of the Common Laws in general; somewhat of the ordinary supply of Princes; some∣what (and very worthily) for the increase of True Religion: somewhat of the regaining of that of our Allies; somewhat of preserving our own Estate; and somewhat of the never sufficiently commended Reformation of Ireland.These I observed for your material Heads. The formal were those Four usual Petitions; For Privileges to come unto the House; For liberty of Speech when you are in the House; For Access to His Ma∣jesty for the informing of the House; And for a fair Interpretation of your Pro∣ceedings when you shall leave the House. I shall from His Majesty make Answer to these Things, 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, step by step, as they lie in order.
First, For your self, the King hath not only stretched out His Scepter, but lifted up his Voice with Ahasuerus, Quae est Petitiae tua dabitur tibi, He hath granted all that you have desired, and assureth you by me of His Special Grace and Favour from the begin∣ning to the end of your present Employment.
Secondly, Concerning the King, it may not be doubted but Gods Blessing of us, and our Blessing of God for his Royal Generation, his quiet Coronation, his peaceable Admini∣stration, his Miraculous Preservation in this very Place, and this our most comfortable Pledge of his future Succession, ibunt in saecula, shall flow unto Posterity, and be the Hymns and Anthems of Ages to come.
Thirdly, For those Statutes of Learning which were here framed, 32 Henr. 8. which you call, Parliamentum Doctum; And those Statutes of Charity, 39 of the late Queen, which you Term, Parliamentum Pium, The Devout Parliament; And those Statutes of Grace digested and prepared in the last Convention, which His Majesty would have had been, Gratiosum Parliamentum, The Gracious Parliament; And 〈◊〉〈◊〉, That large Pardon you expect this time, which may make this Assembly,Munificum Parliamentum, The Bountiful Parliament; The King gives you full Assurance of His Princely Resolution to do what shall be fitting and convenient to keep Life in the one, and to bring Life to the other, so as you do, scitè obstetricari, play the Midwives in them both, as you ought to do.
Fourthly, For the Abortion of some late Parliaments, (from the which His Majesty is most free) a Parliament Nullity, as you T••rm it, is a strange Chimaera, a word of a Monstrous Compesition. I never heard of the like in all my Life, unless it be once in the new Creed, Credo Ecclesiam Romano-Catholicam. Parliaments naturally begat Entities, and the want of Parliaments produceth Nullities. Surely God and the King are must averse to such Parliaments. Mark Gods Parliament, the first Parliament in the World, wherein the Three Persons in Trinity are consulting together, Faciamus Hominem, and you shall find it was to beget Entities: Therefore God is scarce present in that Con∣sultation that brings forth Nullities. 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, as the Philosopher begins his Ethicks, Every Consultation is for some Good, some End, some Entitie, and most opposite to an Abortion, or Nullity. And therefore you may applaud those former Laws of Learning, Piety, Grace, and Bounty, which you handled before: In my Opinion, Mr. Speaker, you have kept the good Wine, and the best Law of them all till now, which is Solon's Law,Lex Oblivionis, A Law of Forgetfulness, That by His Maje∣sties Grace and Favour freely offer'd unto us the last day, all the Memory of these Unfor∣tunate Abortions may be Buried in the River Lethe, and never be had in any further Re∣membrance. I will put you in Mind of a Story, which Tully relates out of Thucydides, and leave the Application to this Honourable Auditory. When the Thebans,having g••t the better of the Lacedaemonians, Erected a Brazen Trophy for that Victory, they were complain'd of apud Amphictyonas, that is, before the common Council of Greece, Eo quod aeternum inimicitiarum Monumentum Graecos de Graecis Statuere non opor∣tuit; Because it was most unfit that between Greek and Greek there should remain any Record of perpetual Enmity.
Fifthly, For the Common Law of England, if we regard the Meridian for which it is Erected, it is a Law, as was said of those of Lycurgus, Disciplinae Convenientis∣simae, of a most apt and convenient Frame, and His Majesty hath ever so approved of it. Nay, He is so precisely affected, and disposed in this kind, that as Paterculus writes of Cato, Id solum ei visum est rationem habere, quod haberet Justitiam. He could never allow of any Devise or Project, how plausible soever, that was not justifiable at the Common Law.
183. Sixthly, For the Supply of Princes in this Kingdom, His Majesty makes no Question, but that by Parliament and Subsidy, is the most Comfortable to the King, and most Favo∣rable to the Subject. It Comforts the King, as issuing from the Heart; and it Easeth the Subject, as brought by the Hands, not of one, or two, but of all the People. That which you call Benevolence, or Good Will, brings unto His Majesty, neither so much Good, nor so much Will as the other support. And therefore the Kings of this Land (though it hath