The Printing of Sir George Croke's Reports
by
Lois Spencer
An anonymous single sheet in the Thomason Collection, together with certain entries in the
MS Court Book of the Stationers' Company, tells the story of a contest which ranged from
printing-house to Parliament and which illustrates not only the keen competition within the
London trade during the mid-seventeenth century, but also the complexities that arose with
reference to the printing of legal text-books.
The pamphlet (BM 669. f.20 [74]), which has no date, title, or name of printer, is
catalogued by Fortescue under March 1658. Thomason's MS. Legal Year dating is "March 1657". It
tells how
About the 7
th of
March 1655, Master
Whiting and Master
Spelman came to
Richard Hodgkinsonne to treat about the printing of Judge
Crookes[1]
(or
Sir
George Crookes) Reports; desiring the said
Hodg. to tell him truly and conscientiously, what he would print it for by the sheete
and finde Paper? The sum the said
Hodgkinsonne then pitcht unto them
was a farthing a sheete, the number printed being two thousand upon each sheete, and the
Paper to be worth five shillings a Reame (
viz. five shillings and six
pence perfect) so for that time they parted: But shortly after Master
Whiting came to the said
Hodg. with one Master
Bacon, and desired the said
Hod. to make some
Proves, which he accordingly did.
About the 12 of
September 1656 Mr.
Jo.
Whiting, and M.
Clem. Spelman went to the Warden of the
Stationers; where M.
Whiting desired to have Sir
G. Crookes Reports entred to the said
Hodgkinsonne,
declaring unto the said Warden that he had agreed with
the said
Hodg. for printing them and therefore willed him to take a
care that none else should meddle with the printing of them.
The 15 day M. Whiting, M. Spelman and Hodg. went to the Clerk, where M. Whiting declared
the same words he had done before to the Warden, but the Clerke refused Entrance to the said
Hodg. upon pretence of a former entry to one Warren.
The 16 day M. Whiting and M. Spelman went to
Stationers-Hall, and there at a publique Court M. Whiting disclaimed
the Entrance of Warren, as surreptitious, and declared his agreement
with Hodg. . . . but no Entry was made as he desired.
After two
more unsuccessful attempts in October and January, Whiting complained
to the Lord
Chiefe-Justice of the Upper-Bench, who (accompanied with 3 or 4 other
of the Judges) after hearing all that could be said by the Company for neglecting to enter to
Hodg. as also what Warren could say for his
pretended claim; una voce Ordered, that the former pretended Entry to
Warren, so surreptitiously obtein'd, should be obliterate, and the said Copy be Entred de novo to the said
Hodgkinson.
On the 20th of October, 1657,[2]
Hodginson began to print "the 17 yeeres of King Charles". During the process, Whiting
frequently visited "the Work-house" alone and with friends, to whom, and to the workmen, he
declared that he had contracted with Hodgkinson to print the whole series, of which the
present section amounted to less than one third.
He also, before the workmen, chid Hodgkinson because he was still completing some other
contracts, and "forbad him to entertain any other worke, assuring him that he would finde him
worke for 7 yeers. And he hath", says the pamphlet, "driven Customers from his the said Hodg. house." An instance of two unnamed Booksellers who on March 23rd
vainly asked Hodgkinson to undertake as much as he would of the printing of Lord Hubbard's
reports is quoted, and Whiting is said to have urged Hodgkinson to hurry on and take no other
work because "there were reports of one Bulstrode[3] Whitlocks printing, which he would not for 100 l.
should come out before his 11 yeers of King James", which he urged
Hodgkinson to finish for him by Michaelmas.
Shortly before he had finished the Caroline copy, therefore, Hodgkinson asked Whiting
whether that for
King James his time were ready or not; if it were
not, and that the presse, for want thereof, should stand still, it would be very chargeable:
Whereupon within a day or two after M. Whiting brought the said Copy
into the said Work-house, where Hodg. cast it off, and concluded that
the last 11 yeers of King James should make a second Volume. About the
30 of May King Charles was finished, and Hod. asking M. Whiting for the copy of King James
. . . M. Whiting told him it was in Just. Hales
hand for perusall, but promised faithfully to bring it to him in a fortnight: The said . . .
Whiting came again within 2 or 3 dayes and desired Hodg. to provide work for a moneth, if he could; for (being tyred) he had a mind to
goe into the Country; and then promised without faile to bring the said Copy to him, within a
moneth; but failed then as before.
Here the pamphlet infuriatingly ends, leaving the reader to check its accuracy for
himself.[4] The Stationers' Register
has an entry under 4 July 1656 (Eyre & Rivington, Transcript),
headed "Thos. Warren", which runs:—
Entred under the hand of Master Norton Warden a
booke entituled The reports of Judge Crooke from the first yeare of the
late K. Charles to the seaventeenth, being collected by his owne hand.
There is no
attempt at deletion, such as was ordered by the judges according to the pamphlet; nor is there
any entry of the book to Hodgkinson. Wing, (
Short-Title Catalogue of English
Books, 1641-1700) has no Hodgkinson entry either.
In the British Museum, however, though not in Wing, is 6128.f.4, entitled:—
THE /
REPORTS / OF / Sr George Croke Knight; / Late, one of
the Justices of the Court / OF / KINGS-BENCH; / And formerly, one of
the Justices of the Court / OF / COMMON-BENCH, / OF SUCH / Select Cases / as were adjudged in the said Courts, the time that he was / Judge in either of them: / Collected and written in French by Himself;
Revised / and published in English / By Sir HAREBOTLE GRIMSTON Baronet, / One of the Benchers
of the Honourable Society of Lincolns-Inn. / LONDON, / Printed by R. Hodgkinsonne, and are to be sold by William
Leak at the Crown in Fleetstreet, / betwixt the two Temple
Gates, by Thomas Firby neer Grays-Inne Gate in
/ Holborn, and at Lincolns-Inne Gate, 1657.
A Parliamentary Order prefaced to the book and dated "Tuesday 9 June 1657",
states that:—
Whereas Sir Harebotle Grimston, Baronet, hath of late revised and
published in English a Book, entituled, The Reports of Sir George Croke Knight . . . which
book is lately allowed and approved by all the Judges of England. It is therefore Ordered by
this present Parliament, that no person, other than the said Sir Harebotle Grimston, and his
Assignes, or such as shall be authorised by him or them, presume to publish in print any of
the said Books or any Copy thereof, either in French or English.
The Order is signed in the customary way by Scobell. The book contains a recommendation,
"Wee all, knowing the great Learning, Wisdome, and Integrity of the Author, do (for the common
benefit) approve and allow of the publishing of this Book", signed by Judges Glynne, St. John,
Atkins, Nicholas, Hale, Wyndham, Warburton, and Parker. It also contains the Preface by
Grimston addressed "To the Students of the Common-laws of England" which is quoted below. This
is dated "From my Manor-house of Gorhambury, May 7, 1657". On the final page is a list of
Errata numbering 45 in all.
Wing, under 'Sir George Croke', lists only one 1657 volume:—'The reports of. By J. S., 1657 fol.' This volume (BM 6121 i 1 is entitled —
THE /
REPORTS / OF / Sir George Croke Knight; / Late, One of the Justices of the
Court / OF / KINGS-BENCH; / AND / Formerly, One of the Justices of
the Court / OF / COMMON-BENCH, / OF SUCH / Select Cases / As were
adjudged in the said Courts, the time that / he was Judge in either
of them. / Collected and written in French by Himself; / Revised, and published in
English / By Sir Harebotle Grimston, Baronet, / One of the Benchers of
the Honourable Society of Lincolns-Inn. / LONDON, / Printed by J. S. and are to be sold by the Stationers
of London, / MDCLVII.
It is much more roughly printed than the
very attractive Hodgkinson copy. It has a different portrait-engraving as frontispiece and
lacks the final emblem-engraving with which Hodgkinson concluded his book. It does not contain
the Parliamentary Order. It compresses, by close printing, into 438 pages the section on which
Hodgkinson lavished 603, and is therefore much more difficult to read. While Hodgkinson's
Errata appear to be corrected, an equally long fresh list is inserted between Tables I and II,
where it would not readily be observed. It contains the Preface, and the Judges'
Recommendation, and the following Note to the Reader.
Thou art desired to take notice, That
in the
Second Edition of this Book, many
grosse
Errors of the former are exactly corrected; and the Errors of this
Edition are carefully taken notice of in an Errata: So
that this
Book is not onely more perfect then the former Impression, But also (for the good of the
People of these Nations), it will be sold for half the Price.
This volume is too
distinctly dated to be that referred to by J. M. Rigg under Grimston, Sir Harbottle, in the
Dictionary of National Biography (ed. 1890), which, after commenting
that the "first volume of Grimston's translation of Croke's reports was published, with a life
of the author, in 1657", adds, "There is also a very inaccurate edition of early but uncertain
date". It is difficult to see which edition(s) Rigg is referring to here. Since the
corrections indicated in Hodgkinson's "Errata" are carried out in the J. S. copy, one would,
but for the dating, have thought that the Hodgkinson edition must be the "former" one referred
to both in J. S.'s foreword and by Rigg as "inaccurate". But Hodgkinson too is clearly dated.
It thus seems doubtful whether the "inaccurate edition of early date" referred to by the
D.N.B. exists, unless Rigg never saw the Hodgkinson edition and referred to it.
[5] Rigg does, however, mention the
Parliamentary Order, which appears only in Hodgkinson.
Before turning to the version of the story in the Court Books of the Stationers' Company,
some facts about the situation and certain of the characters should be summarised.
The controversy about the printing of law-books which this story exemplifies is of
particular interest between 1641 and 1660, because the future of a monopoly was in doubt.
Edward VI had granted to Richard Tottel by letters patent, endorsed by Elizabeth,[6] the exclusive right of printing
common law books. This patent passed by grant through various hands until in the reign of
James I it was granted to John More for forty years.[7] More assigned his rights to Miles Fletcher, in return for an
annuity plus a third of the profits. More died in 1638, leaving the annuity to Martha, his
daughter, wife of Richard Atkyns, who thus through her acquired the patent.[8]
Fletcher, trying to evade payment of the annuity, bought up More's stock and
equipment, and sought to sell the rights to the Company of Stationers. The action which Atkyns
brought against him and the Company was interrupted by the Civil War. From then until the
Restoration, therefore, the issue was undecided. The Company of Stationers, anxious that so
important and lucrative a right should be in their own hands, sought mean-while to establish a
tradition of authorization via priority of entry in their register. After the Restoration,
complicated litigation eventually favoured Atkyns; the Company, however, was able in 1661 to
purchase the right, but had still to contend with counter-claims by the Fletchers. It was
during the previous indeterminate period that, as described in the pamphlet, Sir Harbottle
Grimston sought to publish the legal reports of Sir George Croke.
Sir George Croke is most generally known as one of the two judges who, in 1638, found
against King Charles I on the question of the legality of ship-money. He died in 1642, leaving
his legal Reports, covering three reigns and ranging from 1580 to 1640, in the charge of his
son-in-law, Harbottle Grimston. This was fitting, for Croke had made it a condition of the
marriage of his daughter, Mary, to Grimston in 1629 that the legal practice which the latter,
who was a barrister of Lincoln's Inn, had at that time discarded, should be resumed. It was
excellent advice; Grimston rose rapidly in his profession, becoming in 1634 Recorder of
Harwich, which he represented in Parliament from 1638, Recorder of Colchester (1638-49), and
Colchester's representative in the Short and Long Parliaments, of which he was a conspicuous
member. Politically, his position was complicated. Son of a Puritan baronet, he became Deputy
Lieutenant of Essex and Chairman of the Committee which in 1647 investigated Charles I's
escape from Hampton Court. Rushforth lists him as having taken the Covenant. Burnet, who later
became his chaplain, says he did not. He led the Isle of Wight negotiations for a personal
treaty, opposed regicide, and was purged by Pride in 1648, imprisoned for a short time, and,
when returned to Parliament in 1656, excluded. From 1649-1660 he lived in retirement, latterly
at Gorhambury, an estate which he had acquired through a second marriage — once more an
alliance with a great legal family — to Anne, daughter of Sir Nathaniel Bacon.[9] Part of this leisure (which was ended
by his being elected Speaker of the Convention Parliament, in which capacity he rather
floridly welcomed Charles II at the Restoration) he spent in wrestling with his former
father-in-law's Reports.
This was no easy task. The Reports, extending over so many years and by so eminent an
authority, would necessarily form a legal reference-book of first importance. The current
demand for such works, together with the unsatisfactory way in which it then was often met, is
described by Grimston in the Preface to the Reports, vol. i.
A multitude
of flying Reports (whose Authors are as uncertain as the times when
taken, and the causes and reasons of the Judgements as obscure as by whom judged) have of late surreptitiously crept forth; whereby, instead of that plentifull
and profitable increase which those fields (thus by a vigilant
husbandman tilled) would have yeelded to our Students, we have been
entertained with barren and unwarranted Products . . . . which not only tends to the
depraving the first grounds and reason of our Students at the Common Law, and the young
Practitioners thereof, who by such false Lights are misled, and multiplicity of Law Suits
rather cherished than suppressed: But also to the con tempt . . . .
of divers our former grave and learned Justcies (sic) and Professors
. . . . whose honoured and revered names have . . . . been abused and invocated to patronise
the indigested crudities of those plagiaries.
(Reports of Sir George Croke (1657), sig. a2)
Grimston therefore
took upon himself "the resolution and task of extracting and extricating" the Reports "out of
their dark originalls". Dark not only because in accordance with Parliamentary policy they
must now be published in English, not French, but also because they were exceedingly difficult
to read, "
being written in so small and close an hand, that I may truly say
they are folia sybillina,
as difficult as excellent." Grimston
therefore used the help of "better eyes" than his own.
That Richard Hodgkinson should have been much sought after at this time is not surprising.
After difficulties financial, political, and professional, he had just reached the zenith of
his fame as the printer (in 1655) of one of the most exacting and superbly printed books of
the century, Sir William Dugdale's Monasticon Anglicanum (vol. I). In
1656 he printed, at the request of Sir Henry Spelman: "Villare Anglicum
/ OR / A VIEW OF THE TOWNES / of ENGLAND". (BM E.484[3]) which contains an attractively
written foreword from the Printer to the Reader. Sir Henry Spelman had first recommended
Dugdale to serve in the Office of Arms, and first introduced him to Roger Dodsworth, who
originated, and probably wrote most of Monasticon but died before its
completion.[10] But the second
volume of Monasticon was to come in 1661 from the press of Alice
Warren,
Thomas's widow,
[11] and in 1656 Dugdale's
Antiquities of Warwickshire was
printed by Thomas Warren. It seems possible, therefore, that round about 1655-56 rivalry
existed between Hodgkinson and Warren towards the Dugdale-Spelman antiquarian axis. Warren was
a skilful printer: he specialised in "portraictures cut in wood" (
Stat.
Reg. 4 April 1656), and on 7 April 1656 is referred to as the printer of a 7-sheet map
of London. He probably saw Hodgkinson's technical virtuosity, displayed in the first volume of
Monasticon, as a menace to his own prospects.
The Clement Spelman mentioned in the pamphlet was probably Sir Henry's fourth son
(1598-1679), barrister, and from 1660 bencher of Gray's Inn. He wrote in 1647 a tract entitled
Reasons for admitting the King to a Personal Treaty in Parlt. and not by
Commissioners
[12] and in 1648
a Letter to the Assembly of Divines concerning Sacrilege. According to
the D.N.B., "there was another member of his family of somewhat similar
age and the same name" who may have been the Clement Spelman listed on 24 April 1648 as a
sequestered delinquent; he may also have been the Clement Spelman of the pamphlet.
The number of members of the Bacon family "of somewhat similar age and the same name" during
the 1650s has made it impossible to identify with certainly the Bacon[13] mentioned in the pamphlet. It seems unlikely that
Nathaniel Bacon, Member for Ipswich, is intended, as he was by now probably too well known to
be mentioned by the vague "one Master Bacon". The Nicholas Bacon referred to at the end of
this article may be a more likely candidate.
The important question of the identity of Whiting is discussed later.
The Court Book (1654-79) gives a more detailed account of the facts covered in the Thomason
pamphlet, and adds much more. On 6 October 1656 Thomason and Leake were two of those present
when
This day came to the Court Mr. Richard Hodgkinson Printer & with him one Mr.
Spilman and demanded Entrance of a Booke called Judge Crookes Reports which they produced but
the same booke being already (in July last) entred to Thomas Warren by authority &
direction (as he asserts) of one Mr. Whiting y
e Proprietor —
& that in presence of one Mr. Bacon and Mr. Dugdale not now present — And Mr.
Warren affirming also that he was bargain'd withall by the said Mr. Whiting for printing One
Impression of the said Copies according
to certain Articles agreed on &
drawn up (but not sealed) between them That he hath (in pursuance of the said agreement)
caused to be cast a ffount of new Letter for ye doing thereof whereby he shall loose at least
20l. — if he be prevented from Printing thereof. To w
ch it was
replied that Mr. Warren had not the booke it selfe in his custody but had procured an
Entrance by a Title only to w
ch Mr. Warden Norton had set his hand. The
Table debate the business and resolve that they cannot give their judgment in the premises
untill they heare the said Mr. Whiting Mr. Bacon and Mr. Dugdale, and withall desired both
parties to referre themselves to such persons as themselves shall thinke fitt to nominate;
but that way not done.
A further entry on 9 February 1656/7 runs:—
Memorand that
since the last Court the Master & Wardens & Mr. Norton were summoned before the Lord
Ch. Justice Glyn & Justice Atkins at Serjeants Inne where it was ordered by their
Lordships that the Entrance of the booke called Crookes Reports made to Mr. Warren (his right
therein being overruled) should be oblitterated. And this day came again Mr. Spilman Mr.
Whiting & Mr. Hodgkinson to demand the same & Entrance of the said Copie to Mr.
Hodgkinson. But forasmuch as the matter of right
[14] in the Copie begot all the Controversie & it not appearing
that the present Claimers have any right derived from Sir Harb. Grimstone Esq
re to the Author it was proposed & accordingly promised by Mr. Spilman to obtaine
from the said S
r Harbottle a Signification of his consent to the
purpose afores
d. W
ch the Table enclined to do to
prevent a new mischiefe.
On 2 March 1656/7,
came againe to the Court Mr. Spilman and
Mr. Whiting with a writing under ye hand of Sr Harbottle Grimston (as
was averred) according to ye motion of the last Cort but our Master who
is imediately concerned (in ye Ld Cheife Justices Order) being absent
by reason of sickness Mr. Spilman was prayed to forbeare pressing the business . . . . untill
the Mr. could personally come to the Court.
At this point there is a year's gap before the next relevant Court Book entry. It seems that
between March 2nd and June 9th, 1657, application was made to Parliament by Whiting and
Hodgkinson for vindication of the Judges' ruling, which was secured by the Parliamentary
order: and that Hodgkinson's was the edition referred to by Bulstrode Whitlocke as published
on 25th June. Between that date and January-March 1657/8 appeared the unauthorised "J. S."
edition. It will be remembered that this edition purported to be sold "by the Stationers of
London". It would be interesting
to know how much truth lay behind this
expression. In 1664, John Streator printed under the name of Richard Atkyns the pamphlet
entitled
The Original and Growth of Printing, in which the previous
attitude of the Stationers (to which the writer of the 1664 pamphlet is opposed) is summed up
thus:—
Say they, from the Year 1641 or 1642 until the . . . . Restauration, . . . .
any Booksellers that listed, did print, or cause to be printed, such Law-Books as seemed good
to them, without Restraint or Prohibition, occasioned by the Licence of the late Times. And
that such as had Licence under the King's Grant to print Law-Books, were hindered to make the
benefit of the same Grant; And that it was usual for such persons as printed Law-Books to
enter the same in Stationers-Hall, and that it was conceived and taken, that such person and
persons as Entred a Copy in the said Hall-Book to be Printed had the sole Right to print the
same; and those that claim'd the Right of printing Law-Books under the King's Licence were
thereby taken to be Excluded, and debarred to any Benefit therein. (op.
cit. pp. 15-16)
In contrast to this policy, the Parliamentary Order of 9 June, 1657, might suggest some
willingness on the part of the Commons to arrogate to themselves the previously royal right of
granting the monopoly.[15] Such an
attitude might appear as a threat to the procedure of right by entry in the Register which the
Stationers sought to establish. It may be that in our instance the retention of the Warren
entry, the refusal of a Hodgkinson entry, the postponements and the varying reasons given for
them, are factors in a coherent if improvised policy which, on 9 February 1656/7, when blocked
by the Judges over the question of printing rights, introduced the issue of inherent right so
that action on the other count might again be postponed.
If so, it might seem possible that the J. S. edition could have been printed or initiated
with the concealed (or open) support of the Stationers' Company, though the legally
non-committal phrase "Stationers of London" may equally well indicate the contrary. The
identity of J. S. is, however, a question here. The obvious claimants are the two men thus
initialled who participated in printing subsequent abridgements of the Reports: John Starkey
and John Streator. Streator, who partnered Warren in this the very next year, seems the more
closely linked, since he was, as assign of Richard Atkyns, deeply and frequently involved in
litigation about the printing of law books; he was certainly and emphatically the advocate, in
1664, of individual (royal) rights, against the sale of the monopoly to the company of
Stationers.
Whatever the identity of J. S., we know that Whiting appealed to the House of Commons
against the J. S. edition, for, while the Journal of the
House for 20 Jan. 1657/8 has the entry "The humble petition
[16] of John Whiteing, of Lincoln's-Inn,
Esquire, was this day read", Burton's
Parliamentary Diary for the same
day reports the following discussion:
Col. Cox.
Your order concerning Sir Harbotle Grimston's Reports was broken; it was a violation of
your privilege. I desire the petition may be read.
The title was 'To the Right Honourable the High Court of Parliament' and it was read
without further debate. The substance of it was, that against the orders of the House, the
book was reprinted, in bad paper, with many faults, &c and that they called it a
monopoly, and the Parliaments were so consequently. (sic)
Mr. Speaker.
Upon complaint in this case, and to assert your privilege, I sent for three or four of the
offenders, and bound them over to appear here the first day. There were some of them at the
door even now.
Major Beake.
This is no breach of privilege, but rather a breach of the law. I would not have you to
stay at the threshold, to take no order in this Case. Public business must take place, and if
politicians meet with such an order upon your books, it will not look well to be the Antisignanus of this house.
Mr. Speaker moved that a Bill be read; but it was called on to
adjourn.
There is also evidence that Grimston himself, if he was disappointed at the number of Errata
in Hodgkinson's edition, was enraged by those of the J. S. edition, for in his Preface to the
second volume of the Reports[17] he
says,
I have been more than ordinarily careful in the Edition, that the Reverend Reporter
may not be blemished with those many
Errata's in this, which have
somewhat obscured the former:
[18]
Especially in that latter Edition of it, by some ignorant and mercenary persons, who care not
how they blot mens Credits, and therein wrong the Reader, as well as the Learned and
Judicious Reporter, so they may have a vendible impression.
He adds that if despite his efforts some errors have slipped in "You will
find them particularly corrected, in the usual place, after the end of this Book".
[19]
Whether because he had indeed previously made other arrangements, or because he felt that
Hodgkinson had worked less accurately than the task demanded, or because he wanted no more
bother with Whiting, Grimston seems to have decided to make a break over the printing of the
Reports for King James's reign, which had for a time been placed in Hodgkinson's hands by
Whiting. The Court Book on 19 Feb. 1657/8 has the entry that
William Godbie Printer this
day brought a letter directed to the Table from Sr Harbottle Grimstone
dat. 16 ffeb. 57 purporting the said Sr Harbottle's desire yt Judge Crooks Reports in the tyme of King James might be Entred as ye copie of William Godbie but Mr. Hodgkinson having formerly left a Caveat
against the same and being now present desired forbearance of the Entrance of ye same & sth that Mr. Whiting (Assignee to Sr Harbottle as he will prove) agreed with him for printing the same with
many other Reports of . . . . Judge Crooke & that fraudently the said Whiting got the
said Copie (being left with Mr Hodgkinson) from him under pretence of
Judge Hales perusing of it & never brought the same back.
Hodgkinson secured suspension of the entry of the Book to anybody, pending his proof of his
allegations, which he promised to produce at the next Court. On 19th March 1657/8, says the
Court Book, Godby brought to the Court a letter from Grimston repeating the request of Feb.
16th and affirming the right to be in Godby only, "and that Mr. Hodgkinson was only employed
in printing the Judiciall Reports which (if it had been Entred) he was to have given Bond for
the copie." Hodgkinson presented a paper "purporting an assertion of his right in the Copie of
the above Reports not only with consent but speciall approbation & direction of . . .
Grimstone and protesting against what shall be done to the prejudice of such his right." The
Table decided to decide nothing at present but told the Clerk to go to Gorhambury, taking
Hodgkinson's paper, and give Grimston a copy of it, asking to be fully informed about it. On
March 26th, 1658, Godby presented to the Table Grimston's reply, which stated that Grimston
"denies he ever assigned to Mr. Whiting his interests in any of Judge Crook's Reports except
the Judiciall Reports in the first seventeen yeares of King Charles 2ndly That Mr. Whiting's promise to Mr. Hodgkinson of printing the other parts . . .
cannot devest Sr Harbottle of his property . . . But admitting Mr. Hodg.
had such a promise from Mr. Whiting or himself (which he utterly denies) he has no remedy upon
failure of performance but to bring his case . . . to recover his Damages. . . ."
It would not, says Grimston, be for the Company to "meddle" with such action, but to "leave
him to a legall way". Grimston then repeats his request for assignment to Godby.
The court at last decided, at the end of the sitting, that though Hodgkinson had shown the
Table a copy signed by several witnesses to the agreement with Whiting, this was, as Grimston
urged, a legal matter, not a case for them to decide: since Hodgkinson's possible redress
would not be prejudiced by entry of the Reports to Godby, it was decided to assign the
Jacobean volume to him.[20]
Hodgkinson had thus won the first round only to be defeated in the second. But though he
appears to have sought no legal redress, he did take what is now called unilateral action, for
a Court Book minute of 7 February 1658/9 records that he had been found at some previous date
"printing Judge Crook's Reports contrary to order" and his goods were seized and taken to
Stationers' Hall. A "friendly agreement" having now been reached between Hodgkinson and Field
(the bookseller for whom Godby and Newcomb issued the Jacobean volume in 1659) it was decided
that these should be restored.
Grimston's labours continued. The second Part, commended by eight Judges and without
Parliamentary Order, was duly printed by T. Newcomb and W. Godbie, to be sold by John Field at
the Seven Stars in Fleet-Street, in 1659. Both of the copies I have seen (BM 6128.f.3 and that
in the Library of the Institute of Historical Research, London) have been rebound, which may
possibly account for the absence in each of the Errata, referred to by Grimston in the
Preface. (The Second Edition of Part II (1669) describes itself as "corrected".) The First
Part (for Elizabeth's reign) appeared in 1661 "Printed by and for John Field
and Tho. Newcomb: Also for W. Lee, D. Pakeman, and Gabriel
Bedell." It has a highly rhetorical Dedication to King Charles II in which Grimston avers
that the Third and Second Parts would have been similarly dedicated but for "the extream
difficulty of publick Address to Your Majesties Sacred Person, divided from Your good
Subjects, by the cruel, wicked, bloody, and desperate practises of horrid Intruders and
Usurpers", which had forced him to send them abroad with only a Preface. The names of eleven
Judges, but no Parliamentary Order, commend it. The Errata, inserted between the reports and
the Tables, form a staggering list of 57 lines in each of two columns in very small print.
Perhaps, after all, Grimston would have been better advised to stick to Hodgkinson.
The equivocal part played by Whiting in this story deserves comment. The chief clue to his
identity is the "of Lincolne's-Inn" description in the Parliamentary Journal for 20 January
1657/8, which seems to fix him as the John Whiting, son and heir of Thomas Whiting of
Saxlingham, Norfolk, who was admitted on 10 November 1624, and had been admitted pensioner
at Caius, Cambridge, on 28 May 1619, "son of Thos. Gent., of Saxlingham,
Norfolk". The BM catalogue describes him as "Bookseller", on the strength of the word
"Proprietor" in the Thomason pamphlet, one supposes, for his name occurs in no other place
where a bookseller's should, so far as I can discover.
It will have been noticed that throughout the story Grimston never appears in person. He
would scarcely have felt himself persona grata in London during the
year following his exclusion from Parliament. He may therefore in the first instance have
acted through a friend, representative, or associate rather than a stationer. In the Preface
to the Hodgkinson volume he mentions the help of "better eyes" than his own. Such a helper
would need to have had a legal training and/or practice with documents. John Whiting of
Lincoln's Inn would possess these qualifications. Roger Dodsworth, in a letter to Sir William
Dugdale dated by Hamper (Life, Diary & Correspondence of Sir William
Dugdale, 1827) March 1649/50, says: "Mr. Whiting was wth me this
morning, and tells me ther is a great man called Paston, whose father was a studious man after
antiquities, especially Abbey Books, and hath left Collections out of divers, wch Mr. Whiting is to p'use. He will serve you by Sir Charles Mordants'
deeds", and on 10 May, 1651, he tells Dugdale that Mr. Whiting has "come up last weeke but is
gone today wth rare Historical notes out of several Registers he found
in Suffolke, touching St. Edmundsbury."
In an article by Falconer Madan in the Athenaeum (3 November 1888)
which reprints the previously missing section of Dugdale's diary for 1656, occurs, under 14
September, the entry:—"Sent to Mr. Martin the Register at Lichfield 6s, whereof 2s6d I am to receive of Mr.
Whiting the Lawyere,[21] it being
for the search of the will of one Thwaites of Henoure." Since "Mr. Dugdale", according to the
Court Book, accompanied Whiting on his Hodgkinson negotiations, it seems that the Whiting
referred to above, who may have been recommended to Grimston by the Dugdales as one competent
to help in deciphering Croke's sibylline leaves, would be a not unlikely person for Grimston
to choose as his negotiator. If he made any subsequent excursions into the world of the
printers of law books, he would have needed to walk warily after the Restoration, for Grimston
then became Master of the Rolls.
There remains a faint and very conjectural possibility that after the Restoration two, or
perhaps three, of the participants in this story ("Master" Bacon, Grimston, and very
improbably J. S.) encountered each other again. In the case of le Roy versus Bacon (Mich. 16
Car. II BR) the latter
was indicted (I quote Levinz
[22]) "for intending to murder the Master of the Rolls, and
for offering 100 l. to J. S.. to do it and saying, that if he would not he would do it
himself."
Keble[23] gives the accomplice's
name as Parry and agrees with Siderfin[24] and Levinz about the cause, that Grimston "on Misdemeanours in a Cause in
Chancery referred to him, made an order which displeased the Defendant." The D.N.B. refers to this Bacon as Nathaniel.[25] It is clear, however, from Heathcote MSS
November, 1664, p. 170 (News Letter) that this is an error: "Mr. Nicholas Bacon, a barrister
of Grey's Inn, being found guilty of endeavouring the death of Sir Harbottle Grimston, Master
of the Rolls, has been sentenced to 1,000 Marks fine, 3 months' imprisonment, and to make
public acknowledgment of his offence at the Kings Bench Bar & Chancery." And the Christian
name is confirmed by an entry in Cal. St. Pa. Dom. Ch. II, 1667, vol.
ii, p. 116, 23rd May: "Warrant for a grant to Sir John Denham, surveyor of works, and Thos.
Killigrew, groom of the bedchamber, of a fine of 600 l. imposed on Nich. Bacon, of Gray's Inn,
convicted four years ago for contriving the death of Sir Harbottle Grimstone, Master of the
Rolls."
Whether this Nicholas was the "Master Bacon" of the Thomason pamphlet, one cannot tell.
There can however be little doubt that he was the writer of the letter to Grimston which in
H.M.C. Report on the MSS of the Earl of Verulam at Gorhambury, 1906 is
headed (p.95) "Anonymous letter to Sir Harbottle Grimston, Master of the Rolls", and which
suggests an enmity of longer standing than the immediate issue; part of it runs:—
I
have a cause Depending in Chancery which has already beene branded with your notorious
partiality, and by consequence I expect that at the hearing . . . . it will receive as
palpable tokens of your injustice . . . . I have sent this as a monitor to forewarne you that
you do mee justice at your peril, or expect Buckingham's fate, although I were never soe
certaine of Felton's end, for I shall thinke myselfe happy enough that I liv'd to punish
audacious injustice, especially when it shrouds itselfe under robes of justice and power . .
. . Sir, believe mee neither foole, mad man nor huff, for if the case would beare it, that I
could tell you my name, you would know that I both dare and will doe as I say.
The
attempt and not the deed confounded Bacon. Grimston continued to wear the "robes of justice
and power" until 1685, when Cooke's letter in the
Lefroy Papers informs
us, under 2nd January, that "the Old Master of
the Rolls, Sir Harbottle
Grimston, hath made shift to die at last from apoplexy."
Note: The records of the Stationers' and Newspaper Makers' Company were made accessible to
me by courtesy of the Clerk, Mr. R. T. Rivington, which I acknowledge with thanks. I am also
indebted, initially, to Mr. J. Crow; and subsequently to Mr. Cyprian Bladgen, who from his
great knowledge of the Company's history has generously given information and advice.
Notes