custom of the more idle sort, having once served,
or but seen the other side of the sea under colour
of service, to shake hand with labour for ever, thinking
it a disgrace for himself to return unto his former
trade), that, except some better order be taken, or
the laws already made be better executed, such as
dwell in uplandish towns and little villages shall
live but in small safety and rest. For the better
apprehension also of thieves and mankillers, there
is an old law in England very well provided whereby
it is ordered that, if he that is robbed (or any man)
complain and give warning of slaughter or murder committed,
the constable of the village whereunto he cometh and
crieth for succour is to raise the parish about him,
and to search woods, groves, and all suspected houses
and places, where the trespasser may be, or is supposed
to lurk; and not finding him there, he is to give
warning unto the next constable, and so one constable,
after search made, to advertise another from parish
to parish, till they come to the same where the offender
is harboured and found. It is also provided that,
if any parish in this business do not her duty, but
suffereth the thief (for the avoiding of trouble sake)
in carrying him to the gaol, if he should be apprehended,
or other letting of their work to escape, the same
parish is not only to make fine to the king, but also
the same, with the whole hundred wherein it standeth,
to repay the party robbed his damages, and leave his
estate harmless. Certainly this is a good law;
howbeit I have known by my own experience felons being
taken to have escaped out of the stocks, being rescued
by other for want of watch and guard, that thieves
have been let pass, because the covetous and greedy
parishioners would neither take the pains nor be at
the charge, to carry them to prison, if it were far
off; that when hue and cry have been made even to the
faces of some constables, they have said: “God
restore your loss! I have other business at this
time.” And by such means the meaning of
many a good law is left unexecuted, malefactors emboldened,
and many a poor man turned out of that which he hath
sweat and taken great pains toward the maintenance
of himself and his poor children and family.
CHAPTER XVIII
OF UNIVERSITIES
[1577, Book II., Chapter 6; 1587, Book II., Chapter 3.]
There have been heretofore, and at sundry times, divers famous universities in this island, and those even in my days not altogether forgotten, as one at Bangor, erected by Lucius, and afterward converted into a monastery, not by Congellus (as some write), but by Pelagius the monk. The second at Caerleon-upon-Usk, near to the place where the river doth fall into the Severn, founded by King Arthur. The third at Thetford, wherein were six hundred students, in the time of one Rond, sometime king of that region. The fourth at Stamford, suppressed by Augustine the