us is, whether His Majesty may, by 6 prerogative
royal, without assent of parliament, at his own will and pleasure, lay a new
charge or imposition upon merchandises, to be brought into, or out of this
kingdome of England,, and enforce merchants to pay the same? 3 The same speaker,
in an exhaustive examination of precedents, made out a good case against the
right of the Crown to levy new customs for revenue purposes, and the general
feeling of the house was clearly with him. Therefore Salisbury once more tried
to arrange a compromise and eventually succeeded in inducing the commons to
offer £200,000.1 In a memorial the commons stated the concessions they expected
from the king in return for the increased revenue he would receive. Purveyance,
wardship, and other feudal relics were to be abolished (except aids, restricted
in amount to £25,000), and possession of an estate for sixty years was to be a
sufficient title against the king and his heirs. Four English counties now
subject to the jurisdiction of the council of Wales were henceforth to be exempt
therefrom. 2
In his answer, delivered just before the prorogation, James
took up other grievances as well as those mentioned above. He dealt at some
length with various alleged ecclesiastical abuses, but, although his tone was
conciliatory, he refused to promise more than that he would examine each point
carefully and frame such remedies as his princely wisdom suggested. However
adroitly he might contrive his answer to the commons' petitions, his feeling
obviously was that ecclesiastical questions were no fit subjects for
parliamentary interference, and that he meant jealously to safeguard his
supremacy. Similarly, in touching upon the proposed restriction of the council
of Wales, he would only promise to consider the matter. 3 In other words his
attitude was that the commons after bringing grievances to his notice should
thenceforth be content to leave their redress to him.
When parliament reassembled, the commons began to discuss
the king's answer to their memorial, and it soon became evident that there was
every intention to insist on a more definite and satisfactory response. On the
other hand James now thought the proposed bargain unacceptable, and insisted
that a grant should be made to pay his debts and also that his additional
revenue should be augmented by another C i oo,ooo. The result of these fresh
demands was to stiffen opposition, and there were plain speeches delivered
against the Scottish favourites and the extravagance of the court. At last James
lost patience and first adjourned and then dissolved parliament. Thereupon the
Cgreat contract' vanished into oblivion.
The history of this first parliament of James I is most
important as the prototype of many others. During its sessions the Tudor system
of government had been on trial and its inadequacy was exposed. James had failed
partly because he lacked the personality of his famous predecessor. Yet it is
very doubtful whether even Queen Elizabeth could have succeeded, for both these
sovereigns regarded parliament as an unwelcome and intrusive body that had to be
cajoled by occasional concessions into granting much-needed subsidies. It was,
they felt, a nuisance born of financial necessities. Consequently they directed
all their efforts to excluding the estates from any share in administration and
listened to criticisms only when they either became unusually vehement or when
the fiscal situation was especially serious. There are other, less fundamental
reasons why James failed to control parliament as successfully as Elizabeth. He
allowed the dominant position which the privy councillors had occupied in the
sixteenth century to be weakened by their paucity and slight influence. During
this parliament there were only two or three councillors in the commons, and
none of them ever acquired any real leadership in debate. The absence of such
leadership as the Elizabethan councillors had supplied, naturally led
back-bcnchers to accept guidance from private members. Although Sir Edwin Sandys
cannot be regarded as the leader of the opposition, in any modem sense of that
term, the feebleness of the court representatives gave him an opportunity which
he skilfully utilized to concentrate the attention of the house upon such
grievances as purveyance or impositions. In addition members found a way to free
themselves from the control which privy councillors had exercised over
committees, by enlarging them so that they became committees of the whole house.
This change in procedure grew more and more important in the twenties and was
admirably suited to training and developing leaders in the struggle against the
court. Thus the tide was already advancing strongly in resistance to that system
of monarchy which James loved so well.
1 His complete failure to appraise the new spirit that was animating
members, and his entire lack of sympathy with popular opinion, were plainly
revealed after the dissolution of his first parliament, in which criticism of
his beloved Scots had been frequent. He now scattered £34,000 among his
favourites stly fellow countrymen, and created Robert Carr Viscount Rochester,
thereby for the first time enabling a Scot to sit in the house of lords.
1
Salisbury, who was mainly responsible for the royal policy,
did not long survive the first parliament of the reign; and his death in 1612
removed a powerful restraint, for hitherto James had been kept from serious
errors by the awe his minister inspired in him. Almost at once a change is
noticeable, and a more frivolous tone perceptible. For the next nine years the
domestic history of England largely consists of the annals of the court, where
the most important events were the fall of one favourite and his supersession by
another. The king seems to have felt that he had been unduly overshadowed by
Salisbury, who had engrossed the two offices of lord treasurer and secretary of
state. Accordingly the treasury was put into commission and the king was his own
secretary of state for nearly two years, until the appointment of Sir Ralph
Winwood. Both arrangements worked badly, for the treasury steadily increased its
indebtedness and the king was much too indolent to transact the business of an
office that required daily attention. He came to rely more and more upon
Rochester, whom he hoped to fashion into a useful instrument to carry out the
royal policy, but was himself moulded to the wishes of the favourite, and thus
became involvrd volved in an infamous tragedy. Rochester was enamoured of
Frances ( Howard), wife of the earl of Essex, and daughter of the earl of
Suffolk and great-niece of the earl of Northampton, the leaders of the
pro-Spanish faction in England. James was so infatuated with Rochesterz that he
must be held responsible for the success of the suit for nullity which the
countess brought, inasmuch as he appointed new members, carefully chosen, to a
.Commission that was evenly divided. To the great scandal of honest men, Lady
Essex was thus enabled to marry her paramour. One result of this unhallowed
union between a daughter of the Howard family and the special friend of the king
was the triumph of the Spanish faction at the court. Their influence over the
king was much strengthened after the dissolution of the Addled Parliament.
The elections to this parliament 1684 created unusual
excitement owing to the activities of some self-appointed 'undertakers' who
hoped to secure the return of members likely to support the court. The extent of
their interference was much exaggerated by rumour, and this in itself sufficed
to secure their defeat. James made two speeches, early in the parliament, in
which he acknowledged that there was a great increase of popery; this he
attributed to the impunity the papists enjoyed in consequence of the failure of
the proper officers to make presentments against them. He was careful to add
that no religion or heresy had ever been extirpated by violence. He confessed
his need of parliamentary grants and blamed his heavy family expenses,--the
burial of his son Henry and the marriage of his daughter Elizabeth whom he had
sacrificed in the interest of religion and the commonwealth. He denounced as
utterly false the reports that he had relied upon the undertakers, and denied
that he had aided or hindered any man at the election. As for grievances, let
each member present those of his own constituency, but let them not be heaped
together in a scroll which would cast aspersions upon his government and evince
discontent rather than desire for reformation.
Speedy disillusion awaited James's hope that the commons
would revert to the earliest stages of parliament, when individual petitions
were presented. Instead prompt consideration was given to a bill against
impositions--a vexed question left over from the last parliament. In their
desire for support the commons appealed to the lords, but their co-operation was
denied in a close division in which the majority was largely composed of
bishops, courtiers, and the two Scots who had been created English peers. To
make matters worse, Neile, bishop of Lincoln and one of the worst of sycophants,
who was possibly angered by a speech in the commons charging the clergy with
leading scandalous lives, 1 delivered a strong attack upon the commons. Let not
the lords enter into a conference, he said, on a bill that struck at the very
root of the prerogative. They would be sure to hear undutiful and seditious
speeches, tending to distract both houses and alienate the king and his
subjects.2. When the commons complained of this speech Neile apologized with
tears, but the commons were stir unsatisfied. Not content with debating the
bishop's speech against them in the upper house, they strayed like lost sheep
into all kinds of trifling accusations concerning his conduct in his diocese.
When they were sharply pulled up by the king, angry complaints were made about
the royal favourites and pensioners. The result was a dissolution. James gave
his version of the trouble to the Spanish ambassador, Sarmiento:
The house of commons is a body without a head. The members give their opinions
in a disorderly manner. At their meetings nothing is heard but cries, shouts and
confusion. I am surprised that my ancestors should ever have permitted such an
institution to come into existence. I am a stranger, and found it here when I
arrived, so that I am obliged to put up with what I cannot get rid of. 1
The need for money, which had been responsible for calling
a parliament, survived its dissolution. To raise funds James issued a general
appeal for a benevolence. This began with genuinely free gifts, offered to the
king by courtiers and others, and for a time retained its original character;
but it soon became apparent that the example of generosity would not be
generally followed. Thereupon the privy council attempted to use the sheriffs
and justices of the peace as its local agents. These latter were instructed to
inform people of means, within their respective counties, that free gifts to His
Majesty would be regarded as proofs of good affections and held in grateful
remembrance.2 What happened in Devonshire is typical of the whole country. There
the justices informed the privy council of their anxiety that posterity would
suffer if they established such a precedent. 'Nothing but the fear of the just
blame of after ages' impelled them to refuse what they would always be willing
to give in accordance with the ancient and lawful customs of the kingdom. At
this juncture they were summoned before the council, where it was proved that
free gifts without coercion had often been made to the king's progenitors.3
Nevertheless, in spite of these appeals, the amount raised from the whole
country was only about,£40,000, plus £20,000from the City and courtiers.
Meanwhile Rochester's pre-eminence at court was being
threatened by the appearance there of George Villiers, the son of a
Leicestershire knight, first introduced to the king in 1614 and appointed a
gentleman of the bedchamber and knighted in April of the next year. The good
looks and facile manners of the young man alarmed Rochester, and he upbraided
the king bitterly. The royal apologia is one of the most curious documents in
English history. The king confesses that the favourite had 'deserved more trust
and confidence of me than ever man did,-in secrecy above all flesh, in feeling
and impartial respect, as well to my honour in every degree as to my profit'.
Yet these merits have recently been 'mixed with strange streams of unquietness,
passion, fury, and insolent pride, and (which is worst of all) with a settled
kind of induced obstinacy'. The favourite's sharp and bitter railing made
Peacham's treatise, a gentle admonition in comparison, and seemed intended to
persuade the writer that he was to be overawed rather than loved. This discourse
proceeded from the infinite grief of a deeply wounded heart, which had suffered
as much as it could endure. The king continues:
Neither can I bear it longer without admitting an unpardonable sin against God
in consuming myself wilfully, and not only myself, but in perilling thereby not
only the good estate of mine own people, but even the state of religion through
all Christendom, which almost wholly, under God, rests now upon my shoulders. Be
not the occasion of the hastening of his death through grief, who was not only
your creator under God, but hath many a time prayed for you, which I never did
for any subject alive but for you. . . . Hold me thus by the heart; you may
build upon my favour as upon a rock that never shall fail you. [Reward me with
your love and obedience for] it hath ever been my common answer to any, that
would plead for favour to a puritan minister by reason of his rare gifts, that I
had rather have a conformable man with but ordinary parts, than the rarest men
in the world, that will not be obedient.' 2
Rochester's downfall, however, came about not from sullen
rudeness to the king but from the discovery of a shocking crime. When Rochester
first became involved in a liaison with Lady Essex, he had not infrequently
profited by the superior intelligence of Sir Thomas Overbury, an early friend.
But when the annulment permitted Rochester to regularize his relations with his
paramour, Ovcrbury did his utmost to dissuade him from marrying her. To get this
inconvenient mentor out of the way, James was induced to offer Overbury a
diplomatic appointment, and, when that was refused, to confine the unfortunate
knight in the Tower. This punishment failed to satisfy the bitter hatred of the
countess, even when she had attained her ambition and become the wife of
Rochester. After a number of failures Overbury was successfully poisoned. The
crime was not unearthed for two years, but in spite of the lapse of time ample
evidence was forthcoming to convict the countess. The earl was found guilty too,
but it is by no means certain that he was an active participant in the crime.
Both were pardoned, but the clemency encouraged a suspicion that the king had
connived at the murder. This was grossly unjust, but James's infatuation for
Rochester, and the active part he had taken in Lady Essex's case, justified the
general disgust at the revelation of the character of one whom the king had
delighted to honour. Probably no single event, prior to the attempt to arrest
the five members in 1642, did more to lessen the general reverence with which
royalty was regarded in England than this unsavoury episode.
Another event that gave public opinion a profound shock was
the fall of Sir Edward Coke. For ten years he had been the champion of the
common law against the prerogative. He had maintained that the prerogative was
subject to definite legal limitations, and that the judges should see that it
did not exceed them. In opposition to Coke's views, legalists like Bacon tended
to magnify the prerogative until it seemed to be supreme in the state, and to
regard upholding the royal power as the special duty of the judges. just as
parliament had attacked what they at least regarded as the unconstitutional
proceedings of the Crown in the matter of taxation, so Coke and the common
lawyers tried to restrain within due bounds the prerogative courts, such as the
high commission. Ever since his appointment in i 6o6 as chiefjustice of the
court of common pleas, Coke had been a thorn in the flesh of churchmen on
account of the writs of prohibition he had issued against the court of high
commission. Similarly, in the famous case of proclamations, he had laid it down
once for all that the king could not by proclamation change the common law or
create any new offences, although he admitted that if the king prohibited by
proclamation what was already punishable by law future offenders would be guilty
of an aggravated offence. To silence this troublesome critic, James removed him
from the court of common pleas and made him chief justice of the king's bench,
but the promotion did not achieve its purpose. Coke continued to assert the
independence of the judicature, and in Peacham's case expressed the opinion that
judges should not be consulted individually and privately about a case already
pending, although for the present he did not protest against their consultation
in a body. The final quarrel between Coke and the king took place over the
question whether the king could command the common-law courts to desist from
hearing a case by issue of the writ de non procedendo rege inconsulto. The
judges made it clear that in their view the king could not control cases
pending, even if his interests might be involved. Summoned before the council,
the other judges retreated, but Coke stood his ground and was dismissed from his
office. The lord chancellor told Coke's successor that the dismissal was 'a
lesson to be learned of all, and to be remembered and feared of all that sit in
judicial places'. 1
Although some further examples were necessary before all
the judges were prepared to accept the subservient position assigned to them by
Stuart theories of government, Coke's disgrace was a heavy blow to the
independence of the judiciary. But his sacrifice of office rather than conform
to royal dictation was not in vain. Henceforth men became less and less disposed
to accept legal decisions as definitions of the constitution, until in time even
thoughtful men like Hyde 2 felt that the decision in Hampden's case was against
the plain and obvious meaning of the law. By the dismissal of independent judges
and the appointment of subservient successors, the early Stuarts obtained
servile instruments. But the very means they took to secure favourable decisions
deprived those decisions of all moral weight.
During the years that intervened between the fall of Coke
in 1616 and the meeting of parliament in 1621, domestic history contributes
little worthy of remembrance, except the advance of Buckingham3 in royal favour
and the fall of the Howards. This amily, which engrossed many of the offices of
state, was headed by Nottingham, lord high admiral, and Suffolk, lord high
treasurer. Buckingham, whose pride could not endure the presence at court of any
who did not owe their advancement to his influence, soon secured the exclusion
of both from the administration. Suffolk's conviction of accepting bribes came
none too soon, for the financial position had steadily deteriorated under him.
He was succeeded at first by a commission and then by its moving spirit,
Cranfield, who had begun life as a London apprentice but who, after amassing a
fortune in the City, had quickly won favour at court and secured the
treasurership and the title of earl of Middlesex. Nottingham had to resign after
a commission had presented a hostile report on the state of the navy. In this
case, also, the change was all to the good, for corruption and incompetence had
long reigned supreme in the navy. Although the annual cost of its upkeep was
constantly rising, the number of serviceable ships was little more than half the
total inherited from Elizabeth. James bragged that his choice fell not upon 'an
old beaten soldier for my admiral' but upon a young man whose honesty he trusted
( Buckingham), and there is no doubt that, thanks to the transformation of the
commission into a permanent navy board, the condition of affairs vastly
improved. Indeed it can be said that both at the treasury and at the admiralty
greater efficiency at less cost was secured by Buckingham and his nominees than
by their predecessors. Yet the price paid for these reforms was too high, for
Buckingham exacted servility from all, and honest criticism and outspoken advice
were no longer heard in James's court. Moreover the losses from the Howards'
corruption would have been trifling compared with those sustained through
Buckingham's overweening confidence in his capacity to rule England. And the
time was at hand when his ignorance of foreign affairs made free discussion in
the council essential.
The first stage of the Thirty Years War was now over, for
the battle of the White Mountain ( November 1620) ended Frederick's brief reign
in Bohemia. 1 It soon became evident, however, that his enemies would not be
content until they had also expelled him from the Upper and Lower Palatinate.
James, who had no direct responsibility for the rash adventure in Bohemia, felt
that he could not sit idly by while his son-in-law was despoiled of his
hereditary lands. Therefore, having failed to induce his subjects to contribute
liberally to a benevolence to help Frederick, he once again had recourse to a
parliament. The time seemed opportune to profit by the warm sympathy Englishmen
felt for Frederick, popularly regarded as a protestant champion threatened with
destruction by a Roman catholic coalition. Probably never in previous English
history had interest in public affairs, and particularly in foreign policy, been
so intense. Sermons were often devoted to the danger to continental
protestantism, and it is noteworthy that the earliest English newsbooks were
printed in Holland ( 1620-1) and dealt with foreign intelligence.
1 James, however, regarded this popular absorption in foreign news with
strong disapproval. It is wholly characteristic that, when Bacon drafted a
proclamation to explain to the electorate the situation of foreign affairs,
which necessitated a parliament, James's comment was that, as the people were
incapable of understanding state affairs, it was not fit that the king should
explain them. 2 He found it easy to
punish ministers who talked politics in the pulpit, and to issue a proclamation
against the excessive discussion of questions of state;
3 but the mass of Englishmen were too interested to be deterred. It is
probable that, as Bacon suggested, the disappointing results of the elections
were occasioned by recent events on the Continent and 'the general licentious
speaking of state matters'. 4
factor he overlooked was the depression lasting from about 1619 to 1624. Hard
times are usually blamed on the government by electors and there is no reason to
believe 1621 was an exception. 5
James's contempt for the opinions of the man in the street
and his determination to exclude members of parliament from all real influence
upon the direction of foreign affairs were fatal to his relations with the
legislature. He would need money to carry on whatever foreign policy he judged
best, but parliament would refuse grants unless it both knew and approved the
policy that required the expenditure. At present James was in a curious position
because parliament accepted one half of his foreign policy, his anxiety to
prevent the catholic powers from overrunning the Palatinate, but disliked the
other half, the Spanish match. 1 It
is just possible that, had the king given a strong lead in his opening speech to
parliament ( January 1621), domestic grievances would have been forgotten amid
the excitement of a spirited attempt to preserve Frederick in his hereditary
domains. Instead James disdained to take parliament into his confidence, and his
remarks were singularly ill suited to enlist the sympathies of his hearers. 'But
you of the Lower House,' he said, 'I would not have you to meddle with
complaints against the King, the church or state matters, nor with princes'
prerogatives.' 2 On the
all-engrossing question of foreign policy, he merely said that he would never
suffer the Spanish match to endanger religion and that he proposed to equip an
army in the summer to preserve his children's patrimony, and for this reason
supplies would be needed. No hint was afforded of the probable cost of the army
or of the extent of his commitments with foreign powers. Accordingly parliament
made the rather perfunctory grant of two subsidies, and then turned to redress
of grievances.
For some time there had been indications of the storm about
to break, because a writer of newsletters had noted that everybody was groaning
under the burden of monopolies, whose number had been multiplied by a score
since James's accession. 3 What made this burden the more unbearable was that
Elizabeth's gracious surrender in 1601 had seemed to lighten it permanently, for
she had agreed that the legality or otherwise of any or every patent might be
tested in the law-courts. At the very beginning of the new reign the judges in
the famous case, Darcy v. Allen, had delivered the unanimous decision that a
monopoly was prima facie against both common and statute law, that it was
burdensome to the kingdom because it raised the price of the commodity at the
same time that it lowered the quality and threw artificers out of work, and that
it was justifiable only when a new invention was made or introduced or when
demanded in the interest of the state.
1 Nevertheless the law had been ignored, evaded, or broken. In 1606,
1610, and 1614 parliament had protested against the abuse of patents, but the
evil was more rampant than ever during the early years of Buckingham's
ascendancy. Then the relatives or dependants of the favourite enjoyed three
monopolies--for the licensing of inns, and that of ale-houses, and for the
manufacturing of gold and silver thread. No doubt these monopolies furnished
pickings for their possessors, but the gain was small in comparison with the
irritation caused. The country gentleman who was a magistrate was affronted at
the implication that he was incapable of supervising the inns in his
neighbourhood, the puritan protested that the new patentees licensed disorderly
houses and multiplied drinking facilities far beyond the reasonable needs of the
people, and the City mercers were annoyed at the privileged position given to a
rival industry.
As soon as the commons began to discuss grievances, the
proceedings of the monopolists came in for severe censure. In particular Sir
Francis Mitchell and Sir Giles Mompesson were found to have been extortionate as
licensers of inns, and the tale of their iniquities aroused the house to a fury.
Mitchell was called to the bar and sentenced without a hearing. 2 Then, rather
late in the day, the question was raised whether the commons had any right to
punish offences which did not concern their privileges. A search for precedents
having failed, it was resolved to repair to the lords. 3 The king, hearing of
these proceedings, unexpectedly addressed the lords in a curiously vacillating
speech intended to exempt himself and Buckingham (and his relatives) from all
blame. He told the lords that the commons would be the accusers and they the
judges, and that they must be careful to see that all charges against Mompesson
were proved by witnesses. The speech ended characteristically with the
pronouncement that 'I will give accoumpt to God and to my people declaratively,
and he that will have all doon by parliament is an enemy to monarchie and a
traitor to the king of England'.
1 Undeterred, the lords heard witnesses and passed sentence. Now, having
tasted blood, the commons flew at higher game. During their investigations of
irregularities at the courts of law they unearthed evidence that Francis Bacon,
Viscount St. Albans, lord high chancellor of England, had accepted presents from
suitors, a few while their suits were actually pending but usually after
judgement had been delivered. Bacon at once realized the uselessness of
attempting a defence to the articles of impeachment exhibited against him, and
acknowledged the substantial accuracy of the charges.
2 The king remitted most of the penalties imposed, but excluded him from
all public business. He did not long survive his disgrace, dying in 1626. The
only possible line of defence is that which he himself suggested in a letter
written to the king at an early stage of the proceedings. 'I hope I shall not be
found', he said, 'to have the troubled fountain of a corrupt heart in a depraved
habit of taking rewards to pervert justice; howsoever I may be frail and partake
of the abuse of the times.' 3 The
most lenient view that can be taken, therefore, is that the highest legal
dignitary in the kingdom accepted presents from suitors, when he must have known
full well that these presents were either given in the hope of influencing
decisions or in gratitude for favourable decisions. Whether the distinction
between accepting presents under these circumstances and taking bribes is worth
making, is a question that can be left to the casuist.
These judicial proceedings, and the time they consumed,
seem to have alarmed and irritated the court. When the houses met, after an
adjournment, members were told to avoid long speeches and malicious diversions
from what should be the sole business before them, the grant of supplies to
sustain the army in the Palatinate. 4 Once again the commons were left without
any clear indication of the nature of the policy they were asked to finance.
They naturally demanded that, first, they should know against what enemy the
army to be raised was going to march. After voting a subsidy for the immediate
support of the forces in the Palatinate, the commons drew up a petition in which
they sketched the European situation as they saw it.
They represented what they conceived to be the causes of
the unhappy state of affairs, and what the remedies. Briefly the causes were the
Roman catholic league abroad, with the king of Spain at its head, and the
connexion between the triumph of popery on the Continent and its increase at
home. The remedies were to declare war against the head of the catholic league
and to marry the prince of Wales to a protestant. Before this petition was
formally presented, James, egged on by Gondomar, the Spanish ambassador, wrote
to the Speaker. Hearing that 'some fiery and popular spirits' were debating
questions far above their reach and tending to violate the royal prerogative,
the king demanded that no one in the house should henceforth presume to meddle
'with anything concerning our government or matters of state', and particularly
not with the Spanish match. Furthermore the king said that he felt himself 'very
free and able to punish any man's misdemeanors in parliament, as well during
their sitting as after. Which we mean not to spare hereafter upon any occasion
of any man's insolent behaviour there.'
The commons then drew up an explanation of their petition,
in which they acknowledged that to make peace and war and to marry the prince of
Wales appertained solely to the royal prerogative. The reason for their
petition, therefore, was merely to bring to the king's attention certain facts
which might not otherwise come to his knowledge, and they now asked him to
receive their answer and petition. This explanation was not unnaturally roughly
handled by the king, who pointed out that it was idle to protest at one place
that they did not intend to entrench upon the prerogative and yet in reality to
usurp it by their advice. Thereupon the commons drafted the famous Protestation
of 18 December 1621, in which they denied, by implication, the king's claim to
the right to imprison members at his will, by asserting that their lives and
privileges were 'the ancient and undoubted birthright and inheritance of the
subjects of England'. They replied to the king's denial of their right to
discuss foreign relations with the statement that what concerned the king,
state, defence of the realm, and the church of England were proper subjects for
counsel and debate in parliament and that they had every right to discuss and
resolve them. 1
This was too much for James's patience, and he first
adjourned and then dissolved parliament. Coke and Sir Robert Phelips were
imprisoned, and Pym confined to his house, for their share in the proceedings.
Further to mark his disapprobation, the king ordered the production of the
journal of the commons, at a meeting of the privy council, and tore out the
offending protestation. At the same time he made a speech condemning it because
it was framed in ambiguous and general terms that might serve in the future as
precedents for the invasion of most of the prerogatives of the Crown.
1 The criticism is just. The
commons' right to give advice on all subjects was substantially new,
2 and if conceded would give them simultaneously an indirect control over
the administration, for they would naturally refuse supplies whenever their
advice was not accepted. James realized the logical consequences of their claims
more clearly than they did themselves, but he entirely failed to gauge the
strength of popular support the commons had at their backs and particularly
failed to perceive that his pursuance of a proSpanish foreign policy was the
surest way to alienate the sympathy of the middle classes, so strongly
represented in parliament.
Bad as the mistake was in choosing friendship with Spain,
and the Spanish match, as subjects for rebutting the pretensions of the commons,
James gave his case away by the grossest inconsistency. After the failure of the
long-drawn-out negotiations with Spain, he summoned parliament and virtually
handed over the direction of foreign relations to the very body he had so
recently rebuked. In his opening speech ( February 1624) he said that full
particulars of the negotiations would be given members. When they had heard
about the negotiations, 'I shall then entreat your good and sound advice. . . .
Never a king gave more trust to his subjects than to desire their advice in
matters of this weight.' Later he said that no man dying of thirst longed for
water more ardently than he desired a happy conclusion to his parliament. 3 On
the whole his wish was gratified, and he parted on better terms with the houses,
now, than on any previous occasion, for king and subjects were united against
Spain--although the union was achieved only after the complete failure of a
policy pursued consistently for a decade. Moreover, judging by the course of
events, the king's statecraft had been wrong and popular prejudice right. It was
perhaps fortunate for his peace of mind that he died at the outbreak of
hostilities, for his reign ended, as it had begun, with England at war with
Spain. 1
Miserably as James had failed in his most cherished plan,
he furnished proof before he died that he was wiser than his son and his
favourite. When they insisted on promoting the impeachment of the treasurer,
Middlesex, the king warned Charles that he would live to have his fill of
impeachments, and Buckingham, that he was merely pickling a rod for his own
back. Perhaps the king realized that the proceedings against Middlesex were more
significant constitutionally than those against Mompesson or Bacon. Then the
commons had been content to turn over the evidence to the lords for
investigation and punishment; now they presented definite charges as
'inquisitors general of the grievances of the kingdom'. 2
Constitutionally the reign is the first of six that
occupied the transitional period during which the Tudor monarchy was transformed
into the Hanoverian. It is difficult, therefore, to gauge the advance made by
parliament under James. That the two houses would no longer be content to occupy
a subordinate position in the state was already clear. When not blinded by
anger, the king was too shrewd not to see that a new power had arisen in the
land, as was proved by his famous remark, on receiving a parliamentary
deputation: 'Chairs for the ambassadors.' Yet the only privilege the house of
commons asserted so decidedly that it was never called in question was the right
to determine the validity of the election of its own members. Neither immunity
from arrest for words spoken in parliament, nor the right to tender advice
freely on all subjects, was acknowledged by the Crown, and both privileges were
infringed by Charles I. During his last years James ceded the revived claim to
call ministers to account by impeachment, but Charles utterly denied it in order
to save Buckingham.
The future seemed to depend on two factors--how far the
needs of the Crown could be supplied by its ordinary revenue, and whether the
commons could count on the support of the
lords. James had been successful in establishing
impositions as regular levies on merchandise, but his efforts to raise money by
benevolences or forced loans had been foiled by the passive resistance of his
subjects. At the end of his reign the Crown could rely upon funds nearly
sufficient to meet ordinary expenses but would be forced to ask parliamentary
grants for emergencies. In other words a peaceful policy would virtually obviate
the necessity of calling parliament, but a war would compel recourse to one. The
question of the co-operation of the two houses was still open, half-way through
the reign. At its commencement the lords refused to join the commons in
attempting to suppress the evils of purveyance, and in 1614 adopted the same
attitude with regard to impositions. Yet during the last few years signs were
not lacking that the two houses would present a united front. James's lavish
creation of English peerages 1 and bestowal of Scottish and Irish peerages on
Englishmen, the ascendancy of Buckingham in the royal counsels, and later the
influence ecclesiastics exercised in politics, all combined to alienate the old
nobility and to produce an opposition party-'the country lords', as its members
were called in contradistinction to the court lords and the bishops. As
generally happens, personal wrongs coincided with public grievances in
estranging the lords from the court. No doubt the lords resented their exclusion
from the royal confidence unless they deferred to Buckingham, but they were also
disgusted at the national disasters for which he was responsible. Consequently
they viewed with equanimity, or even encouraged, the growing pretensions of the
commons.
The declension of the influence on public affairs of those
who prided themselves on being the natural-born counsellors of the king was not
due solely to the early Stuarts and their idiosyncrasies. The time had come when
the enlargement of the sphere of governmental activity required more elaborate
administrative machinery than had previously sufficed. During Elizabeth's reign,
even the tireless energy and business acumen of Burghley and Walsingham, with
the assistance of a small group of councillors, could scarcely keep pace with
the daily routine of the government. After the death of Salisbury in 1612 his
successors had neither the ability nor, for the most part, the devotion to duty
that had inspired the Elizabethan ministers of state. It is not surprising,
therefore, that the group of privy councillors that served Elizabeth was only
half as large as that under James. The privy council now contained the chief
officers of state and of the household, and such personages, English and
Scottish, as the king thought fit to honour. By the end of his reign there were
about thirty-five privy councillors, a number which was increased to about forty
by 1630 but restored by 1640. The increase in size did not make for greater
efficiency, and the non-official members rarely gave constant attendance.
Consequently recourse was had to committees, some temporary, some permanent. The
standing committees of James's reign were numerous and gave preliminary
consideration to matters concerning Ireland, the navy, &c. Most important of
them was that for foreign affairs, for this was the direct ancestor of the
cabinet. Apparently it began with the appointment of a committee in or about
1615 to treat of the Spanish marriage. By the end of James's reign it was
already discussing questions of state in no way directly concerned with foreign
affairs and had achieved sufficient importance to be referred to as the junta,
or cabinet council. Charles I continued the practice of his father, and it was
in the cabinet council that Strafford spoke the words that brought him to the
block. 1 However, although by 1640
the cabinet council had become established in fact and was legally what it has
always remained, a committee of the privy council, it bore little resemblance to
the modern cabinet. Above all, its members were not selected from among the
leaders in parliament, and it contributed nothing to bridge the gulf that was
rapidly widening between king and parliament. Indeed in the absence of
well-defined political parties in parliament it would have been difficult to
make the seventeenth-century cabinet a means to create harmony between
legislature and executive.
Looking both backwards and forwards, there is no doubt that
the relations of the early Stuarts with their parliaments were vitiated
throughout by their firm belief in the theory of the divine right of kings.
Englishmen had ample opportunity of learning what James thought about monarchy.
In 1598 he published his Trew Law of Free Monarchies. In 1616 The Workesof the
Most High and Mighty Prince, James of the Most High and Mighty Prince, James
were collected and published. In addition the king rarely lost an opportunity of
setting forth his theories in speeches. In so doing he was not actuated solely
by a vain desire to display his learning but had the deliberate intention, as he
said, to set cor regis in oculis populi and to act as the 'great schoolmaster of
the whole land'. From his utterances and writings, therefore, it is possible to
deduce his conception of the royal office with greater definition than for any
other English king. By a free monarch he meant one free from all control. Even
though 'a free and absolute monarch' owed duties to his subjects and was
ordained for their advantage, no degree of tyranny on his part justified them in
resisting. 1 He could make laws
without the co-operation of parliament or suspend laws passed by parliament,
and, notwithstanding that 'a good king will frame all his actions according to
the law, yet he is not bound thereto but of his own good will'. The state of
monarchy was the supremest thing on earth, because kings are not only God's
lieutenants here below and sit upon God's thrones, but even by God himself are
called gods. Therefore, as it is blasphemy to dispute what God can do, and as
good Christians content themselves with his will revealed in his word, so it is
presumption and high contempt in a subject to dispute what a king can do, and a
good subject cheerfully abides by the king's pleasure revealed in his law.
James was far from successful in persuading the masses of
his subjects to accept these views. The school of divines which contemporaries
came to style 'Arminian', but which modern writers often call 'Laudian',
wholeheartedly adopted them and preached them fervently. Among laymen, however,
there were few imitators of these clerics. In particular parliament, which
formed the audience for many of the king's utterances, remained wholly
unconvinced. A well-informed observer, writing, in 1610, after one of the more
hyperbolical of the king's speeches, noted of it: 'I hear it bred generally much
discomfort, to see our monarchicall power and regal prerogative strained so
high, and made so transcendent every way, that yf the practise should follow the
positions, we are not likely to leave to our successors that freedome we
received from our forefathers.' 2 Thus the persistence with which James thrust
down his subjects' throats his theory of the constitution almost compelled them
in their turn to formulate their views of the limitations of monarchy and the
rights of parliament, which might otherwise have remained undefined for a
generation longer. James had called into existence, therefore, an opposition
that in less than twenty years advanced from the modest position of the Apology
of 1604 to the bold stand of the Protestation of 1621. These contradictory
theories of the respective powers of king and parliament contained material for
a bitter conflict, but James was by temperament adverse to pushing matters to
extremes and too indolent to pursue any path persistently. Hence the day of the
constitutional battle was postponed to the next reign.
Charles I never attempted elaborately to define his
conception of kingship. He did not share his father's fondness for abstract
speculation or his considerable literary and oratorical gifts. His views have to
be gleaned, therefore, from occasional utterances, not from full-length
discourses. Nevertheless he stated, time after time, one postulate of the theory
of the divine right of kings. 'I must avow', he said in June 1628, 'that I owe
the account of my actions to God alone.' While on trial for his life he was
equally definite. 'A king', he told Bradshaw, the president of the court,
'cannot be tried by any superior jurisdiction on earth.' 1 But for Bradshaw's
interruption, he would have continued that the Scripture 2 saith, 'Where the
word of a king is, there is power, and who may say unto him "What doest thou?"'
3 He cited the legal maxim that a king can do no wrong as proof that he could
not be impeached. He was equally convinced that there was a divine law
commanding subjects to obey their king, under penalty of God's judgement. At the
time of the negotiations at Uxbridge, in February 1645, he suggested to Sir
Edward Nicholas, then secretary of state, that if, during his arguments with the
parliamentary commissioners, 'in your privat discourses, . . . you would put
them in mynde that they were arrant rebelles & that their end must be damnation,
ruine, and infamy, except they repented, . . . it might doe good'.
1 He remained consistent to the last hour of his life. From the scaffold
he declared that the people had no claim to any voice in the government. Their
freedom consisted in the enjoyment of laws by which their life and liberty would
be secure. It was not in having a share in the government: that did not pertain
to them --'a subject and a soveraign are clean different things'.
2
Both James and his son were thus devoted adherents of the
theory of the divine right of kings, though they stressed different postulates.
The father, however, was usually content to be logical and consistent on paper,
whereas the son was consistent in trying to translate his theories into action.
Charles had been a very sickly child, not expected to survive. He was very slow
in beginning to walk and to talk, but whereas he became a good horseman and
walker, he suffered from an impediment in his speech all his life. This defect
may account for the gravity and reserve which caused his elder brother, Henry
(d. 1612), to tease him by calling him the archbishop of York. 3 Unlike his
father's, his disposition was inflexible. His intellect was rigid, yet he was
capable of quibbling and giving evasive answers that might mislead. He himself
said that he could never be a lawyer: 'I cannot defend the bad nor yield in a
good cause.' 4
Charles's character augured ill for the future, inasmuch as
both the general trend of events--the spirit of the age--and the particular
circumstances in which the new reign opened called for conciliation in order to
win support for the expensive policy now being pursued abroad.
When Charles succeeded James in 1625, he found that the
financial needs of the Crown compelled the prompt summoning of parliament. When
it met the king and those who spoke in his name did little more than assert
that, as the previous parliament had advised the present policy, the present one
would no doubt provide the necessary funds. There was from the start, however, a
disinclination among members to recognize in the extravagant schemes now on foot
the true offspring of their predecessors. They voted two subsidies, or about
one-seventh of the amount the king needed, and then began to discuss the state
of affairs, particularly the way in which the previous grants had been spent.
Different speakers stressed different points: that no one seemed to be any the
better for the expenditure; that the king would do well to follow Queen
Elizabeth's example and rely upon a grave and wise council rather than upon one
or two favourites; that the journey to Madrid was the real cause of the war with
Spain, not any parliamentary action; that it was well known that then articles
that benefited Roman catholics had been sanctioned, and it might be that the
recent marriage treaty with France included similar provisions; and that, after
all, the best way to secure national safety was to suppress Roman catholicism at
home. 1 In vain Buckingham took
upon himself the fence of the royal policy and urged prompt grant of supplies.
The commons by this time had made up their mind that redress of grievances must
have precedence. Voices were even heard hinting that the favourite was the
greatest grievance of all. Charles thereupon hurriedly dissolved his first
parliament, and thus terminated the opening scene in the long tragedy that ended
twenty-four years later upon the scaffold.
His position continued to grow worse, for the expedition to
Cadiz 2 returned in disgrace and the tension between the English and French
courts was increasing so rapidly as to threaten war. The attempt to raise money
by the issue of privy seals asking individuals to lend specific sums of money
failed so completely that it was plainly necessary to summon another parliament.
Charles did his best to smooth his path by ordering strict enforcement of the
penal laws against papists, by appointing as sheriffs the leaders of the
opposition in the late parliament, and by appointing Laud to preach to the two
houses when they assembled. His sermon is a remarkable exposition of the views,
on the unity of church and state, that prevailed at court. It was declared that
a royal command must be God's glory, and obedience to it the subject's honour.
It was asserted that the king would never depart from God's service, from the
care of his people, or from the wise managing of his treasure. Laud's biographer
remarks that this was sound doctrine but was not acceptable to the auditors. 3
Soon they were listening to an orator of very different type--Eliot--on the late
disasters. He roundly declared: 'Our honour is ruined, our ships are sunk, our
men perished; not by the sword, not by the enemy, not by chance, but, as the
strongest predictions had discerned and made it appear beforehand, by those we
trust.' 1 His speech really
determined the history of this parliament, for it convinced members that a
strict accountability for the past must precede any provision for the future.
The commons soon found that in their endeavour to establish the responsibility
for Mansfeld's disastrous expedition
2 they were hampered by the refusal of the council of war to testify as
to the opinions of individual members. Charles upheld them in their refusal: 'It
is not you that they aim at, but it is me upon whom they make inquisition, and
for subsidies, they will not hinder it. Gold may be bought too dear.'
3 Undaunted, the commons now attacked Buckingham as the author of all the
national ills, and, once fairly started after their prey, they could not be
called off. On one occasion Charles warned them not to question the man whom he
delighted to honour and whom he cherished so dearly. A second time he threatened
them in unmistakable terms: 'Remember that parliaments are altogether in my
power for their calling, sitting, and dissolution; therefore, as I find the
fruits good or evil, they are to continue, or not to be.'
4
Perhaps the commons were emboldened by the knowledge that
they could count on the support of the peers, for the upper house had revealed
an independent spirit from the start of the session. They began by resolving
that no peer should hold more than two proxies, thus striking a shrewd blow at
Buckingham, who had thirteen. They presented three successive petitions to the
king for the release of Arundel, nominally confined for an offence personal to
Charles but in reality for opposition to Buckingham. The king did not give way
until there was a probability that they would refuse to transact any business in
Arundel's absence. 5 When Charles attempted, by having Bristol accused of high
treason, to prevent his revealing what had actually happened at Madrid during
the visit there of the prince and Buckingham, the house simultaneously accepted
Bristol's charge of high treason against Buckingham.
1 They foiled all the king's efforts to deprive Bristol of a fair trial
and allowed the earl to put in an answer full of damaging revelations. It was
therefore clear, when the commons in their turn drew up an impeachment of
Buckingham, that nothing could save him but the dissolution of parliament. When
the lords prayed the king that they might sit a little longer, his reply, 'not a
minute', 2
showed that he realized the peril in which his favourite stood.
The need for money remained as pressing after the
dissolution of parliament as before. A demand for a free gift, equal in amount
to the subsidies proposed but not voted by parliament, was dispatched to the
justices of the peace, whose panels were purged of the names of all those
obnoxious to the court. The response, however, was extremely meagre, for men
refused to give except in a parliamentary way. A very rickety fleet was
collected from the maritime towns and counties, and those who objected were
sharply told that in times of danger ordinary precedents no longer applied. 3
There was still no money, however, to feed or pay mariners, although the
probability of a war with France made the equipment of the fleet more imperative
than ever. Therefore the king had recourse to a forced loan, to be raised by
commissioners who were to exact from all men rated in the subsidy-books sums
equivalent to what they would have paid if parliament had voted five subsidies.
To make the scheme more palatable, Charles called upon the clergy for help from
their pulpits. In a letter to the archbishop--doubtless intended to serve as a
text for many a sermon--the king urged that, having been led into war by the
advice of parliament, he could not now be abandoned but with the sin and shame
of all men. 4 The section of the clergy that good protestants were beginning to
label 'Arminian' willingly responded to the call. Sibthorpe5 and Roger Manwaring
preached sermons magnifying the prerogative above law and parliament. Charles
was so pleased with the former's effusion that he directed the archbishop to
license it. The archbishop refused. Thereupon he was ordered to confine himself
to his house and was supplanted in the church courts by a commission headed by
Laud. Other methods than persuasion were adopted in dealing with those who
refused to contribute. By way of warning, the lord chief justice, Sir Randolph
Crew, was dismissed for refusing to acknowledge the legality of the loan. Some
of the recalcitrants were sent to prison, or into confinement, or to serve on
board ship, and an attempt was even made to compel fifty men from Essex to
accept press-money for service with the king of Denmark. Among those who refused
to contribute were Eliot, destined to be a martyr for parliamentary liberties,
Hampden, the future hero of the struggle against ship-money, and Wentworth, who,
after changing sides, became the great exponent of personal government.
During the year 1627 the situation went from bad to worse.
The king of Denmark was expelled from Germany, and the protestant cause lay at
the feet of the victorious Roman catholics; the French Huguenots were encouraged
to rebel, but Buckingham suffered a decisive defeat on the Isle of Ré when he
tried to relieve La Rochelle. 1 These disasters increased the need of money at
the same time that they made borrowing more difficult. As one of Buckingham's
parasites acknowledged, 'No man that is moneyed will lend upon any security, if
they think it to go the way of the court, which now is made diverse from the
state.' 2 The failure off La Rochelle was regarded as the greatest and most
shameful defeat England had suffered since the loss of Normandy. Indeed,
according to Denzil Holles, who was one of the five members whom Charles tried
to arrest in 1642, England had never received so dishonourable a blow. 3
Exasperation at the manifest misgovernment naturally strengthened resistance to
the forced loans, and before the end of the year an attempt was made to test the
legality of confinements for refusing to contribute. In a famous case 4 five
prisoners applied for a writ of habeas corpus in order to bring their case
before the king's bench. The writ was not one of right but of grace, yet it was
granted because of the great public interest in the issue at stake. Probably the
five knights hoped that the question would be raised whether a refusal to
contribute to the loan was a legal cause for commitment. The return to the writ,
however, merely stated that they were committed by the special command of the
king, and assigned no other reason whatsoever. Thereupon one of the prisoners,
Darnel, refused to proceed, but the other four contended that they should be
released on bail, since they had been committed without cause shown. The
attorney-general argued that they should be kept in prison until the king was
ready to bring them to trial. The precedents, as well as the statutes, were by
no means clear, and accordingly the decision of the judges was: 'We cannot
deliver you but you must be remanded.' The judges apparently intended to
postpone further consideration of the case because, as one stated later, there
was no record that, upon such a writ as the present one, a man had ever been
bailed without the king being first consulted, and the prisoners might have sued
out another habeas corpus the next day. Actually both they and the general
public assumed that a final verdict had been given and that the judges had lent
their authority to the view that the loan and the imprisonments for refusing to
contribute to it were legal, and that the king had the right to commit for
indefinite periods without his victims' having any redress at law.
1
The prison doors were opened at the beginning of 1628, but
this clemency did not evoke any gratitude in the country at large. When Charles
caused elections to be held for a third parliament, the main issues were the
forced loan and arbitrary punishment. Popular interest ran high and considerable
pressure was brought to bear in favour of court candidates, but the royal
influence was powerless against appeals on behalf of those who had suffered
imprisonment rather than contribute to the exchequer in an unparliamentary way.
2 An observer summed up the results of the election as follows: 'It is feared .
. . because such patriots are chosen every where, the parliament will not last
above eight days.' 3 When the houses met, the debates turned almost exclusively
upon the question how to prevent extra-parliamentary taxation and imprisonment
without cause shown. The commons began by passing resolutions against
unparliamentary taxation, against the retention of any man in prison by command
of the king or council unless the cause were expressed, against the denial of
the writ of habeas corpus, and against the refusal to release or bail a prisoner
confined without cause shown. These resolutions occasioned a great debate in the
house of lords, where it was thought by a contemporary that the majority stood
'for the king's prerogative against the subject's liberties'.
1 Generally speaking, the old nobility opposed the court, but the new
creations and most of the bishops favoured it. The parties were so evenly
divided that in the end a compromise was reached which attempted to prevent the
king from interfering with due process of law in normal times but would permit
him to override it in an emergency.
The commons, however, were unwilling to acknowledge
explicitly that the king possessed these extraordinary powers, especially as no
satisfactory form of words could be devised to define them. 2 Abandoning their
own resolutions, they now determined to proceed by a bill which should both
reaffirm the validity of old statutes safeguarding the liberty of the subject
and interpret them in the sense the commons thought right. Thereupon the king
declared that, as he was willing to promise to observe the old statutes, so his
subjects should be content to contain themselves within the laws of their
forefathers, without enlarging them by new explanations or additions. The flat
refusal of the king to suffer his prerogative to be curtailed by law prompted
Sir Edward Coke to hit upon the happy idea that the two houses should join in a
Petition of Right 3 to the king for the redress of their particular grievances.
Such petitions had been used by individuals in the past, when they felt that the
sovereign or his servants had exercised his prerogative to override the law, and
merely sought permission for the petitioners to enjoy the benefit of the law.
The Petition of Right emanating from parliament, however, was intended to go
farther and to declare what the law was, as well as to secure for individuals
the benefit of it. The king was deterred from a speedy dissolution only by his
financial needs and by the knowledge that the majority of the house of lords
sided with his opponents. In vain he attempted ambiguous and evasive answers to
the Petition, for both houses requested a clear and satisfactory answer, and in
the end the king assented in the style, Soit droit fait come est desiré.
1 The Petition, 'concerning divers rights and liberties of the subjects',
begins with a recital of the statutes alleged to have been broken and of the
grievances for which redress was now provided. It then proceeds to ask: (1) that
no man hereafter should be compelled to make any gift, loan, benevolence, tax,
or such like charge, without common consent by act of parliament; (2) that no
free man should be imprisoned or detained without cause shown; (3) that soldiers
and mariners should not be billeted upon private individuals against their will;
and (4) that commissions for proceeding by martial law should not be issued in
the future. 2
Previous to the royal assent to the Petition, the commons
had been careful to consult the lords at every stage, and together the two
houses had prevailed. Thenceforth the commons rashly attempted to stand alone,
and made no effort to secure the co-operation of the upper house. After the
failure, under Wentworth's leadership, to embody in a bill such a compromise as
would both satisfy the king and safeguard the liberty of the subject, Eliot had
recovered the ascendancy he had exercised over the house in 1626. The greatest
orator of his generation, he was fiery and impulsive by nature, prone to
idealize the commons at the expense of king and lords, and scornful of the daily
compromises so essential in political life. Through his impatience he had
hazarded the fruits of the session by proposing remonstrances and attacking
Buckingham, for only by the action of the lords was the king dissuaded from a
dissolution, and only by their intervention was he induced to accept the
Petition. The necessity of conciliating the upper house proved irksome to
Eliot's democratic ardour. On one occasion he had said, 'I am confident that,
should the lords desert us, we should yet continue flourishing and green'; 3 and
the commons proceeded, under his guidance, to test the truth of this assertion.
In particular they passed a remonstrance--a prototype of the more famous measure
of 1641--detailing grievances in both church and state and naming their authors,
Laud and Neile of the first and Buckingham of the second. The lower house
followed this up by a second remonstrance, denouncing the collection of tonnage
and poundage as a breach of the fundamental liberties of the kingdom, because
these duties had never been granted to Charles I by parliament. The king
interrupted this hot pace by a prorogation. The speech that preceded it
contained a statement of his view of the Petition of Right: 'The profession of
both houses, in time of hammering this Petition, was no ways to intrench upon my
prerogative, saying, they had neither intention nor power to hurt it. Therefore
it must needs be conceived that I have granted no new, but only confirmed the
ancient liberties of my subjects.'
1 This view prevailed at law during the years prior to the meeting of the long
parliament. When those members who were imprisoned after the dissolution in 1629
tried to take advantage of the Petition, they were met by the attorney-general
with the following argument:
A
petition in parliament is not a law, yet it is for the honour and dignity of the
king, to observe and keep it faithfully; but it is the duty of the people not to
stretch it, beyond the words and intention of the king. And no other
construction can be made of the Petition, than to take it as a confirmation of
the antient liberties and rights of the subject. So that now the case remains in
the same quality and degree, as it was before the Petition. 2
Thus its immediate effects were slight, and proof would be
difficult to find that the king's government during the years 1629 to 1640 was
hampered by the Petition, except possibly with regard to forced loans, which
were no longer exacted. Nevertheless the very reluctance of the king, first to
accept the Petition at all, and then to accept it in an unequivocal manner,
suggests at least that he was conscious that something more was at stake than
the mere confirmation of ancient liberties. In fact he had sustained a severe
defeat at the hands of both houses of parliament, although the foolish tactics
of Eliot, by ruining all hope of the continuance of that union between the two
houses which had already accomplished so much, enabled the king to
represent the proceedings of the lower house as the work of a seditious
minority.
In the interval between the two sessions of parliament the
assassination of Buckingham revealed the wide gulf that had opened between king
and people. A naval lieutenant, John Felton, brooding upon his own wrongs
(especially the refusal of Buckingham to promote him or to see that he received
the pay due to him), read the remonstrances passed by the commons and believed
that it was his duty to sacrifice his life to rid England of the hated
favourite. His deed was welcomed by the populace, who compared him to David
slaying Goliath. Verses and ballads celebrated England's delivery, and the
duke's body was conducted to Westminster Abbey with few mourners but with an
escort of the train-bands lest the citizens of London should defile the corpse.
'And this', says a newsletter, 'was the obscure catastrophe of that great man.'
1
The death of Buckingham had removed one obstacle to a good
understanding between king and parliament, and there were other hopeful signs
that the ruinous foreign policy which had alienated the two houses was about to
be changed. The restoration to favour of Abbot and Bristol, and the admission to
the king's counsels of such men as Richard Weston, named lord high treasurer in
1629 and created earl of Portland in 1633, and Wentworth, were sure guarantees
against further adventures like the expeditions to the Isle of Ré. Nevertheless
the disagreements about impositions and religion still remained. Charles ordered
that the customs duties be collected as if they had been granted by parliament.
When merchants tried to land their goods without paying the duties, the goods
were seized, and all attempts to recover them by legal action failed. One
merchant, Richard Chambers, being summoned before the council, bitterly
complained that 'the merchants are in no part of the world so skrewed and wrung
as in England; that in Turky they have more incouragement'. 2 After committal to
prison he was released on bail, whereupon he was cited before the Star Chamber,
whose proceedings had been in no way interfered with by the Petition of Right.
Another merchant, John Rolle, whose goods were confiscated, was a member of
parliament. As regards religion, whereas the commons, in their
remonstrances, had demanded the suppression of the Arminians, there were
obvious signs, such as the promotions of Montague
1 and Manwaring, that this
party was in full favour at court.
When parliament reassembled it was soon evident that a
stiff contest was in prospect. It must be confessed that the popular leaders in
the commons chose their ground badly. Instead of presenting a united front with
the lords, as they had done with very satisfactory results in the earlier part
of the previous session, they now elected to stand alone. They failed to assume
the general position that all unparliamentary taxation was illegal, and chose
rather to assail the alleged breach of privilege involved in the seizure of
Rolle's goods. They then launched forth into a general attack on the religious
policy pursued, displaying a strong bias that was at once Erastian and puritan.
Thus Pym boldly asserted that parliament was the only power in the land
competent to deal with the new disease of Arminianism, and Eliot that the
bishops could not be trusted with the interpretation of the Thirty-nine
Articles. In fact, the latter orator continued, the presence on the episcopal
bench of men like Montague threatened the total overthrow of sound religion,
which was already undermined by the innovations introduced by the sect to which
he belonged. Most speakers contrived to represent the Arminians as akin to the
Jesuits and to suggest that the inevitable result of the teaching of the first
would be the ultimate triumph of the second.
Once the religious issue had been definitely raised, there
was no longer any possibility of a compromise. The commons were claiming the
right to determine the religion of England. They insisted that the leaders of
the branch of the Anglican church that was most popular at court should be
silenced. Such demands could never be admitted by Charles. His sympathies were
wholly with those new churchmen who headed the revolt against the Calvinistic
theology that found favour in the sight of the commons. Montague, at the close
of his Appello Caesarem, had written: 'Popery is for tyranny, puritanisme for
anarchy: poperie is originall of superstition; puritanisme, the high-way unto
prophanenesse; both alike enemies unto piety. . . . Domine Imperator, defende me
gladio, et ego te defendam calamo.' 2
Eliot's impetuosity had brought matters to a crisis, and
the king felt he had no option but to defend the church. In his eyes, as in
Montague's, the puritans intended to disrupt both church and state, and Charles
firmly shared his father's belief, 'No bishop, no king'. He therefore determined
to set a term to the commons' interference in ecclesiastical affairs and order
the speaker to adjourn the house. When the speaker signified this command, he
was met with a loud cry of 'Noe hoe'. On his attempt to leave the chair, he was
restrained until three resolutions had been passed: that whoever should
introduce any innovation in religion to bring in either popery or Arminianism
should be accounted a capital enemy of the king and kingdom; that whoever should
advise the levying of tonnage and poundage without parliamentary sanction should
incur like denunciation; and that whoever should pay tonnage and poundage, under
those conditions, should be held a betrayer of the liberty of the subject and a
capital enemy of the king and kingdom.
1 A week later Charles formally dissolved the parliament, with a speech
in which he contrasted 'the undutiful and seditious carriage in the lower house'
with the 'dutiful demeanors' of the lords.
2 In a sense the contrast is fair, and at least some of the blame for the
eleven years' prerogative government that followed must be laid at the door of
Eliot, whose headlong course had provoked the inevitable; and, moreover, the
fact that one house of parliament was now neutral, or perhaps even favourable to
the king, helps to explain the acquiescence of the country at large in the
intermittence of parliament. On the other hand it is characteristic of
Charles--and the explanation of his ultimate downfallthat he failed to see in
the action of the commons anything more significant than that 'some few vipers'
had cast 'this mist of undutifulness' over the eyes of the majority. He could
never conceive that to many of his subjects puritanism was a living faith for
which they were as ready to suffer as had been the martyrs during the Marian
persecution. Similarly he never realized that probably a majority of the people
were deeply attached to parliamentary government and were anxious to see its
extension rather than its curtailment.
He could see Eliot, who embodied the new aspirations of the