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of the officers of our exchequer, and our custom-house,
and auditors, out of which we will make choice of
some few, best qualified to be sub-committees, for the
better case, and the speeding of the business by their
continual travels and meetings; whose part and em-
ployment we incline to be to attend the principal offi-
cers in their several charges, and join themselves to
some of the inferior officers, and so take upon them
the mechanic and laborious part of every business,
thereby to facilitate and prepare it for
your consulta-
tions, according to the directions and instructions they
shall receive from you from time to time.

CXCIV. To the KING.

May it please your Majesty,

BEING yesterday assembled in council to proceed in the course we had begun for retrenchment of your majesty's expences; we received your princely letters, whereby we are directed to send to your majesty the names of the officers of the exchequer, custom-house, and auditors, out of which you purpose to make choice of some to be sub-committed to handle the mechanic and laborious part of that which your majesty had appointed to our care; we have, according to our duty, sent unto your majesty the names of the several officers of your majesty in those places, to be ordered as your wisdom shall think best to direct. But withal, we thought it appertenant to our duties to inform your majesty how far we have proceeded in the several heads of retrenchments by your majesty at your departure committed unto us, that when you know in what estate our labours are, your judgment may the better direct any further course as shall be meet.

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The matter of the houshold was by us, some days since, committed peremptorily to the officers of the house, as matter of commandment from your majesty, and of duty in them, to reduce the expence of your house to a limited charge of fifty thousand pounds by the year, besides the benefit of the compositions: and they have ever since painfully, as we are informed, travailed in it,

Stephens's second col

lection,

p. 69.

and will be ready on Sunday next, which was the day given them, to present some models of retrenchments of divers kinds, all aiming at your majesty's service.

In the point of pensions we have made a beginning, by suspending some wholly for a time, and of others of a third part; in which course we are still going on, until we make it fit to be presented to your majesty: in like manner the lord chamberlain and the lord Hay did yesterday report unto us, what their travail had ordered in the wardrobe: and although some doubt did arise unto us, whether your majesty's letters intended a stay of our labours, until you had made choice of the sub-committee intended by you; yet presuming that such a course by sub-committee was purposed rather for a furtherance, than lett to that work, we did resolve to go on still till your majesty's further directions shall come unto us; and then according to our duty we will proceed, as we shall be by your majesty commanded. In the mean time we thought it our duty to inform your majesty of what we have done, that neither your majesty may conceive that we have been negligent in those things which were committed unto us, nor your directions by your late letters hinder or cast back that which is already so far proceeded in. And so humbly kissing your royal hands, and praying to the Almighty for your long and happy reign over us, we rest

Your majesty's most humble bal prodeji ar and obedient subjects and servants, PEMBROKE.

G. CANT.

LENOX.

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CXCV. To the Marquis of BUCKINGHAM.

My very good Lord,

I WRITE now only, rather in a kind of continuance and fresh suit, upon the king's business, than that the same is yet ripe, either for advertisement, or advice.

The sub-commissioners meet forenoon and afternoon, with great diligence, and without distraction or running several ways: which if it be no more than necessary, what would less have done? that is, if there had been no sub-commissioners, or they not well chosen.

I speak with Sir Lionel Cranfield, as cause requireth either for account or direction, and as far as I can, by the taste I have from him, discern, probably their service will attain and may exceed his majesty's ex

pectation.

I do well like the course they take, which is, in every kind to set down, as in beer, in wine, in beef, in muttons, in corn, etc. what cometh to the king's use, and then what is spent, and lastly what may be saved. This way, though it be not so accusative, yet it is demonstrative. Nam rectum est index sui et obliqui, and the false manner of accounting, and where the gain cleaveth, will appear after by consequence. I humbly pray his majesty to pardon me for troubling him with these imperfect glances, which I do, both because I know his majesty thinketh long to understand somewhat, and lest his majesty should conceive, that he multiplying honours and favours upon me, I should not also increase and redouble my endeavours and cares for his service. God ever bless, preserve, and prosper his majesty and your lordship, to whom I ever remain

16 Jan. 1617.

Your true and most devoted servant,
FR. BACON, C. S.

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Sir Tobie CXCVI. To Mr. MATTHEW, about reading and giving judgment upon his writings.

Matthew's

second collection of letters, p.

22.

second col

SIR,

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BECAUSE you shall not lose your labour this after noon, which now I must needs spend with my lord chancellor, I send my desire to you in this letter, that you will take care not to leave the writing, which I left with you last, with any man, so long, as that he may be able to take a copy of it; because, first, it must be censured by you, and then considered again by me. The thing which I expect most from you is, that you would read it carefully over by yourself, and to make some little note in writing, where you think, to speak like a critic, that I do perhaps indormiscere, or where I do indulgere genio; or where, in fine, I give any manner of disadvantage to myself. This, super totam materiám, you must not fail to note; besides, all such words and phrases as you cannot like; for you know in how high account I have your judgment.

Stephens's CXCVII. To the Marquis of BUCKINGHAM. My very good Lord,

lection,

p. 73.

I THOUGHT fit by this my private letter to your lordship, to give you an account of such business as your lordship hath recommended unto me, that you may perceive that I have taken that care of them I ought, and ever shall in those you recommend or remit to me.

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For the suit of the alehouses which concerneth your brother Mr. Christopher Villiers, and Mr. Patrick Mawl, I have conferred with my lord chief justice, and Mr. Solicitor thereupon, and there is as cruple in it that it should be one of the grievances put down in

This seems to be spoken pleasantly of himself, and to refer to Jan. 15, 1617, on which day the lord Verulam was by special warrant made lord chancellor. Rymer XVII. p. 55, and at which time probably some affairs, that required privacy and retirement, might occur.

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parliament; which if it be, I may not in my duty
and love to you advise you to deal in it; if it be
not, I will mold it in the best manner and help it
forward. The stay is upon the search of the clerk
of the parliament, who is out of town; but we have
already found, that the last grievance in septimo, is
not the same with this suit; but we doubt yet of
another in tertio.

For the business of Mr. Leviston, for your lordship's sake, who I perceive keeps your noble course with me, in acquainting me with these things, I shall apply myself unto you; though in my nature I do desire that those that serve in the court where I sit, though they be not in places of my gift, and so concerns not me nor my place in profit; yet I wish, I say, I might leave them in as good case as I find them. And this suit concerneth the main profit of the six clerks: who though they be of the master of the rolls his gift, yet they serve in my court. But my greatest doubt is, that the grant cannot be good in law; and that it is not like those other precedents, whereof I have received a note. For the difference is, where things have been written by all the clerks indifferently and loosely, in which case the king may draw them into an office; and where they have appertained to one especial office; in which case the king can no more take away the profits of a man's office, than he can the profits of his land. Therefore I think your lordship may do well to write to Mr. Solicitor and serjeant Finch, or some Sir Tho other lawyers that you trust, or such as Mr. Leviston mas Cotrusteth, being persons of account, to inform you of

9

9 Sir Henry Finch, serjeant at law, being the first of his name that made a considerable figure in that profession, I shall give a short account of him. He was younger brother to Sir Moyle Finch of Eastwel in the county of Kent, and father of John lord Finch, keeper of the great seal in the reign of king Charles I. He died in 1625, leaving to posterity a sufficient testimony of his learning in the law, as well as the sciences, in his book intitled, "A Description of the Common Laws of England according to the rules of art, etc." His son's good parts and elocution were acknowledged by the greatest of his enemies; which accomplishments, though he died without issue, have eminently appeared in some other descendents from his honourable family. Stephens,

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ventry.

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